New York, July 15, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns a bomb threat made late Thursday night against the Belgrade-based
independent radio and television station B92.
An anonymous caller told a B92 security guard that a bomb would explode
in an hour inside the station's offices because of its "anti-Serb campaign,"
according to local news reports and CPJ interviews.
B92 director Veran Matic told CPJ in a telephone interview today that
about 15 staffers were evacuated from the premises for about two hours
while the police examined the building and its surroundings. No explosive
devices were found.
B92 said in a statement that the threat was made after Vjerica Radeta,
a member of Parliament from the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party
(SRS), called the station "mercenary and anti-Serb" during a debate.
SRS vice-president Aleksandar Vucic made a similar charge against the
station on July 9.
The station also received a bomb threat on Monday after a live broadcast
of the commemoration of the 1995 massacre of Bosnian Muslims in the
eastern Bosnian town of Srebrenica, B92 journalist Marko Mrkic told
CPJ.
Matic told CPJ that threats against B92 have intensified during the
last year, and many have been made directly against him and his family.
"The radicalization and the rise of the number of threats are the results
of the inefficient reaction of the government and the police to the
past threats," Matic told CPJ.
B92 has provided extensive news coverage of politically sensitive war
crimes issues in Serbia and is the only broadcaster in the region providing
live coverage of the trial of former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic
at the Hague-based United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia.
