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BAKU: Azeri private radio scraps some BBC relays in protest at"biase

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  • BAKU: Azeri private radio scraps some BBC relays in protest at"biase

    Azeri private radio scraps some BBC relays in protest at "biased" reports

    BBC Monitoring research
    2 Jun 04

    The Baku-based Azerbaijani commercial FM station ANS CM has suspended
    transmission of BBC programmes in Russian to Central Asia and the
    Caucasus at 0700 local time (0200 gmt). On 1 and 2 June, the BBC output
    was replaced by continuous music and station identification jingles.

    A statement by the company, ANS CM, which has been rebroadcasting BBC
    World Service output for the last 10 years, said it had stopped the
    transmission because of what it called the biased BBC reporting on
    the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. The BBC denied the accusations and
    expressed regret over the decision. In a statement, the BBC said that
    it has remained committed to providing fair, impartial and balanced
    coverage of events in the region.

    ANS TV, operated by the same company as the radio station, reported on
    1 June that ANS CM radio would not broadcast the Russian programmes
    in Azerbaijan because "the morning programmes of this service of the
    BBC and the programmes by producer Mark Grigoryan are distorting the
    truth about the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict".

    A deadline of 1 June was reported on the air by ANS TV on 24 May,
    by which the BBC was to have addressed the issues raised by ANS in
    letters sent to the BBC since 6 April.

    ANS TV has carried regular criticism since 12 May about BBC Russian
    programming for the region and BBC web pages in Russian which dealt
    with the 10th anniversary of the cease-fire in the Nagornyy Karabakh
    conflict. Similar critical reports were aired to a lesser extent by
    some other Baku-based commercial TV stations. Azerbaijani press and
    news agency reporting of the affair has been more muted.

    On 31 May the head of the presidential administration, Ramiz Mehdiyev,
    told Azartac news agency that a visit by a BBC correspondent
    to Nagornyy Karabakh, without the permission of the Azerbaijani
    authorities and in violation of Azerbaijani laws, had caused some
    discontent. However, since freedom of the press is protected in
    Azerbaijan, he said it would be unacceptable to take sanctions against
    the radio station or to take it off the air.

    ANS CM radio on 102 FM did rebroadcast the BBC Azeri Service at 1700
    gmt on 1 June as scheduled. The dedicated BBC FM relay for Baku on
    103.3 FM, which carries BBC World Service in English, the Central
    Asia and the Caucasus Service in Russian and Azeri, as well as the
    BBC Turkish Service and some British domestic programming, continued
    to operate as scheduled.
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