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Clarification in the affair 'Medal for B92''by Veran Matic The Association of Independent Electronic Media, ANEM, has
posed a steady stream of questions over the past year on the apparent lack of
media regulations. These questions have been put to both the federal and
Serbian governments and the public has been kept informed of them. There
has been no extensive public campaign such as we conducted under the Milosevic
regime because we have wanted to create a healthy environment in which to
resolve the problems of the independent media in a constructive manner.
However despite our many meetings with government representatives and our
earnest efforts to reach a compromise, nothing has happened. ANEM periodically publishes reports on the media situation
and makes recommendations. The most recent of these was published on
October 4 under the title "Media in Serbia Twelve Months On".
This document was distributed to all the appropriate institutions and
individuals in the country and abroad. It was also delivered to the office
of Prime Minister Djindjic and representatives of the UN Institute for Peace.
The document was also posted on the B92 Web site (http://www.b92.net).
The question posed to the prime minister at the Institute for Peace in
Washington was taken from this document. At issue, therefore, are
questions which had previously been asked in this country as well, but in the
context of offering solutions aimed at alleviating tensions, reaching a
compromise and creating an atmosphere conducive to the passage of sound and
appropriate media legislation. As far as medals for past merits go, if anyone had wanted
to give independent media and journalists this kind of pat on the back they
would have done so by now. If we were interested in this kind of accolade,
B92 and ANEM would have laid much more emphasis on the importance of our role
over the past twelve years, particularly in the process of creating the
conditions for the overthrow of the Milosevic regime. Given the short
memory of those concerned I would remind the public that TV B2-92 covered a
broad area of Serbia despite having been banned by the former regime at that
time. Only viewers in the Belgrade area were unable to receive our program
because of the large number of government transmitters jamming our signal but we
did cover almost the whole of Vojvodina, Serbia's northern province, by
broadcasting from transmitters located in Romania. We also covered eastern
and central Serbia by broadcasting from Bosnia-Herzegovina, where our first two
transmitters were blown up the night after they had been built. This did
not stop us we installed a new transmitter and resumed broadcasting.
This is the first time I am telling this story in public, in order to prove that
we need no medals, only fair treatment and justice. (Veran Matic is President of the Association of Independent Electronic Media of Serbia ANEM) source: MHxJU |
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