Russia threatens to strip France 24, Deutsche Welle of licence
Russia said on Friday it might strip the France 24 TV channel and German broadcaster Deutsche Welle of their Russian operating licenses amid deteriorating relations between the West and Moscow.
Russia's communications watchdog said it may act against the French media outlet a day after French authorities accused Russian broadcaster RT of airing distortions about the conflict in Syria, Russian news agencies reported.
Moscow has previously used laws regulating media ownership to threaten foreign outlets with expulsion in a tit-for-tat response to measures taken by foreign governments against RT.
On Thursday, the French media regulator (CSA) issued a warning to RT's French office, accusing it of misrepresenting facts in a news bulletin about events in Syria.
RT's programme had questioned whether chemical attacks in the eastern region of Ghouta had really occurred and accused a local group of fabricating the attack and its effects on the local population.
Russian news agency RIA quoted a Russian broadcasting industry source as saying: "During an analysis of the licensing agreements in (watchdog) Roskomnadzor's possession, it has been established that the editorial activity of (France 24) is under the control of a foreign legal entity."
This would violate a Russian media law introduced in 2015 which restricts foreign ownership of media companies in Russia to 20 percent or less.
According to Interfax news agency, Roskomnadzor could ask a court to strip Media Communications, a Russian entity, of its license to broadcast France 24 in Russia.
RT chief Margarita Simonyan told RIA, "Unlike others, Russia can afford such a luxury as reciprocal measures."
France's CSA imposed no sanctions on RT over the Syria report, but the regulator has the authority to fine a broadcaster or suspend its licence.
In statement, RT France acknowledged a mistake in the French translation of comments from a Syrian witness but said this was a purely technical error which had been corrected.
A committee of the upper house of the Russian parliament said on Friday it would ask "the regulatory authorities" to examine how Germany's Deutsche Welle is complying with Russian legislation, according to RIA.
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