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Media Control Is Obvious

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  • Media Control Is Obvious

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    MEDIA CONTROL IS OBVIOUS
    [05:54 pm] 22 June, 2007

    Most of the countries in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
    are suffering under new forms of media control that are severely
    limiting independent news media, according to a report issued today by
    Freedom House.

    The report, `Muzzling the Media: The Return of Censorship in the
    Commonwealth of Independent States,' describes a contemporary model of
    censorship in the former Soviet Union that is achieved through a mix
    of state-enabled oligarchic control, broadcast monopolies of
    presidential `families,' and judicial persecution, as well as subtle
    and overt forms of intimidation. The report's findings are derived
    from Freedom of the Press, Freedom House's annual global survey of
    media independence.

    Freedom House Executive Director Jennifer Windsor said that `while the
    old Soviet model of complete state domination of news media has been
    cast aside, a new and in many ways equally pernicious model of media
    control in the CIS has emerged.'

    Of particular concern is the sharp downward decline in many CIS
    countries in the last several years. During this time, the report
    cites four major trends that have emerged: intensified control over
    mass media, particularly television; tighter legislation curbing media
    freedom; increased attention to international broadcasting; and
    greater control of print media.

    The survey's most recent findings show that ten of the twelve
    post-Soviet states are ranked Not Free, indicating that these
    countries do not provide basic legal, political, and economic
    guarantees and protections for open and independent journalism. Of the
    ten Not Free countries, none is moving in the direction of more
    freedom and most have a decidedly downward trajectory. Of the 195
    countries examined in the survey, three of the ten worst press freedom
    abusers - Belarus, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan - are found in the CIS.

    Despite the best efforts of authorities, however, some degree of
    independent reporting persists in authoritarian CIS states, due to the
    commitment of enterprising and courageous journalists, as well as the
    possibilities offered by new technologies.

    `The Internet is a principal alternative and challenger to media
    hegemony in the CIS,' said Christopher Walker, Freedom House director
    of studies and the report's author. `But while the Internet remains
    relatively free in Russia and other post-Soviet countries, it is
    quickly becoming a target for regulatory intervention by the
    authorities.'

    Absent the rule of law and meaningful legal protections, the CIS is
    also one of the world's most dangerous places for
    journalists. Intimidation, physical violence, and even murder of
    reporters and editors have become commonplace for news professionals
    who investigate political and corporate corruption. Journalists in
    virtually every CIS country have been victims of contract killings or
    otherwise met death under suspicious circumstances. In Russia alone,
    at least two dozen journalists have been killed since President
    Vladimir Putin assumed office seven years ago.

    The report notes that press freedom's trajectory in the CIS was not
    always so dire and that an opening of the press had been achieved in
    the aftermath of the Soviet Union's collapse. By 1994, six of twelve
    countries in the former Soviet Union had risen to the Partly Free
    category in Freedom of the Press. A decade later, a profound reversal
    had taken place, with eleven countries ranked Not Free by 2004.
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