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Culture and Education committee confirms the deal on the EU Media Freedom Act

24 януари 2024 12:18, Людмила Калъпчиева
Излъчване: Туида Нюз преди около 1 година, брой четения: 318
European Parliament

Ban on forcing journalists to disclose sources and use of spyware against them, except in strictly defined cases

All media required to be transparent about who owns them

Fair allocation of state advertising

Member states have to ensure editorial and functional independence of public media

EP’s committee on Wednesday approved the provisional co-legislator agreement on a new bill to protect EU journalists from growing threats to media freedom and the industry’s viability.

 

23 Members of the CULT committee voted to support the deal, 4 voted against and 2 abstained.

 

According to the provisional political agreement between the co-legislators, reached on 15 December 2023 on the European Media Freedom Act (EMFA), member states will have to ensure that citizens have access to a plurality of editorially independent media content.

 

Particularly, EU countries will have to ensure the editorial and functional independence of public media by:

 

- appointing heads and board members through transparent and non-discriminatory procedures. Their term of office will have to be long enough to guarantee the media’s independence, and dismissing them with no substantiated reason before the end of their term will be prohibited;

 

- transparent and objective funding procedures, as well as sustainable and predictable funding to safeguard independence;

 

- independent monitoring of media’s political independence, with public reports.

 

Protection of journalists’ work

 

Member state authorities will be prohibited from interfering with editorial decisions.

 

MEPs secured a prohibition on journalists and editors having to disclose their sources, including by detainment, sanctions, office searches or by installing intrusive surveillance software on their devices.

 

By way of derogation, such interferences will only be permitted on a case-by-case basis ‘by an overriding reason of public interest’, subject to authorisation by a judicial authority and if needed for investigations of serious crimes punishable by a custodial sentence in the respective member state.

 

Even in these cases, the right of subjects to be informed about ongoing surveillance as well as having to have judicial protection will apply.

 

Ownership transparency

 

To assess media independence, the EMFA will oblige all media to publish information on their direct and indirect owners, including if they are directly or indirectly owned by the state or a public authority, in a national database.

 

Media will also have to report on funds received from state advertising and on state financial support. This includes funds from non-EU countries.

 

Provisions against big platforms making arbitrary decisions

 

MEPs negotiated the creation of a system to ensure that decisions on content moderation by very large online platforms do not negatively affect media freedom.

 

Platforms will first have to distinguish independent media from non-independent sources. Media would be notified that the platform intends to delete or restrict their content and have 24 hours to respond (shorter timeframe in case of crisis).

 

If after the reply (or in absence of it) the platform still considers the media content does not comply with its conditions, it can proceed with deleting or restricting. However, if the media considers that the decision does not have sufficient grounds and undermines media freedom, they have the right to bring the case to an out-of-court dispute settlement body and request an opinion from the European Board for Media Services (a new EU board of national regulators to be set up by the EMFA).

 

Fair allocation of state advertising

 

To ensure media outlets do not become dependent on state advertising, public funds to media service providers or online platforms will be allocated via open and non-discriminatory procedures, based on public criteria. Member states will have to distribute state advertising expenditure to a wide plurality of media.

 

Public authorities will publish information every year about their state advertising expenditure, the total annual amount spent and the amounts spent per media service provider or online platform.

 

Next steps

 

The deal has to be formally approved by the Parliament as a whole (March plenary tbc), as well as by the Council.