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Reuters
Reuters
Business
Alicja Ptak and Pawel Florkiewicz

"Free Media": Poles protest against changes to broadcasting law

A protester holds a placard reading "Free media!" during a demonstration in defence of media freedom and against a proposed amendment to the country's broadcast media law regarding the share of foreign capital in Polish media, in Czestochowa, Poland August 10, 2021. Grzegorz Skowronek/Agencja Gazeta/via REUTERS

Thousands of people across Poland protested in defence of media freedoms on Tuesday, objecting to draft legislation that critics say could shut down a U.S.-owned broadcaster critical of the government.

Parliament is scheduled to vote on the legislation on Wednesday.

People attend a demonstration in defence of media freedom and against a proposed amendment to the country's broadcast media law regarding the share of foreign capital in Polish media, in Warsaw, Poland August 10, 2021. The placard reads: "There is no freedom without media freedom". Adam Stepien/Agencja Gazeta/via REUTERS

The vote to tighten rules on foreign ownership of Polish media threatens to sour relations with Washington and deepen concern in the European Union over democratic standards in the bloc's east. Issues such as judicial independence and LGBT rights have already brought Poland and Hungary into conflict with Brussels.

In Warsaw, one of around 80 towns and cities where protests were organised, people brandished placards with slogans such as "Free Media, Free People, Free Poland".

"If it happened (that TVN24 lost its licence) ... it's the end - there is no democracy, no freedom of speech," said 66-year-old designer Iwona Leliwa-Kopystynska.

The placard reading "Free media. Free people. Free Poland" is seen during a demonstration in defence of media freedom and against a proposed amendment to the country's broadcast media law regarding the share of foreign capital in Polish media, in Krakow, Poland August 10, 2021. Jakub Wlodek/Agencja Gazeta/via REUTERS

TVN24 footage showed protesters on the roof of the Culture Ministry in Warsaw with banners reading "Free Media" and "Poland Free of Facism".

The amendment to the Broadcasting Act would strengthen a ban on non-European firms controlling Polish broadcasters.

"Would we like Polish media ... to be acquired without any regulations by anyone from around the world without any obstacles?" Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki asked reporters earlier.

While Morawiecki's Law and Justice (PiS) party says it wants to stop countries such as Russia or China taking control of Polish broadcasters, critics say it aims to gag TVN24, Poland's most popular news channel, whose licence expires on Sept. 26.

FOREIGN INFLUENCE

TVN24's parent, TVN, is owned by the U.S.-based media group Discovery Inc. via a firm registered in the Netherlands, to get around a ban on non-European firms owning more than 49% of Polish media companies.

TVN has called the bill, which would close that loophole, an attempt to limit media freedom.

PiS has long argued that foreign media groups distort public debate in Poland in a way that harms Polish interests.

But the bill risks upsetting an important ally.

TVN, estimated to be worth over $1 billion, is the biggest American investment in Poland. U.S. State Department Counselor Derek Chollet has said future American investments could be jeopardised if TVN24's licence is not renewed.

Critics say the government is adopting tactics tried and tested by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a close ideological ally of PiS.

Hungarian public broadcasters have largely become mouthpieces for the government, while several other media outlets have been shut or taken over by government-friendly interests.

Critics say that since PiS came to power, Poland's public broadcaster, TVP, has become an outlet for government propaganda.

(Reporting by Alicja Ptak and Pawel Florkiewicz in Warsaw, additional reporting by Krisztina Than in Budapest, writing by Alan Charlish; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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