06/12/2015: SERBIA – BEHAVIOUR OF PUBLIC OFFICIALS TOWARDS MEDIA WORKERS IN SERBIA UNACCEPTABLE

06/12/2015: SERBIA – BEHAVIOUR OF PUBLIC OFFICIALS TOWARDS MEDIA WORKERS IN SERBIA UNACCEPTABLE

December 6, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 06/12/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) was appalled by sexist comments a high-ranking public official in Serbia made when referring to a female journalist.

Defence Minister Bratislav Gasic was speaking to a group of journalists in the town of Trstenik after a visit to a local factory. During his statement and questions with the press, B92 journalist Zlatija Labovic knelt in order to avoid obstructing cameras filming Gasic. The Minister said, “I like female journalists that kneel down easily”.

“Statements like this are unprofessional and unacceptable from a public official. This behaviour must be addressed, considering Gasic’s position as a Minister.” SEEMO Secretary General Oliver Vujovic said.

SEEMO is a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East and Central Europe. SEEMO’s press freedom work is supported by the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) project, as part of a grant by the European Commission.

 

03/12/2015: TURKEY – SEEMO URGES TURKEY TO ALLEVIATE PRESSURE ON JOURNALISTS

December 3, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 03/12/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) expressed concern regarding the recent deterioration of the media atmosphere in Turkey. The country already faces many issues regarding media freedom and freedom of expression, but has witnessed a significant increase in devaluing of human and journalists’ rights.

On 26 November, two media workers from the daily Cumhuriyet were arrested for reporting on trucks containing weapons that were allegedly being sent to Syrian rebel forces in connection with Turkey’s National Intelligence Agency. Editor-in-chief Can Dundar and Ankara Bureau Chief Erdem Gul now face charges including potential life imprisonment. They were accused of publishing confidential information, political and military espionage, as well as being the propaganda vessel of a terrorist organization.

Following this, another tragic event occurred on 28 November, when Tahir Elci, a Turkish human rights lawyer and defender was assassinated with a single bullet to the head in Diyarbakir, south-eastern Turkey. The horrifying event took place right after a press conference Elci held that day. The circumstances surrounding his death remain unclear.

On 2 December, a Danish journalist claimed in a series of tweets that he was severely assaulted by a group of Turkishsoldiers while crossing the Turkish border into Syria. Nagieb Khaja, a freelance journalist covering conflict in the region, posted a photo of himself with severe facial bruises. Khaja stated that he identified himself as a journalist and showed his press card to authorities at the border, but they beat him regardless.

“We appeal to authorities in Turkey to drop charges against Can Dundar and Erdem Gul from Cumhuriyet, do all they can to find the perpetrators of the gruesome murder of Tahir Elci and to investigate the case of Nagieb Khaja and punish those responsible for his senseless beating”, SEEMO Secretary General Oliver Vujovic said.

SEEMO is a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East and Central Europe. SEEMO’s press freedom work is supported by the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) project, as part of a grant by the European Commission.

 

27/11/2015: TURKEY – ARREST AND DETENTION

November 27, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 27/11/2015

The arrest and detention of two prominent Turkish journalists on groundless charges of aiding a terrorist organisation, espionage and disclosure of classified documents marks a disturbing new low in Turkey’s sustained assault on media freedom, the International Press Institute (IPI) and the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) said today.

Cumhuriyet Editor-in-Chief Can Dündar and the paper’s Ankara bureau chief, Erdem Gül, were arrested yesterday and placed in pre-trial detention on the orders of an Istanbul criminal court.
Dündar and Gül face life imprisonment if convicted.

“The court says that Cumhuriyet Editor-in-Chief Can Dündar and Ankara Bureau Chief Erdem Gül have been imprisoned for spying, for being members of a terrorist organiation and for revealing state secrets,” IPI Turkish National Committee Chair Kadri Gürsel said.

“But we know that they have been put in jail simply for their factual reporting on the secret arms transfer to Syria, which undoubtedly constitutes a liability for the [ruling] AKP government. Their arrest constitutes an unpredecedented degradation in the agonising state of press freedom in Turkey and a new extreme in the criminalisation of journalism in the country.”

IPI Executive Director Barbara Trionfi added: “The arrest and imprisonment of Can Dündar and Erdem Gül for publishing information on a matter of urgent and undeniable public interest make it clear: press freedom in Turkey is no longer simply under threat; it is in danger of being completely extinguished. We urge the international community to send a strong signal that such breaches of fundamental rights and liberties will not be tolerated and we call on Turkey to release both journalists without delay.”

The case has its origin in a video published by Cumhuriyet on May 29, 2015 that the paper said showed evidence that Turkey’s intelligence agency, MIT, was secretly sending weapons to Islamist rebel groups in Syria. The video purports to show Turkish security forces opening trucks en route to Syria belonging to MIT that contained crates of weapons and ammunition.

Turkey’s Interior Ministry rejected assertions prompted by the video and insisted that the trucks were in fact conveying humanitarian aid to the Turkmen community in Syria. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has suggested that the weapons were placed on the trucks by adherents of the religious movement led by his ally-turned-foe Fethullah Gülen in order to discredit him. Turkish authorities have designated the Gülen movement as a terrorist organisation.

Erdoğan recently responded to a question about the videos by asking: “What difference would it make whether the trucks contained weapons or not?” He chracterised Cumhuriyet’s publication of the video as a “betrayal”.

Erdoğan had vowed in a television interview with state broadcaster TRT in June 2015 that the journalist who wrote the piece would pay a “heavy price”. Erdoğan filed an individual criminal complaint against Dündar under Turkey’s broad anti-terror law, accusing Dündar and Cumhuriyet of “joing[ing] the actions of the members of the organization who searched the trucks and plott[ing] with fabricated evidence to create a perception in the scope of a planned setup as if the Republic of Turkey has been helping terrorist organizations”.

According to Turkish media, shortly before Dündar was taken into custody, he told reporters: “We are accused of ‘spying’. The president said [our action is] ‘treason’. We are not traitors, spies, or heroes; we are journalists. What we have done here was a journalistic activity.”

He added: “We came here to defend journalism. We came here to defend the right of the public to obtain the news and their right to know if their government is feeding them lies. We came here to show and to prove that governments cannot engage in illegal activity and defend this.”

25/11/2015: UKRAINE – CONDITIONS FOR JOURNALISTS IN THE UKRAINE WORRISOME, CONCLUDE SEEMO MEMBERS

November 25, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 25/11/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) has expressed concern regarding the turmoil journalists face in the Ukraine.

On 21 November, Hulsum Khalilova, a journalist with ATR TV, was assaulted during clashes between Ukrainian security forces and the Civil Blockade of Crimea action in Chaplynka, close to the Ukraine-Crimea administrative border. She was hit in the stomach with a gun while reporting. According to one representative of ATR, the journalist was attacked by Ukrainian special forces. SEEMO has urged that this attack be swiftly investigated.

SEEMO is a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East and Central Europe. SEEMO’s press freedom work is supported by the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) project, as part of a grant by the European Commission.

 

24/11/2015: KOSOVO – SEEMO URGES INVESTIGATION OF KOSSEV ATTACKS

November 24, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 24/11/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) urges authorities in Kosovo to investigate and resolve cases of pressure and attacks made on the Kossev news portal.

The vehicle of Kossev journalist Nevenka Medic was set on fire in the early hours of 24 November. The fire allegedly ignited because of electrical issues inside the vehicle, but there has been speculation that the incident could be related to other attacks directed at the staff of the portal. Prior to this incident, the Kossev offices were shot at by unknown perpetrators. No one was injured in the incident, but when they arrived to work in July, 11 journalists noticed several gunshots had been fired into the walls and through the windows of the premises. Only a month later, reporter Svetlana Jevtic was physically attacked and verbally insulted by an employee of the Kosovo Property Agency.

“We call the authorities to protect the Kossev journalists, and create a safer environment for all media workers in Kosovo”, SEEMO Secretary General Oliver Vujovic stated.

SEEMO is a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East and Central Europe. SEEMO’s press freedom work is supported by the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) project, as part of a grant by the European Commission.

 

23/11/2015: GREECE – SEEMO CRITICIZES DECISION OF GREEK INSTITUTIONS

November 23, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 23/11/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) asks for the release of official details about two foreign journalists arrested in Chalkidiki.

On 23 November in the city of Polygyros in Northern Greece, American Angela Anderson and Italian Francesca Pagani were arrested for allegedly recording trial proceedings, which is against the law in Greece. The case being tried was against several Greek citizens and activists engaged in protesting the exploitation of gold mines for ecological reasons.

The judge accused the two journalists of filming inside the court room, while they claim to have been filming outside of it.

The judge immediately ordered them to be put on trial and afterwards arrested, following which they were detained in the Polygyros police department in. Their equipment was confiscated.

“SEEMO is asking authorities to release more details about this case. It is not acceptable to block journalists’ reporting in connection with a court case.” SEEMO Secretary General Oliver Vujovic stated.

SEEMO is a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East and Central Europe. SEEMO’s press freedom work is supported by the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) project, as part of a grant by the European Commission.

20/11/2015: BELARUS – PROBLEMS IN BELARUS – IPI REPORT

November 20, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 20/11/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) presents a IPI report about Belarus.

Do recent events indicate that Belarus could fully turn towards Europe and pull away from Russia politically? In the last few months, a number of developments have excited observers in international media and revitalised old debates about the former Soviet country’s future. But despite positive indications, a broader view suggests that this prediction may be overly optimistic.

In the judgment of most media freedom or democracy indexes, the Eastern European country is labelled as one of the worst in Europe and in recent years Belarus has shown no tangible progress towards establishing a free media atmosphere.

One of the most important recent events was certainly the Oct. 11 presidential election, which was broadly perceived as neither free nor fair. Belarus’ leader, President Alexander Lukashenko, who first took office in 1994, is often called “Europe’s last dictator” by critics. It was, therefore, not surprising that he was re-elected for a fifth term in office with a landslide 83.5 percent of the vote.

According to a report on media coverage of the recent elections prepared by the Belarusian Association of Journalists’ (BAJ), state-owned media only served Lukashenko and gave no voice to opponents. Further, it presented the country’s current situation as being extremely successful. Although independent media outlets had a more balanced coverage, they were unable to have an impact throughout the country, because they were given limited space in which they could operate.

The U.N. special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Belarus, Miklós Haraszti, criticised the situation and the fact that audiovisual media is owned and controlled by the state, with the result that the public did not have a democratic chance to inform itself about other political parties.
“The election process was orchestrated, and the result was pre-ordained,” Haraszti said in a statement. “It could not be otherwise, given the 20 years of continuous suppression of the rights to freedom of expression, assembly, and association, which are the preconditions for any credible competition.”

Another recent event that raised hopes for Belarus was the awarding of the 2015 Nobel Prize for Literature to Belarusian investigative journalist Svetlana Alexievich. Despite the country’s unfree media atmosphere and the overall lack of independent journalism, Alexievich – whose work during the course of her career included interviews with the survivors of conflicts and disasters, such as the Chernobyl disaster, during the Soviet period – became the 14th woman to win the 8 million kroner (approximately €860,000) prize and the first journalist to do so.

Her win had a tremendous impact, not only because she has been persecuted by the current regime and was formerly forbidden from making public appearances, but also because of her stance towards the Belarusian government.

Recent statements that she has given in the media reveal that she is extremely critical of Lukashenko and Russia. In one of her first public comments after winning the award, Alexievich said she would not vote in the elections “because we know who will win”. One day before the elections, she told reporters in Berlin that “it plays absolutely no role how we will vote” and she continued to criticise the electoral process as being entirely under the control of the president.

International observers and Belarusians alike have expressed great happiness and hope at her success. Catherine Taylor, the deputy director of English PEN, said that she hoped the award “will further highlight the civil and political injustices in Belarus and go some way to bringing about the restitution of free speech and freedom of expression for all Belarusians”.

The final important event in recent months was the EU’s suspension of sanctions against Belarus, which included an arms embargo, a trade ban on arms-related services, financial restrictions, travel bans and asset freezes. The sanctions, tightened most recently following the government’s crackdown on anti-regime demonstrators in Minsk in 2010, targeted Lukashenko and some 200 other individuals and 18 entities.

However, the recent move relaxed sanctions against 170 individuals, including Lukashenko, and three companies. It followed the release of political prisoners in Belarus, the country’s hosting of the Ukraine peace talks and the non-violent atmosphere that accompanied the elections.

According to EU diplomats, the suspension can be seen as a reward for Belarus’ perceived opening up to Europe. They say it also signals a new strategy by the EU to engage, rather than isolate, Eastern European countries. The suspension process began at the end of October and is expected to last until February, but could be terminated should new human rights abuses occur.

Artyom Shraibman – a political correspondent and editor for major Belarusian informational portal TUT.BY in Minsk and a former political correspondent at leading independent Belarusian news agency BelaPAN – told IPI in an interview that he agrees with the EU’s approach.

“If we look back in history, the worst human rights record was seen in the country exactly in the times when the country was isolated from the West by the war sanction….,” he said. “The country needs to be europeanised in a way, and this can’t happen if it is focused only on the eastern vector of its foreign policy.”

Nonetheless, the question whether the aim of the sanctions was reached has always been controversial. Some observers say they believe that the impact of the sanctions has not been as strong as expected, given that there are alternative trade routes between Belarus and Russia. Therefore, since the overall effect has not led to any revision of the policies in Belarus, let alone regime change, the sanctions should not be considered as overly important.

Moreover, one of the reasons for lifting the sanctions, the non-violent electoral atmosphere, has been widely criticised, as there is effectively no opposition in the country given the very deep crisis it is currently experiencing. While Lukashenko’s suppression was effective, the opposition itself also could not find a common leader and gain peoples’ confidence, aggravating the situation.

Ales Antsipenka, head of BAJ’s media monitoring group, told reporters late last month that the election “was such a quiet affair” because of the lack of real competition or public discussion of serious economic problems, the marginalisation of opposition forces, and state media censorship, which left out voters’ critical remarks about Lukashenko.

What are the current major “pressure points” on independent journalism in Belarus?

According to information shared by BAJ, the key issues in Belarus are that media freedom remains limited, independent newspapers suffer from uneven competition with state-run press, and some newspapers cannot obtain the right to be distributed through the networks of state monopolies, such as press distributor Belsayuzdruk and postal service Belposhta. There is no independent radio – only Poland-based Radio Racyja, which is available across most of Belarus, but only online – and the only TV channel with alternative views is Belsat, which is also based in Poland.

Shraibman also pointed to Internet freedom as a major problem.

“On January 1, 2015, the amendments to the media legislation were enacted and they provided that now all the Internet resources that distribute news are considered media, and can be shut down basically without a judicial decision,” he said. “So, the Ministry of Information can on its own decide some sites can be blocked on the basis of each information and, quote, ‘being harmful to national interests’.”

Shraibman added that he believed that, with this quite-broad description, authorities might use the legislation whenever it suits them. He said that, if not a trend, this possibility presented at least the most urgent and recent challenge to media freedom in the country.

He also emphasised the challenging situation of freelance journalists who work for media registered abroad.

“If the foreign media is not registered in Belarus, it doesn’t have its offices registered in Belarus, working for them is punishable by a fine and several of my colleagues have received those fines,” Shraibman recounted. “It is not enormous sums of money, but still unpleasant to work like this sometimes on a regular basis. This happened to my colleagues working for TV channels or radio stations operated from Poland.”

From Shraibman’s point of view, the recent events of the presidential elections, the lifting of EU sanctions and the success of Alexievich, although increasing hopes, does not seem to have had any lasting effect.

“I think as long as the sanctions are being suspended only for four months, the government will generally tend to refrain from using excessive force and excessive suppression, both to political activists and to journalists of the independent or oppositional media,” he said. “So, I think generally as long as the political system is unchanged, the situation of the press freedom will also hardly undergo any significant changes, [at least not] any visible [from a foreign standpoint] for example.”

Accordingly, it appears that Belarus still has a long way to go in order to solve its many challenges to media freedom, which also include denial of accreditation to media representatives, bureaucratic methods to deny information, impunity for crimes against journalists and limited access to information. Under the circumstances, it seems unlikely that Belarus will turn fully towards Europe as long as Lukashenko continues to lead the country.

20/11/2015: RUSSIA – STEPS AGAINST GLASNOST DEFENCE FOUNDATION (GDF)

November 20, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 20/11/2015

The International Press Institute (IPI) and the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) today joined international free expression defenders in condemning Russia’s move to stigmatise prominent Russian media freedom watchdog the Glasnost Defence Foundation (GDF) as a “foreign agent”.

Russia’s Justice Ministry yesterday added GDF to its list of “foreign agents” under a 2012 law requiring non-profit organisations that receive foreign donations and engage in political activity to register using that term. NGOs and others required to register are subject to financial audits and issue biannual reports on their activities, in addition to identifying themselves with the phrase “foreign agents” in their materials.
Russian journalist Galina Sidorova, a member of IPI’s Executive Board and the chair of the Foundation for Investigative Journalism – Foundation 19/29, Russia, said today: “For the 25 years of its existence the Glasnost Defense Foundation has done more for advocacy of press freedom, support of independent media, protection of journalists and development of the civil society than any other NGO or professional journalist body in Russia.
“For the last two years the GDF and Foundation 19/29 have been partners in a training program for investigative journalists and bloggers in the Russian regions. There is both irony and hypocrisy in the Ministry’s move, since this very partnership was specified as one of the reasons for its decision to include the GDF in the ‘foreign agents’ list, insofar as Foundation 19/29 had been inserted there earlier last May.
“The Russian government and legal institutions have lately been pursuing an unprecedented attack on independent media and freedom of expression, which they are now trying to mask with the rhetoric of necessity to fight terrorism and extremism. This case against GDF reflects the dramatic and deteriorating situation that independent media and journalists are facing these days in Russia.”
IPI Director of Advocacy and Communications Steven M. Ellis echoed Sidorova’s comments.
“For nearly 25 years, GDF has worked to defend the rights of journalists and protect media freedom across Russia, providing legal assistance to journalists and conducting research into ‘hot spots’ where abuses of media freedom most often occur,” he noted. “This move is the latest in a systematic campaign of harassment and intimidation targeting independent media and civil society in recent years, and will only serve to further hinder the ability of people in Russia to freely share and receive information in the public interest.”
The Kremlin has claimed the 2012 legislation is needed to safeguard Russia from foreign attempts to sway domestic politics. However, the term “foreign agents” carries a Soviet-era connotation of espionage and those who work for organisations that refuse to comply with the demands can be punished with heavy fines or prison sentences.

GDF has received funding from organisations based outside of Russia, including George Soros’ Open Society Foundations, the National Endowment for Democracy, and the MacArthur Foundation. Yesterday’s decision by the Justice Ministry came after an “unscheduled inspection” of the organisation.

20/11/2015: KOSOVO – “END QUARRELS WITHIN RTK” INSISTS SEEMO

November 20, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 20/11/2015

The South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) expressed its deep concern regarding recent developments in the Kosovo public broadcaster RTK.

RTK General Director Mentor Shala wrote an open letter that addressed the public broadcaster’s workers, informing them that he was elected for another three-year term. However, instead of focusing on the work and future of RTK, the letter contains accusations against members of the board of the Independent Trade Union of RTK.

Shala said that the Trade Union is attempting to destabilize RTK, naming particularly Hisen Berisha and Bekim Hasani, and accusing them of misinterpretation and blackmail. A letter by Mr Berisha was recently published in which he addresses alleged nepotism and corruption in RTK.

SEEMO is a network of editors, media executives and leading journalists in South East and Central Europe. SEEMO’s press freedom work is supported by the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF) project, as part of a grant by the European Commission.

 

16/11/2015: GREECE – MISSION TO GREECE – RESULTS

November 16, 2015 disabled comments

Vienna, 16/11/2015

New draft legislation intended to combat the abuse of Greece’s civil defamation law in cases involving journalists marks a step in the right direction, but must be complemented by the repeal of criminal defamation, the International Press Institute (IPI) and the South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO) said today following a joint three-day visit to Athens.

The bill, introduced by Justice Minister Nikos Paraskevopoulos and currently undergoing an open consultation period, would reform Greece’s Law on the Press, widely known in the Greek journalistic community as the “press killer”. Paraskevopoulos told the IPI/SEEMO delegation that the proposed changes would scrap the law’s minimum limit for compensation in defamation cases and institute a mandatory 20-day pre-trial period during which the impugned media outlet would have the opportunity to publish a retraction. If a retraction is published, plaintiffs would be barred from pursuing damages in court except in the case of material harm, which is generally difficult to prove.

Paraskevopoulos said that the minimum compensation requirement “does not conform to the proportionality principle” and he described the retraction period as a way to combat the “ease” of taking journalists to court.

IPI and SEEMO representatives welcomed the proposal as a move in the right direction.
“The low threshold for filing defamation claims against journalists in Greece’s civil courts is producing a industry of vexatious claims against the press at a time in which the country needs investigative journalism and a watchdog media more than ever,” IPI Director of Press Freedom Programmes Scott Griffen, who led the mission, said. “We are grateful to Minister Paraskevopoulos for recognising this problem and for taking concrete steps to combat it. At the same time, we urge lawmakers to closely involve journalists and civil society in the drafting process so that their concerns and further suggestions are taken into account and that the changes will actually amount to an improvement in practice.”

However, during audiences with both the Justice Minister and with the Hellenic Parliament’s Standing Committee on Justice, Order and Transparency, IPI and SEEMO representatives underscored that any reform of Greece’s defamation laws will be inadequate unless it includes the repeal of the country’s criminal defamation laws, which continue to be used actively against the press.

In March 2015, a court sentenced investigative journalist Kostas Vaxevanis to a suspended prison term of 26 months over an article that analysed a prominent businessman’s alleged involvement in the 2012 to 2013 Cypriot financial crisis. Following the verdict, which Vaxevanis has appealed, OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatovic reiterated a standing call on Greece to remove defamation from its penal code.

Members of the Standing Committee on Justice defended existing criminal laws, pointing out that no journalist has gone to prison for defamation in recent memory. They also noted that in practice all prison sentences for crimes against honour are either suspended or converted into a fine according to Greek penal law.

But Griffen countered that those arguments “do not survive scrutiny”, commenting: “Numerous human rights bodies as well as the European Court of Human Rights – including in a case involving Greece – have already determined that prison sentences for defamation are prima facie disproportionate regardless of whether they are actually carried out. Moreover, those convicted are still burdened with a criminal record.”

SEEMO Secretary General Oliver Vujovic added: “IPI and SEEMO call on Greece to fully repeal its criminal defamation laws, which are not acceptable in a modern democracy. There is no reason that Greece cannot follow the lead of other European states that have already done so, such as Cyprus, Ireland, Norway, Romania, Serbia and the United Kingdom. Greek lawmakers should consider both the chilling effect that the threat of imprisonment can have on Greek citizens’ right to freedom of expression as well as the negative example that its laws set for other states.”

IPI and SEEMO’s visit to Greece was prompted in part by concerns that the country’s overly plaintiff-friendly defamation laws were allowing powerful figures to punish or suppress unwanted media investigations through the threat of financial ruin. Civil lawsuits claiming hundreds of thousands or even millions of euros in damages are not uncommon, journalists from various print and web outlets, as well as representatives of the country’s national federation of journalists’ unions, told the IPI/SEEMO delegation.

Defence lawyers are often successful in beating back claims against the press. But the IPI/SEEMO delegation was also presented with troubling examples of court rulings that appear to ignore standards on freedom of expression. In one case, a group of journalists from the coastal city of Volos was sued by a local businessman and his wife for €3 million over an article that the national federation says relied on official police and judicial documents. In 2007 an appeals court sentenced each defendant to pay damages of €45,000, a decision whose consequences continue to reverberate. One of the journalists involved told the delegation he was still paying off an emergency loan from the national federation that had prevented his home from being seized upon execution of the verdict.

Griffen and Vujovic were joined in Athens by Boris Bergant, former vice-president of the European Broadcasting Union and a member of the SEEMO board, and Radomir Licina, editor of the Serbian daily Danas and a former IPI Executive Board member. In addition to defamation laws, the mission also focused on police violence against reporters and photojournalists; thorny questions of ownership and trust in the Greek media landscape; and governance of the country’s revived public broadcaster. An analysis on these and other issues will be published in the coming weeks.