New York, March 17, 2000 --- Nebojsa Ristic, head of an independent
television station in Serbia, was released from prison today after
serving almost 11 months of a one-year sentence imposed last April,
according to CPJ's sources in Belgrade. Ristic was arrested in April,
1999, and charged with disseminating false information under Article
218 of the Serbian penal code.
Ristic was editor of the independent television station TV Soko in
Sokobanja. The charges resulted from a search of Ristic's office,
where police found a poster carrying the slogan "Free Press: Made
in Serbia!" The reason given for his early release was that "his behavior
had been corrected" during his prison term.
"While we welcome the news that Nebojsa Ristic was released, it is
outrageous that he was jailed in the first place," said CPJ Europe
program coordinator Emma Gray. "President Milosevic's recent actions
show he is more intolerant than ever of independent journalism."
Meanwhile, the Yugoslav government shows no signs of easing its clampdown
on independent media. On March 16, local police and federal officials
broke into the transmission facility of TV Pirot, in the town of Pirot,
and removed broadcasting equipment. A ministry inspection note and
a ruling instructing TV Pirot to stop broadcasting were found attached
to the broken door. The closure of TV Pirot is the latest in a string
of recent government attacks on independent Serbian broadcasters.
END