Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia plans 24/7 English TV channel

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russia plans 24/7 English TV channel

    Russia plans 24/7 English TV channel
    By Neil Buckley in Moscow

    FT
    June 6 2005 20:40

    Russia is launching a 24-hour global satellite news channel in English
    to try to boost the country's image, battered recently by the Yukos
    affair and president Vladimir Putin's centralising tendencies.

    The channel, Russia Today, is a project of Mikhail Lesin, a former
    communications minister who is now a press adviser to Mr Putin, and
    Alexei Gromov, the president's press secretary. It also involves RIA
    Novosti, the state-controlled news and information agency responsible
    for pro-Soviet propaganda in the Communist era.

    Those involved were meeting on Monday to put final touches to the
    plans before an official media launch on TuesdayRIA Novosti and the
    presidential press service declined to comment.

    But one person familiar with the project said the channel was aimed at
    combating what Moscow sees as the erroneous `Anglo-American' view of
    Russia, and put the country's own viewpoint across. It would also seek
    to represent the opinions of ordinary Russians.

    The project aimed at least in part to counter the damage to Russia's
    image from the attack on Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former oil magnate
    sentenced last week to nine years in a penal colony.

    Funding was already in place for two to three years. But it was
    unclear on Monday what the channel's initial financing would be, with
    estimates ranging from $10m to $30m, and the extent of Kremlin
    involvement in the funding.

    Plans for the channel were first revealed by a press release put out,
    apparently in error, by RIA Novosti last week and hastily
    withdrawn. Adverts also appeared in some western media seeking
    journalists for an `English-language, 24-hour broadcast news channel
    based in Moscow'.

    The release said the channel, expected to launch this autumn, would
    broadcast in Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States,
    Europe, the US, and some Asian countries.

    It would `reflect Russia's position on key issues in world affairs,
    and inform the foreign audience about the variety of aspects of life
    in Russia'. To ensure balance, it would have a supervisory committee
    composed of `famous Russian and foreign public figures, journalists,
    artists, scientists and businessmen'.

    Margarita Simonian, a 26-year old former Kremlin reporter for Russia's
    Channel 2, has been appointed editor in chief.
Working...
X