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Russia: Moscow court liquidated the Journalists and Media Workers’ Union

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The Moscow City Court dissolved today the Journalists and Media Workers’ Union (JMWU), the independent representative organisation of journalists and media workers in Russia. The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) and the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) strongly condemn this illegitimate political trial, based on false accusations. The IFJ and EFJ will continue to support their affiliate JMWU.

Not surprisingly, the Moscow City Court on Wednesday followed in full the request of the prosecutor’s office to liquidate the independent journalists’ union JMWU, affiliated to the EFJ and IFJ.

The prosecutor claimed that the trade union’s members did not pay membership fees and that its representatives took part in “unauthorised actions”, including support for Russian journalist Ivan Safronov, recently sentenced to 22 years in jail for alleged treason.

JMWU’s lawyer contested all the charges, demonstrating that the prosecution was illegal and unfounded. But the judge only took into account the prosecutor’s unfounded assertions.

“This court decision will have no effect on our affiliates, who will continue to carry out their mission as journalists by continuing to tell the truth about the situation in Russia. The Russian judiciary is mistaken if it thinks it is putting an end to our professional commitment to serving the public,” said JMWU office secretary Andrei Jvirblis.

“This is clearly a political trial with the sole aim of intimidating independent journalists and preventing them from uniting to expose the multiple and increasing violations of press freedom in Russia,” said IFJ and EFJ General Secretaries Anthony Bellanger and Ricardo Gutiérrez. “This conviction is a travesty of justice and we therefore continue to regard the JMWU as a representative and credible trade union in Russia. The JMWU remains a member of the IFJ and EFJ and we will continue to provide all the necessary support for the continuation of its activities”.

Source: EFJ

Platform “Three Freedoms”: Disgraceful decision of the police to ban the EuroPride march

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Three freedoms platform: Ministry of Internal Affairs must guarantee the freedom of peaceful assembly, and not retreat in the face of threats of violence

Civil society organizations gathered around the “Three Freedoms” Platform consider the police’s decision to ban the EuroPride march scheduled for September 17, 2022 to be shameful and irresponsible. The Ministry of Internal Affairs must act without delay on the announced appeal of the organizers, cancel the first-instance decision on the ban and enable citizens to enjoy the freedom of peaceful assembly.

The danger of attacks and conflicts, as well as violence, destruction of property and disruption of public order on a larger scale in case of simultaneous holding of two announced gatherings, cannot and must not be a sufficient reason for banning a peaceful gathering such as the EuroPride walk. The MUP is obliged to consider in the appeal procedure whether the danger of violent behavior originates from the participants of one or both of the announced gatherings. In a democratic society, it is inadmissible to restrict the freedom of peaceful assembly of the participants of an assembly due to threats or danger of violent behavior originating exclusively from the participants of the counter assembly. 

We believe that today’s decision of the Stari grad Police Station to ban the EuroPride march is a direct consequence of the pressure that the station was exposed to by the President of the Republic, Aleksandar Vucic, and the representative for the composition of the new government, Ana Brnabic, who, outside of their powers defined by the Constitution and the law, announced the ban gatherings and presented unconvincing reasons for the ban.

Today’s decision on the ban can, in any case, be understood as an admission by the state that it is completely powerless to control radical right-wing groups and individuals, who in recent weeks openly called for the abolition of freedom of peaceful assembly, which is guaranteed by the Constitution of Serbia, the European Convention on Human Rights rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 

We call on the Ministry of Internal Affairs to, without delay, upon receipt of the appeal, issue a decision on canceling the pronounced ban on the EuroPride walk, and thus enable the participants of this event to hold a peaceful and dignified gathering, enjoying their democratic and human right.

 

The announcement is signed by: 

  1. Civil Initiatives 
  2. New Optimism
  3. Independent Journalists’ Association of Serbia (IJAS)
  4. Belgrade Centre for Human Rights
  5. Youth Initiative for Human Rights (YIRH)
  6. Center for Practical Politics
  7. A 11 – Initiative for Economic and Social Rights
  8. Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia
  9. Crta
  10. Autonomous Women’s Centre
  11. Slavko Curuvija Foundation
  12. Catalyst Balkans
  13. The Lawyers’ Committee For Human Rights (YUCOM)
  14. The Belgrade Centre for Security Policy (BCSP)
  15. CZKD | Center for Cultural Decontamination

SMCG: Authorities to urgently determine who is behind the threats

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Foto: Pixabay

PODGORICA, 12.09.2022 – The Trade Union of Media of Montenegro strongly condemns the threats to the editor of the M portal Danica Nikolic and calls on the authorities to urgently determine who sent the e-mails with creepy threatening messages.

Threats to journalists and media workers in Montenegro, which continue and are increasingly frequent in the online sphere, are unacceptable, especially because of a different opinion. We repeat that all media and journalists have the right to autonomous editorial policies and that this should not be a reason for their brutal targeting.
We also call on politicians to stop calling out the media because they don’t like their reporting because that can also stimulate attackers to threaten journalists and the media and try to deal with them. A large number of attacks and threats against journalists in previous years are the result of political and social tensions in the country, and that is why political elites must be particularly sensitive to the protection of journalists’ right to free information. We remind you that during August and September, as many as six attacks and threats against journalists and media workers were registered.

How the BBC’s 50:50 Project is shifting representation in media

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photo: pixabay

Between 2005 and 2015, fewer than one in five experts in the news globally were women, according to a 2020 report on missing perspectives of women in news.

“Men are quoted in online news twice as frequently as women in the U.K., three times more frequently in South Africa and in the U.S., four times more frequently in Kenya, five times more frequently in Nigeria and six times more frequently in India,” the report said.

Author of the report, Luba Kassova, said that the oversaturation of male sources is because of the gender imbalance in the media landscape. “News is produced mainly by men, featuring more men and is consumed by more men.”

In 2016, Ros Atkins, a BBC news presenter, started brainstorming with his colleagues at Outside Source on ways to change the narrative. To retool cultural change and improve BBC’s content production, Atkins and his team arrived at three main goals.“I wanted better data on the representation of women in our journalism and content; to explore the impact of embedding representation in our daily editorial and production thinking and processes; and to prove that fair representation is not only a goal to aspire to but one that can be achieved consistently,” said Atkins.

 

[Read more: The high psychological cost women pay for engaging in news about climate change]

 

These goals led to the creation of the 50:50 Project. Initially, less than 40% of BBC’s contributors were women. Within four months of using the 50:50 project, the site’s women contributors is now up to 50%.

“[Atkins and his team] were reflecting on the number of women on air the previous day, but then no one remembered. So they started to log this. That very act of logging means that people think about it, and then they become more creative and work harder to put a more diverse selection of people on air to make our news coverage as inclusive as possible,” said Hewete Haileselassie, the project’s internal service lead.

 

How it works

 

The 50:50 project is a self-monitoring system designed to fit into existing workflows, and is rooted in three core principles: collection of data, measuring what data it controls and an emphasis on quality

When collecting data, researchers start with monitoring BBC’s content and using it to incorporate more diverse voices in the outlet’s coverage. “Data plays a critical role in the achievement of our goals. Every team participating in the project counts the people they feature in their output. How many men or women do we bring onboard to discuss topical issues? This helps us to create a contributors’ database which we add people to and share with the news team so that they have access to a pool of experts that is more diverse,” said Ifeoluwa Adediran, a researcher under the initiative.

The team also looks for experts across the world who are familiar with BBC’s interview techniques and who can offer timely insight on emerging issues.

“We have a lot of female experts around the world, but they are mostly under the radar. What we do is look [for them] and invite them to in-person and virtual ‘open days’ where they meet BBC editors, producers and members of the technical teams who demystify BBC’s interview processes,” said Haileselassie.

The team only logs contributors and experts in the BBC’s database. People who are integral to everyday news stories, like political figures or eyewitnesses, aren’t counted. The resulting database consists of reporters, analysts, academics, experts and others incorporated into BBC’s coverage.

There is no compromise for quality. The best contributor is often used, regardless of their impact on a team’s 50:50 numbers. Editorial excellence is always the priority. The 50:50 Project aims to help content creators discover new voices to better reflect the audiences they serve,” Haileselassie added.

 

[Read more: Tips to enhance the diversity of women in your reporting]

 

What it means for the media ecosystem

 

The project has expanded beyond the BBC’s newsroom to a global network of partner organizations that are implementing its methodology. The number of partners, which includes public and private media and academia, has grown to 145 organizations in 30 countries. Some of these organizations include Deutsche Welle and NDR.

This year, more than 70 members of the global 50:50 partner network published their data alongside the BBC to show their progress in representing women in a range of content and industries. Of the organizations who were below the target of 50% of women experts in their coverage when they first started monitoring, 73% have seen an improvement in the gender balance of their content.

“[These experts] have the knowledge to add meaningful contributions to media content, but because they remain under the radar, we always have the same set of people featured in programs all over. But with the 50:50 project, we’re able to attract new voices. So it’s just about reaching new voices, especially women, bringing them on and getting their perspective,” said Adediran.

The BBC plans to expand on the 50:50 project by piloting and rolling out a socioeconomic diversity monitor later this year, based on the 50:50’s framework, alongside a target 25% of staff originating from a lower socioeconomic background.

Lekan Otufodunrin, a media development expert, said initiatives like BBC’s 50:50 project are central to driving gender balance in media reports. “It’s a commendable intentional strategic approach to ensuring a fair chance to commensurate women’s voices in media reports,” she said. “Without a conscious approach like this, advocacy for more women voices in media reports will not be achieved. When there is a database of women experts, there will not be an excuse of not having women to speak with on any topic.”

 

Source: International Center for Journalists

by Abiodun Jamiu

AEM: Six months ban for morning program of TV Pink M

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Photo: pixabay.com

PODGORICA, 02.09.2022 –  The Council of the Agency for Electronic Media decided today to black out the morning program of Television Pink M for six months because of the report on the tragic event in Cetinje on August 12, the MINA agency reports.

In the morning program, the tragedy in which 11 people died is discussed in a sensationalist manner.

Three members of the Council voted for such a decision, and one abstained.

Milan Radović, Edin Koljenović and Andrijana Nikolić voted for that decision, while Branko Bošković abstained.
Bošković abstained, with a dissenting opinion, but was in favor of sanctioning.

BH Journalists: The N1 TV program must be available to all citizens

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SARAJEVO, 31.8.2022. – The Steering Committee of the BH Journalists Association and the Free Media Help Line (FMHL) give full support to the journalists and editors of N1 Television in their efforts to enable all citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina to follow the program of N1 through various internet platforms and the network of cable operators, including the platforms of BH Telecom.

N1 TV occupies a significant part of the information space of BiH, thanks, first of all, to numerous and diverse program contents and to meeting the informational needs of citizens for different and plural information of importance to the public. This position of N1 TV is especially important at the time of the pre-election campaign, which begins on September 2, and any attempt to deny citizens the right to watch N1 TV should be considered as an illegal restriction of freedom of expression and information.

The Steering Committee of BH Journalists particularly regrets the fact that the financial, political and other interests of the owners and management of BH Telecom, and United Media, in whose composition N1 operates, may call into question the availability of program content of N1 television to the citizens of this country, especially one of its entities – the Federation BiH. In this context, the Steering Committee of BH Journalists emphasizes that it shouldn’t happen in any democratic society that the interests of capital and the race for profit overcome the public interest, as well as the right of citizens to freedom of expression and information.

BH Journalists remind that the negotiations and demands of both companies – BH Telecom and United Media are fully in accordance with the current laws, the rules of the Communications Regulatory Agency (RAK – CRA) and the current EU Directive from 2010. However, the legality and legitimacy of the renewal of the mutual agreement on the distribution of television programs through the terrestrial broadcasting network should not damage the integrity and free operation of N1 TV, nor call into question the function of journalism as a public good.

BH Journalists emphasize that this case also confirmed the need for the urgent adoption of the Law on the Publicity of Media Ownership and Pluralism, the draft of which has been sitting in the drawers of the Ministry of Transport and Communications of BiH since December 2018. The draft of this law envisages not only the publication of data on media ownership, but also the separation of editorial policy, program functions and public responsibility of the media from the financial and all other interests of media owners.

Serbian local radio station threatened by powerful businessman

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photo: OK radio

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls on the Serbian authorities to guarantee the safety of the journalists at OK Radio, a leading local radio station in the southeastern town of Vranje, whose work is being obstructed by increasingly violent threats from Dejan Nikolic, a powerful local businessman known as Kantar.

Kantar has been exerting constant and growing pressure on OK Radio for several months because it is opposing his plan to build an illegal gambling room that would encroach on the building that houses the radio station.

“The threats against OK Radio’s staff are very worrying and are obstructing the work of its journalists,” said Pavol Szalai, the head of RSF’s European Union and Balkans desk. “In accordance with our April 2022 recommendations, we call on the Serbian authorities to take steps to improve journalists’ security. There is an urgent need to restore a safe environment for this radio station’s journalists so that they can resume working normally. Press freedom must not be gagged by fear.”

OK Radio is a well-established radio station that broadcasts local news. Most of its funding comes from the income of a café called the No Comment Caffe that is attached to the radio station. In March, OK Radio owner Olivera Vladkovic told the police he was getting telephone threats from Kantar. Then, the café was ransacked at the start of June.

Kantar began construction on his illegal gambling room on 6 June, walling up the windows of the radio station. Representatives of journalists’ associations with the Standing Working Group for the Safety of Journalists – an entity created by the Serbian government in 2020 to respond more effectively to attacks on journalists – visited Vranje on 15 June and voiced their support for OK Radio and Vladkovic. Kantar went to No Comment Caffe and reiterated his threats on 16 June. He was arrested the same day.

The strongman’s harassment has taken various forms, from threatening phone calls to smashing the café’s windows. He even sent one of his men to the café carrying a phone on which Kantar could be heard screaming threats against the radio station’s journalists.

Kantar’s imprisonment has not stopped him from continuing his threats. In late June, he targeted Veran Matic, a member of the Standing Working Group for the Safety of Journalists, by means of  posted in the streets of Vranje accusing Matic of destroying the city.

Kantar even continued to threaten journalists when he appeared in court, while friends and associates gathered outside wearing T-shirts with the words “Vucic help us” – a reference to Serbia’s president – and displaying signs saying “Justice for Kantar,” suggesting that he is a victim. After the hearing, OK Radio’s reporters said publicly that they did not feel safe.

Kantar is both extremely influential and feared in the region. A local court ordered the destruction of the wall erected in front of OK Radio, but no builder is prepared to carry out the job for fear of reprisals from Kantar. Two employees have left OK Radio because they felt they were in danger. Other Serbian media outlets are also reluctant to cover this case for the same reasons.

As the No Comment Caffe’s inability to keep operating has deprived OK Radio of its main source of funding, the Association of Independent Electronic Media has launched a fund-raising drive for the radio station.

Serbia is ranked 79th out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2022 World Press Freedom Index.

Source: Reporters Without Borders (RSF)

Three freedoms platform: Anything but the security guarantee of “EuroPride 2022” is a defeat for the state

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The “Three Freedoms” platform calls on the competent institutions to clearly and unambiguously guarantee the safe holding of “EuroPride 2022”, scheduled for September 2022. The public messages of the President of the Republic and the representative for the composition of the new government about the impossibility of holding this gathering for security reasons do not represent a “decision of the state”, but illegal pressure on the competent institution (MUP- Ministry of Internal Affairs) to ban the scheduled gathering, which creates a devastating impression that the state is unable to provide not even the physical safety of its citizens.

Regardless of whether the announcement of the President of the Republic that this event will be “postponed or canceled” or the statement of the representative for the composition of the new Government that it is only a “pleasure to the organizers” is taken as authoritative, the manipulation of this issue by placing it in the context of endangering state security and energy crisis undermines basic human rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution and confirmed international treaties, including the right of citizens to freedom of peaceful assembly.

We remind that human rights and freedoms can be limited only for the reasons prescribed by the Constitution in the procedure prescribed by law, for which in this case neither the President of the Republic nor the mandate holder have any authority. Any statement by state officials discouraging the organization of public gatherings constitutes an unjustified encroachment on this freedom.

Regardless of whether the competent state authority will pass a decision on the banning of “EuroPride 2022”, the damage has already been caused by creating the impression among citizens that their human rights do not depend on clearly prescribed and predictable procedures and laws, but on the unpredictable and changing will of incompetent state officials. The Three Freedoms platform calls for solidarity with all citizens from the LGBT+ community in the fight for the equal enjoyment of basic human rights and freedoms.

 

Belgrade, 29. 8. 2022.

 

Signatories:

 

Civil Initiatives 

Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia

The Lawyers’ Committee For Human Rights (YUCOM)

Independent Journalists’ Association of Serbia (IJAS)

Belgrade Centre for Human Rights

Trag Foundation 

Youth Initiative for Human Rights (YIRH)

New Optimism 

A 11 – Initiative for Economic and Social Rights

Slavko Curuvija Foundation

Center for Practical Politics

CRTA

Catalyst Balkans

The Belgrade Centre for Security Policy (BCSP)

CZKD | Center for Cultural Decontamination

Transparency Serbia

Autonomous Women’s Centre

Partners for Democratic Changes Serbia

AJK hires a lawyer to represent journalists

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Yll Zekaj – has been engaged as a lawyer in the Association of Journalists of Kosovo, with the support of the OSCE – Mission in Kosovo.

For AJK, it is important that the legal representation and protection of journalists and media workers will be enabled due to the hiring of Mr. Zekaj.

AJK encourages you to report the cases where you are hindered while reporting, or you are a subject of attacks and threats.

You can address your concerns or requests for consultation on this e-mail: [email protected].