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UNTOUCHABLE PRIVILEGES ON THE AIR
One Year OnBy Slobodan Djoric It’s perfectly clear to everyone by now, even from the
official documentation: while the teargas and smoke were flooding into Nikola
Pasic Square on October 5, 2000, and the Federal Parliament and Radio Television
Serbia buildings burst into flames, marking the end of the Milosevic regime, it
was business as usual in the Federal Government building in the office of the
telecommunications minister. Deputy Minister Aca Stevanovic was at his desk that day.
He was the right and left hand of Ivan Markovic (who vanished into thin air on
October 5) and his predecessor Dojcilo Radojevic. This trio presided over
the Serbian airwaves for four years, treating this natural resources as though
it were their private domain, the property of the Socialist Party of Serbia
and the Yugoslav Left. Television and radio was the regime’s political
resource. Once it was obvious that loss was inevitable, at least the
political fallout for many unprotected Socialist-Left broadcasters could be
reduced. With this in mind, Markovic’s deputy and accomplice, Aca
Stevanovic, was looking after the shop even on that October 5. It was
essential to secure the legality of the media to enable them to stay on air
until the good times rolled around again. Channels without challenges
Under a ruling signed by Aca Stevanovic, the Federal
Government permits the use of channels by the following television stations:
Globus in Kragujevac, Most in Novi Sad and Most in Raska, TV S in Uzice, TV S in
Sombor, TV S in Cacak, Global in Nis and TV KI in Kikinda. All of these
channels are within the STV Mreza system. This company was founded in late
August, 2000, by the Socialist Party’s Central Committee, the founding
documents were appointed by Gorica Gajevic and Nikola Sainovic was appointed
head of the board. The directors were recruited from Radio Television
Serbia, first Zoran Zivkovic and then Dragan Kolarevic. These television stations might have gone unnoticed if it
hadn’t been for the arrest of former finance minister Borislav Milacic on
charges of purchasing equipment worth 2.5 million dollars for them, from state
funds. The Mreza affair has still not been resolved, but its radio
and television stations have come under the scrutiny of the local authorities. Thus it was established that the manufacturing conglomerate
Zastava in Kragujevac had been plundered and left short of several million
dinars used to subsidise TV Globus. There similar cases in other towns as
well. The founding and financing of eight Mreza branch offices is yet to
come under scrutiny by state investigatory bodies. In the course of 1999 and, especially, the election year,
2000, Ivan Markovic and his deputy Aca Stevanovic made increasingly free use of
their discretionary powers to make room on the air for the regime’s favourites
and those who paid homage to the image and the work of Slobodan Milosevic and
his wife. In this way, RTV Pink was granted twelve channels in
August, 2000, alone. TV Kosava was given seven television and two radio
frequencies in April, 2000. Radio Fan, part of the private company Madona,
from Pozarevac (owned by Milosevic’s son Marko) was awarded eight radio
frequencies, TV Palma got three television channels, Studio B got four, Yu Info
four, Radio Television Serbia and BK TV, TV Art, TV SOS, TV Politika and another
ten operators got one each. Our research indicates that during those two years the
Ministry permitted the use of a total of 98 television and 65 radio frequencies,
without once releasing the information to the public. The minister for
telecommunications was exercising his discretionary right with great discretion.
The criteria for doling out these channels were always the wishes and personal
interests of the former regime, rather than any sort of technical assessment.
For example TV Jedinstvo in Novi Pazar was given four channels, TV Arilje (which,
according to municipal leaders is owned by Deputy Minister Aca Stevanovic)
received nine channels! Stevanovic signed these licences personally and
presented the documents for these channels to himself on October 1. They
were valid for a period of ten years! The same day BK TV was also
presented with five channels, but only for a period of two years, in order to
extend its coverage into south-eastern Serbia. Below the Line
The expert committee from the Association of Independent
Serbian Journalists and the Belgrade Media Centre which was charged with
drafting new broadcasting legislation was faced with the current chaotic
situation on the air. Not only are there a vast number of broadcasters,
but also a range of inherited privileges, repression, illegal decisions and
corruption. In the absence of any explicit legislation, and the regime’s
apparent unwillingness to pass any, the committee decided to apply the criteria
of justice to the situation. The proposed provisions of the new law rule draw a line
between the 1998 open competition for frequencies and the minister’s
discretionary rulings which were valid in 1999 and 2000 and which weren’t a
right under the law but a licence for privileges. If this draft legislation becomes law, all documents signed
by Aca Stevanovic and his boss Ivan Markovic will become invalid once the first
open tenders are called under the Broadcasting Act in line with a detailed plan
for radio frequencies based on international regulations and criteria. The Amnesia of the New Authorities
When he first accepted his portfolio in November, 2000, the
former minister for telecommunications, Boris Tadic, spoke of the necessity of
putting an end to any further populating of the airspace. As a first
measure he imposed a moratorium on the issue of licences, a measure which
neither fooled nor daunted the new broadcasters. At the time this
statement was issued about 95 per cent of the existing seven hundred
broadcasters didn’t have a valid licence. Either their licences had
expired or they had never held one. The new authorities were helpless and
unable to do anything about the broadcasters who sprang up after October 5,
despite the moratorium. In order to apply the law on communication systems
they would have had to close down all these stations, because the changes of
October 5 had no legal basis. Tadic didn’t want to follow in the
footsteps of his predecessors by applying the law selectively. Faced with this all or none dilemma he chose the latter.
This decision suited the former lapdogs of the Belgrade regime (Pink, Palma,
Kosava and BK) who held onto their television channels and their potential
millions of viewers, an enormous advertising market. It also suited the
rookies Municipal radio and television stations didn’t feel their
status put them under threat. Most affected were the independent and
private local broadcasters which had survived years of repression and expected
to at least be given legitimacy as a reward for the victory of the democratic
opposition. They also expected that the regime stations would lose their
privileges. None of this happened. Quite the opposite did: the
number of radio and television stations has grown each month and the pressure on
the advertising market is becoming unbearable because of the increasingly unfair
competition. It is cold comfort that political competition on the wild
market has ceased to exist because most of the independent electronic media
which welcomed the political changes of October 5 are on the verge of bankruptcy.
There is no justice in sight for them and the clear political boundary between
regime and non-regime media has now vanished. It appears that the new
authorities are suffering from amnesia and the claim of the independent
broadcasters that nothing has been done to address the situation is certainly
justified. Amid the lack of regulations, and political will within
DOS, Minister Tadic clutched at a straw by accepting an offer by the Association
of Independent Serbian Journalists and the Media Centre to set an expert working
party to draft new broadcasting legislation. And the credit for the fact
that this first broadcasting bill was delivered to the Serbian Government in
August, 2000, goes to Tadic, as former minister. The authorities are now in possession of draft legislation
on broadcasting which is in line with European standards, in line with the law
and in line with justice. The only question now is whether DOS is ready to
accept this solution. Still it seems that the new authorities have forgotten the
violations of the law, corruption, and self-serving of the former heads of the
Ministry of Telecommunications. The electronic media will show their true
colours once they announce their own positions on the broadcasting legislation.
Let’s hope that happens soon, because too much time has already been wasted. (The author is the secretary-general of the Spektar Media
Association) source: MHxJU |
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