publish time

17/03/2024

author name Arab Times

publish time

17/03/2024

People gather to take part in a protest against the government, in Bratislava on March 15. (AP)

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia, March 17, (AP): Thousands Slovaks rallied in the capital on Friday to condemn a plan by the new government of populist Prime Minister Robert Fico to overhaul the country’s public broadcasting during a wave of anti-government protests.
The protesters in Freedom Square at downtown Bratislava joined President Zuzana Caputova, local journalists, the opposition, international media organizations, the European Commission and others who warned that the changes would result in the government’s full control of the Slovak public television and radio.
Zora Jaurova, a lawmaker for the major opposition Progressive Slovakia party that co-organized the protest said the changes would turn the broadcaster into "a trumpet for government propaganda.”
"We must not allow that to happen,” she told the crowd.
According to the plan drafted by Culture Minister Martina Simkovicova, the current public radio and television known as RTVS would be replaced by a new organization. A new seven-member council with members nominated by the government and parliament would select its director, although the current one has a parliamentary mandate until 2027. The council would have a right to dismiss the director without giving any reason.
"This appears to be a thinly veiled attempt to turn the Slovak public service broadcaster into state-controlled media,” Noel Curran, European Broadcasting Union (EBU) director general said in a statement. "That would be a dangerous step backwards for democracy and for freedom of expression."
RTVS is a member of EBU, which is an alliance of public broadcasters.
The attack on RTVS is part of Fico’s major attack on all free media, a statement signed by hundreds of Slovak journalists said.
Šimkovičová said the changes are needed because the current broadcaster is biased and gives space only to mainstream views and censor the others.
About a thousand journalists and others working for the broadcaster denied that was true.
Simkovicova represents the ultra-nationalist Slovak National Party, a member of the coalition government that is a major pro-Russian force in Slovakia. She has worked for an internet television known for spreading disinformation.