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Monthly Bulletin, July 2019
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Media NGOs expressed their concern about the decision of the new acting Mayor, Adrian Talmaci, to prohibit the media’s presence at the working meetings of the Chisinau Mayor’s Office. The Office’s spokesperson announced that journalists wouldn’t have access to the working meetings and that they would be informed about the discussions via press releases or requests for information. Media NGOs qualified such decisions as abusive, given that the working meetings feature topics of public interest that concern the capital city’s inhabitants directly. Eight organizations, including the Independent Journalism Center (IJC), the Association of Independent Press and the Association of Electronic Press, urged the Municipal Council of the Chisinau Mayor’s Office and the Congress of Local Authorities to take action to immediately and unconditionally resolve the issue. On Thursday, July 24, following a protest organized by civil society in front of Chisinau City Hall, the interim mayor declared that the meetings of the Mayor’s Office would be open to media and invited journalists to the next meeting.
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The new Minister of the Internal Affairs, Andrei Nastase, asked his subordinates to restrict the access of journalist Vadim Ungureanu to the press conferences of the General Police Inspectorate (GPI), on the grounds that the journalist was currently the subject of a criminal investigation. The statement was made during a press briefing held at GPI headquarters on Sunday, July 14, when several journalists, including Vadim Ungureanu, asked the Minister questions that he refused to answer. In a declaration published on Monday, July 15, four media NGOs – the IJC, the Association of Electronic Press, the Association of Independent TV Journalists and the Access-Info Center – criticized this request, noting that according to law, an individual charged with committing a crime shall be presumed innocent until his/her guilt is confirmed by a final conviction. The declaration signatories asked the Minister to ensure equal and free access to all media representatives to the events organized by MIA.
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According to RISE Moldova, a number of properties registered to Finpar Invest, a company affiliated with the Head of the Democratic Party, Vladimir Plahotniuc, were covered up by investigators in a criminal case initiated for money laundering. These properties include Finpar’s studios where Prime TV, Publika TV, Canal 2 and Canal 3 television broadcasters and Publika FM and MUZ FM radio stations are located. Investigations on this case are underway by the National Anti-Corruption Center (NAC) and the Agency for the Recovery of Criminal Assets (ARCA). Prime TV and Publika TV officially belong to Vlad Plahotniuc, while Canal 2 and Canal 3 are owned by his political advisor Oleg Cristal. Cristal refused to comment on the case, saying that it “involves the buildings owned by the Finpar company, and the TV companies are just renting these studios.” Cristal added that the TV channels are continuing to operate normally.
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During hearings on July 3, the Parliamentary Committee for Mass-Media rejected the 2018 Broadcasting Council (BC) Activity Report. MPs objected to the way the BC monitored the election campaigns, selected the TV audience measurement company, failed to digitalize the broadcasting space, etc. MP Maria Ciobanu (of the ACUM Bloc) drew the attention of BC members to the fact that the public broadcaster Moldova 1 was characterized by a “fierce censure,” and that the opposition was not covered enough in public broadcasting. Her colleague, ACUM Bloc MP Octavian Ticu, stated that the BC acted as a “truncheon for the opposition” during the reporting period, highlighting the BC’s decisions to sanction Jurnal TV and delay licensing the TV8 channel, as well as its failure to react to fake and manipulative news. For these reasons Ticu requested the dismissal of all BC members.
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At a July 10 hearing, the Parliamentary Committee for Mass-media judged the activity of the Teleradio-Moldova Public Company Supervisory Board (SB) to be ineffective. MPs called for the dismissal of Teleradio-Moldova Chair, Olga Bordeianu, Moldova 1 Director, Ecaterina Stratan, and SB Chair, Nicolae Spataru. Committee members stated that Olga Bordeianu and Ecaterina Stratan ineffectively managed public money and turned the public station into a party-affiliated channel. Chair of the Supervisory Board, Nicolae Spataru, was accused of failing to react promptly to these violations. The MPs were also unhappy with the way Moldova 1 covered the political events of June 8-9 in Moldova. Following the hearings of the Parliamentary Commission, the management of Teleradio-Moldova published a public statement saying that Moldova 1 has become the “target of a denigration campaign” and that the governing parties want to establish “political control” over this broadcaster.
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