New York, February 12, 2004The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) is deeply concerned about Andrzej Marek, editor-in-chief of the
weekly Wiesci Polickie (Police News) in the western Polish town
of Police, who may be sent to jail for three months for refusing to apologize
to a local official who has accused the journalist of defamation. According
to local news reports, he has until tomorrow to appeal the court decision.
The charges stem from two articles that appeared in Wiesci Polickie
in February 2001. The first article accused Piotr Misilo, then the appointed
speaker of the Promotion and Information Unit of the Police City Council,
of obtaining his post through blackmail. The second article criticized
Misilo for using his public post to promote his private advertising business.
On February 6, 2004, the Szcecin District Court upheld its November 8,
2003, verdict sentencing Marek to three months behind bars. However, the
court ruled that it would suspend the sentence if Marek published an apology
to Misilo in his newspaper. Marek, who stands by his articles, has refused
to apologize.
Human rights organizations in Poland have taken up the case, including
the Helsinki Foundation of Human Rights, which has asked Polish President
Aleksander Kwasniewski to pardon Marek.

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