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CZECH
REPUBLIC
Despite the Czech Republic's status as a leading
candidate to join the European Union, local journalists continue to face
significant risks for criticizing politicians and government policies,
while political interference in the media inhibits the expansion of press
freedom.
The country's entire political establishment was
shaken at the beginning of the year by a crisis at Czech Television (CT).
On December 20, 2000, CT's supervisorsall of them politically appointedabruptly
dismissed the general director and named journalist Jiri Hodac, a loyalist
of Parliament speaker Vaclav Klaus' Civic Democratic Party (ODS), as the
station's new head.
According to international reports, Hodac was appointed
in a backroom deal between the ruling coalition and the powerful, conservative
ODS. Klaus, a former prime minister, was suspected of trying to consolidate
control over CT in advance of parliamentary elections, scheduled for sometime
in 2002. CT staffers were so outraged that they occupied the station's
offices and began broadcasting their protests during prime time.
The dispute also divided the country's political
leaders, with President Vaclav Havel publicly supporting the journalists
and criticizing Klaus, his main rival. On January 3, 2001, about 100,000
people gathered in Prague's Wenceslaus Square to demand Hodac's resignation.
As popular support for the journalists grew, senior politicians backed
away from Hodac. On January 11, 2001, with 50,000 protesters in Wenceslaus
Square calling for him to step down, Hodac resigned.
On January 23, the lower house of Parliamentthe
House of Chambersoverrode Senate opposition and amended the country's
Media Law in an effort to depoliticize the station. The nine-member Czech
Television Council (CTC), which oversees the network, was dismissed and
expanded to 15 members. The new legislation gave professional and civic
organizations the right to nominate new CTC members, subject to Parliament's
approval.
On February 9, Jiri Balvin, an experienced and respected
journalist, was appointed as the interim CT director. CT staffers ended
their strike on February 10 after receiving assurances from Balvin that
he would maintain editorial independence. Parliament finally approved
new CTC members in late May. On October 31, the CTC selected Balvin for
a six-year term as CT general director.
Even as the CT crisis ebbed, independent journalists
who criticized government policies continued to face considerable risk.
On October 22, Prime Minister Milos Zeman threatened legal action against
the independent, Prague-based weekly Respekt because of its sharp
attacks on government corruption. Zemen characterized the weekly as "the
garbage pail of Czech journalism." After protests from CPJ and other
press freedom organizations, Zemen abandoned his threatened lawsuit.
On February 28, a court ordered Zeman to offer a
public apology for suggesting that Ivan Brezina of the Prague weekly Reflex
had accepted bribes to write articles about a nuclear power plant. Zemen
was also ordered to pay 300,000 koruny (US$8,000) in damages, the CTK
news agency reported. On December 6, the ruling was overturned on appeal.
On October 23, Frantisek Zamecnik, former editor
of the controversial, pro-communist regional weekly Nove Bruntalsko,
was convicted of libeling three local officials and sentenced to 16 months
in prison. The case was under appeal at year's end.
In a positive development, Tomas Smrcek, a former
television reporter, was acquitted in June of "endangering classified
information." Smrcek faced eight years in prison for displaying a
confidential government document during a 1994 television interview that
aired on the Nova channel. He had used the document to support allegations
of corruption against the chief of the State Security Service.
The U.S. government–run news service Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) has offices in Prague, and Czech authorities
took steps throughout the year to protect the station from a number of
threats. On April 22, for example, Czech authorities expelled Iraqi diplomat
Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani for conducting surveillance of the RFE/RL
headquarters. There were unconfirmed international press reports that
al-Ani was planning a terrorist attack on the RFE/RL building, which also
houses the U.S.-funded Radio Free Iraq.
After September 11, Czech authorities deployed troops
and armored personnel carriers outside the RFE/RL building as a security
precaution. Because of the physical vulnerability of the building, Prime
Minister Zeman called on the United States to relocate RFE/RL headquarters
from downtown Prague to a more secure location, The Associated Press reported.
October 22
Respekt
THREATENED
Prime Minister Milos Zeman threatened to bankrupt the independent, Prague-based
weekly Respekt with a series of debilitating lawsuits in retaliation
for its criticism of his government.
Zeman announced that his government was planning to file suit against
Respekt and its editor-in-chief, Pyotr Holub, after Holub wrote
an article calling the ruling Social Democrat (CSSD) government corrupt,
the CTK news agency reported.
The prime minister later told a group of journalists that members of
his cabinet would file separate complaints against Holub, all demanding
financial compensation, "so that Respekt finally ceases to
exist."
Zeman valued the reputations of his 17 cabinet ministers at 10 million
crowns (US$270,000) each, implying that his government would seek 170
million crowns (US$4.5 million) in damages.
He went on to say that he wanted an "equality-based partnership
to reign between the government and the press" but added that journalists
should not be surprised by his cabinet's "allergic" reaction
to lies.
Respekt has often reported on scandals and conflicts of interest
within the CSSD.
After strong protests from CPJ and other press freedom organizations,
Zeman and the members of his cabinet dropped the threatened lawsuits.
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