BIRN appoints new correspondent in Poland

BIRN is pleased to announce that Polish journalist Ada Petriczko has joined our team from December 1.

Ada is a reporter with more than a decade of experience covering breaking news and writing long-form stories for outlets including The New York Times, The Guardian, The Boston Globe, and Gazeta Wyborcza. In 2021, she was selected as the IWMF Elizabeth Neuffer Fellow out of over a hundred applicants worldwide. During the fellowship, she reported for The New York Times and The Boston Globe, and carried out independent research on media freedom at MIT. Before that, she worked as a freelance foreign correspondent based in New Delhi and was part of the editorial teams at NewsMavens and Wysokie Obcasy.

Ada, who is based in Warsaw, has wide experience in a variety of journalistic forms, including investigations, analysis, features, documentary photography, and narrative podcast.

“This is a fascinating time to be reporting on Poland, and I’m thrilled to do it with BIRN. What excites me most is the chance to work alongside journalists across the region and dive into the kind of cross-border stories that are uncomfortable in all the right ways”, she said about her new role.

Ada will be part of the Reporting Democracy team. In this position, she succeeds Claudia Ciobanu, BIRN’s longtime correspondent and Fellowship for journalistic excellence alumna, who established our presence in Poland six years ago.

Reporting Democracy is a cross-border journalistic platform dedicated to supporting independent journalism to scrutinise the issues, trends and events shaping the future of democracy in Central, Eastern and Southeast Europe.

Turning data into stories – Digital Rights and Freedoms at the Crossroads in the Western Balkans and Turkey

From November 24 to 26, 2025, BIRN welcomed some 120 participants – journalists, civil society activists, tech experts, academia, relevant institutions’ representatives and citizens at large – in Prishtina (Kosovo) for a regional annual conference and the Internet Freedom Meet event on digital rights and freedoms.

What unfolded was more than a presentation of cold statistical data. We witnessed a collective reckoning with how rapidly emerging technologies are advancing, and with how weak oversight and shrinking civic spaces are reshaping – and often endangering – people’s everyday lives across the Western Balkans and beyond.

From Project Roots to Regional Reality

The third and final annual conference is built on BIRN’s three-years project, Reporting Digital Rights and Freedoms, funded by the European Union and implemented by BIRN Kosovo and its regional partners BIRN Hub, BIRN Albania, BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina, BIRN Macedonia, BIRN Montenegro and BIRN Serbia in the Western Balkans region and Turkey. The project aimed at strengthening media and civil society capacity to document and report digital rights and freedoms violations. Through training, capacity building online and offline events, fellowships, subgranting as well as editorial and other technical support, the project equipped newsrooms and individuals, journalists and activists with tools to first and foremost understand and then monitor and report about issues such as online abuse, to challenge disinformation, and bring somewhat hidden digital violations into public debate and for institutional reaction.

BIRN Kosovo director Jeta Xharra opened the conference and noted that there was very little knowledge about digital rights and that the project has contributed to educating both journalists to report on and the public to understand digital rights.

In a high-level speech, Kosovo’s President, Vjosa Osmani, sent a strong message of support towards the internet as a free space, and on the importance of exposing tech-facilitated abuse, be it online manipulation, promotion of hatred, violence against women or harassment of children.

The Deputy Head of the EU Office in Kosovo, Eva Palatova, emphasised the EU’s commitment to a human-centric digital environment, noting recent key policy instruments, the Digital Services Act, the AI Act and the European Democracy Shield, aimed at protecting users. 

The work done throughout the project pointed to the importance of addressing internet governance-related topics systematically. The latest BIRN regional report, launched at the opening of the conference, documented 1,440 violations from September 2024 to August 2025. Over the three years of the project, based on BIRN’s monitoring methodology, we captured over 4,000 cases of digital rights and violations mapped.

From September 2024 to August 2025, the most frequent types of trending violations include misuse of artificial intelligence (AI) to facilitate sexual, gender-based violence and fraud, threats to the freedom and pluralism of information, attacks on digital assets and economic rights and harmful and threatening online behaviour. 

The conference was attended by around 120 participants including 30 Internet Freedom Meet fellows from the Western Balkans region selected following a public call for participation. 

Throughout the three-day event, the fellows played a dual role. They followed conference panels on the main stage, bringing sharp questions and contextual knowledge; and in parallel, they immersed themselves in dedicated workshops with international trainers, diving deeper into some of the most urgent challenges shaping the digital landscape.

In these workshops, fellows confronted real-world dilemmas: how to investigate online harassment while keeping victims safe; how to trace disinformation networks across borders; how AI-generated deepfakes and algorithmic bias threaten vulnerable groups; and how online/street surveillance erodes civic freedom. Fellows additionally enriched the discussion with local knowledge and lived experiences. 

Pho
Photo: BIRN Kosovo

Humans Behind the Numbers

The conference focused heavily on the human impact behind the numbers – giving a platform to stories of and about real people – journalists, activists, citizens’ – whose lives were impacted and shaken by digital abuse, such as threats, surveillance or disinformation. 

Participants heard worrying testimonies: journalists recounting smear online campaigns after exposing corruption, activists exposed to harassment and doxxing following their online advocacy, and citizens becoming victims of AI-driven scams, identity theft or deepface-based abuse.

Speakers emphasized a critical truth: digital rights violations are rarely isolated incidents. They are more often than not entwined with inequalities – especially in terms of gender, LGBTIQ+ persons, minorities, people with disabilities and other vulnerable groups.  As Albanian technology policy expert Alba Brojka noted on the panel about gender-based violence, “It is a mirror of what is happening in the society and is amplified online.”

Photo: BIRN Kosovo

New Technologies, Same and Worse Dangers

Emerging technologies, such as generative Artificial Intelligence, are accelerating threats, while legislation and institutional oversight – and to a valuable extent also the media and civil society pace of understanding technological changes – lag dangerously behind.

Experts on the panels warned of AI-facilitated fraud, voice-cloning scams, deepfakes and more – noting that they are all increasingly used to exploit individuals’ vulnerabilities, especially women, young people and children. We heard how deepfakes have become so realistic that more and more people, especially with the information overload, cannot differentiate between real news, manipulated content or disinformation – which directly leads to undermining public trust and discourse influencing democratic and public informed participation.

Panelists looked into [weak] legal frameworks and selective enforcement, which make digital space a fertile ground for censorship, repression, threats and surveillance. We heard from several speakers sharing stories from Serbia or Turkey of unlawful surveillance, spyware deployment and non-transparent use of digital technologies and tools to intimidate critical voices of activists, journalists or even whistleblowers. While on one side, we see an “implementation gap” of those appropriate laws that exist, on the other side, in many places, we encounter outdated institutional settings, limited resources or political pressure, which stays unbothered while critical voices under attack stay unprotected and often with severe online or offline consequences.  

Photo: BIRN Kosovo

Digital Rights are Human Rights – Not Optional Extras

One underlying message seconded by all participants – and participation was truly multistakeholder – is that digital rights are human rights, and are not marginal issues for tech-savvy urbanities but fundamental rights, deeply tied to dignity, security and democratic participation. Beyond the number of captured digital rights violations, those numbers represent people. At least one person per case. At least one more friend or family member was affected by it. And often entire communities. 

Numbers cannot tell the whole story. Data reveals patterns to which the BIRN team, together with our partners, fellows, subgrantees, gave context. Living in the online space is not abstract – it shapes people’s safety, identity and freedom. Every violation is a life interrupted, a voice shaken, a right diminished. By documenting abuses, amplifying testimonies and exposing the systems that allow them to keep happening, the project brought human stories back to the centre.

Photo: BIRN Kosovo

From Talk to Action: What Needs to Happen Now

By the end of the conference, participants agreed on several urgent and concrete steps for the region: 

  • Update and enforce legislation regionally, looking into good practice, to keep pace with technological change: laws should address AI-driven abuse, data protection, online harassment and digital surveillance
  • Support for victims/survivors, ensuring accessible reporting mechanisms, provide legal, psychological and social support, including protecting anonymity whenever needed
  • Empower independent media and civil society, including sustained grants, training and mentorship, so that civil society and journalists (media) can continue documenting abuses safely and effectively
  • Promote digital literacy and public awareness, as a necessary continued effort to educate citizens at large about ever-evolving online risks and understanding their rights
  • Fostering regional cooperation, as digital threats do not respect borders – cooperation among media, civil society, institutions, technical community and academia across countries is essential. 

Why This Matters and Appreciation Words 

For many years we have lived in a world where technology evolves fast – outpacing our social, legal and institutional capacity to adapt. As the closing conference in Prishtina underscored, these are not abstract policy questions. They are about people’s lives, freedom, trust, safety and dignity. They are about our future.

By bringing together journalists, experts from different fields and policymakers, over the three-year project we jointly took responsibility for protecting digital rights not as a niche project but as a core human-rights obligation that shapes people’s realities in the digital age. The Reporting Digital Rights and Freedoms initiative proved that when knowledge, evidence and human stories are brought together, digital rights can no longer be dismissed as technical issues “in the cloud”. They become what they truly are – essential rights that protect the very fabric of democratic society.

BIRN Kosovo wishes to extend its gratitude to project partners, coordinators, editors, monitors, journalists, researchers and authors, subgrantees, fellows, participants of physical and online training and community meetings, and the colleagues and individuals who contributed to the project’s delivery and success.

The Annual conference and Internet Freedom Meet were organised within the framework of the Reporting Digital Rights and Freedoms project, implemented by BIRN Kosovo and supported by the European Union.

BIRN and ‘Youth Initiative for Human Rights’ Hold Workshop and Exhibition for Young People from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia

More than 20 young people from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia gathered for a three day regional workshop dedicated to media, art and dealing with the past, organised by BIRN and the Youth Initiative for Human Rights.

Between 2 to 5 December participants explored how journalism, creative practices and digital media can contribute to dialogue and understanding in post-conflict contexts. Through interactive sessions, they gained hands-on experience in intercultural reporting, storytelling and artistic activism (known as ‘artivism’). They learned how creative tools can support processes of remembrance and reconciliation.

As part of the programme, participants worked in small groups to develop their own video installations, addressing themes of memory, dealing with the past and the role of memorials in divided communities. The artworks reflected their perspectives on shared histories and the possibilities for building bridges through creativity.

The workshop concluded with the public opening of an exhibition in the Historical Museum of BiH showcasing participants’ video installations. The event was followed by a panel discussion featuring visual artist Anita Karabašić, who presented her work on artistic commemoration practices, including memorial projects dedicated to children killed in Prijedor and the victims of the Srebrenica genocide.

The initiative aimed to empower young people to engage critically and creatively with the region’s past, while fostering dialogue across borders and communities.

Photo: BIRN

The project REPORTING CULTURE – Connecting Communities for Change is implemented by Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, BIRN Hub and Youth Initiative for Human Rights, in cooperation with the Regional office of the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation in Tirana. It is run within the framework of “Culture and Creativity for the Western Balkans”, a project funded by the European Union that aims to foster dialogue in the Western Balkans by enhancing the cultural and creative sectors for increased socio-economic impact.

Workshop Overview and Participant Breakdown

Dates and place: 2-5 December 2025, Sarajevo

Number of participants per country:

BiH 12

Serbia 16

Netherlands 1

Total number of participants: 29

The full findings and activities are available in the EDS Report, which can be accessed here.

Meet the People Behind BIRN: Vuk Maras

Vuk Maras is the Director of BIRN Montenegro. Although the youngest member of our network, BIRN Montenegro has already been recognised for its investigations, which have led to significant changes in Montenegrin society.

This year marks BIRN’s 20th anniversary. From exposing corruption to promoting human rights, BIRN’s investigative journalists collaborate across borders to find out the facts and tell people’s stories.

It all started in 2005, when five women from countries recovering from brutal wars defied the odds to establish what would become a major independent media organisation, the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, in the traditionally patriarchal region of the Western Balkans.

Maras recalls how he first heard about BIRN and what his initial impressions of the organisation were at the time.

“I heard about BIRN a long time ago. I was a civil activist and one of the leaders of the most influential anti-corruption NGOs in Montenegro. BIRN was a synonym for investigative journalism and quality reporting in the Balkans and beyond,” says Maras. “At that time, I also met my first BIRN person, Albulena Sadiku from BIRN Kosovo, with whom I partnered on a project.”

However, before becoming the Director of BIRN Montenegro, he worked within the regional office (Hub) . That experience shaped his understanding of BIRN’s mission and way of working.

“Sometimes it is easier to understand BIRN from the outside than when you join the team. At first, the complexity of the structure and procedures was a bit frightening, but it made me realise it is the only way to maintain such a complex yet effective network, which covers so many topics and areas. I could not be more grateful to Regional Director of BIRN Marija Ristic and Managing Editor of Balkan Insight Dusica Tomovic for all their help and assistance to blend in, despite their busy schedule and the amazing job they were doing,” says Maras.

In 2022 the decision was made to open the BIRN Montenegro office.

“When starting BIRN Montenegro, our idea was to create the most influential investigative outlet in the country, which would be able to tackle all the important topics others cannot, or are simply not willing to do, due to the fear of politicians, advertisers, or others. The idea was simple, and so far, nothing has changed that will drive us off that mission,” Maras recalls.

Looking back over the past three years, Maras shares his perception of whether the BIRN Network has changed.

“Like in every big family, there are always challenges that people with goodwill overcome easily. I tend to believe that most of us, if not all, really do our best to make this big family work as well as it can,” says Maras.

He sees BIRN Montenegro’s biggest strengths, but also where it still needs to grow and invest more effort.

“While BIRN Montenegro is the youngest member of the network, I am lucky to have colleagues who are experts in their respective fields and who have a lot of professional experience. Heading such a team makes it way easier to achieve goals we put in front of us. That is to make Montenegro a fairer, freer, and more democratic country, which will serve the needs of its citizens, be a proud member of the EU and NATO, and embrace western standards,” Maras explains.

“Of course, with developments happening in the digital world, IT, including AI, global disinformation campaigns, and other problems we are facing, it has been harder than ever to reach the truth. We have to make sure that more effort, work and expertise is put into each and every assignment we start doing,” says Maras.

And speaking of his team, there are some investigations from BIRN Montenegro that he wants to highlight.

“I am proud to say that despite being a new media outlet and a small team, we were able to cover a number of issues and create positive social change. BIRN journalists have already received several awards and fellowships, which point out how quickly we have become the most credible media outlet in Montenegro.

“We have stopped biometric surveillance in our country, we revealed a Russian hidden society in Montenegro, investigated arms trafficking. We reported on stories covering human rights, transitional justice, illicit financial flows, unregulated cryptocurrencies, and many more,” says Maras.

But, it is essential to emphasise that investigative journalism isn’t the sole activity of BIRN Montenegro.

“BIRN Montenegro has a strong monitoring and analytics component, which allows us to track expenditures in several sectors – energy, transport, and with independent agencies and regulators. Additionally, based on our initiatives, several high-profile events were organised, including parliamentary hearings, meetings with key ministries, the President of Montenegro and national anticorruption forums,” Maras explains.

One of the key aspects of BIRN Montenegro’s work is the Open Data Portal.

“BIRN Montenegro partnered with the Government of Montenegro and the UN’s Development Programme regarding the re-establishment of the Open Data Portal, which should serve as a focal point for citizens, businesses, and organisations in need of access to different data. The portal was launched a year ago, and so far has been updated with different datasets,” adds Maras.

When he thinks about the media landscape in Montenegro, he explains the unique role BIRN Montenegro plays and should continue to play in the years ahead.

“BIRN Montenegro is and will remain free from any political or other influence, and this will allow us to be the only ones responsible for our editorial policy. While I am sure the topics we cover will change over time, depending on needs and priorities, our journalists will be among the very few who are fully free to select and investigate any topic or issue, while caring only about the professional standards. It is what we already do and will be doing in the years ahead,” says Maras.

Speaking of his dream scenario for BIRN in the next 20 years, both as a network and in Montenegro, he knows what he would like it to look like.

“I hope that in 20 years Montenegro will not need the form of BIRN there is now, as the country will become significantly more developed, democratic, and advanced, and that those people working in BIRN Montenegro in 2045 will be happy to investigate and cover some lighter and more joyful topics, but with the same level of professionalism,” concludes Maras.

BIRN Albania Presents Election Monitoring Reports

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) in Albania held a roundtable on Friday in Tirana to present three monitoring reports on the May 11 parliamentary elections.

During the event, BIRN Albania unveiled its monitoring reports on audiovisual and online media coverage during the electoral period, as well as a report analysing how political parties and candidates used social media platforms throughout the campaign.

The two monitoring reports on audiovisual and online media were produced as part of the project “Evidence-Based Monitoring of Local Public Spending during Electoral Processes,” funded by the European Union and implemented by Qëndresa Qytetare (Civic Resistance) in partnership with BIRN Albania. The initiative aims to strengthen electoral integrity, transparency, and fair competition in Albania’s democratic processes.

The social media monitoring report for the 2025 campaign was published in cooperation with International IDEA and the Rule of Law Centre at the University of Helsinki. The findings emphasise systemic challenges related to transparency, the ethical use of technology, and the growing influence of third-party actors across social media platforms.

The roundtable gathered 44 stakeholders from a wide range of institutions and backgrounds, including journalists, civil society representatives, and officials from the Central Election Commission (CEC), the Albanian Media Authority (AMA), as well as representatives of international organisations.

Following the presentation of the key findings, a panel discussion was held with contributions from representatives of the CEC, AMA, International IDEA, media organisations, and civil society.

Photo: Nensi Bogdani/BIRN

 

New BIRN Albania Report Reveals Imbalances in Audiovisual Media Coverage during 2025 Elections

BIRN Albania has released a comprehensive monitoring report examining how Albania’s main television broadcasters covered the 2025 parliamentary election campaign, uncovering persistent media imbalances, limited pluralism, and the dominance of major political actors.

Published in both Albanian and English, the report offers an independent, data-driven analysis of audiovisual content aired between 11 April and 9 May 2025 on the 18 central TV stations with the highest national reach. Drawing from the daily monitoring data produced by the Audiovisual Media Authority (AMA), the assessment focuses on political representation in news bulletins, live coverage of campaign events, and prime-time political talk shows, as well as the use of paid political advertising and documented breaches of the Electoral Code.

Key findings point to the overwhelming visibility of Albania’s two main political forces, the marginalisation of smaller parties, the personalised framing of election coverage, and the absence of direct confrontations between candidates. The report also features qualitative insights from 61 political talk shows and provides targeted recommendations to media regulators, broadcasters, and political actors ahead of future electoral cycles.

This monitoring was conducted as part of the project “Evidence-Based Monitoring of Local Public Spending during Electoral Processes”, funded by the European Union and implemented by Qëndresa Qytetare in partnership with BIRN Albania, aiming to strengthen electoral integrity, transparency, and fair competition in Albania’s democratic processes.

Read the full report:

Download in Albanian

Download in English

 

New BIRN Albania Report Highlights Polarised and Leader-Centric Coverage in Online Media during 2025 Elections

BIRN Albania has published a new in-depth report analysing how Albania’s online media covered the 2025 parliamentary election campaign, revealing persistent imbalances, strong personalisation of political discourse, and limited space for voter-focused or explanatory reporting.

Conducted during the official campaign period (11 April – 10 May 2025), the monitoring assessed 40 of the country’s most influential online outlets — including the websites of national TV stations, daily newspapers, and digital-native portals. The report combines automated analysis with human coding of nearly 6,000 articles to map visibility, tone, and thematic trends in online coverage.

Findings show that political statements and opinion pieces dominated the online sphere, accounting for more than three-quarters of total content. Coverage remained concentrated on the two main electoral subjects and was driven largely by their leaders. Substantive debate on policies was rare, with most reporting focused on confrontation and accusations rather than programmatic issues such as economy, justice, or social welfare.

The analysis also documents how institutional communication, particularly from the Central Election Commission (CEC), shaped public information about diaspora voting and electoral procedures, while paid digital advertising mirrored the same imbalance seen in editorial content — with the two major players accounting for more than 80% of recorded ads.

Published in both Albanian and English, the report provides evidence-based insights and practical recommendations for journalists, media regulators, and political actors to strengthen transparency, editorial independence, and pluralism in Albania’s online information environment.

This monitoring was conducted as part of the project “Evidence-Based Monitoring of Local Public Spending during Electoral Processes”, funded by the European Union and implemented by Qëndresa Qytetare in partnership with BIRN Albania, aiming to enhance electoral integrity, transparency, and fair competition in Albania’s democratic processes.

Read the full report:

Download in Albanian

Download in English

New Report Uncovers Gaps in Transparency and Ethics in Albania’s 2025 Digital Election Campaign

BIRN Albania, in cooperation with International IDEA and the Rule of Law Centre at the University of Helsinki, has published a new monitoring report analysing digital campaigning during Albania’s 2025 parliamentary elections. The report highlights systemic challenges in transparency, ethical use of technology, and the growing influence of third-party actors on social media platforms.

Conducted from 11 April to 11 May 2025, the monitoring covered the official campaign period, the electoral silence, and the days immediately after the vote. The research assessed the activity of over 500 Facebook and Instagram accounts of parliamentary candidates, third-party pages, and political advertisers across Meta and Google platforms. It relied on a multi-layered methodology combining social media analytics, Meta Ad Library tracking, Google Trends data, and manual review of campaign content.

The findings reveal a highly personalised and male-dominated digital campaign space, widespread infractions of the voluntary Code of Conduct on Digital Campaigns, and increasing use of artificial intelligence (AI), bots, and untraceable ads to shape public narratives. BIRN also documented 349 violations of the Code by registered candidates and identified 58 suspicious third-party pages — many of which used paid advertising and coordinated inauthentic behaviour to boost political messaging.

Published in both Albanian and English, the report offers data-driven insights and targeted recommendations for political actors, electoral authorities, online platforms, and civil society. It calls for stronger oversight mechanisms, improved ad transparency, and clear standards on AI-generated political content to safeguard democratic integrity in the digital age.

This monitoring was conducted as part of the regional project “Integrity and Trust in Albanian and Kosovo Elections: Fostering Political Finance Transparency and the Safe Use of Information and Communication Technologies, Phase II,” implemented by International IDEA and the Rule of Law Centre at the University of Helsinki.

Read the full report:

Download in Albanian

Download in English

Call for Applications: Training on responsible journalism, gender-sensitive reporting, media ethics and safety

BIRN Kosovo is pleased to announce the call for applications for a specialised training programme on responsible journalism, gender-sensitive reporting, freedom of information, media regulation, journalistic ethics, and safety in the field.

The training is organised within an EU-funded project, ‘Strengthening the role and capacities of investigative journalism in Kosovo’. 

This programme aims to equip participants with essential journalistic tools, strengthen their professional knowledge, and enable them to exchange experiences on key issues that affect the media landscape. While media and civil society organisations play a crucial role in monitoring public institutions and societal developments, many journalists still lack the necessary training, practical skills, and resources to effectively use freedom of information mechanisms, conduct in-depth research, and follow public sector developments.

Who can apply?

The call is open to:

  • Journalism students
  • Recent graduates
  • Young journalists
  • Experienced journalists

Applicants from Serbian, Roma, Ashkali, and Egyptian communities in Kosovo are strongly encouraged to apply. Translation will be provided during the training to ensure equal participation for all selected applicants.

How to Apply?

Applicants must submit their applications no later than December 12, 2025 (midnight, Central European Time) to:

[email protected] 

Applications must include:

  1. Curriculum Vitae (CV)
  2. Motivation Letter (up to 500 words)

Applicants who have journalistic articles published in different media may submit them together (links of PDF) with their CV and motivation letter. The motivation letter should reflect the applicant’s interest in the topic, relevant experience, and expectations from the programme.

Location

The training will be held in Prishtina. The exact venue, agenda, and logistical details will be shared only with selected participants.

Important dates

  • Application Deadline: December 12, 2025, at 12:00 CET
  • Training Date: December 22, 2025

BIRN Kosovo Holds Digital Rights Meeting

BIRN Kosovo organised an online meeting with local communities about their digital rights on November 27.

The event brought together representatives from universities in Kosovo, students, journalists and civil society organisations. Its aim was to strengthen people’s capacities to understand digital rights and enhance their skills in identifying and protecting these rights. 

The meeting began with a presentation about the Reporting Digital Rights and Freedom project, including its goals, objectives and activities over the past year. The presentation highlighted key findings from BIRN’s Annual Report on Digital Rights Violations, focusing on the cases that have been identified and recorded as digital rights violations within the framework of the project.

During the meeting, Labinot Leposhtica, Coordinator of the Legal and Court Monitoring Office, highlighted the importance of digital rights as an integral part of universal human rights. He said these rights include privacy, freedom of expression and protection against online abuse. Leposhtica discussed the necessary steps and best practices to respect and promote these rights effectively, underlining the role of  institutions and citizens in ensuring a safe and fair digital environment. 

Following this, Xhorxhina Bami, journalist and editor at BIRN, presented the Engaged Citizens Reporting (ECR) platform, a digital tool launched by BIRN that allows journalists to gather information directly from communities and involve them in the reporting process. Bami explained that the platform enables citizens to report their concerns while maintaining full anonymity. 

The meeting was attended by 35 participants, including 30 women. They had the opportunity to engage in discussions and share their experiences regarding digital rights violations in Kosovo, including the misuse of personal data, anonymity on social media and unauthorised dissemination of information. 

This meeting was organised within the framework of Reporting Digital Rights and Freedoms, implemented by BIRN Kosovo and supported by the European Union.