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Int'l observers assess coverage of the Public TV and Public Radio

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  • Int'l observers assess coverage of the Public TV and Public Radio

    International observers assess the coverage of the Public TV and Public
    Radio as the most balanced

    ArmRadio.am
    14.05.2007 14:35

    The International Election Observation Mission (IEOM) for the 12 May
    parliamentary elections in Armenia, which is a joint undertaking of
    the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
    (OSCE/ODIHR), the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (OSCE PA), the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) and the
    European Parliament (EP) turned to the media coverage of the elections
    in its statement of preliminary findings and conclusions.

    The report says, in part: `The Election Code provides for airtime to
    all candidates based on `equal conditions.' Each registered party/bloc
    in the proportional contest was entitled to a maximum 60 and 120
    minutes of free airtime and no more than 120 and 180 minutes of paid
    airtime on public television and radio respectively. The CEC allotted
    the sequence of appearances in free and paid airtime by
    lottery. Public media adhered to their obligations in a somewhat
    formalistic manner: public TV H1 decided that all free campaign slots
    could be broadcast daily as a bloc, in the time period set by the CEC
    but outside primetime viewing.

    Political and electoral events were extensively reflected in newscasts
    and current affairs programmes inthe broadcast media.7 Many media
    outlets tried to cover a broad range of political subjects, and thus
    to

    The two public broadcasters (H1 television and Public Radio) mostly
    guaranteed access to the media for contestants. Public Radio offered
    balanced political coverage (both in time and tone).
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