Media freedom watchdogs and journalists’ associations are expressing concern over a bill aimed at combating Russian disinformation.
Critics say the draft law put forward by the Culture, Youth, and Sports Ministry on January 20 foresees excessive intrusion of governmental regulation and control in the sphere of media, and could be used to harass journalists.
In a statement on January 23, the Representative on Freedom of the Media for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Harlem Desir said he understood "the need to fight against disinformation” in Ukraine at a time when the country is facing a Russia-backed insurgency in the easternmost regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.
"But this should not be done at the expense of media freedom and through state interference in the content of the media and in the organization of journalism activities in the country," Desir added.
The Nation Union of Journalists of Ukraine (NUJU) warned that the bill on "amendments to certain legal acts of Ukraine aimed to provide national information security and right to access to truthful information" would legalize state interference in the journalistic profession and restrict media workers' rights.
According to the bill, criminal punishment for spreading disinformation could range from large fines to prison sentences of up to seven years.
But NUJU head Serhiy Tomilenko said some provisions such as the issuance of press cards have "nothing to do with Russian aggression."
Journalists would be required to receive their press accreditation through a state-sponsored agency, while a media monitor would be tasked with imposing fines and blocking online media, among other sanctions, Tomilenko said.
Professional status would be conferred or denied to journalists based on adherence to the Code of Journalistic Ethics.
The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) and other media watchdogs advised the Ukrainian government to stay out of the activities of media outlets and allow them to self-regulate.
"The state should create conditions for this process [self-regulation and autonomy] by avoiding any governmental interference and not deprive journalists of their rights," said EFJ General Secretary Ricardo Gutierrez.
To combat disinformation, the government should promote "self-regulation, support for professional standards of journalism and fact-checking initiatives, independence of the media, diversity of sources to debunk false information, and the development of media literacy," Desir said.
Watchdog
Thursday 23 January 2020
The husband of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British-Iranian woman who has been detained in Iran for almost four years, says she is being used as a "chess piece" in foreign policy.
Speaking on January 23 following talks with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Richard Ratcliffe said there has been "no breakthrough" in efforts to secure his wife’s release and urged the government to be "tougher" with Tehran.
The couple's five-year-old daughter Gabriella was also at the meeting.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was arrested at Tehran airport in April 2016 after visiting relatives in Iran with her young daughter.
She was later sentenced to five years in prison for alleged spying in a case that has been condemned internationally.
Her family, employer, and the British government maintain her innocence.
Last month, Iran rejected a request that Zaghari-Ratcliffe be released after serving half of her sentence, according to state-run media.
Based on reporting by AFP and the BBC
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