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Tuesday, 22 January, 2002, 12:24 GMT
Putin blamed for TV shutdown
TV-6 staff describe the action against them as a coup
The head of Russia's last national independent television station has angrily blamed President Vladimir Putin for its forced closure.
The authorities pulled the plug on TV6 at midnight on Monday, abruptly ending its transmissions.
It looks like some kind of a television coup - the
authorities today showed that their single goal is to gag us
TV-6 director Yevgeny Kiselyov
TV-6 viewers in Moscow on Tuesday found themselves watching sports programmes instead, while in St Petersburg the ballet Swan Lake was reportedly broadcast.
The Kremlin has insisted that the long-running row between the Russian authorities and TV-6 is based on its failure to make money.
But the closure has sparked fresh claims that the real issue is freedom of speech.
The BBC's Jacky Rowland in Moscow says the controversy is threatening to tarnish the image President Vladimir Putin has created for himself by supporting the US-led war on terrorism.
TV-6 has been a persistent critic of government policy, especially over the war in Chechnya.
"I have no doubt (the closure) was the president's decision," said TV-6 director Yeveny Kiselyov.
"Russia is heading towards an authoritarian and totalitarian regime."
TV-6's power supplies, telephone lines and internet connections have all been cut off, the station says.
If... TV-6 no longer exists in its present form, we will only be able to speak about free speech in this country in quotation marks
Liberal politician Boris Nemtsov
TV-6 anchorman Andrei Norkin, on his way to a meeting of angry station staff, told reporters: "Our government officials are very consistent. They did
everything they could (to shut down the station)."
The closure of TV-6 comes only months after the forced shutdown of national news channel NTV, which was also noted for its willingness to criticise the government.
Most of NTV's staff had gone on to work for TV-6.
Russia's Press Minister, Mikhail Lesin, said it remained possible that TV-6 staff could win back their own licence if the firm could "organise itself and solve its problems".
Moves against the station came to a head earlier this month, when a court ruled that TV-6 should close because it was losing money.
But Mr Kiselyov has said the government had previously offered to do a deal with the station, under which its journalists could stay on air as long as they broke with TV-6's owner, Boris Berezovsky - a sharp critic of the government.
The journalists initially agreed to the deal, then backed out.
The case against TV-6 was brought by a subsidiary of the oil company, Lukoil, a minor shareholder closely linked to the government.
The head of Russia's leading liberal party, Boris Nemtsov of the Union of Right Forces warned that "if in April TV-6 no longer exists in its present form, we will only be able to speak about free speech in this country in quotation marks."
Related to this story:
Viewpoint: Russian deja-vu
(22 Jan 02 | Europe)
Independent Russian TV shut down
(11 Jan 02 | Europe)
Russian media fights court closure
(28 Nov 01 | Europe)
Russian tycoon flees to Israel
(25 Apr 01 | Europe)
New blow against Gusinsky media
(16 Apr 01 | Europe)
Analysis: The battle for NTV
(14 Apr 01 | Europe)
Russian NTV viewers on the streets
(08 Apr 01 | Europe)
Analysis: Is the Kremlin against free speech?
(14 Jun 00 | Europe)
Eastern Europe's media revolution
(09 Apr 01 | TV and Radio)
Russian media freedom 'under threat'
(11 Jan 02 | Europe)
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