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Croatian Secret Services
Spied on AIM
AIM Zagreb, December 23,
2001
Tudjman’s
secret police - Service for Protection of the Constitutional System (SZUP)
systematically followed the work of the Alternative Information Network (AIM)
for years by bugging the telephone of AIM’s editor and journalists. Among the
dossiers of 126 journalists compiled by the agents of SZUP, there are police
notes which show that AIM was the object of interest of Croatian secret services
for a long time. When the journalists who were treated as enemies of the state
and therefore spied on by secret police were given access to these dossiers, the
proportions of Tudjman’s paranoia became quite clear. In police files marked
as “highly confidential” not only conversations of some of AIM’s
journalists were noted, but also their contacts with the colleagues from abroad
and especially with the central office in France. Although all the articles of
AIM journalists have always been public and since a few years ago can be found
on AIM’s web site, the police dossier of AIM’s editor for Croatia contained,
among other, integral texts of the articles from the production of Alternative
Information Network. AIM has
not worked illegally in Croatia, least of all secretly. Its editor in Zagreb was
accredited by the Information Office of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, like
all foreign correspondents in Croatia. The accreditation was duly issued and
thanks to that he was able to follow the work of the Croatian Assembly and visit
other state institutions. SZUP became interested in AIM from the very beginning,
but in the first police notes the abbreviation of Alternativna informativna
mreza AIM was misspelled as EAM. When AIM editor for Croatia got a computer and
modem by means of which articles were exchanged between AIM editorial boards in
the capitals of the states established after dissolution of former Yugoslavia,
this was noted in police files as “installed equipment”. The term
“installed equipment” is associated with the activities of spies which
should not cause wonder when one sees that AIM editor in Croatia and some of the
other associates of the Alternative Informaton Network whose phones were also
bugged, were under surveillance under suspicion that they were engaged in
extremist, even terrorist activities! The
object of interest of SZUP, it is evident from the notes collected in the
dossiers of the tailed journalists, were also the meetings of AIM editors and
journalists held abroad, mostly in Austria. Since in the beginning and middle of
the nineties it was not possible to travel freely in the countries of former
Yugoslavia, editorial meetings of AIM were mostly held in Austria or some other
country outside the region that was stricken by war. After a
meeting of AIM journalists in Switzerland in 1994, two Croatian dailies, Vjesnik
and Vecernji list, carried what Swiss newspapers had written about the
activities of AIM on the territory of former Yugoslavia. This was an
introduction into a campaign that followed. In one of his speeches that followed,
Croatia’s president Franjo Tudjman accused AIM of being one of the
organizations that were keen on reconstruction of Yugoslavia. Everybody who even
superficially knows anything about the circumstances in Croatia at the time must
be aware that this accusation was equal to an accusation for high treason. That
Tudjman’s propaganda used all kinds of means to scare people of possible
revival of Yugoslavia is illustrated by the results of public opinion polls
carried out at the time. In the list of things the Croats were afraid of the
most, fear of reconstruction of Yugoslavia ranked third immediately after the
fear of war and unemployment, but higher than fear of poverty! “The
number is increasing of those in the world who are trying to prove that the
independence of Croatia, Slovenia and Bosnia & Herzegovina was recognized
much too soon and saying that it would perhaps be best to renew some kind of a
South Slavic or Balkan confederation: indeed it has not been officially stressed,
but we are witnessing that for example Vukobrat from Paris has officially
submitted such a proposal to the European Union, such ideas were repeated at the
gathering in Opatija, and there are attempts to revive them in diplomatic
circles. Some people in Croatia fall for such ideas, and alternative information
media with 70 odd journalists from entire former Yugoslavia are helping them”,
said Tudjman at a meeting of top echelons of his party, Croat Democratic Union
(HDZ), which was, of course, carried by all the media in Croatia. That is
how AIM was put on the list of the most dangerous enemies by the very top of
Croatia, so it is no wonder that the journalists of Alternative Information
Network were under intensive police surveillance. The object of interest of
Tudjman’s secret services was also the question how AIM was financed. In one
of police notes contained in the dossier of AIM editor for Croatia, information
is stated that 80 per cent of the money came from the European Union. Among
police notes there are also data about who and when founded AIM and the names of
some of the foreigners who participated in it. Apart
from being a frequent target of the commentaries of regime newspapers that
presented AIM in the sense of the quoted Tudjman’s speech that it advocated
restoration of Yugoslavia AIM appeared in this context in the book titled
“Western Balkan” by Andjelko Milardovic, Professor of Croat Studies in
Zagreb. This book with the following subtitle “The Concept, Ideas and
Documents on Reconstruction of the Balkan in the Process of Globalization”
printed in Zagreb in 2000, describes AIM in detail on fifteen odd pages. The
organization structure of AIM is described, its objectives, production,
international support and main activities. The author of the book literally
carried all the data as they can be found on AIM’s Internet pages and even
states that his source was AIM’s web site. The very
title of the book “Western Balkan” is indicative because the phrase is
linguistically a synonym of paranoia Tudjman’s regime spread for years
threatening the Croatian citizens with dark world conspiracies that were aimed
to forcefully push Croatia into a new Yugoslavia. In his public appearances,
Milardovic claimed that “Western Balkan” was just a different name for a new
South Slavic community the European Union was advocating. He clearly said so in
one of his texts published last summer with the title “So Long to Yugoslavia,
Hello to Western Balkan” in the weekly for Croatian emigrants called Dom i
svijet (Homeland and the World) that is published by pro-HDZ Croat Information
Centre. Inclusion of AIM in the book “Western Balkan” goes along the lines
of Tudjman’s thesis that the Alternative Information Network belongs among
those who are doing their best to reconstruct some form of a future association
of the countries that had formed former Yugoslavia until 1990. The fact
that secret services spied on AIM’s journalists at the time of Tudjman, bugged
their phones and noted the contacts they had, testifies about the dark side of
that regime that recognized “the enemies of the state” all around it. But
the awareness that these journalists were classified in the group of persons the
police tailed for extremism and terrorism testifies that the intentions of those
who issued orders to the police to do it were exceptionally dangerous. With such
accusations in regimes similar to that of Tudjman, one could end up in prison
for many years. For the fact that nothing of the kind has happened to AIM’s
journalists, they can thank the fact that the Council of Europe and the European
Union did support Alternative Information Network. Even for Tudjman it would
have been too much to declare war on entire Europe because of a few “enemies
of the state”. # Drago Hedl, AIM source: AIM
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