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Editor
of "The Day" Sentenced
Handcuffs Instead of
Laurels
Prison sentence
pronounced to Vladislav Asanin started numerous reactions and discussions within
Montenegro, but also raised a question of the position of journalists in
Montenegro.
AIM
Podgorica, December 16, 2001 Vladislav
Asanin, former editor-in-chief of the daily "Dan" (The Day) has been
sentenced to three months in prison for slander. Asanin was convicted in a civil
claim filed by Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic for publishing texts from
the Zagreb weekly "Nacional" about tobacco mafia. Since
Asanin already had one suspended sentence for slander (passed in a civil suit of
Stanko Subotic), the court in Podgorica sentenced him to three months in prison.
This would be the first time in Montenegro that a journalist would end up behind
bars. That was why this verdict did not leave anyone in Montenegro indifferent.
Some disputed it, others justified it, whereas still others considered it to
harsh or inadequate not denying Asanin's responsibility. "Imprisoning
and convicting of journalists is impermissible. I am against this sentence, as
well as against slander as a part of Criminal Law", commented Borislav
Banovic, former Montenegrin Assistant Secretary of Information and official of
the Social-Democratic Party. Numerous
domestic and foreign non-governmental organisations, as well as journalists,
including those who have been criticising "The Day" for unprofessional
editorial policy for a very long time, have raised their voice against Asanin's
prison sentence. Such
stands have opened many other questions. Has everyone risen to defend Asanin as
a professional journalist, acquitting him of responsibility that he has been
accused of? Or, perhaps, this criticism has been partly addressed to the
existing Montenegrin law which envisages from three months to three years of
prison for slander? "I
believed that Montenegrin judiciary would not sentence Vladimir Asanin to prison
for slander in the media, although there is a legal procedure for that. For some
time now, journalists and non-governmental organisations in Montenegro have been
fighting against imprisoning journalists because of their writing and publishing,
demanding the replacement of that sentence by a fine, as is the case in other
European countries", said President of the Association of Professional
Journalists of Montenegro Danilo Burzan. Burzan thought that the court should
not be blamed for acting according to a valid Montenegrin law, although as he
said, he was in favour of eliminating all remnants of the old practice from the
Criminal Code. Apart
from those who consistently advocated the principle that journalists should not
be threatened with a possibility of being put behind bars for using "strong
language", there was an increasing number of those who saw Asanin's penalty
as an opportunity to score a political point or two. "I read what
politicians have been saying and do not doubt their good intentions, but for
them it is still just an opportunity at securing political points for themselves",
observed Asanin. "This
is yet another blow to the freedom of public expression and publicity in
Montenegro, delivered by none else but Milo Djukanovic in a way that doesn't
exist even in the most rigid communist systems", commented a SNP official,
Vuksan Simonovic. However, Simonovic and all those like-minded have forgotten
the fact that Asanin was just the last of a number of Montenegrin journalists
who stood accused for a crime of slander. Already in early nineties journalists
of "Monitor" Mihailo Radojicic, Seki Radoncic and Ceseljko Koprivica
had been tried and got suspended sentences. It is
also without doubt that things have somewhat changed today. At the time of war
frenzy, convictions of independent journalists were followed in silence. Today,
victims of that regime (to which Asanin also once belonged) raised their voice
against Asanin's conviction. Namely, Vladimir Asanin had been editor-in-chief of
Radio&Television of Montenegro at the time when unified DPS was in coalition
with Milosevic. Asanin
did not hide this: "I do not deny that; times were different. If I have
changed from a journalist who belonged to a political party into a journalist
working for an independent paper, that means that criticism was effective."
Indeed, his "The Day" did not rise in defence of journalistic
profession when Montenegrin journalists were persecuted or when Slavko Curuvija
was killed, owner of "The Daily Telegraph" (Dnevni Telegraf).
Ironically, now that same weapon that his protégés had been using against
others for years, has turned against him. That is
why sentence pronounced to Asanin started disputes in the divided Montenegro.
"That has nothing to do with either the court or justice", said
President of the Association of Journalists of Yugoslavia Budo Simonovic
assessing the process against Asanin as "open political trial which was
meant to please Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic". There
were those who reacted to Simonovic's reaction. "Simonovic's association,
which mostly rallied correspondents of Belgrade papers, never spoke in defence
of the profession, but only of those belonging to that political option",
recalled Danilo Burzan. Burzan
was not the only one to observe this Simonovic's "principle". A
well-known journalist Miodrag Marovic also wrote about it in his book "Stumblings
of the Old Lady". "Under new circumstances Simonovic has been given a
new role of connecting the phantom organisation Association of Journalists of
Yugoslavia (ASY), he is the President of, with leaders from Dedinje. He does
that by loudly reacting to every open attack on "patriotic journalists"
in Montenegro and wisely keeping silent when professional and independent
journalists are being persecuted in Serbia. And all that under the scandalous
Law on the Media which Budo Simonovic, as President of the AJY, supported by
keeping silent instead of defending the journalistic profession", wrote
Marovic. Simonovic
and all those like-minded, were not heard even during NATO intervention when the
Army arrested journalist Antun Masle and brought in foreign correspondents,
confiscating their journalistic equipment, nor when Milosevic's papers labelled
them spies in "The Day". That is
exactly why it would be frivolous to forget scenes from more recent Montenegrin
history and observe Asanin's conviction as an original social phenomenon. We
have already seen similar things. However, there is nothing that power-holders
today can use as an excuse for settling scores with journalists through
institutions which have been burying free thought in Montenegro for years. Provision
of the Montenegrin Criminal Law on slander are nothing new. They were used for
years as a convenient toy by those who have just now realised that there are two
ends to a stick. The point is not who will get it first at a given moment.
Perhaps Vladislav Asanin's trial might serve as a cause for permanently
eliminating this practice from Montenegrin public stage as a means for scaring
journalists. # Petar KOMNENIC, (AIM) source: AIM
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