Friday, April 19

Will Ofcom’s decision to ban RT stop Kremlin message reaching UK audiences? | RT


On Thursday afternoon the remaining staff of RT’s British operation – including the former Scottish prime minister, Alec Salmond – headed to the 16th floor of Westminster’s Millbank Tower and cleared their desks for the final time. After almost a decade on air the British arm of the outlet was in the process of closing down its operations, ahead of the expected loss of its broadcasting licence.

If you’ve heard about Ofcom’s decision to permanently ban the Kremlin-backed television channel RT from UK airwaves, then it’s probably because you have read coverage of the decision rather than because you were a viewer. RT’s most recent audience figures showed it was a statistical afterthought, reaching just 79,000 viewers a day – with most watching for around a minute as they flicked through channels.

Yet the fate of this channel parroting the Kremlin’s line on world affairs – describing the invasion of Ukraine as a “special military operation” – has become a symbolic focus of British political debate about Russian media influence in Britain.

RT’s loss of a broadcasting license now poses two big questions: will the lack of a television channel make much difference to the Kremlin’s ability to push its message to British audiences? And will Moscow use the decision as justification to further restrict the BBC’s activities in Russia?

Ofcom’s decision to rapidly revoke RT’s license was highly unusual, with similar decisions usually taking years of legal wrangling rather than three weeks of correspondence. Even as Russian tanks rolled over the border into Ukraine, Ofcom emphasized that it was perfectly possible for a television station to present a skewed viewpoint, so long as other views were represented. Although RT had received a substantial fine for rule breaches following the 2018 Salisbury novichok poisoning, it has since had a clean record.

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Yet, amid intense political pressure and similar EU-wide bans, events moved fast. As early as 8 March, Ofcom informed RT that the channel’s bosses were no longer considered “fit and proper” to hold a license.

After years of being content that the station’s editorial line was not directly controlled by the Kremlin, within days Ofcom had concluded that the “exceptional” circumstances of the war in Ukraine – and the introduction of a law in Russia criminalizing certain coverage of the invasion – made it impossible for RT to meet the required standards to hold a British broadcasting licence.

“No other Ofcom broadcast licensee is financially dependent on a state whose head of state, President Putin, has been personally sanctioned by the UK for launching a war of aggression against a neighboring state,” said Ofcom.

Yet the decision only affects RT’s regulated television broadcasts in the UK, which were less popular than the broadcaster’s booming unregulated online output. Instead, in the long run the more important restriction on Russia’s propaganda machine may be the decision of major US tech platforms such as Facebook and YouTube to ban access to RT’s content in Britain. The real significance of Ofcom’s ruling may be in publicly delegitimizing RT and associated Russian media outlets in the minds of the British public.

The BBC is also waiting to see whether it will face further pushback as a result of Ofcom’s decision. It has already stopped producing its Russian-language content in Russia, although its English-language correspondents have resumed broadcasting.

Although the Kremlin has spent more than a decade investing in western media outlets, its top-down approach to broadcasting has been outflanked in the current conflict by canny Ukrainian use of social media aimed at English-speaking audiences.

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While President Putin appears at giant television-friendly rallies, his rival, President Zelenskiy, is more adept at producing short, emotional clips that go viral on Twitter.


www.theguardian.com

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