Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

2005 World Press Freedom Review

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 2005 World Press Freedom Review

    2005 WORLD PRESS FREEDOM REVIEW

    A1+
    [08:50 pm] 30 March, 2006

    The embattled television station A1+ continued to have problems in
    2005. In January, the Armenian Academy of Sciences continued its
    demands that the company vacate the premises it used at one of the
    Yerevan buildings, which also hosted a number of media editorial
    offices. The company has been off the air since April 2002, when
    National Commission on Television and Radio refused to give A1+ a
    broadcasting licence. The company has participated in seven licence
    tenders since that time, but without success. According to the
    Yerevan Press Club, A1+ currently operates as a production studio,
    along with the editorial office of a popular Web site www.a1plus.am,
    the Ayb-Feh weekly, and the television training courses of A1+'s
    founder, Meltex LLC.

    The station was evicted from its premises in July, and it was given
    notice to vacate its office in the Armenian Academy of Sciences by
    23 July. A1+ now largely produces programmes for regional television
    stations, as well as keeping a Web site and publishing a weekly
    newspaper.

    However, later in July, Prime Minister Andranik Markarian asked the
    head of the governmental Department of State Property Management to
    find alternative premises A1+. The station also found a compromise
    with the Academy of Sciences President Fadey Sarkisian and may continue
    to occupy its offices until new accommodations were found.

    According to a Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) report, the
    European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) will most likely agree to hold
    hearings and make a ruling on the hotly disputed 2002 closure of A1+
    in January 2006.

    On the afternoon of 1 April, the car of Samvel Alexanyan,
    editor-in-chief of the Syunats Yerkir newspaper, was burned in the yard
    of his house in Goris, in the southeastern region of Kapan. According
    to reports, Alexanyan received threats after he gave an interview
    to the Novoye Vremya newspaper on 12 March. He issued a statement
    on the same day in which he accused the regional administrator Surik
    Khachatrian of instigating an arson attack that destroyed his car.

    According to RFE/RL, Alexanyan claimed Khachatrian was angered by an
    interview Alexanyan gave to a Yerevan newspaper in March. Alexanyan
    similarly blamed Khachatrian for an attack on his newspaper's premises
    in autumn of 2004.

    The subject of the 1915 murder of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians
    in Ottoman Turkey continues to be a sore point in relations between
    Armenia and Turkey.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian urged Turkey to acknowledge the
    killings as a genocide when addressing the opening session of an
    international conference in Yerevan on 20 April.

    On 13 July, seven Armenian media groups, such as the Yerevan Press
    Club and the Armenian Union of Journalists, released a joint letter
    criticising the government's proposed constitutional amendments. In
    the letter, they argued that the constitutional amendments would
    inadequately guarantee the independence of the National Commission
    on Radio and Television, which regulates commercial broadcasting.

    They also maintained that presidential power to appoint all nine
    commission members should be curtailed, and that the Armenian
    parliament must have the power to endorse or reject appointees to the
    Commission. Criticism of the absence of any proposed changes to the
    formation of the governing board of the Armenian Public Television
    and Radio was also voiced.

    The media groups also released a joint statement on 27 July,
    in which they criticized a 21 July statement by the Council of
    Europe's Venice Commission, which positively evaluated the latest
    version of draft constitutional amendments proposed by the Armenian
    government. According to an RFE/RL report, the groups believe that the
    Commission's proposals on the freedom, independence, and diversity of
    mass media are flawed and cannot put in place the necessary guarantees
    of freedom of speech in Armenia.

    According to RFE/RL, the draft constitutional amendments are to be
    debated by the parliament on 29 August before being voted on in a
    national referendum in November.

    On 27 November, Armenia held a referendum on a package of draft
    constitutional amendments to the 1995 constitution. A few international
    monitors were present, and they and local observer groups reported
    large-scale fraud, such as inflation of turnout numbers, ballot
    stuffing and intimidation of observers. According to official results,
    Armenians endorsed the amendments.
Working...
X