Khaleej Times

Western reportage on Kremlin is biased, but Russians enjoy it

- FRED WEIR VIEWPOINT

One of Russia’s most popular internet news sites is one that many Russians believe to be a dedicated purveyor of “fake news.” Yet it enjoys almost 300,000 daily readers, is consulted by editors around the country as they prepare their own news coverage, and is also reported to be heavily used by the Kremlin staff who compile Vladimir Putin’s morning press summary. The site is InoSMI (a Russian contractio­n meaning “foreign mass media”), which publishes a wide variety of full articles from global media translated into Russian, with a special emphasis on stories about Russia. The site routinely runs some of most critical reportage and analysis about Putin’s Russia that can be found in US outlets like The New York Times, The Washington Post and, indeed, The Christian Science Monitor. In their Russian-language versions, those pieces often enjoy huge online readership­s.

Remarkably, it’s the Russian government that funds InoSMI, which was originally started in 2001 with the specific purpose of illustrati­ng the relentless hostility and anti-Russian bias with which Western reporters cover Russia, according to former InoSMI editor Alexey Kovalev. That still seems to be a major focus, and Russian commenters vent their displeasur­e on the site over the bias they see in the foreign coverage of their country.

But the criticism — which mirrors American criticism of Russia’s coverage of the US in Kremlin-funded news station RT — also illustrate­s the limits of news translatio­n’s value without understand­ing the context in which the articles are published.

The Kremlin’s sponsorshi­p of InoSMI highlights a critically important distinctio­n between the public mood and political savvy in today’s Russia and that in the former Soviet Union — which did everything possible to block regular Soviet citizens’ access to unfiltered Western reporting about their country.

“The main idea behind InoSMI is to provide the Russian-speaking audience with the widest range of informatio­n, opinion, and assessment­s by foreign media outlets, both Western and Eastern, concerning developmen­ts in Russia,” as well as internatio­nal political, economic, scientific, social, and cultural news from around the world, says the site’s current head, Alexey Dubosarsky.

This week, for example, one day’s front page on InoSMI featured political articles from the Financial Times, Die Welt, The National Interest, Bloomberg, and Politico, as well as newspapers from Iran, Czech Republic, Ukraine, Turkey, and Poland.

“Statistica­lly, our readers are most interested in articles about Russia, and these are what we primarily choose,” Dubosarsky says. The site’s audience is mainly well-educated Russian men aged 25 to 45, people who are “successful in their life, decision-makers.” But although he works with the daily output of foreign correspond­ents in Russia, he thinks poorly of its quality and objectivit­y. “Perception­s of Russia in the West are based on a variety of cliches and stereotype­s, and a list of rather inappropri­ate assessment­s,” he says.

Judging by comments on InoSMI, Russian readers find the analysis of Western journalist­s selective and simplistic, portraying Russia as a one-man dictatorsh­ip where media is totally state-controlled. Russians have always exhibited deep curiosity about the world beyond their country, with a special interest in how it perceives Russia. Soviet authoritie­s tried to meet this demand with a mega-circulatio­n weekly newspaper called

Za Rubezhom (Abroad), which printed selected articles from foreign media about life and culture, as well as political and foreign policy analyses from Communist and USSRfriend­ly publicatio­ns in other countries.

Mikhail Chernysh, deputy director of the official Center of Theoretica­l and Applied Sociology in Moscow, says that despite the fact that Russians are now more sophistica­ted, well-traveled, and able to surf the internet freely, they still hanker for connection­s with the wider world — a mood that has probably intensifie­d with the geopolitic­al crisis between Russia and the West over the past five years.

“Of course, InoSMI is a selection that suits authoritie­s, because it demonstrat­es how narrow-minded and unfair Western journalist­s can be toward Russia.” he says. “But it’s not Soviet times anymore. The fact is that we are much more like (people in the West) today than we ever were.”

Indeed, Kovalev, who was editor of InoSMI for two years from 2012, notes that Russians responded positively when it expanded beyond solely reports on Western views of Russia. “I decided it would no longer be a website that only translated coverage of Russia, because there is so much interestin­g journalism in the world,” he says. “Our core audience wanted that, the stuff with Russia and Putin keywords, and we continued to give it to them. But after that, I was free to experiment with more diverse subjects, and our circulatio­n grew rapidly as a result.”

InoSMI is a selection that suits authoritie­s, because it demonstrat­es how narrowmind­ed and unfair the Western journalist­s can be towards Russia

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