Author says national identity threatened by German interests
Published:
11 June 2003 y., Wednesday
Media critic Borivoj Celovsky has a message for his compatriots who read the Czech press. There is no Czech press.
Celovsky, author of The End of the Czech Press, says that the country's national identity is threatened because nearly all the nation's newspapers are owned by foreign media companies.
"This is not only demeaning but also dangerous, especially when the capital comes from a powerful neighbor with whom we share the strategically important real estate called Central Europe," he said.
Celovsky's comments and book, which recently went into its second edition, are inspired by the fact that foreign capital controls more than 80 percent of the Czech national newspaper market and 100 percent at the regional level. Celovsky said that he is worried that the newspapers will side with Germany in disputes between the two countries.
The co-owner of a recently launched national newspaper has also criticized foreign ownership of newspapers.
The situation threatens readers' access to a wide variety of opinions, said Ivan Kaufmann, who started national daily newspaper Denik Impuls May 12.
Rheinisch-Bergische Druckerei- and Verlaggesellschaft, GmbH (RBVG), based in Germany, controls Mlada fronta Dnes and Lidove noviny, the country's second- and fourth-largest national newspapers.
Vltava-Labe-Press (VLP), a subsidiary of Passauer Neue Presse (PNP) in Germany, controls the entire regional newspaper market, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, a nonprofit group that tracks newspaper ownership and circulation.
Swiss-run publisher Ringier controls Blesk, the No. 1 daily in the country.
Šaltinis:
praguepost.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Society still discusses the harm of computer games while some scientists begin to speak about another side of a coin: computer and video games give something good.
more »
We are talking to Robertas Urbonas, the executive director of the Lithuanian film studio. And we get known that it was supposed to shoot such famous films as "Saving Private Ryan" and "Schindler's List" in Lithuania.
more »
High profile political personalities and prominent companies are alleged to have been connected to the oil scandals.
more »
The words were strong and the emotions were high as an international congress in Vilnius claimed that communists killed 100 million people throughout the world and appealed to the United Nations and all democratic countries to create a special tribunal fo
more »
A world microlight champion says he still hopes to be the first to make a solo round-the-world flight after being forced down by Chinese warplanes.
more »
Prostitution still remains taboo topic, causing lots of discussions about morality. Prostitution is considered as profession, crime, lifestyle or indispensable part of society. What is the truth about it?
more »
You are welcome to read articles on feminism and liberalism, delinquency of the juvenile and the family, the Mass Media and the terrorism, arguments for and against the drugs, and others.
more »
An interview with the president of the institute of free market of Lithuania
more »
Italy's presidential pardon of Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turk who tried to kill Pope John Paul II in 1981, has reminded Bulgarians of their own link to the event.
more »
Company „Visus Plenus“ during the conference “The Presentation of the New Technologies in the World of Business” presented its updated website.
more »