geert lovink on Thu, 5 Jul 2001 13:36:46 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> ANEM WEEKLY MEDIA UPDATE: June 23 - 29, 2001 |
From: <mediawatch@lists.opennet.org> Sent: Wednesday, July 04, 2001 11:43 PM Subject: ANEM WEEKLY MEDIA UPDATE: June 23 - 29, 2001 YUGOSLAV ARMY DENIES JAMMING INDEPENDENT MEDIA BELGRADE, June 23, 2001 - The Headquarters of the Yugoslav Army denied that there are some minutes from the meeting between representatives of the Yugoslav authorities, Army, and the police, in which, according to what Radio Free Europe had reported, jamming of the electronic media was agreed upon. "On the basis of the conclusions from that meeting, a plan was drawn, according to which the relevant services and units of the Yugoslav Army were responsible for intensifying reconnaissance of so-called informative and commando communication lines, which is their regular task," the official statement said. "There were no minutes made it that meeting, nor was the meeting taped, so the materials published must have been taken from the notebook of some of the participants of the meeting," the official statement added. "The Headquarters officers do not know the results and achievements of the actions carried out according to that plan by the relevant departments of the Ministry of Information and Telecommunications, and especially by the employees of the department of federal Intelligence Agency," the statement concludes. Belgrade daily Danas published some details Friday about this meeting, in which among others Yugoslav Army chief Nebojsa Pavkovic, former federal Intelligence Agency head Rade Markovic, and former federal Information Minister Goran Matic took part. According to Danas, Pavkovic said in the meeting, "A large number of radio and television stations broadcast programmes that are practically hostile. We think that we should use our knowledge and technical equipment to eliminate some of them completely from the air, to jam some of them, and as the third segment of our activities we should devise a plan for psychological and propaganda counter efforts against such information." Goran Matic asserted in the meeting that his Ministry had "limited resources for jamming," while Rade Markovic concluded that it was not good if every one of them were eliminated from the air, and that some space should be left for them, because of the pretence of democracy." "We will play the card of their absence of legal and legitimate work licenses, which leads to chaos," Danas reports that Markovic said, referring to the minutes whose existence was denied by the Yugoslav Army. (B92). CEROVIC: LIVE BROADCAST OF PARLIAMENT NOT IN PUBLIC INTEREST BELGRADE, June 23, 2001. - The Radio Television of Serbia board of directors proposed to the Serbian Parliament that RTS should end live television coverage of the republic parliament sessions. "The live television coverage does not serve but rather undermines the public interests of our society, in the way we understand them," they wrote in a letter to the Serbian parliament speaker Dragan Marsicanin. RTS board member Stojan Cerovic told B92: "This manner of speaking which you can hear there, this string of scandals that happens day in, day out, the abuses and hate speech are all things people should be protected from. It would be much better if a summary of Parliament sessions, daily or as often as necessary, were made, as a detailed report of their work, in which the editing committee should make all the necessary omissions of these undesirable messages. There are also some other reasons for it: this all costs too much, one of the three channels of Radio Television of Serbia is completely sacrificed, and we cannot plan the programme scheme in advance. If you have those live coverage programmes that you never can tell how long will they last, you cannot stick to any programme schedule," Cerovic told B92. JOURNALISTS RECEIVE PANTIC MURDER PRESS KIT BELGRADE, June 23, 2001 - After ten days of investigating into the case of the murder of the journalist Milan Pantic in Jagodina, the police assembled a press kit on the murder. Upon request from the Independent Association of Serbian Journalists, police and media have begun cooperating on this case. At the press conference in Media Centre at the Criminal Police Headquarters, general Radovan Knezevic presented the press kit containing information to be published in all the media. "We have managed to profile face of the man who committed the murder of your colleague Pantic, by dint of hard work in the field," Knezevic said. He appealed for help so that the murderer would be discovered and imprisoned as soon as possible, by the coordinated efforts of the media and the police. He added that the police have more information about the murderer, but this would be kept secret in order that the possible reports on the murder could be more easily investigated. (B92) INDEPENDENT JOURNALISTS AND POLICE COOPERATE BELGRADE, June 24, 2001 - After the murder of the journalist Milan Pantic in Jagodina, the Independent Association of Serbian Journalists (NUNS) began a cooperation initiative that was accepted by the federal and republic Governments, and by the Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs. Two groups of their representatives were formed, one for the media actions and the other for the coordination of their work, Dusan Janjic, editor-in-chief of the news agency Beta said. "Our first aim is precautionary measures. We demand the authorities start adequately protecting professional journalists. Our second aim is that the perpetrators of these crimes be found. We are working on establishing a hotline, the number of which will not be publicly known, but which will be given to the media boards. All Serbian journalists will be able to dial that number to be in the direct contact with their colleagues. Those journalists who are being threatened, and all the others who are under any kind of pressure will be able to use that line," said Dusan Janjic. In addition, the Independent Association of Serbian Journalists also began a campaign called "Stop the Mafia", with the aim of "preventing that the journalists from paying the highest price for the inability of the society to eliminate mafia". "We proposed that the first question in each and every press conference organised by the Ministry of Internal Affairs will be: 'What have you achieved in your investigations of murders of Milan Pantic and Slavko Curuvija?'" Nebojsa Spaic said at the press conference in the Belgrade Media Centre. "The representatives of the authorities also agreed that murder, threats, or any other kind of violence exerted upon the journalists would be treated as a threat or murder of a judge or a policeman," Spaic added. The police supported the Independent Association of Serbian Journalists initiatives. Criminal Police Headquarters head general Radovan Knezevic said that the police would be glad to take part in this campaign. "If any of you are threatened to while you work, if somebody prevents you from writing or publishing your work, feel free to call this number that will be available to you, and we will use all the technical means available to us to discover the perpetrator, and to prevent further incidents of threats," Knezevic promised. CONFERENCE ON EDITORIAL CODE FOR THE ELECTRONIC MEDIA BELGRADE, June 27, 2001 - A three-day conference on the theme "An Editorial Code for the Electronic Media" organised by ANEM and the Council of Europe opened Monday evening in Belgrade's Intercontinental hotel. While there is no more hate speech in Serbian media, electronic media suffer from unfair political attitudes and fear from politicians, meeting participants affirmed. While opening the meeting, federal Information Minister Slobodan Orlic pointed out the importance of applying ethical criteria to journalism, and added that the media in Serbia could be divided into categories of state-run, "allegedly independent," and independent. "The politicians from the new government are not ready to support development of the professional journalism in Serbia," Orlic said, pointing out that many of those politicians were members of boards of directors in the state-run media. "Times during which the professional attitude towards journalism was the last criterion for assessing the work of journalists, and during which the editorial and ethical code was a mere caricature of those qualities in the most influential media that were allegedly state-run and in reality run by the political parties, these times were behind us. That is exactly the reason for such a painful democratic turning point in those media, because there is a shortage of professionals who would simply perform their task as journalists well, and because there is a surplus of the former henchmen who can by no means meet those requirements." The President of the Board of Directors of the Association of Independent Electronic Media, Veran Matic, said that the media in Serbia had been "the key factor if disseminating hatred" during the last ten years. According to Matic, there is no more hate speech in Serbian media, but there is political unfairness, which is reflected in calling Albanians "Shiptars", Roma "Gypsies", and so on. Matic also pointed out that the same kind of political unfairness towards Serbs could have been found in the media from the West, in their reporting on the wars waged in the territory of the former Yugoslavia, and on the events that had happened in Serbia. Council of Europe media adviser Mario Othaimer said that it was necessary to develop freedom of speech and a system of accountability for media, in order to make the establishment of moral and editorial principles possible. The representatives of some thirty electronic media from Serbia attended the three-day conference. (B92) MILOSEVIC SUPPORTERS ATTACK JOURNALISTS BELGRADE, June 29, 2001 - FoNet news agency reported that its photojournalist Petar Pavlovic had been attacked while trying to take photos of the protests against Milosevic's extradition to The Hague Tribunal. Milosevic loyalists first tried to take Pavlovic's camera, and then began hitting and kicking him. Pavlovic hit the ground several times, but somehow managed finally to break free. He sustained a serious injury to the jaw and has a number of bruises and scratches on his body and head. The Belgrade Media Centre said that a large number of domestic and foreign journalists, cameramen and photojournalists, were severely beaten in Belgrade's Trg Republike, where Milosevic's supporters had gathered. Shouting, "You are to blame," the furious protestors attacked anyone they recognized to be a journalist. According to ANEM's information, Beta journalist Suzana Rafailovic and Studio B cameraman Milo Petrovic were also attacked. Glas javnosti reported that BK TV and Associated Press crews were also physically assaulted. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net