Newsletter
Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum

Russian TV Messages: West Is Plotting against Russia?

Brussels, 18 May 2015 - Russian viewers of television news and current affairs are being told that their country has been targeted by the United States in a ‘western plot’ to bring their country to its knees, according to a monitoring report.

These relentless messages aimed at the Russian public accuses the US of orchestrating a campaign against their country which includes fomenting the war with Ukraine, a research conducted in March by MEMO 98, a Slovak monitoring group, in cooperation with Internews Ukraine and Yerevan Press Club (YPC) of Armenia, shows. The message downplays the role of the European Union which is often presented as being pushed into sanctions against Russia by the US.

“Our monitoring revealed that the main Russian channels have been used as instruments of propaganda in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia,” said Rasťo Kužel of MEMO 98. “The channels diverted attention from important domestic issues and scared the population with the possibility of a war and the need of Russia to protect itself against an external enemy.”

Talk shows and news programs on the main television channels on which Russians rely for their information about events at home and abroad uniformly criticize the Ukrainian government and armed forces while supporting the actions of the Russian authorities.

Russians are also repeatedly told that the economic difficulties caused by sanctions and the low oil price are temporary and that ‘they can take it’ in a tone reminiscent of World War II.

Programs on World War II are a key element of the campaign to encourage Russians to support the government of President Vladimir Putin in a crisis situation which is presented as serious as the threat posed to the Soviet Union by the Nazi Germany 70 years ago.

“The national media enjoying high level of trust and popularity in the Eastern Partnership countries would serve as an effective tool against the Russian media propaganda. In this respect, the existence of truly independent public service broadcasters that would develop impartial editorial practices is essential.” said Boris Navasardian of YPC.

The report commissioned by the Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum (EaP CSF), unique regional platform representing CSOs from six post-Soviet countries, is published on the eve of the Eastern Partnership (EaP) summit that will bring together EU and EaP leaders in Riga on 21 May. EaP CSF member organizations contributed to the report.

The summit will also review possible responses to Russian propaganda which influences information space in the EaP countries. EaP CSF recommendations stress that the best response for the local media, including publicly owned stations, is to report news in a balanced way. The report also urges media regulators in the EaP countries to be more active in controlling their airwaves and use legal means to counter violations of national laws by those perpetrating information warfare.

Executive Summary of the Report

Full Text of the Russian Media Monitoring Report

Monitoring results - Russian channels 2015

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Notes to editors:

About the Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum

The Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum (EaP CSF) is a unique multi-layered regional civil society platform aimed at promoting European integration, facilitating reforms and democratic transformations in the six Eastern Partnership countries - Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. Serving as the civil society and people-to-people dimension of the Eastern Partnership, the EaP CSF strives to strengthen civil society in the region, boost pluralism in public discourse and policy making by promoting participatory democracy and fundamental freedoms. For more information, visit archive.eap-csf.eu

For further information regarding the report, please contact:

Darya Mustafayeva
EaP CSF Communications Manager

Phone: +32 28932585
Email: darya.mustafayeva@eap-csf.eu

Rasto Kuzel, Memo98

Phone: +421 905493591

Email: kuzel@memo98.sk

 

Boris Navardasyan, Yerevan Press Club

Phone: +374 91206937

Email: boris@ypc.am

 

 


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