Russia Accuses France 24 of Breaking Media Law in Tit-for-Tat Move

Russian state-owned television station RT logo is seen at the window of the company's office in Moscow, Russia on Oct. 27, 2017. Photo: Pavel Golovkin, AP

Russia’s state media regulator Roskomnadzor on Friday accused television channel France 24 of violating Russian media laws, after Paris issued a warning to the French arm of Moscow’s broadcaster RT.

“As part of its control and supervision activity in the media, Roskomnadzor identified a violation of media law 19.1 by France 24 in Russia,” the watchdog said in a statement.

The law in question bans foreigners from holding more than a 20 percent stake in Russian media outlets, forcing them to be controlled by Russian legal entities.

France 24 broadcasts in English on Russian satellite packages.

“It was established that the editorial activity of the channel is under the control of a foreign legal entity, which is a violation of the 19.1 media law,” Roskomnadzor said.

The watchdog said it had sent a letter to the channel as a “reminder about the inadmissibility of violating laws of the Russian Federation.”

The letter, it added, informed the channel that a media organisation could be shut down if laws are violated.

Earlier France’s broadcasting regulator issued a warning to the French arm of Russian channel RT over a news report which dubbed over the voices of Syrian civilians with words they had not said.

France’s Audiovisual Council (CSA) accused the state-backed channel, which has already drawn the ire of President Emmanuel Macron, of “failures of honesty, rigour of information and diversity of points of view”.

Xenia Fedorova, the president of the channel, however, admitted only to a “purely technical error, which has been corrected”.

“We maintain that RT France covers all topics, including the conflict in Syria in the most balanced way, giving a voice to all parties,” she said in a statement.

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