BIRN Summer School Day 4: Fact Checking, Hidden Data and Knowledge Transfer

The fourth day of the 15th BIRN Summer School started with an excellent lecture by Milica Stojanovic, a journalist and fact-checker at Balkan Insight.

By Vuk Tesija

She revealed the secrets of fact-checking to 30 participants at the school, held in Pristina, Kosovo.

“The fact-checker is not your enemy, but your friend,” said Milica. It is a process, she said, that is crucial for credibility. Mistakes can lead to journalists being liable to legal action, as well as embarrassment.

“In the process, there will be issues and debate. Sometimes you will spend three hours choosing the right word,” Milica explained. She provided several examples so participants could try their hand at fact-checking other people’s texts. This gave them an insight into how responsible and complex the job of a fact-checker is.

The session continued with Alexenia Dimitrova, journalist, OSINT expert, and lecturer in journalism. She delivered a lecture entitled ‘Hidden Places to Investigate Your Country’, demonstrating how open sources of information can provide access to valuable data.

Alexenia shared dozens of useful sources that journalists can rely on when governments in certain countries deny them the information to which they are entitled. “A lot of data is available if you know where to look,” Alexenia emphasised.

Azem Kurtic, a Balkan Insight journalist from the BIRN Hub, discussed a recent investigation which involved him hunting down a location. “By analysing photographs, geolocations, and visual clues, a great deal can be uncovered,” said Kurtic, who shared his combination of computer skills, creativity, and expertise. Through his eyes, participants were able to see the entire process he went through in search of evidence.

Blake Morrison, Lead Trainer and Investigative Projects Editor at Reuters News, continued the session with a gripping story from his career, illustrating how crucial timing is in telling a story.

He emphasised, from his own experience, that there is no such thing as unimportant information or failed stories, since everything a journalist does may one day prove to be of vital importance. The participants, clearly impressed, had the opportunity to hear first-hand insights on how to become better journalists.

BIRN Summer School Day 3: Investigative Stories, AI, Safety and Mental Health

The third day of the BIRN Summer School in Pristina continued with the Advanced Data Journalism course, taught by Jonathan Soma, professor of data journalism at Columbia University’s Journalism School.

By Vuk Tesija

Summing up the previous day, lead trainer Blake Morrison told everyone: “We are the family of journalists. If you do something good, it makes us all look good.”

Soma showed participants how to transcribe their interviews quickly and efficiently with the help of AI, saving significant time. The participants were impressed by the speed and accuracy with which voice was converted into text, without the need for additional effort.

He also revealed numerous other techniques that will make their work easier in the future, demonstrating practical solutions to overcome technical difficulties.

The participants adopted new skills such as searching huge databases and finding answers that previously required days of preparation and reading, now achievable in just a few seconds.

The session continued with Sharbil Nammour, Media Safety Advisor and Founder of Vallaris Solutions.

“I’m interested in your safety. Of course, you have to do the job, but you must also take care of yourself,” Nammour warned the journalists, stressing that in risky situations they need to pay close attention to time and distance – two factors they must proactively control.

Using examples such as protest footage and reports from high-risk areas, Nammour vividly illustrated poor practices in reporting. “Be careful that the journalist does not become the story,” he cautioned, while outlining the best ways to prevent such situations.

The packed lecture schedule continued with Kreshnik Gashi, Managing Editor of Kallxo.com, based in BIRN Kosovo, and Sasa Dragojlo, an investigative journalist at Balkan Insight at BIRN’s hub, who presented their award-winning investigative stories on organised crime groups.

Gashi and Dragojlo discussed the links between crime and politics, as well as the importance of cultivating reliable sources of information.

“Thanks to our story, around 30 corrupt police officers were arrested,” said Gashi, who investigated money laundering schemes originating in Kosovo and ending up as investments in Montenegro. “You have to have your informants, but you have to constantly think about their well-being because they can pay a terrible price,” said Gashi.

Dragojlo presented a series of stories he has been writing for the past four years about migrant smuggling and the Balkan migrant route. “You can’t have armed foreign nationals in border areas without the police knowing, that’s what caught my attention,” Dragojlo said. Advising the participants, he told them: “Be patient, working slowly, and horizontally, will get you vertically.”

In the afternoon, participants visited the Kallxo Studio in Pristina, where they attended a lecture by Jeta Xharra, Director of BIRN Kosovo, entitled ‘From Exposure to Impact: Why Some Investigations Spark Change and Others Don’t’.

The long third day concluded with Emma Thomasson, journalist and media consultant, who highlighted the importance of mental health for journalists.

She spoke about stress, burnout, and other mental health risks, as well as strategies for improving team communication and managing conflict.

BIRN Summer School Day 2: Open-Source Intelligence, Data, AI and Digital Security

During the second day of BIRN’s Summer School of Investigative Reporting, participants learned how to use open source data to gather information, how to use AI in everyday work and how to increase their own digital security.

By BIRN

The second day of BIRN’s Summer School of Investigative Reporting in Pristina, Kosovo, continued with a masterclass in open-source intelligence (OSINT) with Reuter’s visual investigations reporter, Reade Levinson.

Levinson shared tips and tricks on how to use free satellite imagery providers and their different tools in order to find and verify publicly available information online, and how to track ships and planes.

Using examples from the stories produced by Levinson and Reuters, participants immediately put their newly harvested skills to the test. “My steps may not be the same as yours, so please share it with us, as this is the space to also learn from each other,” Levinson told participants.

The day continued with Jonathan Soma, professor in data journalism at Columbia University Journalism School. With Soma, journalists gained elements of analysis using data tool Pandas and coding with the help of AI.

“One of the things that people joke about data journalists is that you spend six months finding data, then a month or two analysing it, which ends up as one paragraph in the article,” Soma said.

“But this does not mean that data journalism is not important or fun to do,” he added.

Sharbil Nammour, media safety adviser and founder of Vallaris Solutions, a consultancy company specialised in working with media in risk assessment and safety planning, shared tips on how to stay safe online and protect your privacy.

“On a societal scale, digital security is press freedom in practice. On a personal scale, digital security isn’t about paranoia, it’s about habits. Own your safety,” Nammour said.

BIRN’s 15th Summer School Begins in Pristina

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN), kicked off the 15th edition of its Summer School of Investigative Reporting on Monday in Kosovo’s capital, Pristina, led by some of the world’s top journalists.

By Vuk Tesija

The week-long summer school brings together around 30 participants from Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Serbia, Ukraine, Georgia, Romania, Bulgaria and Poland. Over the course of the programme, they will learn how to distinguish suspicions from facts and set high standards for investigative reporting.

Jeta Xharra, Director of BIRN Kosovo, welcomed the participants and stressed that BIRN has for the past 15 years been inviting world class lecturers and journalists to share their expertise with participants.

Gentiana Murati, Deputy Director of BIRN HUB, shared her experiences about last year’s summer school and said the programme is one of the best ways available to learn the trade of journalism.

Lead trainer Blake Morrison, investigative projects editor with Reuters in New York, reminded the participants of their shared professional duty. “You represent me, but I also represent all of you. Journalists have a responsibility to each other,” Morrison said, emphasising the importance of ethics in the profession.

During the introductory presentation, Morrison presented a case study of a journalist who reported untruthfully, explaining the consequences for the profession as a whole and those who become the victims of fabricated stories.

Reade Levinson from the Reuters in London continued his masterclass in open-source intelligence (OSINT), teaching participants how to use free sources, from tracking ships and planes to geolocation. She instructed the participants in the secrets of reverse image searches and searches of business databases.

Alexenia Dimitrova, a journalist and OSINT expert, delivered a lecture titled ‘Cross-Border Sources for Your Climate Investigation’, in which she revealed the secrets of investigating climate change in the digital age.

The first day ended with a lecture by Morrison, titled ‘Formulating Story Ideas: How to Structure Your Pitch’, showing participants how to develop a story pitch from a good idea.

The participants, made up of everyone from experienced journalists to beginners, expressed their satisfaction with the first day. Some said they would save a lot of time in future research because they had learned many new tricks.

BIRN Invites Journalists: Apply for Grants for Investigative Stories

Journalists covering EU member countries and EU aspiring countries are invited to apply for grants to produce investigations shedding light on critical social, political and economic issues.

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, BIRN, is calling on journalists who are interested in producing in-depth investigations to apply for grants that will cover the cost of producing investigations but also include mentoring support to develop impactful stories that foster accountability and public awareness.

Who is eligible?

Journalists currently working in or publishing stories covering EU member countries and EU aspiring countries – Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine and Kosovo – can apply.

Please note: this is not a collaborative grant.  Only individual journalists may apply, and each journalist can propose one investigative story.

What are we offering?

Selected journalists will receive grants of €1,140 for the production of their investigative stories (The grant lasts a minimum of three and a maximum of six months). The selected journalists will receive mentoring support from BIRN editors/mentors to help them produce their stories.

This call is ongoing – what does that mean?

Twenty grants in total are available and the ongoing call for applications will be closed once they are all distributed. The second deadline after which applications received so far will be evaluated is October 31st, 2025.

How to apply?

Before applying, click HERE to read the full call for applications. After reviewing the information, follow the link to access the application form. Applicants need to attach two documents in English to the application form: a CV and a signed letter of support from the media outlet where they will publish the story.

About the project

This call for applications is part of the Media Organisations for Stronger Transnational Journalism (MOST) initiative, which aims to enhance the resilience of non-profit media in reporting on European issues and drive innovation in foreign reporting. The initiative supports media organisations in developing new approaches and strengthening capacity, fostering collaboration and sharing best practices across borders.

MOST brings together seven prominent media organisations to establish a community of practice focused on business transformation and editorial cooperation.

The project is implemented by a consortium comprising: 1) Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN), 2) Centro per la Cooperazione Internazionale (CCI/OBCT); 3) El Orden Mundial – EOM, Spain; 4) European Pravda, Ukraine; 5) Kolegium Europy Wschodniej im Jana Nowaka-Jezioranskiego we Wroclawiu – KeW, Poland (New Eastern Europe); 6) Le Courrier des Balkans – Courriers D’Europe et D’Orient – DcB, France; and 7) Stichting the Tactical Technology Collective – TTC, Netherlands.

For clarifications, contact: [email protected].

BIRN Holds Training on Audience-Engaged Journalism Tool for Corruption Reporting

Three Montenegrin media outlets and three civil society organizations were trained on how to use the CER (Crowdsourcing Evidence, Engaging Citizens, Reporting Facts) tool in corruption-related investigations.

The online training held on August 7 aimed to equip the participants with practical skills and tools to create impactful, community-driven investigations related to corruption.

Karla Junicic, BIRN’s Hub Coordinator for Engaged Citizen Reporting, led the sessions and guided participants through the core concepts of engagement journalism.

Junicic introduced attendees to crowdsourcing techniques, storytelling approaches, and methods to identify and involve communities in journalistic work.

“Make sure to know the reasons behind your crowdsourcing and explain to your citizens what you’re looking for – their precise input and experiences are what fuels your stories,” she emphasised during the session.

Participants learned how to design and execute audience-engagement strategies, including pre-research, crafting callouts, design questionnaires, data analysis of responses, and produce stories based on community input.

Practical examples were shared from Balkan Insight and other regional outlets, covering topics such as the education system’s shortcomings, digital rights and social abuse cases– all demonstrating how marginalised voices can be amplified through engaged journalism.

The second segment of the training focused on the practical use of the Audience-engaged journalism tool for citizens reporting corruption (CER Tool), which BIRN developed to support secure, anonymous submissions of corruption and abuse reports. The tool is designed to bridge the gap between journalists and the public, enabling safer and more efficient communication and evidence-gathering processes.

In the final part of the training, participants drafted engagement-focused story ideas centred around corruption-related topics.

This training formed part of the project Society against Corruption in Montenegro and the Western Balkans region, which addresses the pervasive issue of corruption in the Western Balkans region, particularly focusing on Montenegro and Kosovo.

By enhancing citizens’ engagement, strengthening media and civil society reporting, and promoting accountability, the initiative aims to empower communities to combat corruption more effectively.

Through targeted subgrants, capacity building, investigative journalism and policy advocacy, the project seeks to raise awareness, foster constructive engagement, and drive tangible reforms in governance and anti-corruption practices across the region.

Detektor Doc ‘None Will Speak the Truth’ Premieres in Sarajevo

A documentary about a former detainee from Prijedor whose entire family was killed will premiere at the 31st Sarajevo Film Festival on August 18.

The film None Will Speak the Truth, authored by Detektor journalist Azra Husaric Omerovic, will be screened as part of the “BH Film” Programme on August 18.

In July 1992, Esef Dzenanovic was separated from his family and forcibly taken to one of the detention camps in Prijedor. He survived torture in three detention camps.

But before being exchanged and saved from certain death, he learned that his mother, sister, wife and two underage sons were no longer waiting for him at home.

Husaric Omerovic explains that the film was made following the marking of White Armband Day in Prijedor in 2022, when she first met Esef together with her colleague, Enes Hodzic.

“Holding three white roses, Esef stood outside the large groups of people, families, friends standing in a line for roses and ribbons with names of killed children. When we approached him, accompanied by a friend of his, hoping we would talk to him, he only briefly said that they had killed his mother, sister, wife, and two little sons,” Husaric Omerovic recalls.

She added that, every year, he brings three roses for his killed underage sons Alen and Ajdin, as well as his sister, Majda.

On that day, Esef had no strength to talk. Husaric Omerovic says that, by researching his family, she learned that he lost his entire family on July 23, 1992, when he and his father were imprisoned in detention camps. To this day, he has not found the remains of his family.

More than 30 years after the war, Esef is still searching for any information about his family, hoping that they will be buried with dignity and that their souls will rest in peace. He finds the will to live and relief from nightmares by the water; he goes fishing every day.

The film is directed by Azra Husaric Omerovic, edited by Elvedin Zorlak, and the screenplay and editing are by Semir Mujkic and Dzana Brkanic. The executive producer is BIRN BiH director Denis Dzidic. The director of photography is Alen Alilovic, while Emir Dzanan is the cameraman. The sound was recorded by Samir Hrkovic, and the music was composed by Damir Imamovic. The sound processing is credited to Nedim Imamovic.

Detektor has worked on this film for over two years. The scenes and dialogues were filmed in Esef’s family house yard in Prijedor, his current home in Switzerland, and on Swiss and Bosnian lakes, where he seeks to find peace.

“The sadness with which Esef lives every day and his way of coping motivated us to persevere in this idea and to make a film about a man whose everything was killed in July 1992, along with hope.

“Our desire is for this film to encourage those who have information about the location of their grave to speak up, so that their souls may rest, and Esef may find peace,” Husaric Omerovic said.

The 31st Sarajevo Film Festival will be held from August 15 to 22. None Will Speak the Truth will be screened as part of the “BH Film” Programme.

As part of the Sarajevo Film Festival, the Association of Film Workers of Bosnia and Herzegovina is organising the “Bosnian Film Festival” Programme, presenting films from Bosnia as well as films by local authors living and working abroad.

Tickets for None Will Speak the Truth can be purchased in the pre-sale starting Monday, August 4.

Montenegro Withdraws Security Agency Law Proposal After Criticism

On July 30, Montenegro’s ruling majority withdrew the draft Law on the Agency for National Security, ANB, after the civil sector warned that it endangered democratic standards, the rule of law, and human rights in the country.

Parliament Speaker Andrija Mandic said the draft law needed to be better communicated to the public and to international partners.

On July 29, BIRN Montenegro’s Executive Director, Vuk Maras, urged the European Commission, NATO, and the Council of Europe to call on the Government of Montenegro to halt adoption of the draft Law on the ANB, warning that the proposal had been prepared without proper consultations, transparency, or legislative safeguards.

The same day, the European Commission Spokesperson for Enlargement, International Partnerships and the Mediterranean, Guillaume Mercier, told the daily Vijesti that the European Commission expected Montenegro to allow it to conduct a thorough analysis of the law before proceeding with the adoption process.

More than 20 leading non-government organisations in Montenegro have called on the Government to withdraw the draft law from procedure so it can be aligned with the Constitution and international standards.

Meet the People Behind BIRN: Denis Dzidic

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.

Denis Dzidic joined BIRN in 2008. After working as a journalist, deputy editor and chief editor for BIRN Bosnia and Herzegovina’s flagship website Detektor.ba, he was named Executive Director on October 1, 2019.

Before BIRN, Dzidic worked as a journalist for Oslobodjenje daily newspaper and for the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, IWPR, both in Sarajevo and The Hague. There, he reported on transitional justice issues and war crimes. It was then, while he was starting an internship in IWPR, that he first heard about BIRN.

“It was about the time when BIRN was first being created by a group of amazing women reporters. I knew of Nerma Jelacic, and her courageous reporting on war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the legacies of the conflict. I was just starting my career after finishing university in Sarajevo. I worked at a daily newspaper for a year and wanted to try something different, so I decided to apply for an IWPR internship – and the work that Jelacic and BIRN were doing was quite inspiring,” he recalls.

Speaking of his expectations when he joined BIRN in August 2008, and whether he has met them, he says: “It’s been a way for me to ensure that transitional justice reporting, focusing on victims’ rights and marginalized groups, are at the heart of my professional life.

“Yes, it has met my expectations and has easily overpassed them. As you start in journalism in Sarajevo, it’s not easy to foresee that one day you will train journalists in warzones on war crimes reporting – that you will get to lead a group of young professionals who are dedicated to the rule of law, human rights, digital and cyber threats, and finally that you will build an archive which will be the only coherent narrative about the 1990s in Bosnia and Herzegovina.”

This year, the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network of Bosnia and Herzegovina, BIRN BiH, was a strategic partner to the Srebrenica Memorial Centre in marking the 30th anniversary of the genocide.

It has been a hectic period that’s included working on documentaries, multimedia pages and a memorial room. There was also an exhibition of survivors’ testimonies, “From Words to Violence: Lives Behind the Fields of Death”, at UN headquarters in New York.

Dzidic explains what this means to him personally, to BIRN BiH and the whole network.

“One of the key issues Bosnia and Herzegovina as a country, and the region, face is historical revisionism, denial of war crimes and glorification of war criminals. We have seen rampant, systematic and often internationalized campaigns in the past few years to deny the Srebrenica genocide, which was confirmed by rulings of the World Court, the ICTY and domestic courts,” he recalls.

“The opportunity for BIRN BiH to contribute to this year’s commemoration with the Srebrenica Memorial Center has been the proudest moment of my professional career. It was an opportunity to utilize experience gathered over more than 20 years of work, of telling personal stories of victims, to make sure that the voices of those who survived and were killed in the genocide are precisely those whose voices are heard in Srebrenica, Sarajevo, but also at the UN in New York,” he adds.

“This year, we also opened a permanent Memorial room in Potocari, called Lives Behind Fields of Death. I can tell you how much it means to BIRN BiH only by telling you what it means to my colleagues, to the people I am honoured to work side by side with every day. Everyone who could spare a moment came to Srebrenica that day. I hope that for the network, this was a full circle – going back to what the network primarily reported about, and still does,” Dzidic says.

Many war victims tell their tragic stories to BIRN BiH’s journalists. Reporting on war crimes in Bosnia is difficult for journalists who must approach victims with caution and sensitivity. Yet, BIRN BiH’s journalists don’t hesitate to work on some of the worst stories about war crimes.

Dzidic unpacks what motivates them to continue their work, and how they cope with all these stories and the victims’ tragic fates.

“From the outset, BIRN BiH was the only news agency monitoring every hearing in every war crime case. It is part of our mission to be an agency that gives voice to those whose voice is so often unheard and degraded, who are victims of the Bosnian War,” he says.

“In terms of coping, it is not always easy. We have set up systems of support, both internally and externally, and this is not something we shy away from; it is an open discussion in our office and one we take seriously. One cannot simply listen to all the worst wartime sufferings and be immune to them. It takes its toll, but the reward of being a media of the people and for the people of this country is what gives us belief,” Dzidic adds.

Besides this, there are other obstacles that BIRN BiH must cope with in its work.

“In the past few years, we have had threats; the Sarajevo court sentenced an individual to three months in prison for threatening our newsroom; we have had SLAPP suits – one, bizarrely, was for following a trial, and we have had institutional pushback, including silence to our FOIA requests. In terms of personal work, we deal with the most complex topics, which sometimes leads to fatigue, burnout, and other related issues,” he says.

“Bosnia and Herzegovina has become a far less free place to work – one part of the country has criminalized defamation and introduced a law on foreign agents, while the other part has sought to give the right to the police to decide what is fake news, and our institutions are more and more corrupt and under political pressure.

“I wouldn’t say we have beaten any of these issues but we address them daily and keep working. We see our role to be the light of the people, to be a free voice, where they can see the truth and where their voices can be heard. That keeps us going,” Dzidic explains.

And as part of their recent focus on education, BIRN BiH recently signed a collaboration deal with the International University of Sarajevo to enhance mutual activities and information exchange.

“Namely, as a result of our 20 years’ work on transitional justice, we are trying to do more in advocacy, especially in relation to education in the country,” he says.

“The [educational] curricula on the Bosnian war are divisive and hateful, and some even contain glorifications of convicted war criminals. We are developing a database of court-determined facts and trying to prepare a handbook on how to use it to teach children about the war in a factual manner. The project is still in the early phases, but nothing is more important than factually teaching children,” Dzidic says.

Speaking of BIRN BiH’s flagship website, Detektor.ba, Denis explains why they recently decided to redesign it.

“We redesigned the website at the start of this year due to our strategic focus on having more multimedia outputs. Basically, we are the only media NGO producing two monthly TV shows. We also have other video materials just for the website and social media, such as explainers and short videos. These significantly increase our reach, especially among younger audiences,” Dzidic says.

He sees BIRN continuing its growth and cementing its role as a leading media watchdog fighting for the everyday rights of the region’s people.

“Without media support for factual reporting and without a voice for the people, the region will remain stuck on its EU and reform path. I think the people in BIRN individually have proven they are passionate, reliable and informed enough to be that voice,” he says.

“BIRN means the promise of a better future. With the amount of corruption and nepotism, abuse of human rights and ignoring suffering we see every day, it would be so easy to join the hundreds of thousands who leave my country with no hope of a better future. This is my place to fight for a better hometown, a better country, a better region. I want that for my son,” he declares.

At the end of each day, Denis likes spending his spare time with his son the most. “My favourite way to spend any moment outside work is time with my four-year-old son, Noa,” he concludes.

BIRN Montenegro Urges Halt to Security Agency Law Over Threat to Democracy

On July 29, BIRN Montenegro’s Executive Director, Vuk Maras, urged the European Commission, NATO, and the Council of Europe to call on the Government of Montenegro to halt adoption of the draft Law on the Agency for National Security (ANB), as it seriously threatens democratic standards, the rule of law and human rights in Montenegro.

Maras sent the letter to the European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Kaja Kallas, European Commissioner for Enlargement, Marta Kos, NATO Secretary General, Mark Rutte, Council of Europe Secretary General, Alain Berset, and Commissioner for Human Rights, Michael O’Flaherty, warning that the law proposal was prepared without proper consultations, transparency, or legislative safeguards.

“Key concerns of the draft law include access to databases and information-communication systems without prior judicial approval, implementation of some secret surveillance measures without a court order and lack of any procedure for employment in the Agency. While we are aware that some democratic countries do have some of these solutions incorporated in their systems, the Montenegrin context makes such discretionary rights highly problematic,” Maras said.

He recalled that significant cases of misuse of surveillance of civil society, opposition, or media without proper judicial authorization are currently being adjudicated, including cases against a former Security Agency Director, Dejan Perunicic.

Maras stressed that Agency had never undergone systemic reform, or proper vetting of its current staff, and no accountability by its employees involved in illegal operations has ever been established.

“Considering these concerns, we respectfully request that NATO, the European Commission and the Council of Europe encourage suspension of any adoption of the draft law in its current form, facilitate or insist on a proper, participatory legislative process, and support introduction of proper judiciary oversight and scrutiny and independent review channels for alleged abuses,” Maras said.