The myth of "free press" in Russia.

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The myth of "free press" in Russia.

Post by fgalkin »

Stas Bush wrote:Another lie. Fucker, I said I disagree with Chechnya policy although it's not illegal... Liar.
And above all else, there is independent media in Russia. NTV was fucked but there is a shitload of programs and the TV6 which fuck ANYTHING Putin said...

I GOT TIRED OF LIES. Take some time, look what I say. Not just insult me like fgalkin did.
How's this for starters?

Stas, take your head out of your ass and shut the fuck up.

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Last edited by fgalkin on 2003-03-26 12:24am, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Enforcer Talen »

the ex ussr, lying to it's people? how can you say such a thing?? :shock: :shock: :shock:

:lol:
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Post by fgalkin »

About the free "TV 6" bullshit:
The station's end was abrupt, with a blank screen and then a test pattern interrupting a talk show host in mid-sentence.

Russian officials also severed the station's electrical supply, as well as connections to telephone and Internet lines.

The move comes after a Moscow court decided Jan. 11 to liquidate TV6 after a minority shareholder accused the station of failing to turn a profit.

That shareholder, the pension fund Lukoil-Garant, owns a 15 percent stake in TV6. Lukoil-Garant is controlled by Russian oil giant Lukoil, which, in turn, is minority owned by the Russian government.

TV6 has the fourth-largest share of Russia's television audience, even though its broadcasts do not reach all of the country.

Seventy-five percent of TV6's shares are owned by Boris Berezovsky, a millionaire in self-imposed exile who is of the Russian government and President Vladimir Putin.

Last week, TV6's journalists voluntarily surrendered the station's broadcast license and formed a new company without Berezovsky to fight for transmission rights themselves.

But on Monday TV6 General Manager Yevgeny Kiselyov said the managers decided they hadn't had the right to surrender the broadcast license and only did so because of Kremlin pressure to drop Berezovsky.

"We were told: This your last chance. Take it or we in the Press Ministry will take you off the air," Kiselyov told The Moscow Times. "We trembled and lost our composure."

Kiselyov and his fellow managers said only the station's stockholders could officially hand over TV6's broadcast license.

Kremlin Media Minister Mikhail Lesin told The Moscow Times the decision to close TV6 was not related to the failed negotiations with station journalists. He said Lukoil-Garant was "not happy with the peace process" and had put pressure on the court to send bailiffs to begin the liquidation process.
Freedom of the press my ass. :roll:

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
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Post by Vympel »

If it's so clear cut, then why this:

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/media/media ... 11-25.html

Why didn't Putin stamp this legislation with approval?

And here, we have conspiracy theories over the closure of a TV station which wasn't making money:

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/media/media ... _1-22.html

The media situation in Russia is not nearly so black/white as some would have us believe. I try and follow the developments out of interest- and you have two sides- the 'independent' media are just mouthpieces for the rich fatcats who Putin kicked the ass of, and those oligarchs owe hundreds of millions (see for example http://www.pbs.org/newshour/media/media ... _7-12.html) while on the other side you have everything being the all-seeing, mighty hand of Putin crushing liberty. :roll:
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Post by fgalkin »

Regarding the alleged unprofitablility of TV-6
Aminority shareholder gets no dividends and suspects that the company has been manipulating assets without his knowledge. On learning that the company turns no profit, the shareholder asks the court to declare the company bankrupt.

This is a normal scenario, but what is not normal is when the minority shareholder receives a lucrative offer to sell his 15 percent stake for $10 million, but refuses and again asks the court to declare the company bankrupt.

Even more strange is when the minority shareholder offers to buy the majority shareholder's stake and then tries to bankrupt the company. And strangest of all is the minority shareholder's stubborn insistence on bankruptcy proceedings after stating that the majority shareholder's offer is laughable because the company is on the way up and will soon rake in profits and have a higher value. But if the court bankrupts the company, it becomes virtually worthless. So where is the logic?

If this were a dispute between shareholders in a factory or a bank, you could imagine the minority shareholder had some cunning plan. But in this case, there are no clever tricks in the wings, no logic and no business interest. Only politics.

The minority shareholder, a pension fund affiliated with oil giant LUKoil, got the political order from the Kremlin to liquidate TV company TV6, owned by exiled oligarch Boris Berezovsky. TV6 took in those members of the NTV team who quit the channel after its seizure in April, not wishing to work for the new owners.

Now, LUKoil is playing the role that Gazprom played in the NTV saga – that of battering ram and liquidator. But LUKoil has the simpler job, as it doesn't have to liquidate an entire wealthy and well-organized business, it merely has to eliminate a single TV channel. It has to make the blow fatal, but at the same time make it all look legal.

The old "dispute between two companies" pretext used in the NTV conflict doesn't work quite so well in this case, however. TV6 has no debts, its new management has boosted the channel's ratings and LUKoil turned down the offer to sell its stake. But these arguments fell on deaf ears in the court, which, as in the NTV case, has to observe political expediency in its decision.

In the TV6 case, the authorities look to be even less worried about the negative political and PR consequences than they were during the NTV case. President Vladimir Putin's new foreign policy course is much to the liking of his Western partners, and the Kremlin has some grounds for thinking that its support for the anti-Taliban operation gives it a free hand to do what it thinks necessary at home.

But the TV6 case might also have a nonpolitical consequence. LUKoil and the courts have resorted to a previously unused provision in the Civil Code to get TV6 closed. In Russia today, it would be possible to close almost every company in the country on the grounds that it showed no profit and zero revenue, even though it is working.

The thing is, Russian business has worked by the unwritten practice of hiding its money from excessive taxes by not showing profits, and the state has turned a blind eye to the practice, realizing that to do otherwise would give entrepreneurs no chance of survival. But now a precedent has been set that could give the state a powerful weapon against inconvenient businesses. And not only the state – this provision, which is theoretically useful but dangerous in the current Russian context, could also become a weapon in the hands of predatory businesses and could spark a whole new asset carve-up.

Another consequence is that the TV6 case and the whole Media-Most affair shows that Russia still does not have an independent judicial system. When Alfred Kokh was head of Gazprom-Media, the company that took over NTV, he notoriously said, "I can get any decision I need." And that is precisely what he did. The state made sure the courts ruled in Kokh's favor, even when it went against the facts and common sense.

One simple example: The tax inspectors took NTV to court on the grounds of the same Article 99 of the Civil Code used against TV6 and said, of course, that the case was purely economic. But the court refused to liquidate NTV, saying that a company that paid all its taxes couldn't be considered insolvent. But in the TV6 case, this argument hasn't worked, nor has the argument that the company has become profitable in the last few months. Now, TV6 has to be liquidated within a year.

TV6's management can appeal, but it's already obvious that with the Kremlin sticking to its guns, there's no chance of victory.

"The authorities have gone for the hard-line approach," said TV6 General Director Yevgeny Kiselyov at a press conference. "The decision to liquidate TV6 was taken in the Kremlin. We will appeal, but it's not the court that will decide the issue, it's the political leadership of the country. Our chances of survival are slim, but they are there."

"We feel a certain regret at this court decision," said Media Minister Mikhail Lesin. "We had thought that the upheavals on the media market were over, but it turns out not all the lessons are over. We hope that the shareholders will reach an agreement and settle this dispute peacefully. We will act only in accordance with the law. A frequency can be put up for tender either when a company's license expires, or for some other reason. So, it's hard to predict the future now. I'd like to see the court decision and, in accordance with it, look at the options."

Lesin's comments show a certain bewilderment, as if these latest events took the man responsible for the previous operation against Media-Most by surprise. Perhaps this suggests that Lesin is also on his way out and is being kept out of important decisions, or perhaps it's just that the state media-strangling machine is now on automatic pilot.

As for Lesin's words of regret and desire to see the court decision, this is just rhetoric. Attentive observers of the political scene now know full well that any channel can be taken off the air at any moment, and that the law allows it to happen. But for it to go ahead, Lesin has to get the order from the Kremlin. On condition of anonymity, one high-placed government official said a few days ago that this order would certainly come.

Commenting on the situation with the TV channel, the official said: "They will definitely close it. Maybe they won't even wait until the appeal is examined. The law allows this, it seems. They'll close it, but not before Dec. 1, because they want to see the how ‘Za Steklom' ends and find out who wins the apartment."

(The writer is a political correspondent for Yezhenedelny Zhurnal.)
http://www.therussiajournal.com/index.htm?obj=5321

Btw, Lukoil was using the statistics from the previous fiscal year, when Tv6 was indeed losing money. However, after it took on NTV's top brass, it's ratings went up dramatically, landing it in fourth position among Russia's TV stations. "Za Steklom" (Russian "Big Brother") was a HUGE hit, comparable to the original Survivor in the US. Everyone knew this, but Lukoil decided to ignore this.

Another thing. The court ruled in Tv6's favor, but 3 days later it reversed its ruling. :roll:

A bit too weird, don't you think.

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
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Post by Edi »

Vympel, sorry, you are going to get utterly stomped in this. Everything Fgalkin says sounds just like an echo of what we have been hearing here about the happenings in Russia from our own news media. True, Putin vetoed a couple of really asinine laws in order to get some good PR, but every time there has been reporting of controversial stuff or criticism of the Kreml louder than an inaudible whimper in the Russian media, the government there has cracked down harshly on the media, not directly, but through the state-owned companies that have minority or majority shares in the medias, or by simply trumping up charges. This has been corroborated several times by independent Russian reporters and media researchers who have been interviewed by Finnish TV crews and newspaper reporters. Russia has no freedom of the press whatsoever, and this is in relation to the major news media. The situation of the non-Russian minorities and their own newspapers in the provinces is even worse.

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Post by fgalkin »

And now to back up my claims:
About TV6 losing money:
The case against TV6 was brought by LUKoil, Russia's largest oil company, which has close ties to the Kremlin. A major shareholder in TV6, LUKoil complained that the station was losing money.

But in recent months, TV6's ratings have soared to make it the second most popular station in Russia and it is back in profit.

However, the arbitration court ordered that it should be wound up regardless.

The Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky, who owns three quarters of TV6, has been in self-imposed political exile since he chose to oppose President Putin shortly after his election.

TV6's closure brings to an end a Kremlin campaign to bring independent television stations to heel. The drive was launched immediately after Mr Putin took office in May 2000.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jh ... russ12.xml
The Moscow arbitration court decided to liquidate MNVK on the claim of one of the TV company’s shareholders – non-governmental pension fund LUKOIL-Garant. The claim originated from the fact that over the period of 1998-2000 the company’s assets were below the minimal rate fixed in the legislation. The verdict was also confirmed by the authority of appeal; a period of six months was determined for a liquidating procedure at the TV company.
http://english.pravda.ru/main/2002/01/11/25322.html

A link to an article by Pozner, who explains what's going on:http://www.internews.ru/article/tv6/tv6tuning.html

as for the vetoing of the bill, there is no point in having it, siince the 3 major networks are already state-owned.

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
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Post by Vympel »

Edi wrote:Vympel, sorry, you are going to get utterly stomped in this. Everything Fgalkin says sounds just like an echo of what we have been hearing here about the happenings in Russia from our own news media
I would get stomped if I were going to take a side firmly against fgalkin, however I didn't 8)
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Post by Stuart Mackey »

Lol, Freedom of the press in Russia is a principle that goes to the highest bidder, or biggest gun. This has always been the case, its now a bit more obvious.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Stuart Mackey wrote:Lol, Freedom of the press in Russia is a principle that goes to the highest bidder, or biggest gun. This has always been the case, its now a bit more obvious.
Russia is working out very well for a country which spent most of the 20th century under a totalitarian regime. Putin's quasi-authoritarian democracy is continuing to help the country recover, at least, and as long as the electoral process isn't interferred with to the point that elections are rigged, I think things will turn out all right.
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Post by Edi »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Stuart Mackey wrote:Lol, Freedom of the press in Russia is a principle that goes to the highest bidder, or biggest gun. This has always been the case, its now a bit more obvious.
Russia is working out very well for a country which spent most of the 20th century under a totalitarian regime. Putin's quasi-authoritarian democracy is continuing to help the country recover, at least, and as long as the electoral process isn't interferred with to the point that elections are rigged, I think things will turn out all right.
Going to take a long while, decades at the least.

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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Edi wrote: Going to take a long while, decades at the least.

Edi
Oh, I doubt Russia will have fully recovered before the beginning of the 22nd century.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

fgalkin
Yeah, it's a big question how "free" Russian media is, but it's not "all propaganda" of the government's policies. Relying on some anti-government biased experts is the same crappy thing as believing that the media is totally independent.
NOTE: There are programs which are criticizing gov. policies. I really wonder if "Besplatniy Syr" is sponsored by the government. I also wonder who made the news on official channels? They are so-o pro-government, I can't help laughin'...
NOTE #2: Besides the TV, there are radio and newspapers, they are also mass-media. All of them caught by the government? Huh, don't think so.
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Post by Edi »

No, not totally under government domination, but as soon as any one of them starts to become inconvenient and ask too many awkward questions, they get shut down. This has been the pattern for the past three years, it's useless to try to deny it, Stas. There are degrees of government censorship, from total (ala North Korea, China and Iraq) to less than total (e.g. Russia), but it is censorship nonetheless, instead of having free news media.

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Post by Stuart Mackey »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Stuart Mackey wrote:Lol, Freedom of the press in Russia is a principle that goes to the highest bidder, or biggest gun. This has always been the case, its now a bit more obvious.
Russia is working out very well for a country which spent most of the 20th century under a totalitarian regime. Putin's quasi-authoritarian democracy is continuing to help the country recover, at least, and as long as the electoral process isn't interferred with to the point that elections are rigged, I think things will turn out all right.
Your right, but as Edi said, it will take decades to get it right.
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Post by Stuart Mackey »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Edi wrote: Going to take a long while, decades at the least.

Edi
Oh, I doubt Russia will have fully recovered before the beginning of the 22nd century.
Indeed. The thing is that Russia has never really had a chance to develop what we take for granted. They must change their culture and thinking to benifit themselfs. How long did it take to have what the Anglo/Saxon nations have? centurys, fortunatly, the Russians have the benifit of our mistakes.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Edi
This has been the pattern for the past three years, it's useless to try to deny it, Stas.
Sure, I don't deny that most of the media is less or more dependent on the government. So what? Does that mean no independent media exists? Brr...
to less than total (e.g. Russia)
And many other countries having same situation. So what? I don't believe completely neither Russian nor CNN and whosoever. Let's see who's more independent.
Edit: Oligarchs are not the ones to be proud of, these have stolen lots of money, yet some prefere to defend Berezovsky and other of his kind. I find that quite disappointing...
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Post by fgalkin »

The press in Russia wasn't free even before Putin's election. http://www.cpj.org/Briefings/2000/Russi ... rch00.html

Before, the media belonged to the oligarchs and the government. Now it belongs only to the government. It wasn't free either way.

Of course, there is independant media in Russia. Unfortunately, there is not too many of it.http://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedi ... ndent.html

Compare it to the lists of media owned by the government http://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedia5/federal.html and http://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedia5/city.html
Also, this was the media formerly controlled by the oligarchs, now controlled by the governmenthttp://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedia5/logovaz.html
http://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedia5/most.html

Owned by Gazprom as of 1999 http://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedia5/gazprom.html Now owns NTV.

And, of course, Lukoil http://www.rferl.org/nca/special/rumedia5/lukoil.html. You all know the TV6 story.

As you can see, the independant media in Russia is dwarfed by the media controlled by the government.

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
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Post by Ted »

Not many countries HAVE free press.

The US doesn't, Canada doesn't, the rest of the West doesn't.

In the US, the major press companies all fund the Presidential candidates, and these companies control most of the press there.

The same in Canada. There is about two or three companies who control the press in Canada, all have ties to the Government, either through funding campaigns, or previous stock holders now in government.
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Post by fgalkin »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Edi wrote: Going to take a long while, decades at the least.

Edi
Oh, I doubt Russia will have fully recovered before the beginning of the 22nd century.
I agree, considering that Russia has been autocratic at least since the time of Ivan the Great, and its only other attempt at democracy (Novgorod) quickly turned into an oligarchy. I heard estimates that only after three genearations had passed, will Russia have a chance to become a true democracy. The serf mentality is too deep in the Russians.


Have a very nice day.
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Post by Colonel Olrik »

Ted wrote:Not many countries HAVE free press.
and
The US doesn't, Canada doesn't, the rest of the West doesn't.
So, if none of the west countries have a free press, which countries do you say that have? Lybia and Iran?

The Portuguese press is free, unless you can prove to me otherwise.
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Post by fgalkin »

Ted wrote:Not many countries HAVE free press.

The US doesn't, Canada doesn't, the rest of the West doesn't.

In the US, the major press companies all fund the Presidential candidates, and these companies control most of the press there.

The same in Canada. There is about two or three companies who control the press in Canada, all have ties to the Government, either through funding campaigns, or previous stock holders now in government.
The press in the US and Canada is not being censored by the government. Media outlelts that are in opposition to the government are not being shut down or taken over. Local reporters don't get beaten, killed, or imprisoned for exposing the corrupt regimes of the local governors. There is a great difference between Russian press and American press.

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
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Post by The Dark »

Edi wrote:This has been the pattern for the past three years, it's useless to try to deny it, <snip>

Edi
Longer. At least since the middle of Gorbachev's rule. Even good ol' Gorby was involved in censorship, and Yeltsin was worse. They did the same sort of shutting down of opposition channels. I would dare say there's never been a free press in Russia for longer than six months at a time. When the Communists fell from power, the politicians who took power were so afraid of losing it that they controlled the media to enhance their campaigns.
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Post by Ted »

fgalkin wrote:
Ted wrote:Not many countries HAVE free press.

The US doesn't, Canada doesn't, the rest of the West doesn't.

In the US, the major press companies all fund the Presidential candidates, and these companies control most of the press there.

The same in Canada. There is about two or three companies who control the press in Canada, all have ties to the Government, either through funding campaigns, or previous stock holders now in government.
The press in the US and Canada is not being censored by the government. Media outlelts that are in opposition to the government are not being shut down or taken over. Local reporters don't get beaten, killed, or imprisoned for exposing the corrupt regimes of the local governors. There is a great difference between Russian press and American press.

Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Maybe not like that, but American press is influenced by the US Government, in that the owners can be and are great friends of the regime.
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Post by EmperorChrostas the Cruel »

An other Ted apple and orange debate.
Being friends with the board of directors.
Having your reporters beaten, or jailed and your TV station being closed.
Sounds the same to me. :lol:


But then again, I thought his comparing the accidental killing of a bus load of civillians by the coalition, and the deliberate killing of civillions by Saddam's soldiers via DIRECT mortar fire was right on the money. :roll:
Hmmmmmm.

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