TV is what matters
2005-12-22
Milo Čermák of Czech TV's canceled "Bez obalu" program wrote
in HN today that the show's demise had nothing to do with
freedom of speech. The fact that he could write this in HN, he
said, is proof that it wasn't a press-freedom issue. What Čermák
misunderstands, though, is Jiří Paroubek's Putin-like approach
to the media. The Russian authorities have solved the media
issue quite cleverly from their perspective, according to Derk
Sauer, a Dutchman active in Moscow: They've decided to control
TV, with its wide reach, and leave the newspapers alone.
Independent news on Russian TV doesn't exist, he said. The last
vestige, Olga Romanova, was sacked a few weeks ago. The
similarities between her case and "Bez obalu" are what Čermák
should look at. Little-read articles in the printed media merely
serve as an alibi for Putin and Paroubek. They can wave them
about as proof that press freedom is alive and well.
[Czech Republic Vladimir Putin Czech Television Hospodářské
noviny]
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