BBC News Russian
Type | Radio network and website |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Availability | International |
Owner | BBC |
Key people | Sarah Gibson (Head of Service) |
Launch date | 1946 |
Official website | bbcrussian.com |
The BBC Russian Service (Template:Lang-ru) is part of the BBC World Service's foreign language output, one of 27 languages it provides.
History
The BBC Russian Service began broadcasting on 26 March 1946.
However during World War II there were sporadic broadcasts to the USSR in Russian only. Most of these broadcasts were after 1942.
These were mainly short news bulletins or announcements relating to UK Foreign Office policy in Russian from 1943 onwards but often weeks or months apart.
In the cold war era broadcasts were severely jammed. Despite this, it tried to bring to listeners in USSR information they were deprived of, including works of writers and dissidents who could not publish their work at home, such as Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Jammíng finally stopped in the late 1980s, as perestroika took hold.
Broadcasting
The BBC Russian Service broadcast to Russia and some former Soviet countries on short and medium-wave radio.
The Russian Service had issues with AM and FM transmission in Moscow and St Petersburg in 2005-2006[citation needed]. It cleared[citation needed] formal obstacles, such as lack of licences.[citation needed] FM broadcasts were disrupted again in November 2006.[citation needed]
The BBC Russian Service partnered[citation needed] with Bol'shoe Radio (Template:Lang-ru), an FM broadcaster in Moscow between April and August 2007. Daily broadcasts alternated between the Russian Service and Radio Moscow. On 17 August 2007 Bol'shoe Radio notified the BBC World Service that it planned to stop transmission of BBC programming in Russian as of that afternoon. BBC content was not aired as usual at 1700 (Moscow time); the station was ordered by its owner, the financial group Finam, to pull the shows or risk being taken off air altogether. The BBC planned to appeal against the decision.[1] In its 2007 Foreign and Commonwealth Office Annual Report the House of Commons' Foreign Affairs Committee concluded that "the development of a partnership with the international arm of a Russian state broadcasting network puts the BBC World Service's reputation for editorial independence at risk".[2]
Masha Karp, Martin Dewhirst, Victor Suvorov, Vladimir Bukovsky,[citation needed] Oleg Gordievsky[citation needed] criticized the BBC Russian service for giving less coverage to viewpoints outside of those approved by the Russian government.[3][4]
The criticism ignored[citation needed] the fact that Alexander Litvinenko’s last interview from his hospital bed was with BBC Russian and it had featured[citation needed] a full spectrum of views about his death.
An article in The Economist suggested that the BBC's desire to continue using local transmitters in Russia may conflict with its neutrality.[5] The BBC World Service denied it[citation needed] and said the problems it faced in acquiring carriage on FM in Russia emanated from the growing impact its distinctive programmes were having with audiences rather than weakening the quality of its output. They said it was the awkward journalistic questions the BBC had asked that inspired the authorities to bring persistent pressure to bear upon its FM partners to drop its programmes until the threat of losing their licences altogether became too strong. In November 2008 the BBC World Service announced[citation needed] a far-reaching strategy rethink, seeing most of the Russian Service's standalone news bulletins end and two blocks of current affairs programming widened. The strategy envisioned closure of longer, lighter feature programmes and aggregating some of their elements such as insights on British culture into a new weekend programme.
The news drew sharp criticism from British experts on Russia who argued that the BBC World Service had weakened its editorial line under pressure from Kremlin and that it lost crucial links with British culture and political thought.[6]
The BBC World Service responded[citation needed] that the changes were necessary to solidify radio output at peak audience times coupled with lack of FM frequencies throughout its target audience and restrictions imposed by the Russian Government.
BBC World Service said[citation needed] that far from dropping analytical and cultural programming, as claimed, the BBC Russian service was strengthening the provision of journalism about politics and culture, and giving it space within high-profile programmes seven days a week at times when most listeners were available. They also argued that their limited budget would be better spent on creating a better website – which is an area of growth in news consumption and which the Russian authorities had not yet attempted to censor or block.
They also argued[citation needed] that their limited budget would be better spent on creating a better website – which the Russian authorities had not yet attempted to censor or block.
On 21 April 2009 the BBC Russian Service relaunched their website in a new wider template that corresponded with other language services such as Portuguese, Spanish, Persian, Urdu and Vietnamese.[7]
On 26 March 2011 the service stopped broadcasting on medium and shortwave, and now publishes and broadcasts on the internet only.[8]
In March 2012 the service began its first TV broadcasts with regular transmissions on TV Dozhd [9] - the service was the first to broadcast live TV from the BBC's new building in central London (New Broadcasting House)[10]. The bulletin is also available via bbcrussian.com [11].
Morning broadcasting
BBC Morning
- Russian name: Утро на Би-би-си
- Broadcast: 0630–1000 (Moscow time)
- Genre: Three and a half-hour breakfast news show
- Presented by: Anna Dementyeva, Mikhail Smirnov, Oleg Antonenko, Oleg Mikhayilov and Rafael Saarkov.
- Main studio: BBC Moscow bureau.
- Show website: Утро на Би-би-си
This program includes:
- Main news, Business, Press reviews, Phone-ins, Expert discussions, Weather forecasts
Ranniy Chas
- Russian name: Рaнний час
- Broadcast: 0500-0530 Monday – Friday (Moscow time)
- Genre: Half-hour breakfast news programme, focused on FSU
- Presented by: Mark Grigoryan, Rose Kudabayeva, Yulia Savchenko and Renata Tairbekova
- Main studio: BBC Moscow bureau.
- Show website: [1]
This program includes:
- Main global, FSU and Russian news, expert discussions and analysis
Evening broadcasting
BBC Evening
- Russian name: Вечер на Би-би-си
- Broadcast: 1700–1900 Monday – Friday(Moscow time)
- Genre: Analytical news show
- Jointly Presented by: Sasha Baranov, Jana Litvinova, Dima Poltavsky, Leonid Louneev or Ilona Vinogradova in London
and Anna Dementyeva, Konstantin Eggert, Pavel Aksyonov, Oleg Antonenko, Oleg Mikhailov, Rafael Saarkov or Mikhail Smirnov in Moscow.
- Main studio: Bush House, London and BBC Moscow bureau (double presentation).
- Show website: Вечер на Би-би-си
This program includes:
- Main global and Russian news and analysis, business, audience reaction, expert discussions
BBSeva: News with a Human Face
- Russian name: "БибиСева": Новости с человеческим лицом
- Broadcast: 1900–2000 Monday-Friday (Moscow time)
- Genre: IInformal presenter-led news programme, with a focus on human stories and audience interaction as well as music and culture.
- Presented by: Seva Novgorodsev MBE.
- Main studio: Bush House, London.
- Show website: БибиСева
This program includes: Interviews with key cultural and other news makers, audience reaction, and regular slots such as ‘Ostorozhno, Lyudi’ (Осторожно люди!)
Vam Slovo: Have Your Say
- Russian name: Вам слово
- Broadcast: 2000–2100 Monday-Friday (Moscow time)
- Genre: Interactive programme, inviting the audience to comment on the main bbcrussian.com forum of the day and contribute story ideas.
- Presented by: Zhenya Mineyeva, Sasha Baranov, Ilona Vinogradova, Jana Litvinova, Rose Kudabayeva, Leonid Louneev, Dmitry Poltavsky
- Main studio: Bush House, London.
- Show website: Вам слово
Pyatiy Etazh: 5th Floor
- Russian name: Пятый зтаж
- Broadcast: 2000–2130 Saturday-Sunday (Moscow time)
- Genre: Weekend programme with news and discussion of the main themes of the week, with a particular focus on culture and British themes.
- Presented by: Mikhail Smotryaev, and featuring regular presenter’s friends, and cultural commentators Zinovy Zinik and Alexander Kan
- Main studio: Bush House, London.
- Show website: Пятый зтаж
Staff
Earlier in 2008 Konstantin Eggert, the Moscow Bureau Editor of the BBC Russian Service, was made honorary Member of the Order of the British Empire with the assistance of the British Embassy in Moscow.[citation needed] Mr Eggert was hired by the BBC despite having served in GRU, Soviet Military Intelligence, in Yemen. Mr Eggert announced his resignation after over a decade at the BBC early in 2009,[citation needed] but has since re-appeared as a part time presenter on the BBC Russian Service morning show.[citation needed]
He is a member of the Royal Institute of International Affairs (London) and member of the board of “Pro et Contra”, quarterly journal of Carnegie Endowment Moscow Center. He lectured on Russian affairs at the German Foreign Policy Association (Berlin), Wilton Park (UK) and Geneva Centre for Security Policy.[citation needed]
Konstantin Eggert is an honours graduate of the Moscow University Asian and African Studies College (history and Arabic language).
The service hired the following journalists,[citation needed]
- Andrei Ostalsky
- Pavel Aksyonov
- Pavel Fedenko
- Konstantin Rozhinov
- Alexander Zhuravlyov
- Oleg Antonenko
- Andrei Beketov
- Oleg Boldyrev
- Mikhail Denisov
- Mark Grigoryan
- Famil Ismailov
- Alik Kan
- Artem Krechetnikov
- Dmitri Poltavsky
- Yuri Maloveryan
- Yury Zhuravel
- Maria Grechaninova
- Yevgeniya Mineyeva
- Dmitry Shishkin
- Anastasia Uspenskaya
- Masha Vassilyeva
- Yan Leder
See also
References
- ^ BBC loses last Russian FM outlet, Maria Esposito, The Guardian, 17 August 2007
- ^ 2007 Foreign & Commonwealth Office Annual Report, the House of Commons' Foreign Affairs Committee, November 2007
- ^ BBC plays by the Kremlin's Rules, Masha Karp, November 2010, Standpoint Magazine
- ^ Letter to the Editorial Complaints Unit of the BBC from Martin Dewhirst, Department of Slavonic Studies, University of Glasgow and Viktor Suvorov, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Minutes of Evidence, 19 November 2007.
- ^ The BBC's alleged kowtow, Economist, 19 Jul 2007.
- ^ World Service cuts: Reduction of the Russian service just a perverse concession to the Russian authorities, multiple authors, The Times, November 7, 2008
- ^ BBC Russian site relaunched, BBC World Service, 21 April 2009
- ^ BBC Russian radio hits the off switch after 65 years, Steven Eke, Editor, BBC Russian Service, 22 March 2011
- ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2012/190312iptv.html
- ^ http://tvrain.ru/teleshow/bbc_na_dozhde/
- ^ http://www.bbc.co.uk/russian/multimedia/2012/05/120521_news_bulletin.shtml