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INDEPENDENT MASS MEDIA OUTLETS BATTLE GOVERNMENT
EFFORTS TO STIFLE FREE PRESS
Chris Schuepp: 8/3/01
Independent media and political organizations in Kyrgyzstan
are battling the Ministry of Justice, asserting that a government
re-registration campaign, decreed on April 5, represents an
attempt to crush freedom of expression. A Bishkek city arbitration
court dealt the journalists a blow July 30 by throwing out
a lawsuit brought against the justice ministry. Legal wrangling
appears set to continue for months, paralyzing mass media
operations in Kyrgyzstan.
Kyrgyz authorities claimed they needed to conduct the re-registration
campaign in order to precisely determine the number of media
outlets in the country. Independent journalists say the re-registration
order is illegal, citing a 1992 law that requires re-registration
only when organizations change or new ones form. Civil-society
organizations throughout the country say the intent of the
order is to crack down on freedom of expression.
In late June, an Interior Ministry order appeared that prohibited
new media outlets from forming during the re-registration
period. Authorities had backdated this order to April 5, casting
a cloud over the 16 media outlets that had registered during
that period.
This group includes some media organizations that have challenged
the government’s viewpoint. Most prominently, it includes
two potentially influential newspapers, Moya Stolitsa and
Agym. Moya Stolitsa’s leader is Alexander Kim, the former
editor-in-chief of Vecherny Bishkek. Kim left "Vecherka"
back in 1999 when people closely connected with the Kyrgyz
government bought the paper. Agym is a Kyrgyz-language newspaper
and is publicly seen as the direct successor to Asaba, opposition
figure Melis Eshimkanov’s newspaper that went out of business
after lawsuits in April 2001.
Both Moya Stolitsa and Agym chose to fight the government’s
action in court, filing separate lawsuits against the Ministry
of Justice in July. The newspapers’ editors argued that the
Ministry cannot de-register their legally registered papers
by producing a shaky document that didn’t reach the public
until 2 ½ months after its alleged signing.
The first day in court for the founders of Agym was July
13, but the case was postponed. Then, on July 23, the first
court session for the Moya Stolitsa case was set, but nobody
from the Ministry of Justice showed up. The postponement of
the court case became inevitable when the Court of Arbitration's
Secretary Office failed to send the court summons to the Ministry
of Justice in time. The official reason given to the lawyer
representing Agym was: "We did not have any envelopes."
The July 30 decision by the arbitration court means the plaintiffs
must file new lawsuits with a different court, the Court of
General Jurisdiction. If nothing else, the lawsuits have extended
a period of uncertainty for mass media. The government already
has twice extended the re-registration period, first to September
1, and then to October 1. This simply means that media development
in Kyrgyzstan is virtually paralyzed for months.
Some local observers express concern that the government
wants to stifle free expression out of a desire to conduct
a referendum this fall that potentially asks voters to approve
an extension of the presidential term to seven years, as well
as the elimination of one of the two houses of the legislature.
Strict oversight of mass media by incumbent authorities could
be a crucial element in securing approval for such controversial
measures.
Media experts say Agym and especially Moya Stolitsa, which
potentially have a combined circulation approaching 500,000,
would likely vigorously oppose a government effort to extend
the presidential term or alter the composition of the legislature.
Officials have also taken action to prevent the consolidation
of opposition mass media. Recently, Moya Stolitsa published
a joint edition with another independent newspaper called
Advokat, a small infrequently published paper. The first joint
edition, however, had a circulation of 10,000 prompting an
immediate response from the Justice Ministry. Officials threatened
the owner of Advokat with legal action, and instructed the
monopolist printing-house Uchkun not to print the joint project
anymore.
While some media outlets fight the Justice Ministry, many
are in a state of confusion over what to do. The prevailing
mood appears to be one of playing it safe. "We have prepared
the relevant documents although we know that the decision
of the Ministry of Justice is illegal," said the manager
of one independent media outlet in Bishkek. "But we all
know that they do as they please and we don’t want to be the
odd ones out."
Editor’s Note: Chris Schuepp works as Country Director
for Internews Network in the Kyrgyz Republic.

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Posted April 23, 2001 © Eurasianet
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