24July97:  55 Radio and TV Stations Shut Down in Serbia
Catherine Fitzpatrick (europe@ccmail.cpj.org)
Thu, 24 Jul 97 19:20:28 EST
     July 24, 1997
     
     His Excellency Slobodan Milosevic
     President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
     Fax: +381-11-656-862
     
     Your Excellency:
     
     The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is writing to strongly 
     condemn the widespread crackdown on the broadcast media in Serbia 
     since Your Excellency became the president of the Federal Republic of 
     Yugoslavia last week. The closing of 55 small independent radio and 
     television stations throughout Serbia appears related to efforts by 
     the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS) to position itself for 
     parliamentary and presidential elections in Serbia in September.
     
     According to a July 23 statement by ANEM, the Association of 
     Independent Broadcast Media in Serbia, in "the largest ban we have 
     seen," federal and republic-level state institutions have mounted a 
     coordinated  campaign to close radio and television stations within 
     the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. On June 2, the Yugoslav Ministry 
     for Transport and Telecommunications published a June 30 deadline for 
     the submission of documentation necessary to receive an operating 
     license. Broadcast journalists complained to CPJ that the new 
     procedure was confusing and contradictory and the deadline impossible 
     to meet. As a result dozens of stations with incomplete documentation 
     have been left in limbo and have failed to obtain even temporary 
     licenses. Officials refuse to explain how and when such stations can 
     be legalized. Even those stations which complied with the ministry's 
     demand and submitted the necessary paperwork have been subjected to 
     arbitrary pressure and even closure.
     
     In addition to imposing a ban on the stations, authorities have 
     confiscated broadcasting equipment, and broadcasters who attempt to 
     file complaints have received no response.
     
     TV Trstenik, a station with a valid license, was the first local 
     station to begin working independent of ruling party control after the 
     victory of the opposition Zajedno coalition in local elections in 
     November 1996. Radio B92 in Belgrade said inspectors of the federal 
     Telecommunications Ministry began closing six radio stations close to 
     the opposition in Kraljevo in southern Serbia on July 18. The 
     independent newspaper Nasa Borba recently reported that only one radio 
     station, which supports the SPS, remains in Kraljevo. Other radio and 
     television stations were closed in Pozarevac, Novi Pazar, Pancevo, 
     Cacak, Sabac, and elsewhere (a complete list is available from CPJ).
     
     Authorities have objected to the emergence of numerous pirate stations 
     since the rise of the opposition last year. CPJ recognizes the need 
     for the regulation of broadcasting, but strenuously objects to the 
     autocratic manner in which it is being done. First, there is currently 
     no federal broadcasting law, only a series of arbitrary government 
     regulations. Second, the telecommunications ministry is making claims 
     that the stations are a "threat to public welfare," indicating that 
     their motivations for the closures are political, not procedural. 
     Third, minute bureaucratic discrepancies are seized upon in a 
     station's application to arbitrarily shut it down, without forewarning 
     and without remedy through the courts. Fourth, the telecommunications 
     authorities are calling in other state agencies such as the tax and 
     economic crime police in order to find pretexts to shut down stations, 
     suggesting that the order to close independent stations emanates from 
     the highest levels of the state and constitutes an orchestrated attack 
     by the ruling party.
     
     The closure of the 55 media outlets is in stark contrast to assurances 
     made by the new Serbian Minister of Information, Radmila Milentijevic, 
     that no stations would be shut down before the elections, as well as 
     pledges made by Your Excellency to CPJ board member Kati Marton in 
     December 1996 that the free media would be permitted to operate 
     without obstruction throughout the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
     
     As an organization devoted to advocacy on behalf of the independent 
     media worldwide, CPJ deplores the current broadcast media clampdown 
     and calls for immediate granting of temporary licenses to the 55 radio 
     and television stations until a just, coherent procedure for frequency 
     allocation, accessible to all broadcasters and with sufficient time 
     for preparation, is developed under a federal telecommunications law 
     with the participation of elected representatives and the public.
     
     Thank you for your attention and we await your comments.
     
      
     William A. Orme, Jr.
     Executive Director
     
     cc:     Ambassador Zoren Popovic
             Ambassador Dragomir Djokic