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Human Rights Watch Slams 'Press Freedom Curbs' In Armenia

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  • Human Rights Watch Slams 'Press Freedom Curbs' In Armenia

    HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH SLAMS 'PRESS FREEDOM CURBS' IN ARMENIA
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    July 2 2007

    A leading international human rights organization has strongly
    criticized controversial government-drafted amendments to two Armenian
    laws which it believes could "effectively ban" future broadcasts of
    RFE/RL and thereby further restrict freedom of the media in Armenia.

    "These new laws clearly restrict access to a crucial independent news
    source for many Armenians and deal a serious blow to RFE/RL and to
    freedom of the media in general," Holly Cartner, Europe and Central
    Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in a weekend statement.

    "The parliament should under no circumstances pass this bill in the
    second reading."

    The New York-based group said the proposed ban on retransmission of
    foreign broadcasts by Armenian state television and radio and heavy
    fees for private networks engaging in such broadcasts "appear to
    specifically target RFE/RL's Armenian service."

    "By passing these laws, Armenia risks violating its international
    commitments to freedom of expression and the media," said Cartner.

    She specifically pointed to an article of the European Convention
    on Human Rights that guarantees the right "to receive and impart
    information and ideas without interference by public authority and
    regardless of frontiers."

    Cartner also implied that continued RFE/RL broadcasts, which
    are accessible to the vast majority of Armenians thanks to their
    retransmission by state radio, are essential for the freedom and
    fairness of next year's Armenian presidential election. "As Armenia
    prepares for presidential elections in 2008, the world will certainly
    be watching to see if the government respects freedom of the media
    and other freedoms necessary for a free and fair vote," she said.

    HRW argued that although Armenia has a "vibrant print media," its
    government maintains "close control over the much more accessible
    broadcast media." It cited in this regard the effective closure in
    2002 of A1+, the only local TV channel that regularly aired criticism
    of President Robert Kocharian and his administration.

    The government bills have also been criticized by the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe's (OSCE) representative on
    freedom of the media, Miklos Haraszti. In a statement last week,
    Haraszti said they infringe Armenia's commitments to safeguard media
    pluralism and access to information, and called on the Armenian
    authorities to drop them.
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