The
Serbian parliament has postponed a vote on a controversial media censorship bill
which has drawn criticism from the public and protests from media and
professional associations. Parliament speaker Slavica Djukic Dejanovic delayed a
vote on the bill until 31 August, after the summer recess, purportedly to allow
refurbishment of the parliament building.
The bill introduces draconian fines and possible closure of news organisations
which publish slanderous allegations about politicians and other public
figures before they have been convicted by a court of law.
Political analysts said the bill aimed to target Belgrade tabloid Kurir but the
entire media would be muzzled as a result.
Serbian journalists' association president Ljiljana Smajlovic, of the planned
law was a scandalous proposal that would be an atomic bomb dropped by
the government on the media. The law would protect the government from the
public, instead of the other way around.
A prominent Belgrade analyst, Slobodan Antonic, agreed: This is not the law
of a free, democratic society, it's a law of an authoritarian, oligarchic and
repressive regime.
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