âThey are not independent media, they are assets, they are weapons, in the Kremlinâs manipulation ecosystem,â Borrell told lawmakers. âWe are not trying to decide what is true and what is false. We donât have ministers of the Truth. But we have to focus on foreign actors who intentionally, in a coordinated manner, try to manipulate our information environment.â
The EU has decided to suspend the broadcasting activities of Sputnik and RT/Russia Today in the bloc until Russia ends its war in Ukraine and stop disinformation campaigns in member states.
Borrell said Moscow-controlled outlets are part of a well-oiled propaganda machine providing biased news about Vladimir Putinâs true intentions.
âIf the information is bad, democracy is bad,â he said, adding that information should be a protected good. âIf the information is systematically contaminated by lies and twisted, citizens canât have a clear understanding of reality and their political judgment is similarly twisted.â
Borrell insisted that Sputnik was created by a presidential decree with the aim of reporting on Russiaâs sate policies abroad, and said that Russia Today is capable of conducting an âinformation warâ against the western world.
Borrell said he will soon propose a new mechanism that will allow the EU to sanction disinformation actors. Lawmakers from the special committee on foreign interference and disinformation are also proposing to establish a sanctions regime to deal with foreign meddling.
MEP Sandra Kalniete, the author of the report, said itâs crucial for the EU to counter foreign threats in a bid to prevent third countries damaging democracies.
âLetâs call a spade a spade. Russia, China and other authoritarian regimes have funneled more than $300 million into 33 countries to interfere in democratic processes,â she said. âPutinâs propaganda machinery wasnât just switched on on 24 February. It has already been working in Europe for decades, attempting to poison and divide our societies.â
Kaniete said online platforms and tech companies need to suspend all social accounts engaged in âdenying, glorifying and justifying Putinâs aggression, war crimes and crimes against humanity.â
She also proposed to reinforce content in Russian and Ukrainian to resist the pressure from Russiaâs disinformation.
âIn short, any tech platform giving space to Putinâs propaganda or complying with his censorship request is an accomplice to Putinâs aggression,â she said.
European Commission Vera Jourova said Putin wants his people to be âapatheticâ and praised streaming platform Netflixâs decision to suspend its Russian services.
âBecause president Putin wants the people to be entertained, not to pay attention to what is happening,â she said. âIt would not be right to see Russians being entertained, and next door Ukrainians being killed.â
Both Borrell and Jourova expressed deep concerns about the imposed censorship in Russia that threatens independent journalists with jail terms and deprives citizens access to verified information about what their government is doing in Ukraine.
âIt is more important than ever to reach the Russian people, and provide them with information,â Jourova said. âEvery possible channel should be used.â
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