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ACNIS Monitors Pre-Election Media Coverage

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  • ACNIS Monitors Pre-Election Media Coverage

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    75 Yerznkian Street
    Yerevan 0033, Armenia
    Tel: (+374 - 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
    Fax: (+374 - 10) 52.48.46
    Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
    Website: www.acnis.am



    March 7, 2007



    ACNIS Monitors Pre-Election Media Coverage


    Yerevan--Today the Armenian Center for National and International Studies
    (ACNIS) convened a policy roundtable in order to present the preliminary
    results of its monitoring of the Armenian print and electronic media, which
    was conducted in advance of the parliamentary elections scheduled for May
    12. The meeting brought together NGO officials, leading analysts, policy
    specialists, and media representatives.

    ACNIS director of research Stepan Safarian opened the conference with a
    remark that since the beginning of the year a specialized monitoring group,
    constituted within the ACNIS framework to observe the pre-electoral
    situation in Armenia, has launched a four-month project to analyze local
    television and print media coverage specifically with respect to the
    forthcoming elections. The monitoring results, he asserted, will
    periodically be provided to all major political forces, civil initiatives,
    and the resident offices of international non-governmental organizations and
    human rights groups. "The objective of this examination is to bring to light
    the public opinion being shaped via Armenia's print and electronic media
    with reference to the parliamentary elections, and to evaluate the
    competitive abilities of those who seek to be influential during the
    election cycle," he said.

    According to Safarian, the first monitoring, conducted by means of content
    analysis, covers the country's best-known television programs as well as its
    most-read daily newspapers. The study encompasses all information
    disseminated about the leaders of major political parties, the quality of
    the public opinion being formed about them, the frequency of airtime, and
    other aspects. Safarian then proceeded to present the initial results of the
    television monitoring, which will soon be made public in final form. "The
    television companies appeared mostly to be instruments in, rather than
    actual mirrors of, election-related developments, and their prime target
    consistently was the opposition," Safarian concluded.

    The next speaker, ACNIS analyst Syuzanna Barseghian, presented the results
    for the monitoring of the print media. She placed emphasis on the most-read
    newspapers, and maintained that the overwhelming majority of the articles
    and analyses concerning the elections is either negative or neutral. "In
    general, virtually all print media depicted the upcoming elections in
    negative fashion, with the net effect of disenchanting voters who already
    hold a passive attitude toward the elections," she said.

    "Recent disagreements within the opposition were used by many of the media
    under scrutiny with the intention of weakening and discrediting the latter
    and deepening public dissatisfaction with the opposition," the analyst said,
    adding that the print and electronic media either covered the opposition's
    initiatives with bias or, as was more often the case, did not mention them
    at all. On the contrary and in evident violation of the Election Code, the
    activities of pro-establishment parties were covered, by and large, against
    a positive backdrop for the ongoing pre-election processes.

    Participants in the ensuing discussion included Armenia's first Ombudswoman
    Larisa Alaverdian; chairman Mikael Danielian of the Armenian Helsinki
    Association; Elina Poghosbekian of the Yerevan Press Club; ACNIS director of
    administration Karapet Kalenchian; political scientist Aleksandr
    Iskandarian; Edward Antinian, deputy chairman of the Liberal Progressive
    Party; Arsen Kharatian of the "Scientific Development" NGO; Haik Gevorgian
    of the Haykakan Zhamanak daily; and various others.

    The roundtable participants seemed to be in consensus that the monitoring
    findings bespeak the fact that a markedly uneven and unfair playing field
    has been formed with respect to the parliamentary election campaign. It was
    recommended and acclaimed, therefore, that the results of this monitoring be
    jointly directed to the cause of realizing everyone's right to be informed.
    Otherwise, as one seminar participant aptly put it, "those who bask under
    the umbrella of the authorities will relish the splendor of the campaign,
    whereas the opposition will continue to bear its misery."

    Founded in 1994 by Armenia's first Minister of Foreign Affairs Raffi K.
    Hovannisian and supported by a global network of contributors, ACNIS serves
    as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy challenges
    facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world. It also
    aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking and a wider
    understanding of the new global environment. In 2007, the Center focuses
    primarily on civic education, democratic development, conflict resolution,
    and applied research on critical domestic and foreign policy issues for the
    state and the nation.

    For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or 27-48-18; fax
    (37410) 52-48-46; email [email protected] or [email protected]; or visit
    www.acnis.am

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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