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Armenian Election Coverage 'Worsening'

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  • Armenian Election Coverage 'Worsening'

    ARMENIAN ELECTION COVERAGE 'WORSENING'
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    Dec 10 2007

    Armenia's main broadcasters have grown even more tendentious over the
    past month in their coverage of the upcoming presidential election,
    openly promoting the frontrunner, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian,
    and attacking his most formidable opponent, a media watchdog said
    on Monday.

    The Yerevan Press Club (YPC) has been monitoring the election-related
    news coverage of the Armenian Public Television and Radio as well as
    six private TV channels and releasing reports on a monthly basis. It
    criticized the broadcasters last month for showing "unprecedented"
    bias against opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian and casting
    Sarkisian in a highly positive light.

    Unveiling the findings of its latest monthly monitoring, the YPC
    said the situation has further deteriorated since then. "There
    are unprecedented phenomena which we have not witnessed in the
    past," the YPC chairman, Boris Navasardian, told reporters. "That
    includes an overtly negative coverage of opposition candidate Levon
    Ter-Petrosian. It's even more large-scale than what our previous
    monitoring detected."

    According to Navasardian, the Public TV and Radio are particularly
    active in vilifying Armenia's former president. He said the
    state-controlled H1 TV channel, the most accessible in the country,
    aired 47 overwhelmingly critical reports on Ter-Petrosian in
    November. Sarkisian's name, by contrast, figured in the news for 148
    times and almost always in the positive context, he added.

    The YPC monitoring also found that the public radio aired over a
    hundred Ter-Petrosian-related reports in November and that 80 percent
    of them were "negative."

    "In terms of the volume [of news coverage] Levon Ter-Petrosian holds
    the number place at the radio," said Navasardian. "That's a unique
    phenomenon." "It is unfortunate that that is being done by media
    outlets which we previously cited as positive examples," he added,
    referring to their coverage of last May's parliamentary elections
    praised by Western observers.

    The YPC suggested that the TV coverage is now far more biased because
    the outcome of the presidential election scheduled for February 19 is
    less predictable than that of the May polls. "The more unpredictable
    the election outcome becomes, the more unethically media outlets
    behave," he said.

    The Armenian authorities say that Ter-Petrosian is backed by less than
    5 percent of voters and will not be even Sarkisian's main opposition
    challenger. Observers believe, however, that they see a much greater
    threat emanating from the ex-president.

    Navasardian criticized Ter-Petrosian as well, saying that he has
    turned down offers to be interviewed by unnamed TV stations. "It's
    easier to talk at a rally," he said. "You say only what you want to
    say and don't have to answer resulting questions.
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