4Sept97: CPJ Concern About Return of Bosnian Transmitter
Catherine Fitzpatrick (europe@ccmail.cpj.org)
Fri, 05 Sep 97 16:35:10 EST
     September 4, 1997
     
     Madeleine K. Albright
     Secretary of State
     Department of State
     Washington, DC
     VIA FAX
     
     Dear Madame Secretary,
     
     The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is writing to express 
     concern about the recent decision by NATO to return the Udrigovo 
     transmitter near Bjiljina in northeast Bosnia, Republika Srpska (RS), 
     to supporters of indicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic.
     
     CPJ welcomes SFOR's original decision to protect the transmitter from 
     an orchestrated mob attack on September 1. We are extremely distressed 
     by the repercussions of the decision to cede control of the television 
     tower to Bosnian Serbs under the direction of Momcilo Krajisnik, the 
     Serbs' representative to Bosnia's collective federal presidency in 
     response to their threat to boycott the September elections. 
     
     With the ceding of the television tower, CPJ fears that opportunities 
     to secure a space for alternative broadcasting may be compromised. 
     Originally, NATO had decided to secure the area around the transmitter 
     precisely to prevent opposing factions from battling for its control, 
     and to ensure more diversity in news broadcasts. Alternative local 
     television stations supported in part by USAID are struggling to 
     report objectively in a violent, polarized situation. Without some 
     backing by the international community, such media will be silenced on 
     the eve of the elections.
     
     In the weeks leading up to the elections, Karadzic and his followers 
     have dominated the electronic media and broadcast threats against 
     reporters who dare to cover the story differently. According to the 
     Institute for War and Peace Reporting, on August 20, RS Minister of 
     Information Svetlana Siljegovic issued a warning on SRT,the 
     state-controlled television station, claiming that the international 
     community was engaging in censorship. Claiming that her goal was to 
     "protect journalists," she warned that it is "more important to be a 
     journalist in a national media outlet [i.e. to be loyal to the ruling 
     party and preserve one's job] than to be paid to carry other people's 
     beliefs."
     
     SFOR troops relinquished control of the television tower after 
     receiving assurances--recognized by U.S. officials as dubious at 
     best--that Karadzic's supporters will ensure access to the transmitter 
     by other factions and will cease disseminating anti-NATO propaganda.
     
     As we stated in our May 20 letter to you, CPJ believes that NATO's 
     mission in Bosnia is to enforce the Dayton Accords, which provide 
     ample guarantees for press freedom, and to ensure that a variety of 
     viewpoints--including criticism of the actions of NATO--can be 
     expressed in the local media. 
     
     Sincerely,
      
     William A. Orme, Jr.
     Executive Director