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Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of Poland Vilnius, 29 October 2014
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Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet:

lessons to be learned

Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of Poland

Vilnius, 29 October 2014

Page 2: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine:

common history

Before the first partition of Poland (1772) large part of today’s Ukraine belonged to the Polish-Lithuanian Kingdom.

Page 3: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Open borders instead of breaking them

After 1989 Polish politicians have not claimed any change of borders as set up in 1945.

In Feb. 2008 in Moscow Vladimir Putin, supposedly started talk with Polish PM Donald Tusk on such a note:

Ukraine is an artificial country, Lwow is a Polish city, why don’t we just sort it out together?

He repeated that notion about Ukraine publicly in Bucharest, during NATO summit in the summer of 2008.

Page 4: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

March 2014: Duma’s offer

Russian Duma offered Poland partition of Ukraine.

Author of the official letter: Vladimir Zyrinowski. Duma’s Deputy Speaker.

The offer supposedly went also to Hungary and Romania.

Polish Foreign Ministry thanked for the letter.

Page 5: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Ukrainian Orange Revolution of 2004 „It is hard to falsify elections when over 13 000 international observers are watching them.

It is even harder to condemn demanding democracy by your own citizens, when the world is watching you through cameras of BBC, CNN and other broadcasters”.

(Mykola Riabczuk in „Ukraina 2004: Reports of Polish observers

of presidential elections”Ajaks 2005)

Page 6: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Ukrainian Maidan of 2013/2014

Public and private Polish media have been reporting from Kiev’s Maidan almost every day.

Evening news were often hosted from there and other places of fighting. For weeks Ukrainehas been on the very top of news agenda.

Polish public was given constant feed of news and pictures. Sometimes they were so brutalthat NBC fined TVP, the public broadcaster for showing a dying man on Kiev’s street.

Page 7: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Trap of „neutral” language The language used by media envoys in Ukraine and their editors in Poland was western-style: neutral.

„Russian invasion of Ukraine”? No, there was no decisive proof of it.

Better say “the Ukrainian crisis”.

„Russian soldiers” in Crimea and south provinces of Ukraine? No, better say “separatists” or “rebels.”

Why not „ foreign soldiers” ? Why not „terrorists” as Ukrainians prefere to call them?

Those fighting against the Ukrainian armed forces are „pro-Russians”. Why not simply „Russians”?

It became publicly known in March 2014, when Russian president Vladimir Putin acknowledged it in his triumphant Crimea speech.

Page 8: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Trap of resentmentsRecently Polish portal Kresy24.pl informed that president Petro Poroshenko established new Defender of Motherland Day on October 14th.

Kresy24.pl called it „the end of chances for Polish-Ukrainian reconcliation” because Oct.14 is the anniversary of formation of Ukrainian Insurgent Army (Polish acronym UPA), responsible for murders of thousandsof Poles in Kresy.

October 14,1942 as UPA day of origin was introduced in the 90s.of XX century. This day Feast of Intercession of the Holy Virgin is celebrated in the East Ortodox Church.Ukrainian portal http://www.ukrinform.ua mentioned it in the title of Poroshenko’s decision information.

Connection between Defender of Motherland Day and origin day of UPA was set up by Russian trolls working through Bielorussian internet site Chartia 97 (http://www.charter97.org/).

Page 9: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Trap of internet trollsOver 80 percent of „under the line” comments about Russian agression in Ukraine is anti-Polish, anti-Ukrainian and pro-Russian.

• Mr Prime Minister Tusk, please explain why we are getting f**ked by Ukrainians? Since when they have been our friends?

• Even if you don’t like Russians, you have to admit that Crimea action was a stabilizing operation. There is nothing to cry about or getting angry of. And flexing the muscles is against Polish raison d’etat.

• The only aim of Americans is now to get material goods. And those tyrans dare to dictate the conditions to Russia?

Russia has third biggest army of hackers in the world in Petersburg, Kazan, Chelabinsk. Up to 100 comments a day for less then 600 euros a month.

„Defend Russia” net group and similiar up to 2 000 Poles joined.

Page 10: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Internet: monitor the comments

• „The Guardian” : 40 000 comments checked daily

• Elimination of hundreds of them, especially dealing with articles of correspondent in Moscow, Luke Harding

• „Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung”: you are able to comment only if you are previously registered and provide your nameand login.

The same should be done in all Polish sites where you can comment.

Page 11: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Media language: analyse and explain

• Point out to the problem, using existing analysis, such as: „Russian disinformation and Western misconceptions” by John Besemeres, Inside Story, Canberra.

• Have language analysis done by media scholars in Poland

• Raise the problem with editorial teams on a conference organized by NBC of Poland

Page 12: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Try to root out ideology from history:• discuss „national shame”

themes • fill in black holes• exchange perspectives

with historical enemies and neighbours

Expolore „what if ?” history books, such as:

• Ribbentrop – Beck Pact • Madness 44• German Option

Resentments: change perspective

Page 13: Thunder from the East in Polish media and internet: lessons to be learned Andrzej Krajewski, freedom of speech expert, National Broadcasting Council of.

Thank you

Andrzej Krajewski freedom of speech expert National Broadcasting Council of Poland

e-mail: [email protected]