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International Broadcasters On High Alert: Key Channel, Support Group

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  • International Broadcasters On High Alert: Key Channel, Support Group

    INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTERS ON HIGH ALERT: KEY CHANNEL, SUPPORT GROUP THREATENED
    Michael Hedges

    followthemedia.com , Switzerland
    July 2 2007

    Foreign-originated broadcasts and foreign media support groups are
    losing their welcome. Is somebody afraid of being bitten? Writing
    new laws to hamper, discourage and foil foreign-originated broadcasts
    from entering their ether-space is necessary, they say, for technical
    reasons.

    Armenia's National Assembly passed (Friday June 29) on first reading
    two amendments to its' law "On Television and Radio." One amendment
    specifically forbids Armenian Public Radio and Television from
    broadcasting any programs they do not produce. The target, without
    subtlety, is US-funded Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty (RFE/RL),
    known in Armenia as Radio Liberty. RFE/RL is the only foreign
    broadcaster offering news programs on Armenian State radio,

    Amendment number two imposes a stiff tax on any broadcaster for
    offering programs from foreign broadcasters. Second reading is
    scheduled early this week.

    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, however, spoke out Friday, saying
    "It will hurt me if (Radio) Liberty stops going on air."

    There's an old newsroom saying that "dog bites man" is not a story.

    "Man bites dog" is. Governments seek control over media. Imperious
    governments seek control over media imperiously. Armenia's President
    Robert Kocharian said he doesn't like people listening to Radio
    Liberty. Coincidentally, Armenia will hold presidential elections in
    2008. Dog bites man.

    In this media-enhanced world, State media's clumsy or cheesy offerings
    bore local listeners silly, causing the broadcast equivalent of
    carpal-tunnel syndrome as listeners push one different button after
    another. The choices may be maddening but not as much as another
    politician's speech.

    Late last year Azerbaijan's National Radio and Television shut down
    radio and TV broadcaster ANS for disregarding "warnings." ANS was
    an RFE/RL affiliate. New rules came into effect January 1st barring
    all local Azeri broadcasters from carrying the BBC, Radio Liberty
    and voice of America programs. Azerbaijan will hold presidential
    elections in 2008.

    Zimbabwe's government bought Chinese jamming transmitters, originally
    manufactured in France, to control foreign broadcasts saying mean
    things. Iran's culture control police are said to round up evil
    satellite dish owners.

    North Koreans have a hard time listening to any broadcasts other
    than those State-operated since "authorized" receivers are fixed
    to State-operated frequencies. Being caught listening to foreign
    broadcasts results in hard time in prison. That idea didn't originate
    in North Korea. Nazi Germany in 1933 imposed prison sentences - or
    worse - for listening to foreign radio broadcasts. Fortunately for
    Germans those laws have been remanded to the dust-bin of history,
    with the exception of radio and TV (and now internet) license fees
    to pay for public broadcasting. ("And how many radios do you have?")

    Hostility toward message bearers - over the air, over the internet
    or over the transom - increased on two events. Most cliche is the
    universally accepted meme that "9/11 changed everything." Media expands
    to the horrification presented, particularly when unanticipated.

    More directly, Ukraine's Orange Revolution is a source of continuous
    reflection for every government - East, West, North or South. Media
    trainers sent to develop journalists' skills succeeded. Media freedom
    advocacy NGOs got results.

    Internews is well-known in developing and transitional regions as
    an advocate for upgrading local media skills as a means of forming
    a strong working platform for free and independent media. They
    assist media infrastructures Afghanistan to, almost, Zimbabwa,
    always supporting local efforts and best practices. Tin-pot despots
    would rather not see Internews trainers showing the secrets of good
    news video.

    Russian tax authorities recently froze bank accounts of the NGO
    Educated Media Foundation (EMF), formerly known as Internews Russia.

    Additionally, EMF President Manana Aslmazyan faces criminal charges
    for smuggling and may face others. NGO's of all stripe and color
    have been in the sights of Russian authorities, many being stripped
    of legal grounds for operating in Russia.

    Mrs Aslazyan's most recent trials stem from the day last January
    when she arrived in Moscow's Sheremeto airport from Paris carrying
    cash, discovered in a random inspection. Arriving in Russia carrying
    more than US$10,000 requires disclosure. She had not and "higher"
    authorities were called. Her explanation was not accepted and charges
    were filed though she managed to return to Paris where she's taken up
    work with Internews Network. The authorities turned their attention
    to EMF, functionally closing it down.

    In May the Azerbaijan government ended cooperation with Reporters
    Without Frontiers (RSF) after the press freedom NGO named President
    Ilham Aliyev a "Press Freedom Predator."

    Changing perspective just a bit (still "dog bites man"), this
    story is also about money. State broadcasters in recent decades have
    invited, with the full approval of their funding governments, foreign
    broadcasters to provide their programs, offering air-time, sometimes
    significant, on State channels. The reasoning is quite simple: cheap
    (read: free) well-produced content. Some governments have gone so
    far as to offer foreign broadcasters a frequency or two, very often
    outside normal licensing rules. Again, cheap, well-produced content
    fulfills a particular need.

    The new media rules proposed in Armenia do not, precisely, forbid
    foreign broadcasts on local frequencies. For local broadcasters to
    air programs from foreign broadcasters there would be, in these times
    of need, a fee. For RFE/RL that fee would be about $200 per hour. Do
    the math: 4 hours a day, 365 days a year means more than $300,000,
    sufficient for a personal assistant or five and that new BMW.

    http://followthemedia.com/conflictzones/arme nia02072007.htm
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