Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 11 – Ukrainian President
Petro Poroshenko told visiting Latvian Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics that
Kyiv supports the idea of creating a Europe-based Russian-language television
channel “to counter the information propaganda coming from Russia.”
In the report of their meeting
posted on the Ukrainian president’s website, it was stressed that during their
meeting, the two “devoted particular attention to the need for joint efforts to
counter the information propaganda from Russia” and that Poroshenko backs EU plans
to create “a pan-European Russian-language channel” (president.gov.ua/ru/news/32037.html).
Such
a channel, the two officials agreed, could become “a source of objective
information” especially for Russian speakers in Ukraine and other countries
bordering Russia who now rely on the anything but objective Moscow channels.
The
Latvian foreign minister himself pushed this idea in his first speech after
Latvia assumed the EU presidency on January 1. Some 15 EU countries and their
East European neighbors reportedly now support the idea (independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/eu-could-launch-european-tv-channel-to-combat-aggressive-russian-propaganda-9953129.html).
Some Western countries, including
the US, have expanded news broadcasts in Russian to the east, but Rinkevics
stressed the need for a full-service channel to provide not only news and
information but entertainment as well, arguing that the existence of such a
channel would wean Russian speakers living in other countries from the current
reliance on Moscow channels.
A major reason the leaders of
Ukraine and other former Soviet republics and East European bloc states are
interested in having such a channel is that over the past two decades, they
have focused on promoting the titular languages of their countries lest they be
seen as supporting the language of empire.
That had the unfortunate consequence
of creating in some of them two media spaces, one for the speakers of their own
national languages and one, provided by a foreign power, for the speakers of Russian.
Vladimir Putin has exploited this division, and the governments against which
he has done so are now seeking a way out.
Some are expanding Russian-language
broadcasting on their own, but many either because of a lack of political will
or the continuing opposition of nationalist groups to such steps need the cover
that international backing for such a channel would provide them. That in and of itself is sufficient reason
for the West to support this relatively inexpensive idea.
But there is another and equally
compelling reason: Just as Western broadcasting to the peoples of the Soviet
bloc did in the past, so too such new broadcasting to these countries would demonstrate
that the West has not forgotten them and also that it clearly distinguishes
between the Russians as a people and the government which rules them and
threatens others.
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