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A Russia Today (RT) television broadcast van is seen parked in front of St Basil's Cathedral and the Kremlin next to Red Square in Moscow on March 16, 2018. The Russian-backed TV channel RT disappeared from broadcasts around Washington. The network vanished from cable channels on April 1, 2018, when the station that ran RT permanently closed. Photo: AFP

Russia-backed news channel RT disappears from Washington, DC-area TVs - but people disagree on why

For years, the state-funded Russian TV channel RT had broadcast its slickly produced English-language news programmes over the airwaves in the Washington area.

But in early February, the network was taken off the air by a northern Virginia TV station. RT had remained on area cable channels until midnight on Sunday when the station permanently closed.

RT blames the loss of the broadcasts on the network having to register as a foreign agent with the Justice Department in November – something that many media outlets with substantial backing from a foreign government have been required to do.

“Although we are not at liberty to disclose the details, we know that this decision was linked to RT’s forced registration as a ‘foreign agent’ in the US,” Anna Belkina, RT’s deputy editor-in-chief, said in an email last week.

Margarita Simonyan, the editor-in-chief of state-funded RT television network (right) is seen with Russian President Vladimir Putin at an exhibition marking RT's 10th anniversary in Moscow, Russia, on December 10, 2015. Photo: AP

But the television station and the owner of the frequency on which RT was broadcast cite business decisions, not the US government.

The station, WNVC in Fairfax, shut down because the frequency on which it was broadcast had been sold. Sunday’s closure pulled the plug on about a dozen digital broadcast channels that offered international programming.

The channels were also transmitted by the region’s cable providers. And despite going off the air in February, RT had remained on cable – where the vast majority of its television viewers were – until the station’s demise.

WNVC was owned by MHz Networks. President Frederick Thomas said last week that the owner of the broadcast signal had asked MHz Networks to remove RT from the air on February 1.

“I was never given a solid answer why,” Thomas said. “They just exercised their right.”

Frequency owner Commonwealth Public Broadcasting Corporation did not specifically address why RT went off the air in February but remained on cable until Sunday.

Curtis Monk, Commonwealth’s president, wrote in an email last week that it had been planning the “surrender of the spectrum for some time.”

“We’ve simply been following our plan.”

Russian state-owned television station RT’s logo is seen at the window of the company's office in Moscow, Russia, in October last year. Photo: AP

Ian Prior, a Justice Department spokesman, declined to comment on RT’s claims that its status as a foreign agent played a role.

Many consider RT to be a propaganda arm of the Russian government. The loss of its Washington-area broadcast has become the latest chapter in an ongoing feud between the network and the US government.

The Foreign Agents Registration Act applies to companies that disseminate information on behalf of foreign governments.

The law does not restrict RT’s content. But RT is required to publicly disclose details about its funding and to label certain content that is distributed in the US.

RT editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan said in January that it is a legitimate news organisation, comparable to Britain’s government-supported BBC or the US-funded Voice of America.

But Robert Orttung, an international affairs professor at George Washington University, said the network is a propaganda arm of the Russian government designed to make its benefactor look good.

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