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28. 02. 2008

SEEMO ALARMED ABOUT ABOUT ATTACKS ON JOURNALISTS IN SERBIA AND LAWSUIT AGAINST MONTENEGRIAN 'VIJESTI'


SEEMO PROTEST SERBIA

H.E. Vojislav Kostunica
Prime Minister of Serbia
Nemanjina 11
Belgrade
Serbia
 
Vienna, 28 February 2008
 
Your Excellency,
 
The Vienna-based South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO), a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists from South East Europe and an affiliate of the International Press Institute (IPI), is alarmed about the recent wave of violent attacks on journalists in Serbia.
 
According to information before SEEMO, journalists reporting on the protest “Kosovo je Srbija”, held on 21 February 2008 as a reaction to Kosovo’s proclamation of independence, were subjected to serious physical attacks. A photojournalist from Holland’s NRC Handelsblad, Dirk-Jan Visser, sustained broken ribs, while two Russian journalists from Russia Today, an English-language TV station, also suffered physical injuries. In addition, the crew of Radio Televizija Srbije (RTS) was attacked during a separate protest.
 
In the meantime, Serbian radio and television station B92 has received written threats ever since Kosovo’s declaration of independence, including a montage video, posted on YouTube, which juxtaposed images of guns firing with footage of B92 anchors. On 20 February, B92 received a bomb threat by e-mail, forcing the staff’s evacuation. The following day, protesters surrounded the B92 building at 6pm, trapping the staff inside until well after midnight. Thankfully, police officers managed to prevent attacks on the building.
 
Moreover, according to information before SEEMO, on 25 February 2008, Milica Ivanovic, a journalist for Beta news agency and the newspaper Blic, was attacked while reporting on the unrest at the Mutivoda crossing between Serbia and Kosovo. When the journalist asked for protection from police officers standing nearby, her request was refused. According to reports, a B92 cameraman who was also present avoided harm by removing the station’s logo from his camera after hearing members of the crowd asking about the B92 crew.
 
SEEMO strongly condemns these repeated and targeted attacks on journalists in Serbia, as well as the failure of the police force to adequately protect them. Journalists must never become targets, regardless of their reporting style or their background. Furthermore, any attacks must carry consequences and be fully investigated.
 
We urge Your Excellency to do everything in your power to provide a secure environment for journalists, and to remind all involved of the importance of the media’s freedom to report on current events, which ensures the Serbian people’s right to information, and is a crucial element in a free democracy.
 
We thank you for your attention.
 
Yours sincerely,

Oliver Vujovic
SEEMO Secretary General
 
 

SEEMO PRESS RELEASE MONTENEGRO

Vienna, 28 February 2008

The Vienna-based South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO), a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists from South East Europe and an affiliate of the International Press Institute (IPI), appeals to Montenegrian ex-president and former prime minister Milo Djukanovic to drop his one million Euro lawsuit against Vijesti, Montenegro’s leading newspaper.

SEEMO first spoke out against the lawsuit when, on 3 September 2007, Milo Djukanovic pressed defamation charges against Zeljko Ivanovic, founder and director ofVijesti, a Podgorica-based daily, Ljubisa Mitrovic, the publication’s editor-in-chief, as well as its publishing house, “Daily Press”. Djukanovic is expected to return to the prime minister post.

SEEMO encourages Djukanovic to seize the opportunity provided by his new mandate by dropping all charges against the publication as a sign of good will. Such a move would constitute a first positive step, and serve as a signal that the government permits and even encourages freedom of speech, a vital aspect of true democracies.

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SEEMO is a regional network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East Europe.
 
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SEEMO - IPI, Spiegelgasse 2/29, 1010 Vienna, Austria, Tel (SEEMO+HELP LINE): +43 1 513 39 40, Tel (SEEMO): +43 1 512 90 11 11, Fax: +43 1 512 90 15, E-mail:
info@seemo.org, Web: http://www.seemo.org
 

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