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Armenia In New TV Controversy

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  • Armenia In New TV Controversy

    ARMENIA IN NEW TV CONTROVERSY
    By Gegham Vardanian

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    http://www.iwpr.net/?p=crs&s=f&o =346723&apc_state=henh
    Sept 17 2008
    UK

    Opposition station hopes Council of Europe will fight for its right
    to broadcast.

    Government critics in Armenia say a small amendment to a new
    broadcasting law is being used to keep the country's leading opposition
    news channel off the air.

    Supporters of the A1+ television station, which ceased transmission in
    2002 when broadcasting licenses were renewed, are hoping to win the
    backing of the Council of Europe, CoE, which has already criticised
    the Armenian government's treatment of the channel.

    The new law on TV and radio which parliament passed on September 10
    commits the country to moving completely to digital broadcasting by
    2015, with parallel analogue and digital transmission from 2010 on.

    The government is offering currently active TV stations a chance to
    bid for new digital broadcasting licenses from 2010.

    The catch, as far as A1+ is concerned, is that the current licenses
    are being automatically extended until June 2010, which means that
    no other companies will have a chance to enter the market before then.

    A1+ was a popular source of alternative news to the pro-government
    line, which now dominates the electronic media in Armenia. Its removal
    from the airwaves sparked large protests.

    Economics minister Nerses Yeritsian, presenting the new bill to
    parliament, denied that there was any political agenda behind it or
    any link to A1+, saying that postponing the issuing of new licenses
    was "the most fair and open mechanism".

    "After 2010, when the current licenses expire, everyone will receive an
    equal opportunity to take part in a competition and win a broadcasting
    frequency," said Yeritsian.

    Opposition members of parliament dismissed the minister's arguments.

    "This is an underhand way of stripping A1+ of its chances of going on
    air and taking part in a license competition," said Zaruhi Postanjian
    of the opposition Heritage Party. "This is being done so that the
    market of existing TV companies won't be extended to include one
    more company."

    A1+ had hoped to regain its broadcasting rights following a ruling in
    its favour issued by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg
    in June.

    The court ruled that Armenia had breached article 10 of the European
    Convention on Human Rights by denying A1+ a license. On September 17,
    the court's decision was sent to the CoE's ministerial committee,
    which will issue specific recommendations to Armenia, and monitor
    their implementation every six months.

    The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, PACE, in a
    resolution on Armenia agreed on June 25, also referred to A1+ and
    called for the national licensing authority "to now ensure an open,
    fair and transparent licensing procedure".

    When Claudia Luciani, director general for political affairs and
    cooperation at the CoE, met the speaker of Armenia's parliament
    Tigran Torosian on September 11 she criticised the way the bill had
    been passed the day before.

    "The bill was adopted in haste, without any European expertise,"
    she said. "It is not a step towards implanting the resolutions of
    PACE but a step backwards, which means that both the government
    and the national assembly have not taken the proposals in the PACE
    resolutions seriously."

    Even some pro-government supporters have failed to back the amended
    broadcasting law. Armen Ashotian, a parliamentary deputy with the
    governing Republican Party and chairman of parliament's commission on
    science, education, culture and youth, abstained on the first reading
    of the bill and did not vote in the second and third readings.

    "I am not sure that the technical advantages which are meant to
    justify the law outweigh the political risks," Ashotian told IWPR.

    A statement by five journalistic organisations called for the decision
    to be overturned, saying it had "nothing to do with defending
    the interests of broadcasters, consumers and the state, nor with
    "guaranteeing equal opportunities and preventing market shocks" -
    arguments the government has used to justify its amendments.

    Movses Hakobian, a legal consultant to the media development
    organisation Internews, said the entire law was conceptually flawed.

    "There's no definition of the transition to digital broadcasting,"
    said Hakobian. "Even the justification [document] for the bill points
    out that it's currently impossible to make an accurate assessment of
    the technical requirements this will impose on the state, its citizens
    and the broadcasters, or of what the anticipated costs are. They have
    no idea what the cost will be - what's going to happen if the cost
    comes to more than the budget can afford? What will we do?"

    Minister Yeritsian responded that the government was seeking the help
    of outside experts to ensure that the switch-over works. He said,
    "We have a programme, but there are gaps and pitfalls. We have asked
    for an international audit to be conducted on this and we need serious
    international expertise."

    Mesrop Movsisian, the director of A1+, believes that the whole bill
    was designed to keep his company off the airwaves.

    "It shows that the authorities are so frightened by the possibility
    of suddenly hearing an alternative voice that they are once again
    resorting to suppressing free speech in Armenia," he said.

    Gegham Vardanian is a journalist with Internews in Yerevan.
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