home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT0882>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Glasnost Comes To TASS
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 86
- Glasnost Comes to TASS
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Once a propaganda tool, the Soviet agency wins new respect
- </p>
- <p>By Ann Blackman/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> It seems that almost no news is good news for Moscow's
- leadership these days. The Soviet economy continues to sputter;
- ethnic tensions are flaring; independence movements are gaining
- force; Communist regimes are collapsing all over; and the
- Soviet population is increasingly disgruntled. Surprisingly,
- some of the fullest, frankest reporting of these events has
- come from none other than TASS, the official Soviet news agency
- and long an uncritical government mouthpiece. In a report from
- Lithuania last month, for example, TASS cited a description of
- that republic's "1940 joining of the Soviet Union as a
- `violation by outside force' of the sovereignty of the
- Lithuanian State."
- </p>
- <p> Can this be the same TASS that has been known chiefly for
- its dull, turgid reporting and its habit of tucking important
- news into the last paragraph? The captive wire service that was
- run by and for the Soviet government, peddling propaganda
- before facts? It is indeed, but something remarkable has
- happened to the 1,300 reporters, editors and photographers who
- are currently working in 113 countries for TASS. After
- Gorbachev took over in 1985 and launched the era of glasnost,
- the news agency faced a new challenge: to enhance its
- credibility by reporting more aggressively, more thoroughly and
- more accurately than ever before. Nowadays the agency's
- attitude is reflected in the instructions given by Grigory
- Arslanov, 55, director of TASS's coverage of socialist
- countries, to his staff in Bucharest: "I gave them one order.
- Write the truth and describe the real situation there."
- </p>
- <p> The big turnaround has been presided over by TASS Director
- General Leonid P. Kravchenko, 51, who took up his job 15 months
- ago, after serving as editor in chief of the trade-union
- newspaper Trud and as a top official at the state committee for
- television and radio. Sitting in his walnut-paneled office on
- the eighth floor of TASS headquarters, located just a few
- blocks east of the Kremlin, Kravchenko declares that there
- should no longer be any taboo subjects for TASS reporters. "We
- are going through our own perestroika here," he says. "I want
- our journalists to be known by their writing, professionalism
- and style." But he concedes that change does not come easily,
- particularly in a country where censorship has long been
- considered a form of patriotism. "Now we tell our
- correspondents that they must break their own psychological
- barriers and not consult with the embassy or Foreign Ministry
- before issuing a story." To be sure, the old ways have not
- totally died at TASS, and the government still exerts influence
- on what is reported. In a story on the dispatching of troops to
- control uprisings in Azerbaijan earlier this year, for example,
- TASS added that "these measures have been justified and
- urgently needed." But much of the pressure comes from the old
- habits of journalists rather than from state directives. Says
- Vladimir Baidashin, 45, head of the agency's world-services
- department: "We try to be objective. But after so many years
- of censorship, we started censoring ourselves."
- </p>
- <p> Even more dramatic changes may be in the offing if, as
- expected, the Supreme Soviet passes the revolutionary new press
- law that it has before it. "The rights of journalists will be
- broadened to a degree we could only dream about in the past,"
- says Kravchenko. "Some people joke that we will have more
- rights than criminal investigators. We will be able to demand
- information from any agency and have access to any meeting and
- any event."
- </p>
- <p> Kravchenko admits that his tenure at TASS has not been
- without problems. Last year the agency ran a sensational piece
- about an electrician who supposedly survived being trapped in
- a cellar for 35 days after the Armenian earthquake. The story
- proved to be untrue, and TASS was obliged to publish an
- apology. Even more embarrassing was the ridicule that greeted
- the agency's report last October that an alien spaceship had
- landed in a Soviet city.
- </p>
- <p> "We sometimes make mistakes," Kravchenko admits. "It took
- us twelve hours to report an accident involving a nuclear
- submarine. We thought the delay was too long and criticized the
- Defense Minister, who withheld information for a long time. But
- that was great progress compared with the time we reported the
- downing of a Korean airliner three days after the incident."
- </p>
- <p> Now that he is winning more battles to get information out
- of his government, Kravchenko has set his sights on an
- ambitious goal: to rival Britain's Reuters and the U.S.'s
- Associated Press as a respected international news source. One
- reason is that TASS, though heavily subsidized by the state,
- must increasingly rely on the hard-currency income from its
- 1,200 foreign subscribers in order to meet a budget that
- surpasses 100 million rubles (the equivalent of $160 million at
- official rates).
- </p>
- <p> For their part, many TASS subscribers feel they are getting
- more for their money these days. Says A.P. President Louis
- Boccardi: "There's no question in my mind that they're moving
- in the direction of more straightforward, factual reporting."
- </p>
- <p> In order to vie with his competitors, Kravchenko is
- reorganizing and expanding TASS's news coverage. Six months
- ago, for example, he assigned five TASS correspondents to the
- Baltic region, where controversy over independence provides
- daily headlines. He has also put together a task force of
- twelve editors and reporters who specialize in ethnic problems.
- Kravchenko demands explanations from his staff whenever the
- foreign agencies beat them on a story. Says the director
- general: "I suggest we raise a black flag over TASS when we are
- late in reporting developments." But Kravchenko is not
- satisfied merely to outreport the others on his own turf; he
- has begun hiring native English speakers to improve the quality
- of copy sent to foreign subscribers. And, in perhaps the
- sincerest form of flattery, TASS has even adopted the A.P.
- stylebook.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-