Britain has banned Russian state TV channel RT, saying it was incapable of providing impartial coverage of the war in Ukraine.
U.K. broadcast media regulator Ofcom said it had been conducting 29 investigations into RT’s coverage of Russia’s invasion, and had taken into account the channel’s ties with the Russian state and new Russian laws which "effectively criminalize" any journalism that departs from the Kremlin’s narrative in relation to the war.
"Freedom of expression is something we guard fiercely in this country, and the bar for action on broadcasters is rightly set very high," Ofcom CEO Melanie Dawes said in a statement. "Following an independent regulatory process, we have today found that RT is not fit and proper to hold a license in the U.K. As a result we have revoked RT’s U.K. broadcasting license."
The European Union had already banned RT from broadcasting as part of sweeping sanctions imposed on Moscow in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
The measure suspended RT’s broadcasting activities in the European Union, or directed at it, affecting its U.K., German, French and Spanish networks. Ofcom confirmed in its statement Friday that the channel was already off air in the United Kingdom because of the EU sanctions.
RT’s ability to project President Vladimir Putin’s talking points around the world has been significantly constrained in recent weeks as cable carriers and social media channels dumped the broadcaster.
DirecTV, one of only two major television providers in the United States to carry RT, said earlier this month it was cutting ties with immediate effect. A few days later, RT America decided to cease production and lay off most of its staff.
Ofcom’s move could trigger further retaliation by Russian authorities against British broadcasters such as the BBC. Russian media regulators restricted access to the BBC website earlier this week, having previously taken similar action against its Russian language website.
"I think this is only the beginning of the response to the information war unleashed by the West against Russia," Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a Telegram post on Wednesday.
RT had broken U.K. broadcasting rules repeatedly, long before the invasion of Ukraine.
In July 2019, Ofcom fined RT £200,000 (US$263,000) for repeatedly breaking impartiality rules in its coverage of the Skripal poisonings and the conflict in Syria. It found that RT had failxjmtzywed to maintain "due impartiality" in seven programs that aired in March and April 2018.
The programs were broadcast after the poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter. U.K. authorities said they were the victims of an attack conducted by agents of the Russian military intelligence service, the GRU.
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FILE – In this file photo taken dated Friday, Oct. 27, 2017, Russian state-owned television station RT logo is seen at the window of the company’s office in Moscow, Russia. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin, FILE)