20May97:  Censorship of Serbian Opposition TV and Radio
Catherine Fitzpatrick (europe@ccmail.cpj.org)
Mon, 19 May 97 21:27:50 EST
     May 20, 1997
     
     His Excellency Slobodan Milosevic
     President of Serbia
     Via Fax: 011-381-11-656-862
     
     Your Excellency,
     
     The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is writing to strongly 
     protest the censorship and harassment of Serbian opposition TV and 
     radio broadcasters by government officials. 
     
     According to BK Telecom management in Belgrade, a local ruling party 
     official, Miladin Ivanovic, has effectively shut down the BK TV 
     affiliate in the town of Pec, sealing the independent station's rented 
     studios after the broadcaster refused Ivanovic's demand that BK TV 
     stop airing news programs. Although the local interior ministry banned 
     a May 16 demonstration called by residents to protest the move, a 
     crowd gathered near BK TV studios.  Station Director Nebojsa Radunovic 
     pleaded with the crowd to disperse.  Nevertheless, police detained him 
     and questioned him for two hours. The police dispersed the rally and 
     confiscated BK TV's videotape of the gathering as well as film taken 
     by several stills photographers. BK TV managers said that their parent 
     company has leased a space for its own transmitter for nearly a year, 
     but state-run Serbian Radio-Television (RTS) has prevented their 
     engineers from installing the equipment. 
     
     In a separate incident, the daily Serbian newspaper Dnevni Telegraf  
     reported on May 11 that Serbian Information Minister Radmila 
     Milentijevic threatened punitive actions against opposition-run 
     Radio-Television Kragujevac for its statements that state-supplied 
     news bulletins contain "lies."  
     
     According to reports by Agence France Press and Radio Free 
     Europe/Radio Liberty about the May 11 article, Milentijevic said the 
     management of Radio-Television Kragujevac "should pay for" routinely 
     warning radio listeners that the official news bulletins which the 
     station is forced to air are fallacious. The minister warned that 
     state-run RTS "must take control of Kragujevic Radio-Television and 
     bring its management to justice." The Zajedno opposition coalition, 
     which controls the town council, took over the station's television 
     operations in January following mass demonstrations and appointed the 
     station management. But its radio division is still forced to air 
     RTS-produced news announcements twice daily. 
     
     Milentijevic also attacked the broadcasting of foreign radio stations 
     into Yugoslavia:  "We don't have any need for radio like Deutsche 
     Welle, Voice of America and [Radio] Free Europe." she said. 
     
     As a nonpartisan organization dedicated to defending our colleagues 
     around the world, CPJ is deeply distressed by the oppressive reaction 
     of officials from the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) angered 
     by their loss of control over the mass media. 
     
     The threats by the Serbian Information Minister against 
     Radio-Television Kragujevac, and her attacks against foreign radio 
     station broadcasting, as well as local censorship of BK TV and the 
     order to broadcast news bulletins by the state-run RTS are blatant 
     violations of international guarantees to protect the free flow of 
     information regardless of frontiers.  They also clearly contradict 
     your  personal pledge not to obstruct the free media. 
     
     CPJ urges you to abide by your promises to respect the freedom of the 
     media and to act promptly to prevent officials of your government from 
     taking punitive actions against the press. 
     
     Thank you for your attention. We await your comments.
     
     Sincerely,
      
     William A. Orme, Jr.
     Executive Director