Feral Tribune Demostrations Reminder
Miroslav Visic (visic@nyc.pipeline.com)
Thu, 19 Sep 1996 01:27:04 GMT
>----- Forwarded message ("Ivo Skoric" <iskoric@igc.apc.org>) -----< 
 
 
Neither East Nor West, the NYC activist group that supports 
alternative and opposition voices in the Communist 
/ex-Communist world, will hold a protest in support of the 
editors of Feral Tribune, the Croatian satirical opposition 
weekly, on Friday September 20.  
 
WHEN: Friday, September 20, 4:30 to 7:00 PM 
WHERE: Croatian consulate, 369 Lexington @ 41st 
 
INFORMATION: Anne-Marie Hendrickson 718-387-0480  Bill 
Weinberg 212-631-1115 Bob McGlynn 718-499-7720   Ivo 
Skoric 212-369-9197   
 
-/- 
 
The story: 
 
CROATIAN ANTI-WAR NEWSPAPER UNDER ATTACK  
 
By OGB News Service  
 
Croatia's independent satirical weekly Feral Tribune is under 
attack by the regime of President Franjo Tudjman. Along with 
the Arkzine, Feral Tribune is a lonely voice of dissent in 
militarized Croatia--and Tudjman's machine is trying to shut it 
down under a far-reaching new law controlling the press. Two 
editors may face imprisonment just for lampooning Tudjman.  
 
This is just the most blatant of many moves aimed at 
silencing Feral Tribune. In May, Nevenka Kosutic, Tudjman's 
daughter, sued the struggling paper for 3.5 million kuna, or 
$635,000.  The paper claimed that she set up a profitable 
business using government connections.  This is the latest in 
a series of reports in the independent media that Tudjman's 
family and friends have enriched themselves while much of 
Croatia lives in or near poverty.  
 
That same month, charges were brought against Feral Tribune 
editors Viktor Ivancic and Marinko Culic under a new law that 
forbids journalists to "offend" leading officials: the amended 
section of Article 71 of the Croatian Penal Code which, among 
other offences, forbids publishing or broadcasting information 
deemed untrue and which can injure the "honour and 
reputation" of senior public officials. Article 71 also mandates 
up to three years' imprisonment upon conviction.   
 
The Prosecutor-General's Office on May 16 sent the editors a 
court summons on charges of making President Tudjman "an 
object of libel and slander" in an article criticizing his 
suggestion that the remains of World War II  Croatian fascists 
be reburied alongside their victims. This is but one of many 
statements by Tudjman minimizing the genocide perpetrated 
against Serbs, Jews and Roma ("gypsies") by Croatia's pro-Nazi 
Ustashe regime, which established its own death camp at 
Jasenovac. Tudjman also recently stated that many of the 
thousands buried at Jasenovac were actually killed by the 
anti-fascist resistance--a dangerous and cynical distortion of 
history.   
 
These charges add to a growing number of libel cases brought 
against journalists in Croatia since Articles 71 and 72 of the 
Croatian Penal Code were amended in March 1996 to allow 
public officials greater freedom in charging media outlets with 
libel. A libel suit filed by HDZ leaders against the independent 
weekly "Globus" has been pending since 30 May. On 14 June, 
the trial against Culic and Ivancic was unexpectedly adjourned 
on its first day until 25 September.  
 
Ironically, Ivancic and Culic face slander charges for calling 
Tudjman "a follower of Generalissimo Franco" when Tudjman 
himself had upheld the late Spanish dictator as an example of 
a man "who enabled normal development of democracy in 
Spain" by having "the courage and wisdom to say that both 
the Spanish Communists and Phalangists have fought for 
Spain, albeit under different flags."  
 
Tudjman's troops in neighboring Bosnia have just carved that 
country up in a cynical deal with the rival strongman 
Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia (and the connivance of the US, 
UN, NATO and EU). Last year, Tudjman attempted to shut 
down Feral Tribune on "pornography" charges for printing a 
cut-and-paste photo of Tudjman and Milosevic in bed 
together.  
 
Feral Tribune was originally a satirical insert to the Split 
newspaper Slobodna Dalmacija. In 1993, Slobodna Dalmacija 
was "privatized" to a group close to the Tudjman circle, and 
the independent-minded editors were all purged. Feral Tribune 
became an independent weekly, led by the old editors from 
Slobodna Dalmacija who refused to toe the Tudjman line.  
 
That same year, 34-year-old editor Ivancic was drafted into the 
Croatian military--the only editor in Croatia to face 
conscription. Since then, some 15 lawsuits have been 
launched against Feral Tribune, totaling nearly $1 million. 
Most have been brought by Croatian police and military 
officers accused by Feral Tribune of war crimes.  
 
Ivancic and Culic are the first journalists to be prosecuted 
under the new law prohibiting criticism or satirical 
commentary on the president, prime minister, parliamentary 
speaker or chief magistrates. International media 
organizations and Croatian opposition groups have 
condemned the law, which imposes a sentence of up to three 
years' imprisonment upon conviction for libel and up to six 
months for slander. "Feral Tribune", however, is not the only 
target.  
 
On 3 September 1996, the ruling Croatian Democratic Union 
(HDZ) brought charges against both Veljko Vicevic, 
editor-in-chief of the independent newspaper "Novi List", and 
columnist Tihana Tomicic. The same day, the HDZ brought 
similar charges against Ivo Pukanic, editor-in-chief of the 
independent weekly "Nacional", and columnist Srecko 
Jurdana.   
 
The charges against "Novi List" stem from a recent column by  
Tomicic in which she compared the political climate in Croatia 
prior to its first 1990 elections to the situation in Germany 
just before Adolf Hitler was elected to power. Although no 
issues were specified, the charges against "Nacional" singled 
out Jurdana, known for his frequent columns criticising HDZ 
leaders.  
 
All of these journalists were charged with violating Article 71 
of the Croatian Penal Code. Tudjman's ruling party, the 
Croatian Democratic Union, is now attempting to buy out the 
country's only independent radio station, Zagreb Radio 101, 
much as Slobodna Dalmacija was bought and silenced three 
years ago.  Ironically, Radio 101 was the first electronic media 
in former Yugoslavia which offered Tudjman a microphone 
(Wall Street Journal, 07/25/96, front page, by Mark Nelson).  
And Feral Tribune's Ivancic, Novi List's Vicevic and Nacional's 
Pukanic face imprisonment.  
 
Time to act is now. 
 
###