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IWPR'S
BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 302, December 10, 2001 CROATIA: THE "DISSIDENT" REPORTERIWPR
journalist opens his secret police file to discover that the Tudjman regime
considered him and enemy of the state. By Drago
Hedl in Osijek When the
call came, my lingering suspicions were finally confirmed. I had long suspected
that former president Franjo Tudjman's secret police had watched me for years.
Now a clerk from the Ministry of Internal Affairs was on the line, enquiring if
I would like to go and look at my police file. I was
one of those journalists who were considered "enemies of the state" by
the regime. Surrounded by informers, our mail was regularly opened and our
telephones bugged. Soon after Tudjman's party, the Croatian Democratic Union,
lost the elections in January 2000, the incoming internal affairs minister Sime
Lucin promised to open the police files on all those journalists who had been
unjustly spied on. Last
month, Lucin gave a press conference at which he revealed that during the
Tudjman era the entire editorial offices of certain weekly magazines had been
under constant surveillance. Exactly three weeks later, along with 125 other
journalists, I was invited to examine the material the security services had
gathered on me during that period. My
appointment was for November 30. When I arrived at the large ugly Ministry of
Internal Affairs building, two young women from the police were there to greet
me. One of them was carrying a large bluish cardboard box and they led me
through a labyrinth of corridors to a small, poorly furnished room. "This
is your file," one of them said. "Before you can see it, you must sign
a statement that you won't use any information in the file against a third
person, nor publicise any compromising information on a third person." As they
started removing large stacks of paper from a huge cardboard box with my file
number on it, I felt confused to say the least. I was about to see myself cast
as an "enemy of the state", which is how the Tudjman regime regarded
me. The two
police clerks explained that I was not allowed to take any notes. They
positioned themselves where they could see my every move. One read a book, the
other a newspaper, but they kept a close eye on me. The very
first document, dated March 16, 1995, and marked as "top secret"
astounded me. The basis for their interest in me was recorded as "extremism:
Serbian and Croatian". They claimed - wrongly - that I had spent time in
Ireland, where I contacted Amnesty International representative Paul Miller. I
did meet Paul, but in London, where I conducted an interview later published in
Feral Tribune. I have never set foot in Ireland. The file
says that we discussed human and political rights in Croatia, especially the
position of the Serbian minority. They could have read that in the published
interview, or by listening to my conversations with colleagues at the Feral
editorial office in Split. In fact, I spent the latter half of 1995 and first
half of 1996 working at the Institute for War and Peace Reports in London, but I
often spoke with my colleagues in Split and occasionally sent them my articles. The
police were also interested by my contacts with Christopher Bennet, whom they
say I met in Osijek. Bennet is described as an IWPR journalist and the "top
secret" report says we spoke of internal political affairs in Croatia, the
state of the local opposition and human rights. Then
came a summary of my telephone conversations with Viktor Ivancic and Heni Erceg,
both Feral editors. The police notes record that I proposed an article about
Croats wanted by Interpol. Then there was an interview I gave to the Belgrade
magazine Duga in Vukovar in 1997. They quote my answers extensively, especially
those parts about what I thought would happen in Croatia "after Tudjman has
gone". Interestingly,
at the end of 1996 the reason for tailing me changes from "extremism:
Serbian and Croatian" to "extremism: Yugoslav, communist" and
"abuse of civil organizations". They
list my contacts with Helsinki Watch and describe my cooperation with the George
Soros foundation in Croatia. They became particularly attentive when I was
considered for membership of the executive board of Soros' Open Society Fund.
Telephone discussions between my editor and the organisation's representative in
New York Aryeh Neier were noted down in great detail. I
wondered how many people had listened to these phone calls, analysed them and
summarised them. Leafing through the secret police reports, I couldn't find a
signed document authorising my surveillance. Could that mean that along with the
entire editorial staff of Feral - that persistent thorn in the side of the
Tudjman regime - I was watched without ministerial approval, on the say-so of
someone from the highest echelons of power? I'll
probably never know. I was
surprised to find that my file didn't cover personal affairs. Other journalists
who chose to read their files were astonished to find police notes on personal,
even intimate details. Jasna Babic, a journalist working for the Zagreb magazine
Nacional told Croatian television that her file even contained results of
gynaecological examinations. Globus journalist Djurdjica Klancir's file included
police assessments of her marriage, while chief editor Damir Butkovic found the
transcript of a telephone conversation in which his mother gave him a recipe for
pasta with mushrooms. Tudjman's
secret police also drew up psychological portraits of all monitored journalists,
which together with written analyses of various media, constituted much of the
material collected. Some journalists' files contain such portraits, others -
like mine - don't. Once I
had read everything the secret police had amassed about me during my five years
as an "enemy of the state", the police clerks asked if I wanted to
have my file destroyed or preserved. I chose preservation - it would be a
terrible waste to destroy such direct evidence of the nature of Tudjman's regime. Also, it
can be used as an exhibit in the court case which journalists who were spied on
plan to bring. Compensation is not our main objective, rather we wish to remove
those responsible for such political surveillance from political life in Croatia,
notably Tudjman's last two ministers for internal affairs, Ivan Jamjak and Ivan
Penic. At the time of writing, both - remarkably - are members of the Croatian
parliament. Drago
Hedl is IWPR coordinating editor in Croatia and a Feral Tribune journalist. source: IWPR |
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