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  • Armenia: State Tightens Media Controls

    ARMENIA: STATE TIGHTENS MEDIA CONTROLS

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    Dec 20 2007

    Harassment of provincial television station coincides with start of
    election campaign.

    By Ofelia Kocharian and Taguhi Tovmasian in Yerevan (CRS No. 424
    20-Dec-07)

    The most popular television station in Armenia's second city,
    Gyumri, is facing closure as a result of what it says is officially
    orchestrated pressure, prompted by its favourable coverage of the
    leading opposition candidate in the presidential election campaign.

    The crisis faced by Gala television station comes as the state tightens
    its overall control of television ahead of the February 19 poll,
    in which Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian is the officially-favoured
    candidate.

    Gala, a privately-owned channel, has a big audience in Gyumri, which
    has a population of around 150,000. The station has been accused of
    tax evasion by the authorities, and its assets and bank accounts have
    been frozen.

    However, the station's owner Vahan Khachatrian, says its problems
    started after Gala broadcast the speech that former president Levon
    Ter-Petrosian made in September announcing his return to public
    politics. Ter-Petrosian has now registered as a candidate for the
    election.

    Khachatrian told IWPR that he did not support any particular party
    and gave airtime to all politicians.

    Because of the company's problems, all 37 of its advertising clients
    have pulled out. "For over a month, we've had no advertisements,"
    said Khachatrian. "The tax bodies have imposed a fine of 26 million
    drams [86,000 US dollars] on us, but I am not going to pay it, and
    we have already lodged a counter-claim in court."

    Khachatrian said he had applied repeatedly to Gyumri's municipal
    authorities to be allowed to buy or lease the television tower his
    company has been using for its broadcasts, but without success.

    However, in November, the 100-metre TV tower, which for the last
    two decades had no official owner, was suddenly announced to be the
    property of the city hall.

    "I had been told the tower belonged to no one and I could do whatever I
    pleased with it," he said. "I repaired it, fitted it with equipment and
    opened the TVcompany - and now the city hall says it needs to privatise
    it. I declare that I am ready to buy or lease it at any moment."

    At a court hearing, Levon Barseghian, chairman of the Asparez
    journalists' club, which has set up a support committee for the
    station, proposed that the city authorities cut a three-way deal with
    Asparez and Gala and allow the tower to be leased at a reasonable rate,
    to include back-payments for previous use.

    The mayor of Gyumri later said a deal could be reached, but on
    December 18, an offer was made that Barseghian said was exorbitantly
    expensive. He said Gala was told to pay 200,000 drams for permission
    to mount antennas on the tower, instead of the 30-40,000 drams that
    is the going rate, and it was also asked for a back-payment of 5.4
    million drams which, at 18,000 dollars, would be enough to build a
    new television tower.

    Gala is a rarity in Armenia, where the electronic media are mostly
    controlled by government allies and do not step out of line. Around
    ten television stations generally give the authorities supportive
    news coverage. Two stations that did provide alternative voices, A1+
    and Noyan Tapan, have lost their broadcasting licenses.

    Referring to the tax claims made against Gala, Boris Navasardian,
    chairman of the Yerevan Press Club, said, "Any television company
    - and especially one based in Yerevan - would find itself in big
    trouble if it was presented with a document like this concerning its
    tax payments on advertising income."

    Media monitoring carried out in October and November by the Team
    research centre, with assistance from the Yerevan Press Club, showed
    that pre-election news coverage on local television was dominated
    by information about two candidates - Prime Minister Sarkisian and
    ex-president Ter-Petrosian. While most of the coverage of the former
    was favourable, that of Ter-Petrosian was very negative.

    "If the prime minister was mentioned by all the channels in a
    positive rather than negative context - 56 positive comments against
    two negative ones - ), it was the other way around with the first
    president, six positive comments against 111 negative ones," said
    Team's interim report on the monitoring exercise.

    For example, on the day that Ter-Petrosian held a big rally in
    central Yerevan in November, the Armenian Channel Two headed its
    news bulletin with reports about visits made by the prime minister,
    the arrival of delegations in Armenia and other official news. Then
    came international news, including a report about a demonstration in
    Australia involving 200 protestors.

    Ter-Petrosian's rally, which attracted many thousands of protestors,
    was the penultimate news item and was less than one minute long.

    There were long-range shots of the rally but no recording of what
    the opposition candidate said. Then came three minutes of vox pops
    giving only negative views from members of the public, who said they
    did not like Ter-Petrosian and his 1991-98 presidency brought them
    nothing but misery.

    "The Shant television company and the Armenian Channel Two paid
    particular attention to one political figure; they both assigned more
    than a half of their airtime to Serge Sarkisian," said the report.

    Both officials and the TV stations concerned deny there is a problem.

    Eduard Sharmazanov, press secretary of the ruling Republican Party,
    said television companies covered whatever they had available,
    and reporting on the prime minister's activities did not mean they
    were biased.

    The media monitoring suggested that Armenia Television, which belongs
    to diaspora businessman Jerard Kafesjian, gave the least coverage to
    opposition candidates. But Gagik Mkrtchian, director of the station's
    news programmes, assured IWPR that they were providing airtime to
    all candidates and were under no "pressure from above".

    Aleksan Harutyunian, chairman of the board of the Public Television
    and Radio Company - Armenia's main television station - rejected
    accusations that the electronic media are merely obeying orders handed
    down from the presidential administration.

    "I don't think that any link in the chain, including the presidential
    administration, applies any pressure or issues orders," he told IWPR.

    "I give everyone airtime equally."

    Critics say Harutyunian himself is too close to government because
    he used to be head of President Robert Kocharian's administration
    and secretary of the Security Council.

    Opposition politicians say they are frustrated by their inability
    to get their message across. According to former foreign minister
    Alexander Arzumanian, "No serious opposition figure can express
    his views through these outlets. Our media serve a totalitarian,
    tyrannical regime."

    The monitoring revealed that there was only one TV station that
    provides relatively independent news coverage - Yerkir Media, which
    broadcasts mostly in the capital and belongs to the nationalist
    Dashnaktsutiun party, a member of the ruling coalition.

    Ter-Petrosian - who banned the Dashnaktsutiun party when he was
    in office - has nevertheless received extensive coverage from the
    channel, whose director Gegham Manukian says "pressure is put only
    on those who want it".

    "During all this time, our company has not received a single hint,
    threat or recommendation as to what we should air and what we
    shouldn't," Manukian told IWPR.

    Taguhi Tovmasian is a correspondent for the Chorrord Iskhanutyun
    newspaper and Ofelia Kocharian is a correspondent for the Iskakan
    Iravunq newspaper in Yerevan.
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