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ANEM press release
NO PRIME MINISTER, WE DON’T WANT PRIVILEGES
FOR ANYONE!
BELGRADE, November 7, 2001 The Association of
Independent Electronic Media is outraged at accusations made yesterday by Prime
Minister Zoran Djindjic that by urging the adoption of new broadcast legislation
ANEM and B92 are seeking privileges. Mr Djindjic told an audience at the Institute for
Peace in Washington yesterday that the question of why some Serbian independent
media now find themselves worse off than under the Milosevic regime was “irritating”. In response to ANEM and B92’s criticism that new
frequency licences had still not been issued, the prime minister implied that we
were seeking privileges. “Some people want privileges. They don’t
want new legislation, they want a licence in order to become a national
television channel, although at this point they have a television channel
without a licence. Thus they are working illegally.” This claim of illegal operation is simply not correct.
Radio and Television B92 are broadcasting in full accordance with the law and
the licences they hold. It is in fact precisely because B92 respects the
current regulations that it finds itself unable to compete in the market. We would also ask the prime minister to note that
neither this association nor RTV B92 has ever claimed that the media situation
is worse than it was under Milosevic. What ANEM has claimed, and
emphasised in a press release issued by the Board of Directors on October 30, is
that the legal infrastructure for the activities of independent media in Serbia
today has not improved since the Milosevic regime fell. The strategy of the Milosevic regime was to leave the
independent electronic media in limbo, without licences and under constant
threat of closure. More than a year after the regime fell, that situation
persists. The new authorities have set the Milosevic legacy in concrete by
proclaiming a moratorium on change without redressing any of the injustices
suffered by the independent electronic media. ANEM has also demanded the urgent adoption of new
regulations for media and telecommunications, primarily the new Broadcast Act in
order to remedy this situation. Mr Djindjic’s claim that the Association of
Independent Serbian Journalists is drafting the bill and that the status quo
must be endured in the meantime is simply not true. The draft Broadcast Bill has been prepared by experts
in various fields, not the journalist association, and it has been presented to
the government. The former telecommunications minister, Boris Tadic,
announced in May that it would “soon” be tabled in the Serbian Parliament.
Five months have passed since then. ANEM believes that the Government is delaying tabling
the Bill because it is not keen to see Radio Television Serbia transformed into
a public service nor to see the establishment of the Broadcast Council which
would be responsible for the allocation of frequencies and channels
independently of either the Parliament or the government. In the meantime the Serbian Government has neither
tabled the new legislation in Parliament nor implemented the existing law. The current Broadcast Act states, in Article 7, that
the government is obliged to call a public competition for frequency use once a
year and reach a decision on the allocation of frequencies within three months
of that. It is therefore legally feasible to grant temporary frequency
licenses under the old legislation, which is what ANEM has requested. This request is not a demand for privileges: on the
contrary, it is concerned with the stripping of privileges from those media once
loyal to Milosevic which have, thanks to those very privileges, used the last
year to capitalise on the market monopoly which they gained, not by the quality
of their programs or their promotion of any social values but through the
support and financing of a dictatorship and their seats on the central
committees of the ruling parties. Our demand is to do with ensuring a level playing
field for those who were performing their functions with honour, even under the
Milosevic regime. They were not doing this because they wanted one day
to receive a medal from Prime Minister Djindjic but because they believed in the
principles of their profession and democratic values. Does the prime minister’s remark that we can have a
medal, but not a national television channel mean that it is government policy
that those who fought for democratic change and reform should be awarded medals
and those who worked against democratic change should be rewarded with channel
licences? The events of the last year bear witness that this is the
intention. ANEM will redouble its campaign for the urgent
adoption of the Broadcast Act, it will continue to respect the law, despite its
unfairness to us and will demand a level playing field for all involved in the
media through the temporary solutions at present legally feasible. Veran Matic, source: MHxJU |
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