The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) has protested the adoption by the Romanian Senate of a draft law obliging radio and television stations to transmit positive and negative news "in an equal proportion."
"One can hardly think about a more absurd proposal than a 'good news and bad news' law," said EFJ Chairman Arne König on Tuesday. "This is obvious political interference in the editorial work of journalists. We cannot understand the motivation of this law and we call on the President of Romania to veto it."
The Romanian Senate adopted, unanimously, the draft law initiated by PRM (Big Romania Party) Senator Gheorghe Funar and by the PNL (Liberal Party) Deputy Ioan Ghise. According to this law, news should be broadcast "equally" in a positive and negative way in order "to improve the general climate and to offer the chance to the public to have a balanced view of everyday life, psychologically and emotionally as well."
EFJ believes that the law is absurd, not least because it includes no criteria for classifying news in positive or negative categories. EFJ affiliate, US MediaSind, said in a statement that the law is an "attempt of the political parties to fence freedom of expression," and an "attack against journalists" since it breaks the Romanian Constitution (art.30, paragraph 1), European Convention of Human Rights (art.10, paragraph 1) as well as the Ethic Code of Journalists enclosed in the Collective Labor Agreement at Mass-Media Level.
Romanian journalists have been subject to continuous and serious pressures in recent months, said EFJ, including verbal attacks on journalists by politicians, politisation of the leading structures of public broadcasting, the recriminalisation of defamation and libel, attempts to abrogate the Law of Free Access to Public Information and the Law of Institutional Transparency, and plans to modify the Penal Code in order to jail journalists who release video or audio recordings without the subject's approval.
EFJ urged Romanian President Traian Basescu to veto the "good news" law and to do everything in his power to make sure that press freedom standards are respected in his country.