News
agency RIA Novosti and the state-owned Voice of Russia radio will be
scrapped and absorbed into a new media conglomerate called Rossiya
Segodnya, according to a decree signed by President Vladimir Putin. The
move is the latest in a series of shifts in Russia’s news landscape,
which appear to point toward a tightening of state control in the
already heavily regulated media sector.
In a separate decree published Monday,
the Kremlin appointed Dmitry Kiselyov, a prominent Russian television
presenter and media manager recently embroiled in a scandal over
anti-gay remarks, to head Rossiya Segodnya.
It is important to point out that newly-named head of the Rosiya Segodnya, Kiselyov, made remarks saying gay-bashing victims deserved their fate back in August.
Said Kiselyov, who received applause for his remarks:
"I think that just imposing fines on gays
for homosexual propaganda among teenagers is not enough. They should be
banned from donating blood, sperm. And their hearts, in case of the
automobile accident, should be buried in the ground or burned as
unsuitable for the continuation of life."
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