mediawatch-owner on Thu, 18 May 2000 13:14:41 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> REGIME SEIZES STUDIO B IN POLICE RAID -- ANEM press release |
[orig to <mediawatch@freeb92.net>] ANEM press release REGIME SEIZES STUDIO B IN POLICE RAID BELGRADE, May 17, 2000 -- The Association of Independent Electronic Media protests in the strongest terms at the police raid and seizure of the largest free broadcaster in Serbia, Belgrade's Studio B. ANEM urges the public to do all in its power to stop this illegal act. The raid on Studio B's premises occurred at 2.00 a.m. A large number of police completely blocked the Beogradjanka building in central Belgrade where the broadcaster is located. A recorded message was broadcast on Studio B informing the public that the Serbian Government had resolved to take over the public broadcaster Studio B which was controlled by the Belgrade Municipality. The resolution quoted a demand from the Serbian Information Ministry to take over Studio B because frequent calls for the violent overthrow of the constitutional order had been made on the station's programs. The Serbian Government said that the legal grounds for the resolution was that Studio B was state-owned and that the state had decided to take direct control of "its own property" and remove all proprietary rights from the hands of the Belgrade Municipality. The Serbian Government also resolved to dismiss the management of Studio B and appoint Ljuboslav Aleksic editor-in-chief of the station. The resolution instructs Studio B to continue broadcasting as a company wholly owned and operated by the Serbian Government. The Serbian Government Decree was signed by Deputy Serbian Prime Ministers Milovan Bojic and Vojislav Seselj. ANEM described this unprecedented move as lacking even any pretence at legal justification. The Serbian Government's resolution is unconstitutional and illegal and its only goal is to prevent the operation of the largest and most influential broadcaster in Serbia which is not under control of the regime. In taking over Studio B the Serbian Government has also prevented the operation of Radio B2-92 which, after three bans and a regime takeover, had leased a radio frequency from Studio B and premises in the same building. The building also houses student broadcaster Radio Index and the influential non-government daily Blic. This raid has thus left Belgrade in complete media darkness, with almost no radio or television station not under government control. ANEM has made an urgent appeal to the public to do everything possible to help prevent a complete media blackout and open dictatorship in Serbia. We call on all democratic forces in Serbia to unconditionally unite their forces in the defence of the basic freedom of speech and information. Press contact: tel.: +361 475 0704 / 361 353 4598 email: visitb92@popnet.hu # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net