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IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS
REPORT, NO. 275, Part II, August 29, 2001
FOCUS ON BOSNIAN MEDIA
THE BATTLE FOR OBJECTIVITYRescuing Bosnia's media
from nationalistic prejudices is proving harder than the West expected.
By Tanya L. Domi in New
York
The
propagandist nature of the Bosnian media was hardly mentioned in the Dayton
treaty which brought peace to Bosnia in 1995. In the West, there was marked
reluctance to embark on anything that smacked of interference with press freedom.
It soon
became clear, however, that democratic political order could never flourish in a
climate where unregulated media spouted nationalistic hate propaganda against
fellow Bosnians. But it
was not until nearly two years after Dayton that the Sintra Peace Implementation
Council, PIC, met and established regulatory authority over the Bosnian media.
The PIC authorised the country's top Western mediator to oversee the licensing
and frequency spectrum of the media. However, the Independent Media Commission,
IMC, conceived at Sintra, did not begin issuing licenses until 2000. The IMC
soon ran into conflict with Republika Srpska, RS. The entity's government-run
broadcaster, SRT, had been spewing hatred at Western agencies during and after
the war and was disinclined to stop doing so. The Office of the High
Representative, OHR, the West's chief authority in Bosnia, stepped in and seized
control of SRT transmitters. The next
big crisis came in November 1999, when the IMC ordered the closure of EROTEL - a
front company for Croatian Radio Television, HRT, operating illegally in
Bosnia-Herzegovina. SFOR troops at first showed reluctance to enforce the IMC
decision. Not till March 2000 was SFOR persuaded to seize the transmitters and
stem the flow of EROTEL's nationalistic tirades. In the
early years, the OHR failed to make good use of its resources. A high proportion
of donor funds was devoted to setting up an independent television system known
as the Open Broadcast Network, which failed to attract a large audience, and
project funding was cut off. However, not all Western media projects failed. One
positive example was the Free Exchange Radio Network, FERN, which managed to
establish a nationwide network of multi-ethnic correspondents who delivered a
first rate, award-winning news programme. FERN was recently merged into the
Public Broadcasting System, PBS. In 1999,
the OSCE established the Free Media Help Line, the first mechanism for dealing
with journalists' complaints and providing legal assistance to reporters
suffering from harassment. It hammered out a comprehensive policy document on
reforming the broadcast media, outlining a new state radio and television
station modelled on European public broadcasting practice. This
document should have served as a policy blueprint but its announcement coincided
with the onset of donor fatigue in Bosnia and further confusion among donors and
aid agencies. Since
1997, USAID has played an increasingly significant role in funding media
projects. It was the principal donor behind the establishment of the IMC.
Subsequently, in September 1999, USAID awarded 14.5 million US dollars to the
International Research and Exchange Board, IREX, to support the development of
independent media in Bosnia Despite
the big grant, IREX was hampered by the confused policies of two successive
heads. This weak leadership has consigned IREX, despite the large funds at its
disposal, to the margins of the media reform programme. Its most
significant effort was to get the former Sarajevo-based daily Vecenje novine to
publish in Banja Luka. In the course of this project, IREX consultants assumed
significant editorial control under controversial circumstances. The paper's
then editor-in-chief complained vigorously to the international community about
its heavy-handed approach. Vecernje
novine has since ceased publication. It reopened as Jutarnje novine under new
editorial direction of an individual known to be affiliated with the Bosniak
Party for Democratic Action. IREX has since withdrawn from the project. While
donor funds are being cut, it remains imperative that the international
community works even more closely with Bosnian media to ensure that the process
of media reform continues. Tanya
Domi, a former OSCE spokesperson in Bosnia, is pursuing post-graduate studies at
Columbia University in New York. source: IWPR Report 275, Part II |
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