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Local TV 'Censured For Airing Ter-Petrosian Speech'

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  • Local TV 'Censured For Airing Ter-Petrosian Speech'

    LOCAL TV 'CENSURED FOR AIRING TER-PETROSIAN SPEECH'
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Rdaio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 22 2007

    A regional television station claimed on Monday to have incurred the
    Armenian government's ire by broadcasting former President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian's September 21 speech that contained harsh verbal
    attacks on the authorities.

    In his first public speech in nearly a decade, Ter-Petrosian described
    Armenia's current leadership as "corrupt and criminal" and called for
    its ouster. His political allies offered to pay TV stations across
    the country to air the 20-minute speech in full. Only two of them
    accepted the offer.

    The owner and chief executive of one of those broadcasters, the
    Gyumri-based Gala TV, told RFE/RL that he did so despite a stark
    warning from the National Commission on Television and Radio (NCTR),
    a presidentially appointed body that issues and revokes broadcasting
    licenses. Vahan Khachatrian claimed that officers of the Gyumri branch
    of the National Security Service visited him shortly afterward and
    warned Gala to stop covering Ter-Petrosian's return to active politics.

    Khachatrian said he will ignore the alleged warning. "I'm not afraid
    of anything or anyone," he said, adding that tax officials in Gyumri
    are now investigating the legality of his ownership of real and
    other property.

    Khachatrian also struck a defiant in a separate written statement
    issued later in the day. "I want to emphasize that the Gala TV
    company's position will not change and that I, as the company's owner,
    will not tolerate any attempt at interference by any structure or
    individual," he said.

    The claims came just three days after Armenia's leading media
    associations expressed serious concern at reports that the government
    has ordered TV channels in Yerevan and elsewhere in Yerevan to shun
    events featuring Ter-Petrosian and, in particular, a rally which he
    plans to hold on Friday.

    The largest of the broadcasters, the state-owned Armenian Public
    Television and Radio, denied this. Its chairman, Aleksan Harutiunian,
    told RFE/RL that his H1 channel, the most accessible in Armenia,
    will cover the Ter-Petrosian rally.

    Other, local channels will not necessarily follow suit. Margarita
    Minasian, chairwoman of another Gyumri channel, Tsayg, said she will
    not send any correspondents to the rally. "We lack the technical
    capacity to videotape events in Yerevan on a daily basis," she
    told RFE/RL.

    "We haven't decided yet. We may and may not cover it," said Anzhela
    Stepanian, who runs the news service of the private Alt TV station in
    the southern town of Armavir. She argued that local news has always
    been the main focus of her company.

    All major Armenian broadcasters are loyal to the administration of
    President Robert Kocharian and rarely air opposition criticism of
    its policies. The only TV station not controlled by the authorities
    was controversially pulled off the air in 2002.

    Meanwhile, representatives of the pro-Ter-Petrosian Armat organization,
    said on Monday that it has prepared video clips informing citizens
    about Friday's rally and have offered various channels to air them
    as advertisements. They said none of them has agreed to run the ads
    so far.

    Armat and other groups supportive of the ex-president portray this
    as an indication that the authorities are seriously worried about
    Ter-Petrosian's participation in the upcoming presidential elections.

    Ter-Petrosian is increasingly emerging as the main challenger of the
    election favorite, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.
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