( Editorial: --> 8197 )
MOSTAR, 4 Nov (Hina) - Croat journalists in Bosnia-Herzegovina on
Tuesday sent an open letter to the High Representative in Bosnia-
Herzegovina, Carlos Westendorp, the head of the Mission of the
Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Robert
Frowick, and the head of the OSCE expert media commission, Maurice
Linwood Todd, expressing their support for the Croatian television
(HTV) in Mostar and its editor-in-chief Milan Sutalo, who has
refused to read a statement by the OSCE subcommission for the
media.
The letter was signed by 113 Croat journalists in Bosnia-
Herzegovina, who estimated that Sutalo's refusal to read the OSCE
statement was 'completely justified'.
The OSCE ordered Mostar HTV and its editor-in-chief Sutalo to admit
that they had instigated violence against the Bosniak people,
caused division among the peoples of Bosnia-Herzegovina, and
prevented the international community in implementing the Dayton
agreement.
According to the letter of the Croat journalists, the OSCE had
accused HTV Mostar only because it had broadcast an open letter by
Mostar mayor Ivan Prskalo to Haris Silajdzic, co-chairman of the
Bosnian Council of Ministers and Mostar deputy mayor Safet
Orucevic, a statement by the Mostar office of the association of the
Croatian Disabled War Veterans (HVIDRA), a statement by the
Academic Society of Bosnia-Herzegovina and a statement by the
Office for Public Relations of Herzegovina-Neretva Canton Interior
Ministry, referring to the Mostar car-bomb explosion of 18
September.
The Croat journalists who signed the letter said they believed that
HTV Mostar, by broadcasting the four statements of legal
organisations and institutions of authority, had only fulfilled
its professional obligation of informing the public.
"That is why we think that neither HTV Mostar nor any other medium in
democratic societies can be punished or held responsible in any
way, regardless of the content of those statements," the letter
said.
The announced closing down of HTV Mostar, (besides being a classic
example of media freedom violation) was a step further in depriving
the Croat people of the right to have radio, television and papers
in their own language, although those things were envisaged by the
Dayton agreement and all conventions on human rights, the letter
said.
(hina) rm
042251 MET nov 97
Bez većih promjena u broju i iznosu izdanih računa u odnosu na prošlu subotu
Pavić: Navijači su nas pogurali prema pobjedi
Šah: Pobjednik Marin Grgantov
Engleska: Liverpool na plus devet
Najviše cijene za 40 novih proizvoda ne odnose se na sniženja - ministarstvo
La Liga: Villarreal uvjerljiv protiv Valladolida
Mostovi Novoga Sada u višesatnim blokadama
WTA Linz: Aleksandrova protiv Jastremske za naslov
Makedonija: U najvećim trgovačkim lancima promet prepolovljen zbog bojkota
Italija: Monza i Venezia u sve težoj situaciji