Anonymous ID: 9cb729 Feb. 1, 2020, 8:51 a.m. No.7990833   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0990 >>1163

>>7990733

Try different spelling as well. Y instead of “I”

 

Other television channels remain in the hands of oligarchs

who compete with the president’s “Family” for influence,

including oil baron Ihor Kolomoysky and Viktor Pinchuk. In February 2013, the largest television network in Ukraine, Inter, was bought by the head of the presidential administration, Serhiy Levochkin, but observers said its coverage remained relatively balanced. Levochkin is closely allied with gas oligarch Dmitro Firtash, but not part of the Yanukovych “Family.” He opposed the use of force against the protesters in late 2013 and resigned from his government post. While state television ignored the protests, the oligarch-controlled channels provided comparatively objective coverage as their owners apparently sought to hedge their bets and balance between Yanukovych and the opposition. Newly created independent internet news sites, such as Hromadske TV, broadcast many of the protest-related events in real time.

 

https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/eoir/legacy/2014/09/26/Ukraine_1.pdf