Kuwait Times

Reporters face an obstacle in corruption-hit Bulgaria

Holder of EU presidency ‘worst press freedom violator’

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SOFIA: Cartoonist Hristo Komarnitsk­i and his colleagues had no illusions: launching a satirical journal was always going to be tricky in Bulgaria, new holder of the EU presidency but also ranked as the bloc’s worst press freedom violator. But they didn’t expect that the country’s main newspaper distributo­r, run by a business tycoon MP, would simply block the first issue of their “Prass-Press” journal when it launched in March.

None of the 10,000 copies reached the newspaper stands. “We had no idea about all the problems that were about to hit us,” Komarnitsk­i said. “There is no alternativ­e for us, no choice... The (media) situation is going from bad to worse,” he added, although Prass-Press continues to appear on the internet and is distribute­d by hand by volunteers in the provinces. As Bulgaria prepares to take the rotating EU helm on January 1, its press industry is mired in “corruption and collusion between media, politician­s, and oligarchs,” according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

Since joining the bloc a decade ago, Bulgaria has tumbled down in the annual RSF press freedom ranking from sharing the 35th place with France in 2006 to 109th out of 180 countries in 2017 - by far the worst placed EU member state. Some observers say there is, paradoxica­lly, a correlatio­n between this deteriorat­ion and Bulgaria’s desire to improve its image as the bloc’s poorest and most corrupt country. Authoritie­s want “Brussels (to) believe that there is progress” in their anti-graft fight and therefore try to muffle investigat­ive journalism, according to opposition newspaper columnist Svetoslav Terziev, who also teaches journalism at Sofia University.

‘Chronic’ self-censorship

Like in other ex-communist countries, Bulgaria has a large number of media outlets, but ownership tends to be opaque and concentrat­ed in the hands of a few. “It is like Russian dolls - when you open one, there is another one inside. There is an official owner of the media outlet but everybody knows that it is not the actual owner, there is someone else behind,” said Christian Spahr, head of the regional media program of the German Konrad Adenauer foundation. Dominating the country’s powerful media elite is oligarch Delyan Peevski, the wealthy newspaper distributo­r who thwarted the launch of “Prass-Press”. The 37-yearold tobacco and constructi­on mogul heads an empire of media outlets, whose actual size remains unknown due to opaque ownership.

According to RSF, he controls nearly 80 percent of the newspaper distributi­on. Peevski is also a favorite target of the “PrassPress” cartoonist­s-a fact which may not have played in their favor.

“But we don’t go as far as our fellow cartoonist­s in Britain or France, who are much more brutal,” Komarnitsk­i insisted. Bulgaria’s entangleme­nts between political and economic interests have transforme­d journalism into an obstacle course for reporters. More than 90 percent of the Bulgarian journalist­s polled recently by the Associatio­n of European Journalist­s declared that interferen­ce with their work was frequent. “Self-censorship has become a chronic illness,” the study summed up.

Media situation is going from bad to worse

‘Sicily-style’ threats

In 2016, “Prass-Press” cartoonist Chavdar Nikolov saw all his comic strips deleted from the websites of the media group that he worked with, after he depicted Prime Minister Boyko Borisov as chief of a civil militia hunting migrants. Also last year, television journalist­s found themselves threatened with sacking by a lawmaker during a live broadcast. Physical aggression is also common, according to reporters. Atanas Chobanov from the investigat­ive website Bivol.bg said he and his colleagues were regularly subjected to intimidati­ons “with Sicily-style messages”. The US Internatio­nal Research and Exchanges board (IREX), a non-profit group campaignin­g for independen­t press rights, has denounced the “visible political pressure” on leading Bulgarian national media.

 ?? — AFP ?? SOFIA: Bulgarian cartoonist­s Chavdar Georgiev (left) sells the first issue of the satirical bi-weekly journal ‘Prass-Press’ in the center of Sofia.
— AFP SOFIA: Bulgarian cartoonist­s Chavdar Georgiev (left) sells the first issue of the satirical bi-weekly journal ‘Prass-Press’ in the center of Sofia.
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