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Armenia Might Terminate Radio Liberty Rebroadcasts

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  • Armenia Might Terminate Radio Liberty Rebroadcasts

    ARMENIA MIGHT TERMINATE RADIO LIBERTY REBROADCASTS

    Arminfo
    27 Jun 07

    Yerevan, 27 June: Representatives of a number of opposition parties
    have harshly criticized the possible termination of rebroadcasts of
    the Armenian Service of Radio Liberty on Armenian Public Radio.

    "The Armenian government is taking another anti-democratic step,
    which is prompted, and it is not difficult to suppose, by the upcoming
    presidential election in the country. They probably want to eliminate
    the free zone which is not controlled by them and which is used
    by opposition politicians to freely express their positions," the
    secretary of the parliamentary faction of the [opposition] Heritage
    Party, Stepan Safaryan, said.

    The opposition parties not represented in parliament also tend to
    view a bill submitted by the government to parliament "on changes to
    the law of the Republic of Armenia 'on TV and radio'" as the desire
    of the authorities to deprive the Armenian Service of Radio Liberty
    of its airtime for political reasons.

    "The case should not be viewed as a legal or judicial matter. This is
    a political step ahead of the presidential election in February next
    year. The bill proposed by the government is aimed at depriving the
    people of the opportunity to receive objective information through
    the only electronic medium not controlled by the authorities,"
    the secretary of the People's Party of Armenia, Grigor Harutyunyan,
    stressed, expressing the official position of the party.

    Representative of the Armenian Pan-National Movement Aram Manukyan
    believes that the authorities have never liked the media that show
    their weak points in governing the republic, and the forthcoming
    presidential election only served as a reason to embark on new and
    specific steps to suppress freedom of speech. "Radio Liberty has not
    bowed to the authorities, and they want to deprive a wide audience
    of the opportunity to receive objective information about the events
    in the republic," Manukyan said.

    The head of the Alternative public and political movement and
    editor-in-chief of Haykakan Zhamanak newspaper, Nikol Pashinyan, was
    even more categorical. He described the initiative of the government
    as another step directed at establishing an army of unrestrained
    dictatorship in Armenia. "When they speak of the necessity not to
    provide foreign TV and radio stations with local frequencies, they
    should first vacate the two local VHF frequencies used for broadcasting
    Russian government TV channels.

    The Armenian Service of Radio Liberty, unlike them [the Russian
    channels], is broadcast in Armenian. Mostly Armenians work there,
    who report on events in our country," Pashinyan said.

    During an emergency session today, the National Assembly will discuss
    the bill proposed by the government "on changes to the law of the
    Republic of Armenia 'on TV and radio'". It says the reason is that
    "the status of the Public TV and Radio Company and its tasks are,
    in fact, incompatible with the right to give consent to provide
    frequencies to other broadcasters".
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