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Armenian Journal: Site Provides Constant Updates Of Airliner Crash

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  • Armenian Journal: Site Provides Constant Updates Of Airliner Crash

    ARMENIAN JOURNAL: SITE PROVIDES CONSTANT UPDATES OF AIRLINER CRASH
    By Timothy Spence, Knight International Press Fellow

    International Journalist's Network
    May 11 2006

    Region :Eastern Europe-Central Eurasia
    Country :Armenia

    Within hours of when an Armenian airliner plunged into the Black Sea
    on May 3, killing all 113 people on board, the staff of the ArmeniaNow
    online newspaper were providing readers with hourly updates on the
    country's first major air accident in decades.

    It is the first time in its four-year history that the news
    organization provided such intensive coverage of a breaking news event,
    said editor John Hughes.

    "I always wondered how our staff would react to a disaster like this,
    but in my mind it was always going to be an earthquake," said Hughes,
    co-founder of ArmeniaNow and a veteran American newspaper reporter.

    "Given what we all have to work with, what I saw was as good as
    anything I've seen."

    The day's news gripped the Caucasus nation of 3.2 million people.

    Cafes and restaurants kept televisions tuned to local and international
    news reports of the accident. Nearly all the 105 passengers and eight
    crew members on board Armavia Flight 967 were Armenian.

    "Armenia is a small country and I'm sure most people had relatives
    or friends or friends of friends on that plane," said ArmeniaNow
    reporter Suren Musaelyan. "It's a huge tragedy and everybody feels
    sympathy to the victims and wants to know what happened."

    Most of the public and independent television stations interrupted
    their regular programming throughout the day to provide live coverage
    and updates of the crash of the Airbus 320, which went down in stormy
    weather after trying to make a landing at Sochi, Russia.

    The last major crash of a plane that originated in the Armenian
    capital of Yerevan was in 1976.

    Musaelyan said he last saw such energy in the news media when he
    covered the 1999 assassination of Armenian Prime Minister Vazgen
    Sargsyan and five other members of Parliament. He worked at the time
    as a reporter for the independent Noyan Tapan news agency.

    Hughes mobilized eight reporters, a photographer and three translators,
    who provided hourly updates throughout the day and evening.

    Veteran Armenian reporter Aris Ghazinyan flew to the crash site off
    the Russian coast and phoned in reports from there. Three ArmeniaNow
    staff members filed reports from Yerevan's Zvartnots airport.

    At the ArmeniaNow office in central Yerevan, three reporters worked
    the phones while the newspaper's three translators provided real-time
    updates in English and Armenian.

    Gayane Abrahamyan, who normally covers the arts for ArmeniaNow, said
    being assigned to cover the scene at the airport was emotionally trying
    but an important experience in how to deal with covering tragedies.

    She said families of the victims, overcome with grief, did not want
    to answer reporters' questions. "I tried to approach people from a
    different point, by trying to understand and sympathize with their
    personal emotions," Abrahamyan said, and found that people were
    willing to talk freely with her.

    But that was a challenge for the 22-year-old reporter. "It was
    impossible not to cry. It was even difficult to talk. But I tried to
    gather all my strength and just to talk to them."

    ArmeniaNow also produced special coverage for the regular weekly
    update of the Web site, interviewing family members of those who
    perished in the crash and covering announcements from the airline
    and Armenian and Russian airline safety officials.

    ArmeniaNow is published every Friday in Armenian and English, serving
    the nation's large Diaspora community in the United States, Europe and
    Australia, as well as people in the country. The online publication
    claims a weekly readership of 12,000 "unique visits."

    Figures for visits on May 3 were not immediately available.

    It routinely updates breaking stories during the week and provided
    updated results of the 2003 presidential election. But Hughes said
    the air crash coverage was something new to his 20-person staff.

    "It's the first time there's been an event like this that merited
    that kind of coverage," he said. "The reason what we did was pretty
    much my instinctual reaction."

    Hughes said he first heard about the crash from a friend who phoned
    from the airport around 9 a.m., about five hours after the crash
    occurred. Within 90 minutes, ArmeniaNow published its first detailed
    news bulletin from reporters.

    ArmeniaNow is independently financed and is a partner of the Knight
    International Press Fellowships in Washington. Along with Knight,
    it is sponsoring an internship program for journalism students at
    Yerevan State University. It also participates in a Yerevan State
    training program sponsored by the International Center for Journalists.

    Timothy Spence is a Knight Fellow working with journalists
    in Armenia. This is his second tour with the program; he
    was previously in Ethiopia. The John S. and James L. Knight
    Foundation sponsors the fellowships, administered by the
    International Center for Journalists. For more information, visit
    http://www.knight-international.org/.
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