Baltics mull joint TV channel to counter Kremlin’s line

RIGA (Latvia), Apr 19:  Europe’s Baltic states are in talks to set up their own Russian-language television channel in a bid to counter the deluge of propaganda aimed at their ethnic Russian populations by Moscow-backed media.
Numerous Russian-language media outlets already exist in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania but most emanate from Russia and toe its line on politics and history – sensitive issues in a region that endured half a century of Soviet occupation.
This month, Latvia and Lithuania each suspended the television channel Russia RTR for “inciting ethnic hatred”. Vilnius had already taken two other stations off the air.
The Ukraine conflict, the worst East-West standoff since the Cold War, is at the heart of the idea for a joint Russian channel, giving the talks a sense of urgency.
“The Russian-Ukrainian conflict has led to a situation where waiting any longer is unacceptable given the number of Russian channels being retransmitted in the Baltic states,” said Ivars Belte, head of Latvian state broadcaster LTV.
“The Russian-speaking audience needs a channel in a language it understands and which objectively reflects developments in the Baltic countries,” he told AFP.
Latvia’s prime minister and top diplomat have both held talks on the matter in recent weeks, with Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics taking to Twitter to voice his support for what he called “an effective tool to counter Russian official propaganda”.
But the idea is still at a theoretical stage, according to Audrius Siaurusevicius, head of Lithuanian national broadcaster LRT: “We’ve only had an initial discussion”.
Ethnic Russians make up only six per cent of Lithuania’s population, compared with a quarter in Estonia and Latvia, but Vilnius has led the way in denouncing Moscow’s disinformation campaigns.
Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite has described the actions of Moscow-backed channels as “open information warfare”.
She even alleged last year that Moscow was preparing a mudslinging campaign shortly before the Vilnius summit where Ukraine’s decision to step away from an EU deal plunged the country into chaos.
“Constant disinformation, provocations and hostile propaganda have become a threat to national security,” she warned late last month.
In October 2013, Lithuanian regulators suspended the Russian-language First Baltic Channel after it aired a controversial documentary blaming Lithuania for a deadly Soviet-era crackdown while it was struggling to regain independence.
More recently Vilnius imposed three-month bans on two Moscow-based Russian-language television channels: NTV Mir in March and RTR earlier this month. (AGENCIES)