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OSCE OFFICE PRESENTS REPORT ON AZERBAIJAN'S PUBLIC BROADCASTER
OSCE Web site, November 20, 2006
BAKU, 20 November 2006 - An assessment report on Azerbaijan's Public Television (PTV) development needs, commissioned by the OSCE Office in Baku, was presented to the broadcaster's management today.
The report analyzes the PTV's editorial policy, programming, technical infrastructure as well as the role of the Broadcasting Council. It also contains recommendations on how to address the station's shortcomings.
"This report reaffirms the importance that OSCE places on public broadcasting as an essential tool for Azerbaijan's democratic development," said Ambassador Maurizio Pavesi, Head of the OSCE Office.
"I hope it will help the broadcaster become a professional provider of accurate and balanced information to the public, and that the recommendations will serve as a basis for a continued co-operation between our Office and PTV."
The report was prepared by three professionals working for the British Broadcasting Corporation. After interviewing PTV staff and meeting local media experts, they devised a long-term training and support programme for the station. They also analyzed the media environment in Azerbaijan in order to get a sense of the broadcaster's competitive challenges.
AZERI BROADCASTING COUNCIL CLOSES ANS TV AND ANS CM RADIO
AZERI TV WATCHDOG JUSTIFIES DECISION TO TAKE PRIVATE COMPANY OFF AIR
CLOSED AZERI BROADCASTER APPEALS TO PRESIDENT FOR HELP
OSCE OFFICE CONDEMNS CLOSURE OF PRIVATE TV BROADCASTER IN AZERBAIJAN
MOST POPULAR AZERI COMMERCIAL BROADCASTER TAKEN OFF AIR
COURT RULES TO EVICT AZERI OPPOSITION DAILY
PRESIDENT'S REACTION TO MEDIA SITUATION
REPORT FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUTHORITIES SHUT DOWN TV STATION AND EVICT TWO NEWSPAPERS AND NEWS AGENCY IN CRACKDOWN ON INDEPENDENT MEDIA
BELIEVERS ENRAGED BY ANTI-ISLAMIC PUBLICATION
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December 2006, Issue No. 44
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AZERBAIJANI ANSWER TO OIL GLUT: BATHE IN IT
International Herald Tribune, November 28, 2006
NAFTALAN, Azerbaijan: Outside this improbable spa in a remote part of the former Soviet Union, oil rigs bob on a hardscrabble plain of rocks, shrubs and rusting industrial equipment that could easily pass for a stretch of West Texas.
Inside, Ramil Mutukhov, a lanky 25- year-old, prepares to be pampered and preened, scrubbed and peeled in a bath of pure crude oil. He undresses, hangs his trousers and sweatshirt on a peg, pulls off socks and underwear and folds up a wad of brown paper towels. He will need those later.
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