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ANEM WEEKLY MEDIA UPDATE
DECEMBER 1 - DECEMBER 7, 2001
PRISTINA, December 3, 2001 Serb members of Kosovo’s new
parliament have refused to leave Pristina airport amid a security dispute with
the UN administration in the province. The 22 members of the Return coalition, returning from
Belgrade this morning, were due to make their first visit to the Kosovo
parliament ahead of its inaugural session on December 10. The MPs however refused to leave the airport after UNMIK
said it could not guarantee the security of the accompanying journalists and
personnel. Airport security prevented journalists from leaving the airport to
enter the city. The Return members asked to be flown back to Belgrade. Oliver Ivanovic, one of Return’s two parliament
presidency members, said the coalition would not attend this week’s
preparatory workshops until UNMIK guarantees the safety of all MPs, staff and
journalists. Ivanovic claimed the UN administration had been informed of
who would be arriving 48 hours in advance. He described their failure to provide
security as “scandalous and shameful.” The arrival of the MPs marked the first time a Yugoslav
airways plane had touched down at Pristina airport since before the arrival of
international peacekeepers in June 1999. (B92/Srna)
BELGRADE, December 3, 2001 Media companies should not be
permitted to own a daily newspaper as well as radio and television operations,
the editor in chief of the Beta news agency said today. Dragan Janjic was speaking in support of a state government
decree to forbid multiple media ownership. He also said that he believed that television operators
Pink, BK and B92 should apply for a national network licence. “Pink is wealthy and such television networks exist in
every country: we are no exception. However, I believe that not everything
should be under state control and represent cheap entertainment. Of course I am
not against Pink being given a frequency licence, but national programs should
have to meet certain criteria first and this station should introduce some
changes in its programming,” said Janjic. He added that all national television broadcasters should
be obliged to rebroadcast independent productions. The level of these, he said,
was poor at the moment but could be expected to improve.
BELGRADE, December 3, 2001 After more than a year, the
democratic authorities in the country still see no importance in adopting new
broadcast and information legislation, obviously fearing that the
democratisation of public information could endanger some of their privileges,
B92 comments today. This is only one of the problems media face in countries in
transition and is among the many such problems under discussion at a two-day
conference in the Belgrade Media Center of representatives of the majority of
news agencies in the region, together with journalist associations, media and
local and foreign scientific institutions. The editor-in-chief of Television Belgrade’s current
affairs programming, Bojana Lekic, said that she faced informal pressure from
the new authorities almost everyday. Lekic, who took up the position a month ago, said that she
would describe the telephone as the symbol of the relations between media and
authorities. The political editor of daily Politika, Milo Vukelic,
described the democratic authorities in Serbia as trying various means to get
control of the paper. “On June 25 and 26, after the scandal broke about the
excess profit tax, not because the law was bad but because a certain lift of
excess profiteers emerged, I was invited to visit a bureau within the Serbian
Government, an institution close to the Serbia Government, or, should I say, the
Serbian Interior Ministry, as a political journalist. I was received by a man
who asked me to write against the excess profit tax law and offered me good
money for the job,” said Vukelic, saying this was only one of many such
examples. European Media Institute researcher Dusan Reljic told the
conference that political control of media in the region still existed and that
this was particularly prominent in Eastern Europe.
NOVI SAD, December 3, 2001 The editor of Kepes Ifijusag, a
Hungarian-language magazine published in Novi Sad, has claimed to have been
threatened after publishing an article from the Feral Tribune on Eduardo Flores,
the commander of the International Platoon which was active at the beginning of
the war in Croatia. Attila Szabo Palocz claims that Flores sent him an
offensive letter describing him as a Hungarian traitor and a Hungarian Chetnik. Several days later, says Palocz, he received another letter,
this time with death threats. A journalist for London daily The Observer also claims to
have received death threats after the broadcasting of a documentary on Channel 4
television in which he made allegations about Flores. The allegations concerned two unexplained deaths. Feral Tribune, in its article, wrote that Croatian
journalists had had no problem whatsoever with Flores because they had made sure
to erect a monument to him.
BELGRADE, December 5, 2001 “Members of the police whose
names are on the list published by Reporter are to decide for themselves whether
they will file criminal charges for libel against the magazine. We know that
many of them have decided to do that and that a significant number of police
officers from the list are interested in filing charges. The Ministry will
provide the necessary legal assistance for all of those who wish to bring
criminal charges,” Police Administration chief Milorad Simic said today. Asked whether the taxpayer would still pick up the bill if
the police lost their cases, Simic said that this was for the court to decide.
BELGRADE, December 5, 2001 There is no doubt about the
authenticity of the list of police officers in whom the Hague Tribunal is
interested, the director of Reporter said yesterday. Perica Vucinic told media that the backlash from the state
over the list was reminiscent of the days when journalists had to “go to
certain places” to get information. A scandal had been created merely by the magazine
performing its function, said Vucinic, adding that the most important message
emerging was that the media should return to the days of self-censorship. “We stick to this information and the story and it is not
the problem of the media that there is a division in the political structure.
This state’s judiciary is under the minister’s control because the
prosecution responded just half an hour after his press conference,” said
Reporter’s director. The magazine’s layer, Srdjan Sisic, added that no crime
of disseminating false information was committed where there was no intention of
jeopardising peace and creating a public disturbance. “Without proof of intention, there is simply no crime,”
he said, adding that just eighteen months ago the Milosevic regime had seized
entire issues of Reporter in the same way and making the same claims.
NOVI SAD, December 5, 2001 The Vojvodina Parliament and the
province’s independent Media Committee for Information claims that
broadcasting legislation due to be tabled in the Serbian Parliament this month
is flawed because it does not recognise the characteristics of the province. Those flaws, which the two bodies say could lead to chaos
in the province, include a reduction in the number of frequencies allocated to
Radio Television Novi Sad and the difficulties in obtaining frequency licences,
because the draft legislation envisages licences being given only to electronic
media which held such licences before February 1998. Radio Belgrade director Rade Veljanovski, a member of the
working group which drafted the legislation, claims that the problem does not
lie in state media subscriptions collected in Vojvodina but the idea that the
entire sum collected should be expended on the needs of RTV Novi Sad. If this
were the case, he said, subscribers in Vojvodina should be given a choice as to
whether they only wanted access to programs broadcast by the provincial service.
BELGRADE, December 5, 2001 The appointment of senior
executives to Radio Television Novi Sad will be carried out according to the law,
but the Vojvodina Parliament will be given an opportunity to approve them,
Deputy Serbian Prime Minister Zarko Korac said today. Korac said that this meant the provincial assembly would
have the opportunity either to assent to the appointments made in Belgrade or to
call for new applications.
BELGRADE, December 5, 2001 Bojana Lekic is considering
quitting her position as head of current affairs for Radio Television Serbia
after just a month in the job, according to the People’s Justice Party, quoted
by Reporter today. The party’s “reliable” source says that Lekic is
unhappy about not being given a free editorial hand and about resistance to her
efforts to change the state media’s sycophantic attitude to the government.
BELGRADE, November 6, 2001 Electronic media in Yugoslavia
have shown the Democratic Party of Serbia, led by Yugoslav President Vojislav
Kostunica, in a mostly negative light, while maintaining a neutral attitude to
the Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic’s Democratic Party, media monitoring
by the Media Center and Strategic Marketing shows. Strategic Marketing spokesman Darko Brocic said that
Kostunica’s party was mentioned in a negative context on nearly all television
channels, led by Studio B and TV BK, both of which broadcast more negative than
positive reports on the party, while most reports on the Democratic Party were
neutral. The most negative reports on Kostunica himself are in
reports on TV Montenegro, followed by TV B92 and Studio B. The most negative
commentary on the Yugoslav Government appears on TV Montenegro and BK TV.
BELGRADE, November 6, 2001 Weekly Reporter is sure to
defeat charges to be laid by Serbian police officers over the publication of a
list purporting to be police of interest to the Hague Tribunal, the magazine’s
director, Perica Vucinic, said today. “Knowing that we are not a wealthy company, after two
weeks of wondering what to do the authorities have come up with the idea of
hitting us in the wallet. I’m not even concerned about whether we can pay;
I’m certain that we’ll defeat the charges and that’s that,” said Vucinic. He commented that the allegations said more about the
authorities than about the magazine. “The police have been manipulated and I don’t want us
to think about police in the light of the jokes we all know about them. They
understand very well, or they will understand soon, who is manipulating them and
that is not the press,” said Vucinic.
PODGORICA, December 7, 2001 The former editor of Podgorica
daily Dan was today jailed for three months after being convicted of libelling
Montenegrin President Milo Djukanovic. The court ruled that Vladislav Asanin had committed the
crime of “slandering through the press” with premeditation and over an
extended period. The charges arose from a private prosecution brought by
Djukanovic. The conviction relates to Dan carrying reports from Zagreb
weekly Nacional on the “Balkan Tobacco Mafia” in which Djukanovic is alleged
to have been involved in illegal business dealings.
BELGRADE, December 7, 2001 The Serbian Orthodox Church and
the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia have formed a joint group of legal experts
which will present an analysis of the Broadcasting Bill. Under the draft legislation, churches have no right to
operate radio and television stations. Archbishop Stanislav Hocevar told media that in a truly
democratic society, churches have the right to operate media. Bishop Lavrentije of Sabac and Valjevo recently wrote to
both the Federal and Serbian governments, protesting over the legislation.
BELGRADE, December 7, 2001 Radio B92 journalists Svetlana
Lukic and Svetlana Vukovic have won the 2001 Konstantin Obradovic Award for the
development of the culture of human rights. The award was given for their weekly program Pescanik (The
Hourglass). The Konstantin Obradovic Award was established by the
Belgrade Centre for Human Rights in memory of its founder, one of the greatest
Yugoslav and international figures in international humanitarian law and an
active fighter for human rights. The jury for the award was Filip David, Vesna Pesic and
Vojin Dimitrijevic. Lukic and Vukovic will receive the award on Sunday night at
a ceremony to mark Human Rights Day on December 10. The ceremony will include the launch of a Serbian
translation of the book “Lustration” by Czech author Andras Zadar.
BELGRADE, December 7, 2001 Radio Belgrade 202 is to change
its program concept as of Monday, editor-in-chief Nebojsa Spaic announced today. Spaic told media that the station’s daily program would
be divided into appropriate blocks for the time of day. Programs on homosexuals, drug addicts, alcoholics and all
“different and lonely” people would aired during the evening. Spaic was appointed editor-in-chief of the Radio Television
Serbia station on September 1.
PODGORICA, December 7, 2001 Journalists should not be
jailed for slander, the head of the Association of Montenegrin Professional
Journalists said today. Danilo Burzan was commenting on the jailing of Dan editor
Vladislav Asanin for three months after being convicted of slandering the
Montenegrin president. Burzan said he would strive to ensure that such crimes
could not be punishable by prison sentences. Budo Simonovic, who leads the Alliance of Yugoslav
Journalists, described Asanin’s conviction as “the twilight and stumbling of
the Montenegrin judiciary”. He added that the jailing had nothing to do with
the court or justice, but was a political trial. The head of the Association of Montenegrin Journalists,
Vlatko Vujovic, described the jailing of Asanin as the most shameful decision
passed by the Montenegrin judiciary in the past half century. “Asanin’s conviction, on no legal basis, put every
Montenegrin journalist behind bars,” said Vujovic, adding that he hoped the
situation would not last long.
BELGRADE, December 7, 2001 YU Radio, the local program of
Radio Yugoslavia, is to rebroadcast current affairs programs of Radio France
International. The broadcasts, which are to begin on December 10, will be
the first collaboration between the two broadcasters. Radio France International and Radio Yugoslavia are
expected to develop other forms of business and technical cooperation in the
near future. Radio Yugoslavia is part of the Federal public broadcaster,
Radio Television Yugoslavia.
source: ANEM
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