// Russia sinks even lower in freedom
of the press ratings
Yesterday, the eve of World Press Freedom Day, Russia
appeared in a bad light in three Western ratings
of press freedom. The American human rights organization Freedom
House gave Russia its lowest ever press freedom rating
of 164 out of 195. The U.S.
State Department placed Russia on its list of countries
where freedom of the press is deteriorating, and the New
York-based Committee to Protect Journalists to its Top 10
list of countries where freedom of speech is threatened.
All of them mentioned the total control of the media by the
authorities, political pressure on the independent press,
plans to control the Internet and, most of all, the murder
of Russian journalists.
Freedom
House released its annual report at the “21st Century
Threats to Press Freedom” conference in Washington.
Russia received a record low position in it. Countries mentioned
in the report are divided into three categories: those with
free, partially free and unfree media. Russia retains its “unfree” status
and lost six points off its score from last year. It is now
grouped among Venezuela, Azerbaijan, Togo, Kazakhstan, Swaziland
and Tajikistan.
Simultaneously, the U.S.
State Department website posted a list of seven countries
where freedom of the press is in rapid decline. Besides Russia,
Afghanistan, Egypt, Lebanon, Pakistan, the Philippines and
Venezuela.
Finally, the Committee to Protect Journalists placed Russia
in third place on its Top 10 list of press freedom “backsliders,” which
it shares with Azerbaijan, Congo, Cuba, Egypt, Ethiopia,
Gambia, Morocco, Pakistan and Thailand.
The compilers of the rating used the same criteria: the political
and economic conditions in which a country's media exists.
The authors of the Freedom House report attribute Russia's
low showing not only to political pressure on the independent
press, but attempts by authorities to depict it as marginal.
Executive director of Freedom House Jennifer Windsor called
it an attempt “to eliminate potential sources of opposition.”
Freedom House research director Christopher Walker told Kommersant that “a
critical factor in the lack of freedom in the Russian press
remains full state control over television channels… That
is a very important factor because the federal channels are
the main sources of news and information for Russians.”
The authors of the report note that Russian authorities are
close to establishing state control over the Internet. Limitations
on the Internet are well established in China, Vietnam and
Iran, the report notes, and journalists in those countries
who work on the Internet, so-called cyber-dissidents, are
tried and put in prison. The West considers the main indicator
of the degradation of press freedom crimes against Russian
journalists, the best known of which is the murder of Novaya
gazeta reporter Anna Politkovskaya. Journalists
are killed in Russia almost as often as in Iraq, the report
states, and Russian authorities do not concern themselves
very much with solving those crimes. Eleven journalists have
been killed in Russia in the last five years, and not one
of those crimes has been full investigated, according to
the Committee to Protect Journalists. The
Washington Post White House reporter and former
Moscow bureau chief Peter Baker stated that “with the
growing danger to independent journalists, it is hard not
only to do your job, to get a comment from the opposition,
for example, it is hard just to live.”
In Russia, the Western accounts have received a mixed reaction.
Chairman of the Federation
Council Committee on Foreign Affairs Mikhail Mareglov
said that “We have to react calmly to criticism – filter
out what is useful and leave the rest.” Margelov does
not believe that there has been real degradation of press
freedoms in Russia. “The Russia press is still varied,
as it has been for the last 20 years. That which used to
be considered a taste of freedom has gone on the Internet.
Television is conservative. There has always been state influence
on the press too. It simply varies between heavy-handed and
a subtle game like chess.”
Chairman of Russian Journalists' Union Igor Yakovenko sees
the state monopoly on the media growing rapidly. “Not
only is there not a single medium not under state control,” he
stated, “there are other principle changes in the system
taking place. On television 90 percent of the journalism
is propagandistic. There are either transponders and talking
heads, or open propagandists and political manipulators,
like Mikhail Leontyev and Vladimir Solovyev. Format also
dictates self-censorship in the media. If you want to stay
around, it is understood what to say about Chechnya, Putin and
Estonia. Yakovenko holds that there is a “collapse
of press freedom” underway in Russia. “Journalists
are beaten at public meetings, Internews, the most effective
civic organization for training journalists, has been destroyed,
the regional opposition publications are not printed, and the
State Duma recently decided to forbid journalists to
send professional enquiries to the authorities. And most
of all – the unpunished murders that have become profitable
in Russia. With them, you can silence a problematic topic.”
Yulia Taratuta, Tamila Dzhodzhua
All
the Article in Russian as of May 03, 2007 |