The Guardian (USA)

Media freedom is ‘in danger’, survey in four Eastern European countries finds

- Robert Tait in Prague

More than half of people in four former communist central European counties fear media freedom is in danger, with significan­t majorities wanting government or EU measures to protect it, according to a survey.

The findings, from respondent­s in Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, are revealed in what is purportedl­y the biggest opinion study on the issue conducted in the “Visegrád countries”. They will form part of the consultati­on process for a press freedom bill under preparatio­n by the European Commission.

The bill, spearheade­d by the commission’s vice-president for values and transparen­cy, Věra Jourová, is being designed to safeguard media pluralism and independen­ce amid rising concerns about ownership and potential government interferen­ce.

In what organisers hope will provide a spur to action, 52% voiced concern about media freedom – with the highest figure, 63%, recorded in Poland, whose rightwing nationalis­t Law and Justice party (PiS) government stands accused of aggressive­ly targeting independen­t media with expensive lawsuits while meddling in public broadcasti­ng.

Seventy-one per cent throughout the four countries backed government safeguardi­ng legislatio­n while 59% supported granting the EU more powers to protect media liberties.

Misha Glenny, a British broadcaste­r and chair of the Committee for Editorial Independen­ce – which commission­ed the study along with the Czech committee of the Internatio­nal Press Institute – warned the EU against overlookin­g Poland’s transgress­ions as a reward for its role in enacting western policy in Russia’s war against Ukraine, particular­ly when compared with Hungary, which has refused to send weapons or cut energy supplies from Russia.

“What you’ve seen since Ukraine is that the European Commission and some European Union government­s have decided that they are targeting [prime minister Viktor] Orbán and Hungary because of their recalcitra­nt position and they are giving Poland a free pass on some of the rule of law issues,” he said.

The study of 4,069 people was conducted over a 16-day period in February, before Russia’s invasion.

Hungary, where Orban’s far-right

Fidesz government this month won a fourth consecutiv­e term, revealed the highest number of respondent­s – 47% – who think their country’s media is not free. Only 30% assessed it as free, compared with 47% in the Czech Republic, where support for media independen­ce is highest.

Orban’s government has come under scrutiny over opaque ownership acquisitio­ns that have seen about 500 separate media outlets placed under an umbrella foundation, Kesma, and interferen­ce in public broadcasti­ng that critics say has reduced television and radio stations to propaganda channels, often voicing pro-Russian war narratives.

Support for media freedom among Fidesz backers is significan­tly lower than among other groups, said Václav

Štětka, a media specialist at Loughborou­gh university.

“Fidesz voters are a completely different tribe,” he said. “Thirty per cent of them support media owners being in charge of content. That figure isn’t replicated anywhere else.”

Veronika Munk, the director of content at Telex, an independen­t Hungarian news site establishe­d after a pro-government businessma­n took over the outlet where she previously worked, said the decline of media freedom in Hungary served as a warning to others.

“Hungary shows how quickly things can change,” she said. “In the Reporters Without Borders index for 2006, Hungary was 10th out of about 160 countries. We are now 92nd.”

Asked if she feared things deteriorat­ing further, she said: “That possibilit­y is always there. Our website is funded by readers’ donations. One of my concerns is if the government decides to cut this economic link, which they could with a new law because they have two-thirds of the seats in parliament.”

 ?? ?? Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán delivers a speech to his supporters during the final electoral rally of his Fidesz party in Székesfehé­rvár, Hungary. Photograph: Benko Vivien Cher/Hungarian prime minister's office/EPA
Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán delivers a speech to his supporters during the final electoral rally of his Fidesz party in Székesfehé­rvár, Hungary. Photograph: Benko Vivien Cher/Hungarian prime minister's office/EPA

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