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Putin puts 'Soviet' bar on poll coverage
The Guardian (UK) ^ | Tuesday September 9, 2003 | Nick Paton Walsh

Posted on 09/09/2003 4:26:43 AM PDT by thackney

The Kremlin has introduced a draconian election law which threatens the media with closure if they give details of candidates' personal lives or analyse their policies. The new law aims to stem the "black PR" and slurs which marred past elections. But it has infuriated opposition MPs and journalists. Some said it represented a return to the Soviet era control of political debate.

The decree, signed by President Vladimir Putin, places a blanket ban during campaigning on forecasting results and requires candidates to be given equal coverage - a practical impossibility because there are 44 parties.

A media outlet can be shut during the electoral campaign after two warnings.

"The law substantially limits press freedoms," said Alexander Shishlov, a senior member of Yabloko, Russia's leading liberal party.

He said the law was even more draconian when the Kremlin presented it to parliament, and MPs removed some of its harsher clauses.

"Yet the law retains its repressive character," he said. "Its adoption is a very alarming sign [for Russia's future]."

The existence of the decree came to light after Mr Putin began the electoral campaign last week when he announced parliamentary elections on December 7.

The presidential election, which analysts consider a foregone conclusion for Mr Putin, is in March.

But Mr Putin seems to have fallen foul of the law himself. He appeared on national television last week endorsing Valentina Matvienko for election as governor of St Petersburg, although the law prohibits officials using their posts to promote their parties or re-election.

A court began hearing a against the appearance, but some high-ranking officials are, under the constitution, immune from prosecution.

The leader of the opposition Union of Right Forces, Boris Nemtsov, said: "We live in a country where everyone from the president to the pauper does not follow the laws. While this continues, we will have big problems."

Journalists in St Petersburg have been the first to face the new restrictions.

One newspaper left its front page blank in protest while filling its inside pages with articles about a fictional election in a faraway land - in reality the St Petersburg vote, but with candidates' names changed.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; Russia
KEYWORDS: election; mediacoverage; russia; russian; soviet
election law which threatens the media with closure if they give details of candidates' personal lives or analyse their policies.

blanket ban during campaigning on forecasting results...

For those who claim freedom of speech violations when free people complain about the media coverage. This is what life is like without the US Constitution. Read it, Learn it and Protect it.

1 posted on 09/09/2003 4:26:43 AM PDT by thackney
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To: Eaker
ping
2 posted on 09/09/2003 4:27:17 AM PDT by thackney (Life is Fragile, Handle with Prayer)
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To: thackney
For those who claim freedom of speech violations when free people complain about the media coverage. This is what life is like without the US Constitution. Read it, Learn it and Protect it.
They got the idea from McCain-Feingold . . .

3 posted on 09/09/2003 4:35:26 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (The everyday blessings of God are great--they just don't make "good copy.")
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To: thackney
Putin is an oriental despot. Some things just never change, and Russia, that Asian nation, is one of them.
4 posted on 09/09/2003 5:34:35 AM PDT by gaspar
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
And the clintons
5 posted on 09/09/2003 5:35:32 AM PDT by Vaduz
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To: thackney
The Kremlin has introduced a draconian election law which threatens the media with closure if they give details of candidates' personal lives or analyse their policies. The new law aims to stem the "black PR" and slurs which marred past elections. ===

This is exact citation. This law is to fight a "black PR".
6 posted on 09/09/2003 6:13:25 AM PDT by RusIvan
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To: Vaduz
The irony of Bill & Al's violations of campaign finance law is that most of those laws (except the use of government property for soliciting campaign donors) are unconstitutional and they were within their rights to violate them--or would have been, except that they were themselves advocates of that very sort of law.

Just as Bill advocated the Independent Counsel law, and lived to understand the unfairness of it as it applied to him (Independent Counsel laws kick in when there is "an appearance of impropriety," but of course any journalist can synthesize an "appearance" out of thin air on a whim).

7 posted on 09/09/2003 6:37:58 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (The everyday blessings of God are great--they just don't make "good copy.")
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