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sedan
04-21-2007, 09:08 PM
April 22, 2007
50% Good News Is the Bad News in Russian Radio
By ANDREW E. KRAMER

MOSCOW, April 21 — At their first meeting with journalists since taking over Russia’s largest independent radio news network, the managers had startling news of their own: from now on, they said, at least 50 percent of the reports about Russia must be “positive.”

In addition, opposition leaders could not be mentioned on the air and the United States was to be portrayed as an enemy, journalists employed by the network, Russian News Service, say they were told by the new managers, who are allies of the Kremlin.

How would they know what constituted positive news?

“When we talk of death, violence or poverty, for example, this is not positive,” said one editor at the station who did not want to be identified for fear of retribution. “If the stock market is up, that is positive. The weather can also be positive.”

In a darkening media landscape, radio news had been a rare bright spot. Now, the implementation of the “50 percent positive” rule at the Russian News Service leaves an increasingly small number of news outlets that are not managed by the Kremlin, directly or through the state national gas company, Gazprom, a major owner of media assets.

The three national television networks are already state controlled, though small-circulation newspapers generally remain independent.

This month alone, a bank loyal to President Vladimir V. Putin tightened its control of an independent television station, Parliament passed a measure banning “extremism” in politics and prosecutors have gone after individuals who post critical comments on Web chat rooms.

Parliament is also considering extending state control to Internet sites that report news, reflecting the growing importance of Web news as the country becomes more affluent and growing numbers of middle-class Russians acquire computers.

On Tuesday, the police raided the Educated Media Foundation, a nongovernmental group sponsored by United States and European donors that helps foster an independent news media. The police carried away documents and computers that were used as servers for the Web sites of similar groups. That brought down a Web site run by the Glasnost Defense Foundation, a media rights group, which published bulletins on violations of press freedoms.

“Russia is dropping off the list of countries that respect press freedoms,” said Boris Timoshenko, a spokesman for the foundation. “We have propaganda, not information.”

With this new campaign, seemingly aimed at tying up the loose ends before a parliamentary election in the fall that is being carefully stage-managed by the Kremlin, censorship rules in Russia have reached their most restrictive since the breakup of the Soviet Union, media watchdog groups say.

“This is not the U.S.S.R., when every print or broadcasting outlet was preliminarily censored,” Masha Lipman, a researcher at the Carnegie Moscow Center, said in a telephone interview.

Instead, the tactic has been to impose state ownership on media companies and replace editors with those who are supporters of Mr. Putin — or offer a generally more upbeat report on developments in Russia these days.

The new censorship rules are often passed in vaguely worded measures and decrees that are ostensibly intended to protect the public.

Late last year, for example, the prosecutor general and the interior minister appeared before Parliament to ask deputies to draft legislation banning the distribution on the Web of “extremist” content — a catch phrase, critics say, for information about opponents of Mr. Putin.

On Friday, the Federal Security Service, a successor agency to the K.G.B., questioned Garry Kasparov, the former chess champion and opposition politician, for four hours regarding an interview he had given on the Echo of Moscow radio station. Prosecutors have accused Mr. Kasparov of expressing extremist views.

Parliament on Wednesday passed a law allowing for prison sentences of as long as three years for “vandalism” motivated by politics or ideology. Once again, vandalism is interpreted broadly, human rights groups say, including acts of civil disobedience. In a test case, Moscow prosecutors are pursuing a criminal case against a political advocate accused of posting critical remarks about a member of Parliament on a Web site, the newspaper Kommersant reported Friday.

State television news, meanwhile, typically offers only bland fare of official meetings. Last weekend, the state channels mostly ignored the violent dispersal of opposition protests in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

Rossiya TV, for example, led its newscast last Saturday with Mr. Putin attending a martial arts competition, with the Belgian actor Jean-Claude Van Damme as his guest. On the streets of the capital that day, 54 people were beaten badly enough by the police that they sought medical care, Human Rights Watch said.

Rossiya and Channel One are owned by the state, while NTV was taken from a Kremlin critic in 2001 and now belongs to Gazprom. Last week, a St. Petersburg bank with ties to Mr. Putin increased its ownership stake in REN-TV, a channel that sometimes broadcasts critical reports, raising questions about that outlet’s continued independence.

The Russian News Service is owned by businesses loyal to the Kremlin, including Lukoil, though its exact ownership structure is not public. The owners had not meddled in editorial matters before, said Mikhail G. Baklanov, the former news editor, in a telephone interview.

The service provides news updates for a network of music-formatted radio stations, called Russian Radio, with seven million listeners, according to TNS Gallup, a ratings company.

Two weeks ago, the shareholders asked for the resignation of Mr. Baklanov. They appointed two new managers, Aleksandr Y. Shkolnik, director of children’s programming on state-owned Channel One, and Svevolod V. Neroznak, an announcer on Channel One. Both retained their positions at state television.

Mr. Shkolnik articulated the rule that 50 percent of the news must be positive, regardless of what cataclysm might befall Russia on any given day, according to the editor who was present at the April 10 meeting.

When in doubt about the positive or negative quality of a development, the editor said, “we should ask the new leadership.”

“We are having trouble with the positive part, believe me,” the editor said.

Mr. Shkolnik did not respond to a request for an interview. In an interview with Kommersant, he denied an on-air ban of opposition figures. He said Mr. Kasparov might be interviewed, but only if he agreed to refrain from extremist statements.

The editor at the news service said that the change had been explained as an effort to attract a larger, younger audience, but that many editorial employees had interpreted it as a tightening of political control ahead of the elections.

The station’s news report on Thursday noted the 75th anniversary of the opening of the Moscow metro. It closed with an upbeat item on how Russian trains are introducing a six-person sleeping compartment, instead of the usual four.

Already, listeners are grumbling about the “positive news” policy.

“I want fresh morning broadcasts and not to fall asleep,” one listener, who signed a posting on the station’s Web site as Sergei from Vladivostok, complained. “Maybe you’ve tortured RNS’s audience enough? There are just a few of us left. Down with the boring nonintellectual broadcasts!”

The change leaves Echo of Moscow, an irreverent and edgy news station that often provides a forum for opposition voices, as the only independent radio news outlet in Russia with a national reach.

And what does Aleksei Venediktov, the editor in chief of Echo of Moscow, think of the latest news from Russia?

“For Echo of Moscow, this is positive news,” Mr. Venediktov said. “We are a monopoly now. From the point of view of the country, it is negative news.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/22/world/europe/22russia.html?ei=5065&en=d4929f91a6c5b2aa&ex=1177819200&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=print

Phyrex
04-21-2007, 09:19 PM
Russia is gonna go full circle lol.

Thislin
04-21-2007, 09:41 PM
The gamut between a "free" and irresponsible press, that glorifies violence ("If it bleeds it leads") and produces junk like the Paparattzi (sp.?) and a controlled press that only publishes things the government thinks are good for the people to hear is vast indeed.

Any ideas on how a middle way might be achieved?

We have libel lawsuits that control the press that way. Maybe making invasion of privacy a more effective tort might help. But what about press reportage that actually encourages repeats?

LionelHutz
04-21-2007, 09:48 PM
Russia is gonna go full circle lol.

Vladimir can rename himself Ras Putin.

Liberal
04-22-2007, 03:25 AM
22 April 2007
90% Good News Is the Bad News in US Radio
By ANDREW E. KRAMER

WASHINGTON, 21 April — At their first meeting with journalists since taking over US’ largest independent radio news network, the managers had startling news of their own: from now on, they said, at least 90 percent of the reports about US Occupation of Iraq must be “positive.”

It could well be the same thing in the US too.

AbbeyRoad
04-22-2007, 03:30 AM
Who's the current Chess Champion? Isn't he facing scrutiny for oppsosing Putin?

Phyrex
04-22-2007, 04:59 AM
Kasparov lol. Who'da thunk it?

AbbeyRoad
04-22-2007, 05:13 AM
I'm' feeling "cold"

Evakian
04-22-2007, 06:57 AM
Vladimir can rename himself Ras Putin.
:lolhit:

sedan
04-22-2007, 07:16 AM
Who's the current Chess Champion? Isn't he facing scrutiny for oppsosing Putin?Vladimir Kramnik. As far as I know he avoids politics. You are probably thinking of the former champion Gary Kasparov, who is mentioned in the article.

AbbeyRoad
04-22-2007, 07:38 AM
Yes - probably

~Sal~
04-22-2007, 08:16 AM
Now that's disheartening. Hopefully they have enough intelligentsia left who will be capable of somehow cutting this off early.

Foolsworth
04-22-2007, 07:30 PM
The gamut between a "free" and irresponsible press, that glorifies violence ("If it bleeds it leads") and produces junk like the Paparattzi (sp.?) and a controlled press that only publishes things the government thinks are good for the people to hear is vast indeed.

Any ideas on how a middle way might be achieved?

We have libel lawsuits that control the press that way. Maybe making invasion of privacy a more effective tort might help. But what about press reportage that actually encourages repeats?

" We have " ? I have no such a thing.I'm not privy to
any particular lawsuit.
Perchance you meant - There are libel lawsuits that - blah blah whoopie.
Figgers you'd use a Noun { reportage } when a Verb is quite apropos.
I meant... Apropotage.

Dzerod
04-23-2007, 05:18 AM
In Russia they call this "self-censorhip". :D
Industrial corporations buy media and in all means try to lick Putin's ass. They think that in such a way they can get some nice orders from government - military, space, energy, infrastructure... superhuge money.

And of course our "democratic" opposition, represented by Kasparov and sponsored by International Republican Institute, claims the strengthening of authoritarian tendenices as usual.. This is getting old.

Dzerod
04-23-2007, 05:54 AM
There's a bit different problem: f*cking nomenklatura (some small officials) is trying to jail everybody who dares to "say bad things" about them. Even in LJ. This is totally disgusting and must be punished. I am getting extremely pissed when some deputy gouvernor killes 5 people in a car accident and there is even NO COURT, but when somebody says in internet forum "Gouvernor is a thief" they are calling police. God damn it, if i'd be a president, i'd personally shoot them all.

~Sal~
04-23-2007, 08:18 AM
In Russia they call this "self-censorhip". :D
Industrial corporations buy media and in all means try to lick Putin's ass. They think that in such a way they can get some nice orders from government - military, space, energy, infrastructure... superhuge money.

So, can they?

Dzerod
04-23-2007, 09:04 AM
So, can they?
They do, but surely not for creating Putin's cult of personality. Gazprom is a gas monopolist because they cut off Europe from gas when Putin says. Rosneft is the largest oil company for the same reason. And there are many other examples with a single principle: corporations are backing Putin's internal and foreign politics, Putin is backing corporations' interests in Russia and worldwide. It's common for every country (as far as i guess), but in Russia with its spoiled culture of business this mechanism acquires connotation of a fight between kids in a sandbox. In the race, where the main prize is a right to be president's favourite, they do not hesitate to do anything: from licking His balls to killing each other. What's more, when Putin himself tries to "tune up" corporations' activites in accordance with his politics and they refuse... watch YUKOS. So many of them are simply afraid that some day his Highness asks them about where did they get their billions, threatening them with dispatch to Yakutia for knitting mittens like Khodorkovsky.
As they say in Soviet Russia joke laughs at you. :p

~Sal~
04-23-2007, 09:29 AM
They do, but surely not for creating Putin's cult of personality. Gazprom is a gas monopolist because they cut off Europe from gas when Putin says. Rosneft is the largest oil company for the same reason. And there are many other examples with a single principle: corporations are backing Putin's internal and foreign politics, Putin is backing corporations' interests in Russia and worldwide. It's common for every country (as far as i guess), but in Russia with its spoiled culture of business this mechanism acquires connotation of a fight between kids in a sandbox. In the race, where the main prize is a right to be president's favourite, they do not hesitate to do anything: from licking His balls to killing each other. What's more, when Putin himself tries to "tune up" corporations' activites in accordance with his politics and they refuse... watch YUKOS. So many of them are simply afraid that some day his Highness asks them about where did they get their billions, threatening them with dispatch to Yakutia for knitting mittens like Khodorkovsky.
As they say in Soviet Russia joke laughs at you. :p

Geez it sounds even more corrupt than the government in the States and Canada. But corporations pull our leaders strings too. They pander here too. They are all in bed together basically. I know, both of the major parties here are.
We are trying to clean things up since our liberal party got caught red-handed with their paws in the cookie jar. We voted them out. For the first time in my life I voted Conservative. Our current Conservative leader here in Canada panders to Bush unfortunately. Our last liberal leader kept us out of Iraq even if he was corrupt, he did something right. It's all a mess in every country it seems.

What would you like to see happen in yours?

Dzerod
04-24-2007, 07:36 AM
We are trying to clean things up since our liberal party got caught red-handed with their paws in the cookie jar. We voted them out. For the first time in my life I voted Conservative. Our current Conservative leader here in Canada panders to Bush unfortunately. Our last liberal leader kept us out of Iraq even if he was corrupt, he did something right. It's all a mess in every country it seems.

What would you like to see happen in yours?
I would like to see pragmatic leadership. Ultraliberals, ultraconservators, or nazis.. Any radicalism would be fatal for such country as Russia.

And i would support any extreme measures against nationalists. We have no national politics and those idiots claiming "Russia - for russians" may cause a new wave of separatism. They must be erased immideatly from media and politics - prisoned, shot, desintegrated - i don't care. Otherwise Russia will sooner or later continue to dissolve.