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YUGOSLAVIA
The revolutionary political changes of late 2000 and
early 2001 that ousted former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic ended
a decade of repression for Yugoslavia's independent journalists. But after
a year in power, the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS), which replaced
Milosevic, failed to enact needed reforms in media-related laws. And while
the DOS proved far less heavy-handed than Milosevic, its leaders have
not hesitated to apply more subtle pressures on independent media that
do not embrace DOS policies.
The 18-party DOS coalition represented a broad array
of political and ideological loyalties: Serbian nationalists, former Milosevic
allies, and pro-Western reformists. The coalition took power in two stages.
Stage one came in the aftermath of federal presidential elections, held
in September 2000, which Milosevic tried to steal. A popular uprising
in early October drove Milosevic from power, clearing the way for DOS
presidential candidate Vojislav Kostunica to take office. Then, in December
2000, the DOS won a majority in the Serbian parliamentary elections, and
appointed coalition member Zoran Djindjic prime minister the following
month.
Kostunica's presidency brought a dramatic, and almost
immediate, end to the intense state-sponsored persecution of journalists
that marked Milosevic's reign. Within four months, the Yugoslav courts
and parliament had dismantled the notorious Public Information Law, used
under Milosevic to impose huge fines and equipment confiscations on media
outlets that criticized the government.
The new rulers promised further media reform, sending
a wave of optimism through the independent press corps. Veran Matic, chairman
of the Association of Independent Electronic Media (ANEM) in Belgrade,
said local media groups enthusiastically submitted ideas for new laws
on broadcasting and information. But, said Matic, with the exception of
the new telecommunications minister, Kostunica's government "did
not wholeheartedly engage in" the reform process. In fact, although
the independent reporting of ANEM and other media had played a key role
in Milosevic's fall, the coalition that replaced him soon came to see
truly independent journalism as a threat to the cohesion of its 18-party
alliance.
Within that alliance, informal political factions
began to form, most significantly around Kostunica, who enjoyed strong
public support, and Djindjic, who was less popular but more committed
to the reform process. The growing competition between Kostunica and Djindjic
heightened each politician's efforts to harness media support for his
own political benefit.
Independent and wealthy television stations such
as TV Pink and BK TV were particularly attractive to DOS politicians because
of their large national audiences. Because they were loyal to the Milosevic
regime, these stations benefited from subsidies and regulatory favor throughout
the 1990s. When the DOS took power, they quickly switched their allegiance
to the new government.
Meanwhile, a decade of physical abuse, legal harassment,
heavy fines, and periodic confiscation of property under Milosevic left
other media outlets financially weak but determined to preserve their
independence under the new government. But without government patronage,
ANEM's broadcasters and other independent media lacked both the financial
support and political protection to compete in the new market.
This vulnerability was noticeable in early May,
when CPJ conducted a fact-finding mission to Serbia. In meetings with
senior Yugoslav and Serbian government officials, CPJ urged greater accountability
for individuals who target journalists, with particular emphasis on the
April 1999 assassination of Dnevni Telegraf editor-in-chief Slavko
Curuvija. CPJ also called for a timely reallocation of broadcast frequencies
to ensure that a broad range of views is available on television and radio.
And CPJ urged a thorough government audit of private, pro-Milosevic media
that had profited from illegal financial support during the 1990s.
Several weeks after the CPJ mission, two attackers
killed Milan Pantic, a 47-year-old crime reporter for the Belgrade daily
Vecernje Novosti, as he was entering his apartment building. Pantic
had received numerous telephone threats in response to his articles, which
covered corruption and organized crime. Local authorities launched an
investigation into the case, but no progress was reported at the end of
the year.
The media reform effort stalled in July, when the
government abolished the Federal Telecommunications Ministry, the only
government office that had aggressively supported new media laws. The
ruling coalition took no further action to push reform. As a result, smaller,
independent media outlets remained financially vulnerable. Long denied
national broadcast licenses by the Milosevic regime, they were still unable
to obtain them under the new governmentand thus could not compete
for national advertising revenues that went instead to state television
and the two pro-government broadcasters, BK TV and TV Pink.
Government inaction on several other crucial issues
exacerbated the economic bias in favor of pro-government broadcasters.
Despite calls from international press freedom groups and independent
media outlets, the ruling coalition never audited the financial gains
that pro-Milosevic stations made during the 1990s. Furthermore, only some
of the equipment confiscated from independent media outlets under Milosevic's
Public Information Act was actually returned, despite promises to the
contrary. And though the government pledged to return the 31 million dinars
(US$450,000) that the independent media paid in Public Information Law
fines during the last years of the Milosevic regime, only about a third
of that amount had been repaid as of August, according to ANEM.
Government efforts to reform the bloated state broadcasting
service, Radio Television Serbia (RTS), also lagged significantly. RTS
broadcasts, which had been a crucial element of Milosevic's efforts to
control public opinion, now enthusiastically supported the coalition that
replaced him. RTS journalists apparently feared losing their jobs if they
criticized the coalition, and the network's financial dependence on the
state seemed to guarantee its docility.
Security conditions in the southern Serbian province
of Kosovo remained difficult, with journalists reporting physical threats
and intimidation from political parties and organized crime figures.
On October 19, an ethnic Albanian journalist for
the Albanian-language daily Bota Sot, Bekim Kastrati, was killed
in a drive-by shooting. United Nations police were still investigating
Kastrati's murder at the end of the year. Local sources told CPJ that
another passenger wounded in the attack, a former commander of the Kosovo
Liberation Army, was the likely target of the shooting.
Kerem Lawton, a British national and producer for
Associated Press Television News, died on March 29 when a mortar shell
struck his vehicle in the village of Krivenik, in Kosovo. Lawton had arrived
to cover NATO operations along the border with Macedonia.
Political debate in Montenegro, meanwhile, continued
to focus on whether the republic should remain in the Yugoslav federation.
With Milosevic's dictatorship gone, international and domestic support
for Montenegrin independence weakened considerably. As a result, President
Milo Djukanovic and his pro-independence allies barely held on to power
in April parliamentary elections, with former Milosevic supporters and
pro-Yugoslav politicians gaining new seats.
Podgorica's political establishment was shaken in
the spring by the "tobacco affair." In neighboring Croatia,
the sensationalist Zagreb weekly Nacional published a series of
articles alleging that Djukanovic was skimming money from an illegal cigarette
smuggling operation. The Podgorica daily Dan reprinted the articles,
whereupon Djukanovic filed libel charges against Dan editor-in-chief
Vladislav Asanin. On December 6, Asanin was convicted and given a three-month
prison sentence. The judgment was under appeal at press time.
March 29
Kerem Lawton, Associated Press Television News
KILLED
Lawton, 30, a British national and producer for Associated Press Television
News, died from shrapnel wounds sustained when a shell struck his car.
At least two other civilians were feared dead in the attack, and at least
10 others were injured.
On March 28, the Macedonian Army launched a mini-offensive against Albanian
insurgents in the village of Gracani in northern Macedonia. Just across
the border in Kosovo, NATO-led peacekeepers stepped up patrols to intercept
Albanian guerrillas crossing into Macedonia.
At the time of his death, Lawton had just arrived in the village of
Krivenik to cover the deployment of additional NATO-led peacekeeping forces.
Both Macedonian military officials and ethnic Albanian insurgents denied
responsibility for Lawton's death and the other civilian casualties.
June 11
Milan Pantic, Vecernje Novosti
KILLED
Pantic, a reporter for the Belgrade daily Vecernje Novosti, was
killed shortly before 8 a.m. as he was entering his apartment building
in the central Serbian town of Jagodina.
Pantic had gone to fetch a loaf of bread. As he entered the front door
of his building, attackers grabbed him from behind, broke his neck, and
then struck him several times on the head with a sharp object as he lay
face down on the ground, according to Vecernje Novosti.
An eyewitness saw two attackers—both aged 20 to 30 and wearing masks
and black shirts—running from the scene, sources at Vecernje Novosti
said. Local authorities launched an investigation, but no progress
was reported at year's end.
The 47-year-old journalist worked as the Vecernje Novosti correspondent
for the Pomoravlje region of central Serbia. He reported extensively on
criminal affairs, including corruption in local companies. His wife, Zivka
Pantic, told Vecernje Novosti that Pantic had received numerous
telephone threats in response to articles he had written.
June 28
Milos Petrovic, Studio B Television
ATTACKED
Suzana Rafailovic, Beta
ATTACKED
Petar Pavlovic, Fonet
ATTACKED
Petrovic, of Studio B Television; Rafailovic, a reporter for the Beta
news service; and Pavlovic, a photographer with the news agency Fonet,
were attacked by enraged supporters of former Yugoslav president Slobodan
Milosevic at a rally in central Belgrade.
The attacks against the journalists occurred in Belgrade's Republic
Square, where several thousand supporters of Milosevic's Socialist Party
of Serbia (SPS) and the allied Serbian Radical Party (SRS) were protesting
Milosevic's sudden extradition to the International War Crimes Tribunal
in The Hague earlier that day. The demonstrators were also angry at the
local media's coverage of the story.
The first attack occurred just before 7 p.m., when reporters from Studio
B Television were walking toward the rally. Several men approached the
journalists and punched cameraman Petrovic, knocking him to the ground.
At approximately 10 p.m., Rafailovic was interviewing an SPS activist
when several people approached to inquire which media outlet she worked
for, Beta editor-in-chief Dragan Janjic told CPJ. When the SPS activist
responded that the journalist worked for Beta, the men started threatening
and manhandling her.
About 30 minutes later, a group of SPS supporters assaulted Pavlovic
when he approached the rally to take pictures, Fonet editor-in-chief Zoran
Sekulic told CPJ.
Several SRS supporters then surrounded Pavlovic, tried to take his camera,
and began punching and kicking him. Pavlovic was knocked to the ground
several times but eventually escaped to the safety of a nearby park.
On June 29, CPJ issued an alert about the attacks.
Jelena Bozovic, Reuters
ATTACKED
Zoran Culafic, Fonet
ATTACKED
Reuters reporter Bozovic and Culafic, a journalist with the Fonet news
agency, were attacked by Serbian Radical Party (SRS) supporters at a pro-Milosevic
rally in front of the Federal Parliament building in Belgrade, Fonet reported.
Two SRS supporters approached Bozovic and asked for her affiliation.
When she identified herself, they accused her of being a traitor on the
payroll of foreigners. One of the men grabbed Bozovic's arm and took her
notepad.
When Culafic attempted to intervene, he was thrown to the ground and
roughed up by several SRS supporters.
Fonet reported that a cordon of police officers standing nearby made
no effort to intervene.
CPJ issued an alert about the attacks on June 29.
October 19
Bekim Kastrati, Bota Sot
KILLED (motive unconfirmed)
Kastrati, an ethnic Albanian journalist for the Albanian-language daily
Bota Sot, was shot on October 19 at around 8 p.m. in the village
of Lausa, west of the provincial capital, Pristina, along with two other
men who were riding in his car at the time. One of the passengers was
killed, and the other was wounded.
Kastrati's employer, the Geneva-based Bota Sot, supports politician
Ibrahim Rugova and his leading ethnic Albanian party, the Democratic Alliance
of Kosovo.
A second man killed in the attack, Besim Dajaku, was reported to have
been a current or former bodyguard of Rugova. The third man injured in
the attack, Gani Geci, was a former member of the now-disbanded Kosovo
Liberation Army. According to local sources, Geci was believed to be the
true target of the shooting, but the murder investigation is still open.
November 22
Reporter
LEGAL ACTION
Blic
LEGAL ACTION
The Third Municipal Prosecutor's Office began investigating the independent
Belgrade weekly Reporter the day after its November 21 edition
went on sale, local sources reported.
The investigation was apparently triggered by an article listing the
names of Yugoslav police officials that the United Nations International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia suspected of complicity in
war crimes in Kosovo.
On Friday, November 23, two police investigators made an unannounced
visit to Reporter's office to question editor-in-chief Vladimir
Radomirovic and reporter Jovica Krtinic, author of the article in question.
Later that day, investigators also questioned Veselin Simonovic, editor
of the independent Belgrade daily Blic, which reprinted Reporter's
list in its November 22 edition.
The two police investigators who questioned Radomirovic and Krtinic
invoked two Milosevic-era laws in an attempt to pressure the journalists
into divulging their sources for the list. Article 218 of the Serbian
Criminal Code proscribes "spreading false information" and was
used to imprison several Serbian journalists in the late 1990s. The journalists
were also threatened with prosecution under Serbia's notorious Public
Information Law, which had in fact been repealed in February.
"We stand behind the story that the list is accurate," Radomirovic,
according to the Belgrade daily Danas. "We expect further
steps from the government and are ready for anything."
On the evening of November 25, Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic
claimed that Reporter had published the war crimes list in order
to "...upset the police, and turn them against the government,"
Belgrade's Radio B92 reported. That same day, Djindjic's Democratic Party
issued a statement encouraging police officers named in Reporter's list
to sue the publication for damages.
On December 4, police spokesman Milorad Simic confirmed that Serbia's
Interior Ministry had notified all police departments that the ministry
would cover legal expenses for any officer interested in suing Reporter
or Blic for libel, according to local news reports.
Three days later, 12 police officers from the town of Valjevo whose
names appeared on the list announced that they were filing a libel suit
against the two publications.
A week later, 13 police officers from the city of Nis filed libel lawsuits
against Simonovic.
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