CPJ concerned about draft legislation

Dear Senator Abdykarimov:

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), an independent, nonpartisan organization dedicated to defending press freedom worldwide, is very concerned about deteriorating press freedom conditions in Kazakhstan and government efforts to strengthen legal restrictions over the independent media ahead of parliamentary elections due later this year.

In light of your deep concern for democratic reforms and your position as chairman of the Senate, we would like to call your attention to the draft media bill, entitled “On Mass Media in the Republic of Kazakhstan,” which was passed by Parliament’s lower house on December 25 and is currently awaiting approval by your chamber. While senior officials such as Information Minister Sautbek Abdrakhmanov claim the draft media bill will protect journalists from state interference and censorship, the current draft contains vague language that weakens legal protection of the media and expands the ability of government officials to influence and censor independent journalists.

Throughout the process of preparing the draft media bill, Kazakh government officials and parliamentary deputies have consistently rejected substantive changes proposed by international and nongovernmental organizations. During the fall, local nongovernmental organizations such as the Almaty-based press freedom group Adil Soz and the Almaty office of the U.S.-based media training organization Internews participated in a parliamentary working group preparing the draft legislation. These two organizations withdrew from the working group in early December after parliamentary deputies from pro-government parties–who dominated the group–rejected their principle recommendations.

In December, President Nursultan Nazarbayev refused efforts by the Organization for Cooperation and Security in Europe (OSCE), a Vienna-based international organization that monitors human rights in former Soviet republics, to have the draft media bill conform to international human rights standards.

“We are asking [international organizations] … not to interfere in our internal affairs,” Nazarbayev said on December 23, according to Eurasianet.org, a New York-based news Web site. “Nor do we want them to tell us which laws to adopt and which to reject.”
We are particularly concerned about the following articles in the draft media bill that media lawyers believe will be used to punish journalists and media outlets:

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