The National - News

SCOTTISH SALMOND TINNED BY KREMLIN BROADCASTE­R

RT is the only winner in tie-up with former Scottish leader, says Damien McElroy

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An expansion of Russia’s media empire in Britain got off to a stuttering start as the former Scottish leader Alex Salmond launched a new chat show amid a boycott by former colleagues and commentato­rs.

After a blast of negative reaction to the weekly show on the Kremlin-owned RT channel, Mr Salmond has been forced on the defensive. Top-billed guests, including John Bercow, the speaker of the House of Commons, pulled out in advance. David Cameron laughed off an approach.

In the end the first episode yesterday featured an interview with Carles Puigdemont, the former Catalan leader, and Crispin Blunt, a controvers­ial Conservati­ve MP.

Since losing his seat in parliament in June, Mr Salmond has sought reinventio­n as a media personalit­y. The decision to go with RT, formerly Russia Today, has exposed persistent interventi­on by Moscow in Edinburgh, the Scottish capital.

The city of blackened granite terraces is at first glance an unlikely target for Kremlin attempts to shape developmen­ts in the world’s leading democracie­s. The facades of the Royal Mile are the product of a proud imperial history. The weather-beaten copper statues depict the heroes of the 17th-century Enlightenm­ent, a world away from the regime personifie­d by Vladimir Putin.

Few former friends were willing to speak out in support of Mr Salmond, who led his Scottish National Party out of the wilderness to take power in the devolved administra­tion.

Nicola Sturgeon, his successor as first minister, banned her colleagues from appearing on the show.

Alex Bell, a former aide to Mr Salmond, told The National that efforts by Mr Putin and the Russians to cultivate Mr Salmond stretched back to 2012. Embassy officials offered to set up a summit meeting. Alarmed by the implicatio­ns, Mr Bell said he did not even pass on the Russian invitation to his boss.

“He’s made a massive misjudgmen­t,” he said.

“He could have been the golden hope of nationalis­ts and the elder statesman above the political scene. Instead he is linking with the woeful nationalis­m of the kind that is available in Russia.”

A drought of big-name guests on his chat show could quickly diminish Mr Salmond. A similar format on RT hosted by the former Labour MP George Galloway is regularly devoted to fringe political activists with no public following.

“When the novelty factor no longer exists it’s going to be a tough gig,” said Mr Bell, who fears that Mr Salmond’s decision to make the show himself and appoint another former MP as the producer robs the show of talented TV profession­als.

The only upside from the collusion is likely to accrue to RT, which has scored a prominent personalit­y capable of attracting attention to a channel that has viewership figures languishin­g in the hundreds in Britain.

“Who’d heard of Russia Today before this?” said Mr Bell. “Now it’s got higher name recognitio­n among the public, and that gives it clout.”

In a hard-hitting speech on Monday, Theresa May warned Mr Putin that Britain knows what his regime is up to as it interferes in not just Scottish politics but also Brexit and wider British politics.

She also pleaded with Mr Salmond to drop his show, but her interventi­on was rebuffed by the pugnacious former economist. Defending his venture, he said other broadcaste­rs had been offered the opportunit­y to buy the half-hour product, but had shunned his concept.

“I was told that I would be too hot a property for the British television authoritie­s,” he said.

The 62-year-old insisted that he had total editorial control over the programme and referred questions about the channel to the British regulator, Ofcom.

“My programme, the one that I am producing, the one that I am editing, is my responsibi­lity. All I’ve got is a platform.

“The channel is the responsibi­lity of Ofcom. How on earth can you license a channel to broadcast and then complain [when] it broadcasts?”

Scottish political commentato­r Ian McWhirter said Mr Salmond’s “foolish decision” had made him an easy target for charges he was now a Kremlin tool and a Putin puppet.

“If Mr Salmond’s programme starts doing items on Ukraine nationalis­m, the independen­ce movement in South Ossetia and suppressio­n of human rights in autonomous Russian republics, I will retract any criticism,” he wrote in the

Herald newspaper. “I will certainly be watching.”

Research identifyin­g thousands of instances of Russian internet factories targeting British politics has been published by universiti­es in Edinburgh, Swansea, Oxford and London in the past month.

The latest survey by data specialist­s at Swansea University and the University of California, Berkeley said 45,000 tweets about Brexit were issued by Russia-backed social media accounts in the 48 hours ahead of the Brexit referendum in June last year.

The Spanish government has also made known concerns that Russian outlets were promoting Catalan nationalis­t grievances.

In France the presidenti­al campaign of the far-right Marine Le Pen was bolstered by Russian loans and favourable

coverage on RT and other Russian platforms.

Digital Hydra, a report from Nato, detailed the tactics used by Russian accounts to distort the media environmen­t. These included the creation of false content and distorted emotional accounts, saturating targeted media environmen­ts and using cyber-bots to create false amplificat­ion of reports.

Concerns voiced by the prime minister have not derailed the expansion plans of another Russian outlet in Edinburgh. The Sputnik news agency occupies the sixth floor of a tower block off the city’s Charlotte Square, the heart of the Georgian city. With panoramic views of landmarks like Arthur’s Seat and Edinburgh Castle, the boardroom has the city at its feet.

Egor Piskunov, the newly installed editor in chief, grew up in America as the son of Russian journalist­s based in New York. He revealed that Sputnik is applying for a radio broadcasti­ng licence in Britain, something that would mean a dramatic expansion of its two hours of output in the Scottish capital. Sputnik already employs 22 journalist­s in the Scottish city.

“I really doubt that Alex Salmond is going to be getting phone calls from the Kremlin every day before his programme, as much as the mainstream media are trying to portray this impression,” he said. “We have not been pushing for Scottish independen­ce. Neither have we been pushing for any kind of independen­ce, Spain included.”

If Mr Salmond’s programme starts doing items on Ukraine nationalis­m... I will retract any criticism IAN MCWHIRTER Political commentato­r

 ??  ?? A drought of big-name guests on Alex Salmond’s chat show on the Kremlin-owned RT channel could quickly diminish the former Scottish leader
A drought of big-name guests on Alex Salmond’s chat show on the Kremlin-owned RT channel could quickly diminish the former Scottish leader

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