Ivo Skoric on Sun, 20 Dec 1998 20:19:30 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> (Fwd) BELGRADE CRACKDOWN ON KOSOVA MEDIA (fwd) |
This was just a question of time - that Serbian government will start to apply its own anti-press law to the Albanian language newspapers. As they regained the control over the province, the crackdown started. This is a wide action aimed to eliminate all but one Albanian language printed media. Some newspapers are accused for endangering the constitution on the basis of articles not yet published. Meaning that Serbian police preventively read everything even things that sit locked in the editor's desk. This ads new twist to this creative legislative action: journalists are punished for the intent to publish information that the State might not like. ivo ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- - URGENT - ALERT CRACKDOWN ON ALBANIAN-LANGUAGE MEDIA The minister of information of the Republic of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, sent on Thursday, December 17, 1998, a warning to the Albanian language newspapers and magazines that they would be taken to court if they don't change their editorial policy. The minister wrote, that the newspapers, according to their analysis of texts that were published in these newspapers and magazines, were "calling for the violent break of the constitutional order, territorial integrity and unity of the Republic of Serbia and FR of Yugoslavia" as well as violating the rights of citizens, that is inciting national, racial or religious hatred. A fax has been sent to the following newspapers and magazines: KOHA Ditore, KOHA, Zeri i Dites, Fjala e jone (published in the village of Prugovac), Fjala e jone (published in Prishtina). Furthermore , a fax has been sent to the newspaper BUJKU, warning the newspaper that it hadn't been registered in the Ministry's register of newspapers, and that it if didn't register measures against it would be taken. The newspapers have not been informed which of the articles have caused a reaction by the minister. To make the matters worse, the minister himself is claiming that he has seen offensive articles that have never appeared. Namely, the daily newspaper Zeri i Dites has not appeared yet, it is planned to be published sometime in March of next year. Or, in the case of Fjala jone, the minister claims that offensive articles have appeared in a newspaper that has not been printed or distributed for months. It is clear therefore that, lacking more serious insight on the media scene in Kosova, the Serb minister of information, who had sent these kinds of letters to three newspapers in Blegrade (Nasa Borba, Danas and Dnevni Telegraf) is actually planning to close two of Kosova's daily newspapers in Albanian: KOHA Ditore, the most influential Albanian language outlet, and Bujku (which is actually registered under the Socialist Yugoslavia register). The only Albanian language newspaper not affected would be Kosova Sot, a new Albanian language daily. Veton Surroi, Editor in chief, KOHA Ditore <veton@koha.net> Prishtina, 17 December, 1998 --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list send a message to majordomo@alb-net.com In the body of the message include: UNSUBSCRIBE KCC-NEWS --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl