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RFE/RL Begins Russian-Language Program To South Ossetia, Abkhazia

November 02, 2009
PRAGUE/TBILISI -- RFE/RL's first Russian-language news program to the Georgian regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia began today.

The new one-hour program, called "Ekho Kavkaza" (Echo of the Caucasus), airs seven days a week from 1800 to 1900 GMT and features on-the-ground reports from journalists in both regions as well as news and analysis from RFE/RL's Russian and Georgian services.

Georgian Service Director David Kakabadze, who supervises the program, says, "We're extremely eager to bring accurate news and responsible discussion of critical issues to a region where people are exposed to a lot of misinformation."

He added that the program is not just for listeners in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, but in other parts of Georgia, as well, because they "get very little accurate information about those [two] regions."

As today's first broadcast goes on the air, a Russian-language website is being launched simultaneously that features a live audio stream of the program along with videos, news, photos, and analysis.

According to Freedom House's 2008 Freedom of the Press Index, "Authorities in the separatist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia restrict media freedom despite the legal protections for it. Local and foreign journalists are frequently intimidated and detained, and there is little access to local or foreign information in these regions."

RFE/RL's Georgian Service, known locally as Radio Tavisupleba, went on air in 1953 as part of Radio Liberty's broadcasts to the Soviet Union.
     
Comments
by: bob
November 07, 2009 06:50
a nation does not need to have its own language to be a nation. by your logic australia new zealand canada french guinea brazil mexico and about a hundred other countries would not be nations because they are no the originators of the language they speak.

by: David from: Los Angeles, CA
November 06, 2009 22:04
OR it could be because RFE/RL do not have Abkhaz and Osset speaking radio jockeys to broadcast in these languages???

by: Henry from: Seattle, WA
November 05, 2009 20:51
The fact that the news program is in Russian shows a weakness of South Ossetia and Abkhazia's claim to independence. One common mark of a nation is having its own language. Yet many Abkhaz and Ossetians know the Russian language better than the Abkhaz and Ossetian languages, thus the need for this broadcast to be in Russian. I recall seeing a news story about Abkhazia. In one segment, the reporter spoke with two young people (20-something years old). They spoke about how Abkhazia deserved independence and how they had a unique language and long history. Yet they were speaking in Russian. And it wasn't because the reporter spoke Russian; the reporter spoke English. You could hear the translator translating from Russian to English for the reporter.
     
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