![]() |
|
|
|
|
| Click
here to read more about press freedom conditions in YUGOSLAVIA Email this article to a friend |
|
New York, November 27, 2001—The Committee to Protect Journalists
is deeply concerned about an ongoing government investigation of two independent
Belgrade publications, the weekly magazine Reporter and the daily
Blic.
On Friday, November 23, two police investigators made an unannounced visit to Reporter's office to question editor-in-chief Vladimir Radomirovic and journalist Jovica Krtinic, author of the article in question. Later that day, investigators also questioned Veselin Simonovic, editor-in-chief of the Belgrade-daily Blic, which ran Reporter's list in its November 22 edition. "These investigations are wholly inappropriate," said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper. "Reporting on war crimes issues is at the very heart of the democratic reforms that Yugoslav and Serbian authorities have publicly embraced." Reformists recall Milosevic-era tactics 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 war crimes 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journalists were also threatened with prosecution under Serbia's notorious Public Information Law, which was in fact repealed last Febuary. "We stand behind the story that the list is accurate," Radomirovic said Friday, according to the Belgrade daily Danas. "We expect further steps from the government and are ready for anything." Journalists could be sued for reports On Sunday night, 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, the prime minister's Democratic Party issued a statement encouraging police officers named in Reporter's list to sue the publication for damages. |