New York, May 28, 2004 – Dusko Jovanovic, the controversial
publisher and editor-in-chief of the opposition daily Dan, was
killed in a drive-by shooting early Friday morning as he was leaving his
office in the Montenegrin capital of Podgorica, according to local and
international news reports.
Unidentified assailants used an automatic rifle to shoot Jovanovic in
the head and chest just after midnight as he was getting into his car.
Jovanovic was rushed to the Clinical Center in Podgorica and died several
hours after undergoing surgery, according to an article posted on Dan's
Web site (www.dan.cg.yu).
Dan assistant editor Danilo Vukovic told CPJ in a telephone interview
today that Jovanovic had received a letter with a vague threat about a
month ago.
Investigative judge Radomir Ivanovic and police officers are currently
investigating the murder, according to local press reports. "We urge Montenegrin
authorities to pursue every lead and investigate this case aggressively,"
said CPJ executive director Ann Cooper.
Background
Dan is closely tied to the Socialist People's Party, which
supported former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic throughout the
1990s and has faced numerous lawsuits for criticizing Prime Minister Milo
Djukanovic and his ruling coalition government.
Djukanovic filed a libel lawsuit against Jovanovic in April for published
articles linking the prime minister to a human trafficking scandal. A
court hearing was set for June, Dan assistant editor Danilo Vukovic
told CPJ.
In June 2002, a court in Podgorica ordered Jovanovic to pay 15,000 Euros
(US$ 18,300) in damages to Djukanovic after Dan republished articles
from a Croatian newspaper linking Montenegro's president to tobacco smuggling
in the Balkans, the Podgorica-based news agency Mina reported.
Jovanovic was the first journalist to be prosecuted by the Hague-based
United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) after his newspaper published an August 2002 story revealing the
identity of a protected witness.
Protected witness K-32 testified against Milosevic, who is being tried
by the ICTY for war crimes. The witness received threatening phone calls
after Dan revealed his identity.
In April 2003, the Tribunal charged Jovanovic with contempt of court and
he faced up to seven years in jail and/or a fine of up to US$106,000.
Jovanovic publicly apologized for revealing the witness' identity in a
March 2004 article published in Dan, and the Tribunal dropped its
charges against the editor the following month, The Associated Press reported.
Aside from journalistic activities, Jovanovic was active in business and
politics. The motive for his killing remains unclear.

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