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Re: Re: Filipovic and the dictatorship of the proletariat



At 09:05 13/10/00 -0400, Proyect wrote:

Burford:
>Had he read rather than skimmed the report on the lying imperialist
>web-site he would have read not that Filipovic had been imprisoned for
>writing for an enemy publication:-

"TODAY IS the day Miroslav Filopovic has been waiting for - but with little
sense of hope or pleasure. For the past two months the Serb journalist has
been in custody, charged with espionage. Today he will face a military
court in the southern Serbian town of Nis, and if found guilty tomorrow,
when the trial ends, he faces between three and 15 years in prison.
Filipovic, 49, is the first Serb journalist to be tried for espionage in
decades, and the case has become a cause of concern for human rights groups.

"The basis of the charges is a series of articles considered by the
authorities to have "undermined the defence of the country". These include
one that was published in The Independent, detailing atrocities allegedly
committed by Serbian forces in Kosovo." (The Independent, July 25, 2000)



The journalistic claim of the Independent that one of his articles was published by them, is not the same as Proyect's charge that he wrote "for" the Independent, and still less an argument why he should be imprisoned for 7 years.

Further web searches show that the reasoning of the 2-day trial is not
exactly clear because it was largely secret, but the main summary seems to
be that Filipovic published a series of articles in Agence France Presse
and in the publication of the Institute of War and Peace Reporting. No
doubt for Proyect these are also a "filthy lying warmongering rag" and
backed by the forces of capitalism, like the Wall Street Journal he was
quoting yesterday.

So while making the fullest possible use of the global capitalist media,
especially through Lexis-Nexis, Proyect thinks that a Serb journalist
belongs in prison of course for having his articles published in these organs.

Proyect is possibly confident that the espionage law was not being used to
suppress the truth of chauvinist atrocities by Serbs and to intimidate Serb
media into concealing these reports??

Filipovic worked "for" the Belgrade independent publication Danas. Does
Proyect imagine Filipovic would have preferred to publish in Paris and
London, rather than Belgrade, if he could have published in Belgrade?

No, robustly enough, it is clear for Proyect that

Of course he belongs in prison


The clearest account of the legal issues I can find is from Amnesty
International. This implies Filipovic got 5 years for espionage, and 2 for
spreading false information. It would be interesting if Proyect defends the
five years for "espionage" whether he also defends the 2 years imprisonment
for spreading false information. Does Proyect claim the information is
false? Or that it is *true* but that it should be suppressed because its
publication would undermine a regime allegedly trying to build socialism.

Amnesty International LONDON, 21.08.2000 -

Miroslav Filipovic, journalist for the independent newspaper Danas,
correspondent for the London-based Institute of War and Peace Reporting
(IWPR), and Kraljevo correspondent for Agence France Presse (AFP), was
imprisoned on 26 July 2000 for seven years on charges of ?espionage? and
of ?spreading false information?.

he was sentenced by Nis Military Court. He was found guilty of both
?espionage? under Article 128 (paragraphs 1 and 4) of the Federal Criminal
Code and of ?spreading false information? under Article 218 of the Serbian
Criminal Code, and sentenced to five and two years? imprisonment
respectively. The sentences are to be served consecutively. Since the case
allegedly concerned ?state secrets? no details were made available about
the charges, evidence or progress of the trial, part of which was held in
camera. ...

Miroslav Filipovic appears to have been indicted as the result of a number
of articles he had written, one of which reportedly alleged eye-witness
accounts of human rights violations carried out by members of Serbian and
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) forces in Kosovo, and which were
published by the London-based Institute of War and Peace Reporting (IWPR). ...

 He was convicted on charges of ?espionage? and of ?spreading false
information?, having been accused of ?collecting data representing
military secrets with the intention to sell them to foreign institutions
like IWPR and AFP?..

His accounts of alleged eye-witness reports of human rights violations by
members of the Yugoslav army and Serbian police and paramilitaries in
Kosovo were described as ?spreading false information with the intention
of provoking disturbance among the citizens and jeopardizing public peace
and order?.

... Under FRY law, espionage is the communication of secrets to any
foreign organization, or any person working for one, and allows wide
discretion in the definition of a ?secret?.. Amnesty International is
concerned that the law is open to such wide interpretation that it has
been used as a measure to diminish freedom of expression rather than as a
legitimate defence of the security of the state.

Though, under Article 14 of the ICCPR ?The press and the public may be
excluded from all or part of a trial for reasons of morals, public order
(ordre public) or national security in a democratic society?, Amnesty
International believes that because the espionage law has been used as a
measure to diminish freedom of expression, rather than as a legitimate
defence of the security of the state, the trial should have been held in
public before an independent and impartial tribunal.

On 3 August, Miroslav Filipovic became unwell and was taken to Nis
military hospital where his heart was monitored for several hours. He has
an existing heart condition, arrhythmia - an irregular heart-beat..
Against the advice of the doctor present, he was returned to the prison,
but on 8 August was transferred to the Belgrade military hospital. Despite
a diagnosis of chronic arrhythmia, he was returned to Nis military prison
on Friday 11 August against medical advice. On Monday 14 August, he was
again transferred from Nis military prison to Nis military hospital. His
family remain extremely concerned for his health.


[Proyect:  "Of course he belongs in prison"]


Pressure on Journalists and the Media and restrictions of Freedom of
Expression

Since introduction of the Law on Public Information in 1998, pressure on
independent journalists and the media in FRY continues to increase. The
law has been used to impose huge fines on media firms, their owners,
individual journalists and printing houses. Journalists have been detained
and questioned while attempting to cover demonstrations against the regime.

Other members of the media jailed for asserting their right to freedom of
expression include: Neboj?a Ri?ti? sentenced to one year?s imprisonment in
1999 for displaying a poster protesting at the repression of the media in
Serbia;

 the satirist Boban Militi?, sentenced to five months? imprisonment on 9
June 2000 for ridiculing President Milo?evi? at a public reading ...


Of course they belong in prison too?



Chris Burford

London




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