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B92 Insight File Cabinet Press Room
CPJ urges Serbian president to protect broadcaster B92

4 March 2008


March 4, 2008

His Excellency Boris Tadić

President of the Republic of Serbia



Dear Mr. President,

The Committee to Protect Journalists is deeply concerned about the recent attacks on the Belgrade-based independent broadcaster B92 and its founder, Veran Matić. The attacks started in the wake of Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence on February 17—culminating in the siege of the station by angry protesters on February 21—and have continued since.

Death threats containing explicit slurs have been issued against the broadcaster and there have been open threats to burn B92’s building.

As a nonpartisan, international organization that defends journalists’ right to report the news without fear of harassment, we call on you to ensure the safety of our colleagues at B92. We ask that you urge the authorities to investigate the attacks in a timely, efficient, and thorough manner.

We are disturbed by statements made by high-ranking government officials such as Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica and Infrastructure Minister Velimir Ilić, who have effectively condoned the violence following Kosovo’s secession from Serbia as an act of patriotism. Journalists interviewed by CPJ say the mob that attacked B92 was inspired by such statements.

At this crucial political moment when tensions are running high, we ask you to address the issue with Ministers Kostunica and Ilic. We would also like to urge you to publicly condemn the threats against B92 and its founder, editor in chief, and CEO Veran Matić.

Vulgar threats e-mailed to Matić call him a fascist and a traitor to Serbia, and blame Kosovo’s secession on B92 alone. One e-mail message to Matić calls him a fascist and says: “I’ve found out where you live and I’ll kill you soon.” Another reads, in part: “You’ll get a bullet in your head if you continue to degrade the Serbian State. You’ll end up like stinky [assassinated Prime Minister Zoran] Đinđić … I hope you’ll come to your senses after those warnings, because not even America can protect you.” A third e-mail says: “Burn in hell if you don’t get incinerated in your television when it’s set on fire.” Matić told CPJ yesterday that the threats continue flooding in.

A graphic video appeared on YouTube on February 17, showing the mock execution by a sniper of two prime-time B92 television anchors. The video was briefly removed from YouTube but reappeared on March 1; it was taken down again today. The video opened with dramatic music and an image of a stormy sky. A message ran across the screen: “Dark clouds are over Serbia! There is only one cause to it.” Then, the picture switched to B92’s television studio and proceeded with the on-screen killing of the journalists.

On February 21, a huge rally in Belgrade to protest Kosovo’s secession from Serbia turned violent, with part of the crowd marching to the B92 building around 6 p.m., besieging it and trapping the journalists inside. The protesters accused the station of pro-Western bias and called the staff “traitors of Serbia,” Saša Mirković, director of external relations at B92, told CPJ.

Matić told CPJ he had to send several appeals to the Ministry of the Interior before it sent enough police reinforcements to guard the building. The siege lasted several hours; staff was still at the building at around midnight when CPJ spoke with Mirković. Earlier that day, B92 had received an anonymous bomb threat by e-mail and the staff was evacuated from the premises, Slobodan Kremenjak, B92’s legal advisor told CPJ.

Matić has been reporting the ongoing threats regularly to Belgrade police and prosecutors. However, law enforcement authorities have made no arrests yet. The station is guarded by police, with a minimum of five officers and a maximum of 20 at times. In addition, the station has stepped up its own security, Matić told CPJ, by hiring a private security firm to ensure journalists are protected within the building, but they remain at risk regardless. “It is very hard to walk the city streets,” Matić told CPJ. “I have to put up with verbal threats and swear words as soon as I venture out.”

B92 has continued to broadcast without censoring itself. As a result, its journalists have continued to work under threat. For instance, on February 26, when B92 was reporting on a protest at a checkpoint near the town of Medveđa, along with other media outlets, an angry group of protesters started inquiring specifically about B92’s television crew, the Belgrade daily Blic reported. The B92 crew had to remove the station’s label from their camera to avoid a fight as colleagues from other media outlets present managed to persuade the protesters that there were no B92 journalists there.

The embattled independent broadcaster B92 has a long history of struggle and survival. Since its inception in 1989, authorities have forced it off the air four times; the station and its journalists have endured multiple mob attacks, bomb threats, actual bombs being planted, beatings, and threats. None of the perpetrators have been brought to justice. Yet, the station has persevered.

Though sentiments following Kosovo’s declaration of independence are raw, there is no excuse or justification for terrorizing a station that has done nothing but its job. You and your government have a responsibility to protect all of Serbia’s journalists, including those whose editorial stance is in opposition with your personal views or that of the state. We call on you to draw on all resources available to your high office to protect B92. We also call on you to ensure that Serbia’s law enforcement work to apprehend those responsible for the siege, storming attempt, and death threats against B92 and its head, Veran Matić, and hold them responsible to the full extent of the law.

Thank you for your attention to this pressing matter. We await your response.

Sincerely,

Joel Simon

Executive Director

>CC list:

>Vojislav Koštunica, Prime Minister of Serbia

>Dragan Jočić, Minister of Interior

>Božidar Đelić, Vice President of Serbian Government

>Milorad Veljović, Chief of Police in Belgrade

>Slobodan Radovanovic, Acting State Prosecutor

>Hans-Joachim Hogrefe, Director, U.S. Congressional Human Rights Caucus

>Alcee L. Hastings, Chairman, U.S. Helsinki Commission

>Michael G. Kozak, U.S. Assistant Secretary for

>Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor

>Thomas Hammarberg, Commissioner for Human Rights, Council of Europe

>Benita Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner

>for External Relations and European Neighborhood Policy

>Miklos Haraszti, OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media

>Louise Arbour, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights

>American Society of Newspaper Editors

>Amnesty International

>Article 19 (United Kingdom)

>Artikel 19 (The Netherlands)

>Canadian Journalists for Free Expression

>Freedom Forum

>Freedom House

>Human Rights Watch

>Index on Censorship

>International Center for Journalists

>International Federation of Journalists

>International PEN

>International Press Institute

>Michael G. Kozak, U.S. Assistant Secretary for

>Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor

>The Newspaper Guild

>The North American Broadcasters Association

>Overseas Press Club

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President Tadić addresses UN SC on Kosovo
21 April 2008 |

 
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