Zelenskyy Signs Law Controversial Law to Regulate Media
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Thursday signed a
controversial law expanding his government's authority to regulate media
and journalists, The New York Times reported.
"Censorship of the media is not new in Ukraine," Thierry Mariani, a French member of the European Parliament, told Sputnik.
"The best way to apply the regime's nationalistic policies is to
control the press, just like in the good old days of the Soviet Union.
Mr. Zelenskyy knows it and is deepening censorship, with some opposition
in the Rada [the Ukrainian parliament] though."
Under the new law, which spans 279 pages,
the president and the Ukrainian members of Parliament will appoint
members to a National Television and Radio Broadcasting Council. Under
the council members will be granted broad authority over Ukrainian
journalists and media organizations. Among such powers offered to the
council, according to the Kyiv Independent, would also include the ability to shut down news sites.
Last month, the National Union of Journalists of Ukraine delivered a statement explaining the bill posed a "threat" to press freedom.
Such powers are clearly excessive," the organization wrote. "No one
has yet managed to tame freedom of speech in Ukraine. It won't work this
time either."
In the past, Zelenskyy's administration was accused of suppressing
press freedom. In his first year in office, 2019, Zelenskyy ordered the
drafting of a new law to increase media regulation.
"Zelenskyy is every day on television to deliver his truth, and his
propaganda is passed on as truth by all the subsidized Western media: no
conditional to the figures and announcements of Zelenskyy," Mariani
said. "It is the new Gospel. Like Jesus, Zelenskyy transforms water in
wine. It is open bar for him and his government in the West. Very few
are the journalists who dare contradict the oracle."