CPJ concerned by media restrictions

Your Excellency:

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is concerned about your government’s enforcement of media restrictions under a state of emergency that has been in effect since the March 12 assassination of Serbian prime minister Zoran Djindjic.

Natasa Micic, president of the Serbian National Assembly and currently acting president of Serbia, declared a state of emergency on the afternoon of March 12 after a sniper fatally shot Djindjic in the center of Serbia’s capital, Belgrade. Article 9 of Micic’s executive order, which established the state of emergency, states that, “Public information, distribution of press and other information about the reasons for the declaration of the state of emergency is prohibited, excluding carrying the official statements of competent government agencies.” The order requires the Ministry of Culture and Public Information to enforce the media restrictions in cooperation with the Interior Ministry but does not specify sanctions for media outlets that violate Article 9.

According to local press reports, Deputy Prime Minister Zarko Korac and several other senior government officials met with the editors-in-chief of Belgrade-based media outlets on the evening of March 12 to provide recommendations on how news should be reported during the state of emergency. The authorities asked editors to report only on official announcements from government agencies, representatives of political parties, or press conferences. The government also requested that the media refrain from reporting on “the reactions of those who will be arrested, their lawyers, and analysts who could complicate the arrests,” said the Belgrade-based Association for Independent Electronic Media.

Minister of Culture and Public Information Branislav Lecic and several senior officials held a second meeting with editors on March 17 to inform them that the government had tolerated a number of violations of the media restrictions, but that authorities would tolerate no further violations, according to local press reports. The government also announced that it will establish a special switchboard for editors to call and check the accuracy of information prior to publication or broadcast.

That same day, the government published an edition of the Official Gazette of the Republic of Serbia containing an executive decree signed by Acting President Natasa Micic outlining sanctions for media outlets that violate state of emergency regulations, said local press reports. Media companies violating the regulations face temporary closure and fines of 50,000 to 500,000 dinars (US$830 to US$8,300), and individuals can be fined between 10,000 to 100,000 dinars (US$160 to US$1,600). There is no procedure to appeal decisions or sanctions, Belgrade’s independent Radio B92 reported.

During the last week, the Ministry of Culture and Public Information has punished a number of media outlets for violating the government’s vaguely defined restrictions or for being linked to Prime Minister Djindjic’s alleged assassins.

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