Serbia Action Alert (Additional Info) 23Jan97
Amanda Onion (aonion@ccmail.cpj.org)
Thu, 23 Jan 97 14:11:45 EST
    SENT BY FAX
    Jan. 23, 1997
    
    His Excellency Slobodan Milosevic
    President of Serbia
    Fax: +381-11-656-862
    
    Your Excellency,
    
    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) writes to express its deep 
    distress about today's reported beating of an Associated Press Television 
    crew member. CPJ is also greatly concerned about other police violence in 
    Kragujevac where opposition supporters in the city are protesting police 
    resistance to the transfer of Kragujevac's radio and television stations to 
    its newly-elected city officials.
    
    The Associated Press has reported that a soundman from AP Television was 
    beaten during clashes between police and protesters in front of the city's 
    radio and television offices. Police also confiscated the crew's videotape. 
    Police officers remained barricaded inside the media offices to prevent the 
    demonstrators from entering. Tonight journalists and other demonstrators 
    plan to stand against police barricades in front of the media buildings from 
    midnight until dawn to protest the police cordon.
    
    Kati Marton, chair of CPJ, wrote to you on January 15, 1997 about the 
    importance of developing an independent public television channel in the 
    Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY). The Committee believes this step is 
    essential to ensure the complete editorial independence of radio and 
    television news coverage. In addition to a state-wide independent public 
    channel, today's events demonstrate the need to authorize local 
    municipalities to grant broadcasting licenses. 
    
    As a nonpartisan organization dedicated to defending the rights of our 
    colleagues around the world, CPJ condemns the beating and censorship of the 
    AP reporters in Kragujevac. Further, CPJ respectfully urges you to find a 
    rapid, peaceful, and legal remedy to the issue of public radio and 
    television broadcasting in the municipalities of FRY. Yugoslav taxpayers 
    support broadcasting through mandatory television subscriptions in their 
    electric bills and they have the right to demand greater independence and 
    diversity in news programming. Furthermore, the current state monopoly over 
    television broadcasting runs counter to the notion of a free media and, 
    consequently, to the concept of a true democracy in FRY.
    
    Thank you for your attention. We welcome your comments.
    
    Sincerely,
    
    
    William A. Orme, Jr
    Executive Director
    
    cc:
    
    Ambassador Zoren Popovic
    Ambassador Dragomir Djokic
    Open Society Institute, Belgrade, Yugoslavia 
    UNPROFOR, Belgrade
    UNESCO
    American Society of Newspaper Editors 
    Amnesty International
    Article 19 (United Kingdom)
    Artikel 19 (The Netherlands)
    Canadian Committee To Protect Journalists
    Congressional Committee to Support Writers and Journalists 
    Freedom House
    Human Rights Watch
    Index on Censorship
    International Association of Broadcasting 
    International Federation of Journalists 
    International Federation of Newspaper Publishers 
    International Journalism Institute
    International PEN
    International Press Institute
    National Association of Newspapers 
    National Press Club
    The Newspaper Guild
    North American National Broadcasters Association 
    Reporters sans Frontieres
    Overseas Press Club
    The Society of Professional Journalists 
    World Press Freedom Committee