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MOLDOVA
Government pressure on the Moldovan media increased
in 2001 after the Communist Party won a majority in the February parliamentary
elections. The Communist candidate, Vladimir Voronin, was elected president
in April.
Soon after the presidential elections, the Chisinau-based
Independent Journalism Center reported that journalists from the opposition
publications Flux, Tara, Jurnal de Chisinau, and
Trud-Moldova were denied accreditation for President Voronin's
April 7 inauguration. The stated reason was lack of space, but the journalists
were told unofficially that access was denied because they worked for
"bourgeois" newspapers.
In mid-July, the Moldovan Parliament approved an
amendment to the Press Law banning domestic news media from receiving
foreign funding. The government claimed the amendment would reduce foreign
interference in Moldova's internal affairs, but with the country sliding
deeper into poverty, the legislation is more likely to put a financial
strain on opposition and independent publications, which are not state
subsidized.
National and local officials frequently keep public
information from reporters, especially those affiliated with independent
media outlets. The European Institute for the Media, a nonprofit research
organization, reported that Moldova's Administrative Code was amended
in 2001 to impose a fine of up to 2,700 lei (US$210) for violating the
Access to Information Law.
The Criminal Code was also amended and now punishes
deliberate failure to grant access to information of public interest with
up to three years in prison. It is unclear if these new regulations will
be enforced.
Growing tensions between the official government
in the capital, Chisinau, and authorities in the breakaway region of Trans-Dniester,
which is dominated by ethnic Russians and Ukrainians, added to the hardships
of journalists on both sides of the conflict. In early October, Moldova's
Prosecutor General asked a Chisinau district court to close the Russian-language
weekly Kommersant Moldovy for backing the Trans-Dniester separatists.
The court banned Kommersant Moldovy. However,
in mid-December, the paper resumed publication under the name Kommersant
Plus.
In later October, Chisinau police detained a television
crew from Trans-Dniester's official news agency, Olvia Press, and questioned
them about their work and their stance on Moldova's territorial integrity.
They were held for several hours and their videotapes were confiscated.
In retaliation, Trans-Dniester authorities rescinded
the accreditation of 17 Moldovan journalists and ordered them to leave
the territory by November 1. Trans-Dniester officials said they would
not reconsider their decision until they received an official apology
and the confiscated videotape. Two weeks later, Moldovan authorities apologized,
and the Trans-Dniester authorities reinstated the journalists' accreditations.
January 10
Vremya
LEGAL ACTION
Yuliya Korolkova, Vremya
LEGAL ACTION
The Prosecutor General's Office filed criminal charges against the Russian-language
newspaper Vremya and against Vremya correspondent Korolkova.
The charges were filed after the Association of Graduates of Romanian
and Western Universities (CAIRO) complained that an article in the newspaper
had insulted Moldova's national honor and instigated interethnic strife.
The story addressed the problems of Russian-speaking Moldovans, claiming
that they have limited access to positions of power and that ethnic Moldovan
officials take bribes.
According to local and international sources, Vremya's editor-in-chief
believes that the lawsuit is aimed to discredit the Russian-language press
in Moldova.
The lawsuit was still pending at year's end.
May 12
Valentina Ushakova, Argumenty i Fakty
HARASSED
Ushakova, editor of the Moldovan edition of the Russian weekly Argumenty
i Fakty, was dismissed after the paper's owner, Ion Musuc, eliminated
her position.
According to Ushakova, she was fired for refusing to publish pro-communist
political propaganda during the parliamentary election campaign.
Several journalists at the paper subsequently resigned in protest.
October 5
Kommersant Moldovy
HARASSED, LEGAL ACTION
Moldova's prosecutor general asked a Chisinau district court to shut
down the Russian-language weekly Kommersant Moldovy.
The Prosecutor General's Office accused the newspaper of publishing
material that threatened Moldova's territorial integrity. Kommersant
Moldovy, known for its sympathetic reports on Trans-Dnienster, a breakaway
republic in eastern Modova that borders Ukraine, received a similar warning
in January 2000 for its coverage of the region.
In the October 12 issue, the newspaper stated that it had not received
the Prosecutor General's official notification and continued to publish.
In the beginning of November, the Moldovan Economic Court denied the
publication's appeal to dismiss the lawsuit. On November 30, the court
found Kommersant Moldovy guilty of threatening Moldova's territorial
integrity and national security and ordered the paper to cease publication,
the Moscow-based Center for Journalism in Extreme Situations reported.
The newspaper plans to appeal the decision to a higher court. Meanwhile,
in mid-December, the paper resumed publication under the name Kommersant
Plus.
October 30
Oleg Yeltsov, Olvia Press
HARASSED
Ivan Azmanov, Olvia Press
HARASSED
Several members of a television news crew from the news agency Olvia
Press were detained by police in the Moldovan capital, Chisinau, according
to local and international sources.
Correspondent Yelkov, cameraman Azmanov, and their driver were with
the secretary of the Socialist Party of the Republic of Moldova, Valentin
Krylov, whom they intended to interview, when they were taken into custody.
Olvia Press is the official news agency of the breakaway republic of
Trans-Dniester, which is dominated by ethnic Slavs. All three crew members
were questioned about the nature of their work in the country and their
stance on Moldova's territorial integrity. The three men remained in custody
for several hours, and their footage was confiscated.
In retaliation, Trans-Dniester authorities rescinded the accreditation
of 17 Moldovan journalists, who were ordered to leave the territory by
November 1. Trans-Dniester officials said they would not reconsider their
decision until the Moldovan government issued an official apology and
returned the videotape to the Olvia Press crew. Moldova denied detaining
the journalists.
Two weeks later, however, Moldovan authorities apologized, and the Trans-Dniester
authorities reinstated the journalists' accreditation.
November 25
RTR
LEGAL ACTION, CENSORED
Authorities in the breakaway Trans-Dniester region of Moldova blocked
the broadcast of a report about the region by the Russian state television
network RTR.
The report, part of RTR's regular program "Vesti Nedeli" (News
of the Week), reported on allegedly widespread corruption, smuggling,
and arms trafficking in Trans-Dniester and implicated the son of the current
president, Igor Smirnov, in illegal activities.
The Trans-Dniester information minister, Boris Akulov, claimed the program
was interrupted for technical reasons. "Vesti Nedeli" was then
rebroadcast on the Trans-Dniester television station TV PMR with official
commentary, Moldovan sources reported.
In response to RTR's report, Trans-Dniester authorities sued RTR for
slander. The case remained in court at year's end.
In addition, RTR was banned from working in Trans-Dniester. Akulov announced
that the regional Ministry of Information would not accredit RTR journalists
until the network's management apologized for the program.
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