Geert Lovink on Mon, 12 Apr 1999 18:45:07 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> NYT story |
Gunmen Kill Opposition Publisher in Belgrade By STEVEN ERLANGER BELGRADE, Yugoslavia -- In a vicious message to the few remaining independent news outlets in Yugoslavia, gunmen on Sunday shot and killed a well-known opposition publisher outside his apartment building in central Belgrade. Slavko Curuvija, the owner of the Dnevni Telegraf, or The Daily Telegraph, and the news biweekly Evropljanin, was shot as he returned home from an Easter lunch with his wife, historian Branka Prpa. Ms. Prpa told police and friends that two gunmen dressed in black, including black leather jackets, fired several bullets into Curuvija's back. They then pistol-whipped her, opening a large cut on her head, she said, before firing more shots into Curuvija's head. "I can't believe that they're killing journalists," Ms. Prpa said afterward in her apartment, clearly stunned. "Was he so dangerous for the state? He was just doing his job." In the widespread crackdown by President Slobodan Milosevic against the independent news media, Dnevni Telegraf and Evropljanin were heavily fined last year for breaching Serbia's restrictive information law, passed only in October, and then the publications were banned. Curuvija reregistered them in Montenegro, Yugoslavia's second, more liberal republic. They were printed in Croatia, but their distribution in Serbia had been widely curtailed. In recent weeks, the Yugoslav government has moved to shut down all independent media here, closing radio station B-92 in Belgrade and reopening it under more compliant leadership, as well as closing Radio 021 in Novi Sad. All independent Albanian-language media in Kosovo have also been shut down or destroyed. Curuvija and two reporters were fined last month for linking last year's killing of a Belgrade doctor to the Serbian vice prime minister, Milovan Bojic. Later, a police investigation concluded that it was not linked to Bojic. Curuvija, who refused to pay the fine, was sentenced to five months in jail, and was awaiting the results of his appeal. Last Monday, state television read an open attack on Curuvija, accusing him of supporting NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia. The commentary said: "Today when these bombs that were desired so much are killing Serbia, the traitors are silent. If they expect Serbs and Serbia to be enslaved, they're waiting in vain. And if they hoped their treason would be forgotten they hoped in vain." The next day, in the newspaper Politika Ekspres, a headline read: "Curuvija has finally got his bombs." The article quoted Milosevic's powerful wife, Mira Markovic, as saying: "The owner of a Belgrade daily newspaper said he supports the United States in its desire to bomb Serbia." The writer of the article then continues: "This is of course Slavko Curuvija." Curuvija denied making any such comment. The official Yugoslav news agency, Tanjug, reported on Sunday night that Curuvija had been killed "by unknown perpetrators," and added, "The police are intensively searching for the perpetrators." Curujiva, who was about 50, was a tall, elegant man with a small gray beard. He and Ms. Prpa recently gave an interview for a story that was published in The New York Times. "He will go to jail for five months, and after this bombing, who will care?" Ms. Prpa asked. "The West can't help him, that's another effect of this bombing. Milosevic can act like a dictator and lock us all up, and who will care for us? I agree the West should care for the human rights of ethnic Albanians, but do they also care for mine?" Curuvija, said that it is impossible now for democrats or dissidents to raise up their heads in this war fever. "The Serbs feel under a collective guilty verdict, and the democratic forces are pushed into their mouse holes because of this permanent state of emergency," he said. "In this moment, you cannot say you want to change something, or bring Serbia closer to the West, which is bombing your country -- it makes you a traitor." "All this helps Milosevic," he added. "Everything Western is terrible right now." Ms. Prpa said softly: "The worst of all is to feel you have no future. What kind of future do we have?" --- # 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