New York, March 14, 2000 --- In the latest government attack
on independent media in Yugoslavia, police have shut down the opposition-run
station Radio Television Pozega in the city of Pozega, 60 miles southwest
of Belgrade.
Police seized the station's transmitter during the night of March
11-12, after accusing RTV Pozega of operating without a license and
failing to pay state fees for using its frequency. Staff produced
payment slips, which the police ignored, to prove that they had in
fact paid the requisite fees.
A few hours before the raid, RTV Pozega broadcast an urgent appeal
for listeners and viewers to defend the station. Several hundred people
gathered to prevent police from removing the station's transmitter.
Late at night, however, after the protesters dispersed, police broke
into the station and seized transmission equipment.
Around 2000 demonstrators gathered in Pozega on Monday to protest
the station's shutdown. That same day, demonstrators also rallied
in the town of Cuprija to protest last week's closure of the independent
stations TV Nemanja and Radio Tir. The only independent radio station
in the town of Pozarevac, Radio Boom 93, was also closed last week,
also for allegedly failing to meet licensing requirements.
The government's attacks have not been limited to small towns. In
Belgrade, pressure continues to mount on the independent TV station
Studio B, which also hosts the popular independent radio station B292.
On March 6, police raided the station's transmission facility, destroying
equipment and seriously injuring two security guards. Later that day,
Studio B and its director, Dragan Kojadinovic, were fined 450,000
dinars (US$39,000) for remarks made by a guest during a live broadcast.
Today, the opposition municipal authorities in Belgrade paid the government
nearly US$1 million to settle debts allegedly owed to the federal
government by Studio B. City Hall made the payment, it said, in order
to prevent conflict between Studio B and the Milosevic regime.
"We condemn the recent spate of shutdowns," said CPJ executive director
Ann Cooper. "With local and federal elections scheduled for later
this year, the authorities are resorting to desperate and undemocratic
tactics in their efforts to stifle dissenting voices."
END