InvestorsHub Logo

727

Followers 5
Posts 587
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 07/07/2003

727

Re: Hawkeiz post# 13049

Friday, 03/16/2007 11:46:00 AM

Friday, March 16, 2007 11:46:00 AM

Post# of 22533
Hawkeiz:

World

Russia

Published: 16/03/2007 12:00 AM (UAE)
Putin tightens grip on press and Web

Reuters


Moscow: President Vladimir Putin has decreed the creation of a new super-agency to regulate media and the internet, sparking fears among Russian journalists of an attempt to extend tight publishing controls to the relatively free web.

Putin signed a decree this week merging two existing agencies into one entity that will license broadcasters, newspapers and websites and oversee their editorial content.

The move, which comes before national elections next year, unites the organisation supervising media and culture, Rosokhrankultura, with the federal body controlling telecommunications and information technology, Rossvyaznadzor.

Officials said this would improve efficiency by putting a single entity in charge of media content and technology but some of Russia's top journalists expressed concern.

Under Putin's rule, independent publishers have been mostly taken over by Kremlin-friendly businessmen. Domestic media are under heavy pressure not to criticise the government, making journalists suspicious of any new official initiative.

Raf Shakirov, who was dismissed as editor of the Izvestiya daily after critical coverage of the 2004 Beslan school siege, said Putin's decree could extend Soviet-style controls to Russia's online media, which have been relatively free to date. "This is an attempt to put everything under control, not only electronic media, but also personal data about people such as bloggers," he said.

Tired of stifling official control over mainstream television and newspapers, Russians have increasingly turned to the internet to find independent sources of information.

Russians are the second largest group represented on the big US-based blog www.livejournal.com. Their blogs often feature political debates and advertise protests by opposition leaders. But authorities have already fired a warning shot across the bows of one leading news website, www.gazeta.ru, which got an official warning last year for "extremism" after writing about cartoons satirising the Prophet Mohammad (PBUH).

Roman Bodanin, gazeta.ru's political editor, said the new super-regulator could make it easier for the government to track and pressurise independent media because the same agency would control the granting of licences and the supervision of content.
Join InvestorsHub

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.