Media freedom in Armenia explained

Censorship in Armenia is generally non-existent, except in some limited incidents.

Armenia has recorded unprecedented progress in the 2022 World Press Freedom Index, improving positions by 11 points and ranking 51st on the list.[1] Publication also confirms absence of cases of killed journalists, citizen journalists or media assistants.[2] [3]

History

1990s and before

The process of democratization of the Soviet Union started with the policy of Glasnost, meaning openness or freedom of speech.[4]

1995 ConstitutionIn 1995, a constitutional referendum approved changes to the old Soviet-era Constitution.

In the 1995 Constitution, article 24 was dedicated to freedom of expression:

Still, articles 44 and 45 ruled the possibility of temporary suspensions of media freedom to protect "state and public security, public order, public health and morality, and the rights, freedoms, honor, and reputation of others." There was no explicit ban of censorship.

2000s

Freedom of information legislation was passed in 2003, and was implemented in 2015.[5]

2002

In 2002, A1+ television channel was shut down by the government. After that, 17 media outlets declared that freedom of expression was not in danger in the country. This was a start of an editorial policy of self-censorship,[6] particularly in television and radio. This means that direct censorship is less common because it is not needed.[7]

2005 Constitution

In 2005, a constitutional referendum approved a series of changes to the Constitution. Chapter 2 of the new Constitution of Armenia is dedicated to "Fundamental Human and Civil Rights and Freedoms". Article 27 is dedicated to freedom of expression and of the press:

Since 2010, there are no criminal penalties for defamation, but it is still a civil wrong. Politicians, businessman, etc. often ask for huge monetary damage. Treatment of journalists in courts is not always fair, even if the Constitutional Court in 2011 ruled that media outlets cannot be held liable for “critical assessment of facts” and “evaluation judgments”.

Since 2010

2015

While there was a reduction of violence against journalists there was a serious episode in June 2015. During the Electric Yerevan mass protests, police used a water cannon against demonstrators and journalists. At least 14 media operators were injured, and equipment was damaged.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Armenia | RSF. rsf.org.
  2. Web site: Armenia improves positions in World Press Freedom Index by 19 points: Pashinyan confident in continuation of progress. armenpress.am. en. 2019-04-18.
  3. Web site: Armenia : A revolution live-streamed Reporters without borders. RSF. en. 2019-04-18.
  4. Alexeyeva, Lyumila and Paul Goldberg The Thaw Generation: Coming of Age in the Post-Stalin Era Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1990.
  5. Web site: Armenia - Country report - Freedom of the Press - 2016. Freedom House. 15 April 2017.
  6. News: Armenia: Climate of Self-Censorship. Vardanian. Gegham. 8 December 2006. 15 April 2017. IWPR.
  7. News: The Armenian media: less free than it seems?. d'Urso. Joseph. 29 September 2016. 15 April 2017. commonspace.eu by. 15 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170415200940/http://commonspace.eu/index.php?m=23&news_id=3923. dead.
  8. 2016. Media Sustainability Index - Armenia. IREX. 2017-04-15.