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A BATTLE BETWEEN THE CONSERVATIVE
GOVERNMENT and left-leaning opposition over control of the boards that regulate
state-owned radio and television dominated Hungarian press freedom debate
in 2000.
After the four-year terms of the National Radio and Television Board (ORTT)
and three other broadcast boards expired in February, opposition parties
failed to exercise their legal right to name representatives to the three
boards that supervise domestic state television and radio channels and an
international network. On February 28, the ruling coalition appointed the
new boards without opposition representation.
After the Constitutional Court dismissed a legal challenge to the incomplete
boards, the government moved quickly to exploit its advantage. On March
15, the state networks failed to broadcast an annual address by opposition
leader Gabor Demszky, the mayor of Budapest. Demszky strongly criticized
Prime Minister Viktor Orban for snatching control of electronic media. The
state media blackout was striking, given that Demszky's previous annual
addresses had been broadcast for eight years in a row.
Under the 1996 Media Law, government and opposition parties must be equally
represented on state broadcasting boards. During the appointments crisis,
the small, extremely right-wing Hungarian Truth and Life Party (MIEP) had
demanded half the opposition seats on the boards. The two larger opposition
parties, the Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP) and the Alliance of Free Democrats
(SZDSZ), insisted that the nominations be split proportionally according
to their representation in Parliament. This opposition dispute allowed the
government to take over the boards.
On March 2, Citizens for Press Freedom, a local civic organization, staged
a protest rally of some 200 citizens and opposition legislators outside
the Budapest headquarters of Hungarian state television. Twelve days later,
on the eve of the anniversary of the 1848 Hungarian revolution, several
thousand people marched across the Hungarian capital to demand independent
state broadcasting boards.
Responding to his opponents on state radio on March 15, Prime Minister Orban
quoted an opinion poll indicating that only 41 percent of the respondents
thought freedom of speech was endangered. Orban blithely argued that this
substantial proportion was no cause for alarm. Nevertheless, some members
of the governing coalition worked to resolve the conflict, proposing amendments
to the Media Law that would create six-member boards with equal nominating
power for each parliamentary party. However, Parliament had approved no
amendments by year's end.
Meanwhile, the government-dominated ORTT was severely criticized for its
decisions during the year. The body revoked the license of the independent
station Tilos Radio, transferring its frequency to the newly created Foundation
for Civic Broadcasting, which is closely linked to the ruling Fidesz party.
The ORTT also granted frequencies to supporters of the far-right MIEP, but
denied a frequency to Radio C, a station of the Roma community. The ORTT
also denied a frequency application from an international consortium that
included the BBC, Deutsche Welle, and Radio France.
At the end of the year, ORTT chairwoman Judit Koermendy-Ekes proposed a
comprehensive framework to regulate the print media, the electronic media,
and the Internet, which had not previously been regulated at all, unlike
other media. The opposition criticized this proposal, as did Internet journalists
and service providers.
In a separate development, Parliament added journalists to the government's
list of people to be screened for any links to communist-era secret services.
(If found out, former collaborators must either resign their positions or
face negative publicity if they refuse to do so, but there is no additional
punishment.) While constitutional experts questioned whether journalists
working for private entities could be required to undergo background checks,
the amendment revealed the government's desire to increase its control over
independent actors in civil society. |