Blog

Mérték Media Monitor: Assessment of Media Council's tendering and licensing practices

February 15, 2013

Mérték conducts a two-part analysis of the Media Council's practices with regard to tendering and licensing. In the first report,  Mérték examines the tender competitions of the 35 local radio frequencies that had been initiated by the former media authority, the National Radio and Television Commission (ORTT) but completed by the Media Council. The organization found that three providers--Mária Radio, Lánchíd Radio, and Európa Radio--won 15 of these frequencies. Lánchíd Radio is the property of Infocenter Zrt, which is owned by Fidesz-lined businessmen Zsolt Nyerges, who also owns national weekly Heti Válasz and the national commercial radio station, Class FM. The organization also found that soon after awarding local licenses to Lánchíd Radio, the Media Council  amended the terms of the license to expand the broadcast coverage for each of the frequencies. This has enabled the station to build a regional presence, although the original terms of its licenses were for local coverage. 

Mérték Media Monitor: Press Freedom Index 2012

February 15, 2013

Mérték Media Monitor surveys the state of media freedom in Hungary.

Court: Media Council must reveal contracts with top TV stations

February 5, 2013

An appeals court has upheld a prior court decision mandating that the Media Council must disclose the terms of its contracts with Hungary’s two largest commercial TV stations, RTL Klub and TV2. Gabor Csuday, an editor at Kreativ magazine, and the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union (TASZ) filed the case against the Media Council after the Council refused to make public its new contracts with the two TV operators. RTL Klub and TV2,  which are both owned by German companies, appealed the first-instance court's decision requiring the Media Council to provide the contracts.

Media Council gives Jazzy Radio five-year extension

February 4, 2013

The Media Council has extended Jazzy Radio’s Budapest license for five years, allowing the station to continue operating on its 90.8 MHz frequency until October 2018. The 2010 Media Act allows authorities to grant one-time, five-year license renewals to broadcasters if the operator has paid its license fees and has not repeatedly breached the media laws. 

Hungarian NGOs to Council of Europe: More Changes Needed to Media Laws

February 4, 2013

A group of leading Hungarian NGOs have asked the Council of Europe to continue negotiating with the Hungarian Government to make changes to the 2010 media laws. Council of Europe officials and the Hungarian government agreed in late January to introduce several changes to Hungary’s 2010 media legislation that include limiting the term lengths of the Media Council chairperson to nine years. Current rules allow the chairperson to serve indefinite nine-year terms. Hungary’s national public news service MTI reported that the announcement of the proposed amendments concludes the discussions between the Council of Europe and Hungarian officials over key aspects of the media legislation.