Armenia: Opposition Parties Cry Foul Over Television Coverage

ARMENIA: OPPOSITION PARTIES CRY FOUL OVER TELEVISION COVERAGE
Marianna Grigoryan

EurasiaNet, NY
April 27 2007

Armenian opposition parties are complaining that high prices for
television campaign ads and extensive coverage of pro-government
political parties are skewing Armenia’s parliamentary campaign.

International and local media monitoring reports appear to support
the contention that the government and parties in power are dominating
television election news coverage.

An April 8-15 survey of more than a dozen television stations
conducted by the Yerevan Press Club found that the governing Republican
Party of Armenia had the most television campaign ads and received
the most exposure from the "frequency of mentions" in television
programs. Second place was held by the pro-government Prosperous
Armenia Party and third place by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(ARF), a member of the governing coalition.

ARF leaders have threatened to go into opposition if the May 12
parliamentary election is not deemed free-and-fair.

Much of the trouble comes down to television ads. The Central Election
Commission (CEC) has stipulated that parties must have access to two
minutes of free television airtime and four minutes of paid airtime
per day. But fees for television campaign ads are estimated to have
at least tripled since the 2003 parliamentary voting. The opposition
says it does not have the resources to cover the costs

The Impeachment bloc, a group pushing for the impeachment of President
Robert Kocharian on the alleged grounds that his 2003 election was
rigged, has only purchased three minutes of political advertising on
television, stated bloc member Nikol Pashinian, editor-in-chief of the
daily Haykakan Zhamanak. "Under the law, anyone has the right to be
nominated as a candidate, to say and express what he wants. However,
to pay 80,000 drams (about $223) for one minute [of advertising]
is affordable only for those who have been thieving for years,"
Pashinian claimed.

A member of the political council of the hardline opposition
Hanrapetutiun (Republic) Party agrees. "Everyone is saving their
money to go on the air during the last few days [of the campaign],
which greatly damages the party’s campaign," said Suren Sureniants.

(The official campaign ends on May 10). As a result, he added,
the Republic Party is "trying to find other options" to get its
message out.

Veteran opposition parliamentarian Arshak Sadoyan, leader of the
National Democratic Alliance Party, suggests that the best option is
to go from house to house to try and meet with people in person.

"When I go to the regions, people are surprised and ask me whether I
am really participating in the elections," said Sadoyan, who is well
known for his fiery anti-government speeches. "Clearly, they won’t
know [me] because I don’t have the resources to pay for a campaign
ad and to appear on the TV screen, and the most powerful means of
propaganda is television."

Representatives of Armenia TV, the country’s largest private TV
station, and Kentron TV, owned by Prosperous Armenia Party leader
Gagik Tsarukian, declined to comment to EurasiaNet about their campaign
ad sales.

The timing of campaign ads also plays a role, opposition members say.

Sureniants, the Republic Party official, deemed it "illogical" that
public television has scheduled a straight hour of campaign ads at
5:15pm, given that the station’s prime time falls between 7pm and
11pm. Representatives of parties allied with the government often
appear on the station during prime-time talk shows, doubling the
impact of the parties’ publicity campaigns, Sureniants charged.

"Everything is done deliberately," commented Sureniants, terming the
practice "a news blockade" backed by the government.

In response to the accusations, Public Television Deputy Executive
Director Gnel Nalbandian told EurasiaNet that the number of parties
taking part in the campaign renders providing equal airtime for all
parties a challenge. "Of course, the broadcasts of public television
cannot equally cover the events of all parties," Nalbandian said.

"Even technically, we are unable to cover the events of the 25
political parties participating in the elections and we have found
ourselves between a rock and a hard place."

Public television is preparing a response to coverage concerns raised
in a March 29-April 17 interim election report by the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s Office of Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights (OSCE/ODIHR). The report showed that
public television devoted 43 percent of its political prime-time news
coverage to the government, with coverage in "an exclusively neutral
and positive tone." The Republican Party of Armenia received the most
airtime of parties running for parliament, with 16 percent of total
news coverage, according to the report. The Armenian Revolutionary
Federation received 4 percent of airtime, and the opposition Orinats
Yerkir (Country of Law) Party received 5 percent.

Meanwhile, studies conducted by the Caucasus Media Institute in Yerevan
show that 75 percent of public television coverage is devoted to the
three parties of Armenia’s governing coalition (Republican Party
of Armenia, Armenia Revolutionary Federation, United Labor Party)
and only 25 percent to parties that are not members of the coalition.

The OSCE/ODIHR plans to publish a third report on the election
campaign with fresh media monitoring details the week of April 30,
said OSCE/ODIHR media analyst Ivan Godarsky. The media monitoring
results will also be included in the organization’s final report,
to be released "six to eight weeks" after the election, he added.

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the independent
online weekly ArmeniaNow in Yerevan.