RFE/RL condemns latest Kremlin threats as ‘Political Censorship’

RFE/RL condemns latest Kremlin threats as ‘Political Censorship’

RFE/RL condemns latest Kremlin threats as ‘Political Censorship’

Press release by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL): Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) strongly condemns a sharp escalation of intimidation tactics by Russian authorities, which saw state media-monitoring agency Roskomnadzor overnight threaten to block eight RFE/RL websites serving audiences in Russia, Ukraine, and Central Asia unless they pulled down articles tied to corruption investigations by jailed opposition leader Aleksei Navalny’s team.

RFE/RL will not comply with these demands. Said President and CEO Jamie Fly, “RFE/RL will not allow the Kremlin to dictate our editorial decisions. This is a blatant act of political censorship by a government apparently threatened by journalists who are merely reporting the truth.”

Roskomnadzor sent more than 60 e-mail notifications giving RFE/RL 24 hours to remove content related to Navalny investigations from its two largest websites for Russian audiences – Radio Liberty and Current Time – as well as RFE/RL’s Russian-language sites for Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan, and local sites for Russia’s Siberian, Volga-Ural, and Northwestern regions.

More than a dozen Russian publications, including the newspaper Novaya gazeta, as well as Dozhd television channel and Ekho Moskvy radio station, have received similar notices in recent days. Several decided to comply with the demands and removed the content. The move is the latest in a series of attacks against RFE/RL and other independent media and comes as RFE/RL has been extensively covering the unprecedented Russian military buildup for its audiences in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, rebutting Kremlin disinformation and exposing malign Russian activities.

In the past year, Roskomnadzor has issued 1,040 violations against RFE/RL that will result in fines of more than $13.4 million for its refusal to submit to the unjust and invasive content labeling provisions of Russia’s “foreign agent” law. RFE/RL continues to fight these fines in Russian court and has also filed suit with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) over the law. In addition, 18 RFE/RL journalists have been designated as individual “foreign agents.”

On January 26, RFE/RL’s Russian Service was fined 3 million rubles ($39,000) for the alleged “public distribution of knowingly false information about the activities of the U.S.S.R. during World War II.” In fact, the existence of the published material is backed by documents from Russian archives – and RFE/RL is being held liable for actions that are not punishable under Russian law. RFE/RL is appealing the fine, not least to help defend Russia’s shrinking space for press freedom.

In a sign that the crackdown on press freedom may yet intensify, President Putin in late January issued an order calling for the creation of a new “register of toxic content.”

[Press release by RFE/RL]

RFE/RL experts available for interview on Ukraine/Russia crisis

RFE/RL experts available for interview on Ukraine/Russia crisis

RFE/RL experts available for interview on Ukraine/Russia crisis

As Russian military forces and equipment continue to flood into Russian and Belarusian territories adjacent to those countries’ borders with Ukraine, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s (RFE/RL) Ukrainian, Russian and Belarus services and Current Time digital network are reporting the facts on the ground on either side of the Ukrainian frontier. RFE/RL has gathered the best of its company-wide coverage of the crisis in this English-language portal and Live Briefing: Ukraine in the Crosshairs.

RFE/RL experts are available for interview on TV, over the phone, or via email:

Ukrainian Service

  • Sashko Shevchenko, Correspondent, Radio Svoboda (Kyiv)
    English, Ukrainian, Russian
    Shevchenkoo-fl@rferl.org | mobile: +380.678.827.039 | Twitter: @radiosvoboda
  • Rostyslav Khotin, Senior Editor (Prague)
    English, Ukrainian, Russian
    khotinr@rferl.org | phone: +420.221.122.281 | mobile: +420.777.474.042
  • Maryana Drach, Director (Prague | Kyiv)
    English, Ukrainian, Russian
    drachm@rferl.org | phone: +420.221.122.296 | mobile: +420.602.612.714 | Twitter: @MaryanaDrach1

Russian Service

Belarus Service

  • Aliaksandra Dynko, Senior Editor (Kyiv)
    English, Belarusian, Russian
    dynkoa@rferl.org  | mobile: +380.956.925.085

Central News

  • Mike Eckel, Senior Correspondent (Kyiv)

English, Russian

eckelm@rferl.org | phone: +420.221.123.624 | Twitter: @Mike_Eckel
READ: How Long Could Ukraine Hold Out Against A New Russian Invasion?

—–

Find RFE/RL Experts at https://pressroom.rferl.org/experts

To schedule an interview with any of RFE/RL’s experts, contact Martins Zvaners in Washington (zvanersm@rferl.org; +1.202.457.6948) or Karin Maree in Prague (mareek@rferl.org; +420.221.122.074).

Follow the latest developments on RFERL.org.

RFE/RL journalists targeted as Kazakhstan protests spiral

RFE/RL journalists targeted as Kazakhstan protests spiral

RFE/RL journalists targeted as Kazakhstan protests spiral

RFE/RL President Jamie Fly criticized the targeting of Kazakh journalists covering fuel price protests that have spiraled beyond the government’s control.

Said Fly, “Reports of gunfire and other violence directed at those reporting on these protests, are deeply concerning—as are attempts to limit the flow of information within and out of the country, by targeting the internet and social media and blocking media websites, including that of our Kazakh Service. At such an unstable time, journalists must be allowed to report the facts as they unfold.”

Today, while covering protests in the central square of Almaty, individuals in a security forces vehicle opened fire indiscriminately at protesters and journalists who were wearing their legally-mandated “Press” vests—including those reporting for RFE/RL. Yesterday, two RFE/RL journalists were detained by police while reporting on the protests in Almaty and Nur-Sultan—Darkhan Umirbekov, an editor in Nur-Sultan who was detained and held for 4.5 hours for questioning, and acting Almaty bureau chief Kasym Amanzhol, who was held for 2 hours of questioning after being picked up as he filmed protests earlier in the day.

RFE/RL journalists have been providing on-the-ground coverage of the recent wave of nationwide protests sparked by a sharp, unexpected doubling of retail prices for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) used in vehicles, which amplified worries among Kazakhs of knock-on effects to the prices of other daily commodities such as food. The protests, which started in Kazakhstan’s long-restive western Mangystau region, quickly expanded to urban centers throughout the country, including the capital, Nur-Sultan and commercial hub of Almaty, where protesters stormed city hall, set fire to a presidential residence, and seized control of the airport. A nationwide state of emergency has been declared.

Access to the website of RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service was blocked within Kazakhstan today, along with those of several other independent media outlets including Orda.kz and KazTAG. Mobile Internet communications were down for much of the day; access remains blocked to popular social media platforms including WhatsApp, Telegram, and Skype.

RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service, known locally as Radio Azattyq, reports accurate news and informed analysis in both the Kazakh and Russian languages that state-controlled media is often unable or unwilling to provide, while serving as a platform for the free exchange of ideas. In FY 2021, the service’s azattyq.org website logged 50 million visits and 69.7 million page views. More than 1.23 million people subscribe to its YouTube feed, and 612,000 follow its Instagram page.

Current Time is a 24/7 Russian-language digital and TV network led by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA. In addition to reporting uncensored news, it is the largest provider of independent, Russian-language films to its audiences. Despite rising pressure on Current Time from the Russian government, which has designated the network a media “foreign agent,” Current Time videos were viewed over 1.3 billion times on YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram/IGTV in FY2021.

About RFE/RL
RFE/RL relies on its networks of local reporters to provide accurate news and information to more than 37 million people every week in 27 languages and 23 countries where media freedom is restricted, or where a professional press has not fully developed. Its videos were viewed 7 billion times on Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram/IGTV in FY2021. RFE/RL is an editorially independent media company funded by a grant from the U.S. Congress through the U.S. Agency for Global Media.

[Source: RFE/RL press release]

NHK WORLD January programme highlights

NHK WORLD January programme highlights

NHK WORLD January programme highlights

Viewers around the world now can see one of Japan’s most popular TV dramas. NHK Drama Showcase debuts on NHK WORLD-JAPAN with How to be Likable in a Crisis. The dark comedy involves a public relations specialist for a prestigious university. As he tries to escape a slew of crises, he confronts social contradictions and individual sorrows. Aya Watanabe, the writer behind many hit shows, wrote the screenplay. Tori Matsuzaka plays the main character. Matsuzaka won a Japan Academy Film Prize for The Blood of Wolves (2018) and The Journalist (2019). Tune in and enjoy his likability across all five episodes of the series.

This is a story of a 15-year hunt for one Japanese man named Satoshi. In 2005, an interactive treasure hunt game was launched in England, and quickly became popular across the globe. Tens of thousands of passionate players were solving 256 puzzles in search for the prized treasure of 100 thousand pounds. But one puzzle out of the 256, was never solved. The legendary “Billion to One” card. The goal was to find a man named Satoshi. People from all over the world kept looking for him. On Christmas 2020, 15 years after the game started, a persistent Satoshi hunter, helped by new internet technology, found him at last. Who is Satoshi? Why did it take so long to find him in a world where everyone seems so connected? This is the bizarre story of the longest hide and seek game. 

Somewhere Street

Sundays 4:10 / 11:10 / 16:10 / 23:10

A unique walking-eye view of cities around the globe! Chat to the locals and enjoy encounters that only strolling the streets can bring.


Wild Hokkaido!

Sundays 1:45 / 7:45 / 13:45 / 19:45

Be immersed in nature’s beauty. Discover Hokkaido at its wildest and best as our presenter guides you through its amazing experiences.

[Source: NHK press release]

VOA appoints Myroslava Gongadze as first Eastern Europe Chief

VOA appoints Myroslava Gongadze as first Eastern Europe Chief

VOA appoints Myroslava Gongadze as first Eastern Europe Chief

The Voice of America has named Myroslava Gongadze as the network’s first ever Eastern Europe Chief. Gongadze moves into the new position after serving as the Chief of the VOA Ukrainian language service in Washington, D.C. She will move to Kyiv, Ukraine, in 2022. In this new role, she will lead expanded coverage of a region threatened by hybrid war and disinformation. As a Russian troop buildup intensifies along the Ukrainian border and in Russian-occupied Crimea, Gongadze will be covering for a global audience the Kremlin’s aggressive posture in Eastern Europe as well as the impact of Russia’s and China’s influence throughout the region. 

A veteran award-winning journalist and broadcaster, Gongadze joined VOA in 2004. Recognized for her reporting on the eve of Ukraine’s Orange Revolution, she also covered developments during the Euromaidan revolution and ensuing crisis period. She moderated Ukraine’s first nationally televised post-Maidan general election debates in 2014. Acknowledged by numerous media outlets for her expertise on U.S.-Ukraine relations, Gongadze appeared multiple times in Focus Magazine’s list of the 100 most influential women in Ukraine. She recently completed a yearlong Nieman Foundation for Journalism Fellowship at Harvard University where she focused on strategies for covering Russia’s information warfare.  

“I am thrilled that Myroslava will be taking on this pivotal role at such a crucial time in the country and in the region she knows – and has covered – so well for so many years,” said Acting VOA Director, Yolanda Lόpez. “This appointment of such a seasoned reporter into Ukraine’s capital city directly aligns with VOA’s audience-first approach, as we continue to move our journalists swiftly into places where they can provide firsthand coverage of critical regions and produce stories that our audience needs most,” López added.

“I am honored to build on my seventeen-year career at Voice of America in my new role as Eastern Europe Chief,” said Gongadze. “VOA already plays a crucial role in Ukraine as a trusted news source and example of impartial fact-based journalism. I am looking forward to bringing coverage of Ukraine, a key battlefield in the global fight for democracy, and the wider region to global audiences,” Gongadze remarked.

The appointment is effective immediately. 

[Source: VOA press release]