Fellowship Stories Available in Single Publication

The stories produced by the ten journalists who participated in the 2012 Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence are now available in the online publication, Communities – The New Ties Reshaping the Balkans.

The publication provides a snapshot of the past year in south-eastern Europe, capturing some important truths behind the news.

Original research by the journalists focused on issues ranging from religious radicalism, the exploitation of migrant workers in the EU, football hooliganism, environmental activism, bad privatisation deals, and the exclusion of youth from a politicised job market. The stories were grouped under the annual theme, Communities.

The journalists were selected through open competition to receive funding and professional support that would help them conduct cross-border research into a topic of regional and EU significance.

The stories produced under the programme were re-published by prominent outlets in the region,as well as by international media including The Guardian, The New Statesman, The Atlantic, The Christian Science Monitor, Der Standard, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, The Huffington Post and the EU Observer.

The work of the fellowship and of its editor, Neil Arun, has been shortlisted for the 2013 European Press Prize in Amsterdam.

One of the participating journalists, Eldin Hadzovic, has also received an award from UNICEF for his fellowship story which examined the failure of Bosnia’s orphanage system.

“The publication of the fellows’ articles in the most important media in the region and internationally is clear proof that this project is a worthy venture,” said Remzi Lami, the director of the Albanian Media Institute and a member of the programme’s selection committee.

The 10 articles from 2012 were re-published by more than 400 outlets, supporting the fellowship’s ultimate goal – to promote and reward excellence in journalism.

The new cycle of the programme will be launched on January 28, when journalists will be invited to submit applications under the annual topic for 2013, Integrity.

BIRN BiH on Bosnian state television

BIRN BiH deputy editor Denis Dzidic was a guest speaker on Tuesday on Bosnian state television’s evening news show, discussing the pace of war crimes prosecutions in the country.

Dzidic talked about the Bosnian state prosecutor’s recent decision to halt an investigation into more than 400 people suspected of crimes against Bosnian Serbs in the neighbourhoods of Hadzici, Igman and Hrasnica around the capital Sarajevo during the 1990s conflict.

He also highlighted how many war crimes investigations are still being conducted by the state, and spoke about the challenges that newly-appointed chief prosecutor Goran Salihovic is facing in order to prioritise work on war crimes cases.

During the show, there was also a discussion about the reasons why war crimes prosecutions in Bosnia and Herzegovina last for several years.

You can watch the entire news programme by following this link: http://www.bhrt.ba/video/?id=777777918&v=dnevnikdva22012013.flv

BIRN Serbia launches campaign to promote EU values

BIRN Serbia begins its new campaign titled “Europe, It is You” in February in 25 municipalities and cities across south-east and south-west Serbia. The campaign is part of an EU Progress programme to find the best idea for the promotion of EU values in that part of the country.

BIRN Serbia and its local partners will organise several different programmes until June 2013 with the help of the EU Commission Office in Belgrade and the European Integration Office in Serbia.

The “Europe, It is You” campaign aims to promote the process of joining the EU and present positive examples from Serbia showing a series of EU values that have already been put into practice.

By connecting local media, local administrations and various other groups, BIRN Serbia will bring together all stakeholders to improve conditions in these areas of Serbia.

Anyone interested will be able to follow work of the campaign online and can also contribute by posting their own video clips or impressions of the campaign on a specially-designed web page.  There will also be several training activities and street actions.

The campaign’s keynote event will take place on Europe Day on May 9th, when synchronised street actions will be held in five cities in the region.

BIRN Kosovo Presents Report on Court Monitoring

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) in Kosovo published its fifth report on court monitoring for the January-December 2012 period on Wednesday.  The information in the report was the result of monitoring a total of 1,441 court sessions, which resulted in 1,040 verdicts.

BIRN’s main findings are categorised in twelve points which refer to a variety of problems ranging from the monitoring of corruption cases, procedural violations, failure to respect the rights of parties during court hearings, to the use of mobile phones during the trial sessions.

The press conference at which the BIRN report was presented was attended by representatives of several judicial institutions including the Kosovo Judicial Council, the Supreme Court of Kosovo, the State Prosecution, the Ombudsperson, representatives of embassies in Kosovo, representatives from OSCE, EULEX, and civil society.

The head of the Judicial Council of Kosovo, Enver Peci, congratulated BIRN for the work conducted so far, which, he said “represents a target for the fields where the judicial system should be more engaged”.

The  President of the Supreme Court, Fejzullah Hasani, said that BIRN had helped to illuminate errors which legal officials had been unable to investigate. 

“I have read BIRN’s report carefully and with pleasure, and I express congratulations for the realistic findings that are welcome for our work,” said the special prosecutor, Besim Kelmendi.

Diane E. Tourell, legal analyst at the OSCE, also complimented the BIRN report and emphasised that the OSCE echoes the concerns caused by procedural violations and would welcome similarly thorough reports in the future.

Download the full report as a PDF file in English
Download the full report as a PDF file in Albanian

 

Balkan Job Finder Offers More Posts in 2013

BIRN’s online employment service BalkanJobFinder.com now has more than 1,000 CVs in its talent pool.

The BalkanJobFinder website is full of CVs from highly-skilled professionals from across the Balkans. Jobs are offered all around the region and beyond. At the moment, there are active offers of new posts in the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Serbia and other countries. Jobs are also offered which allow experts to operate throughout the region without having to base themselves solely in one city. This service is also growing bigger each month and getting more efficient.

All these services can be accessed through the BalkanJobFinder website and its growing social network pages at Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. Also, feel free to subscribe to its newsletter.

In a special New Year offer, for every purchase clients make in January, they will get another job post within the same value absolutely free. For further information, please contact the BalkanJobFinder Business Development Manager, Dina Jakovljevic, at [email protected].

BIRN’s Balkan Transitional Justice Team Holds In-House Journalism Training

The Balkan Transitional Justice team held a two-day training and editorial meeting in Belgrade from January 12-13, supported by the United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

The session was aimed at enhancing techniques for covering transitional justice issues and developing topics for upcoming cross-regional investigations. The investigations are part of BIRN’s Regional Reporting on Transitional Justice Issues programme. Over the next two years, the organisation’s network of journalists will produce four major investigations on transitional justice issues in the region.

The meeting brought together journalists and other team members from six countries, including BIRN’s reporters, translators, television editor and radio producer. The team also discussed project activities for the forthcoming two years and held a development session intended to boost investigative reporting skills and further improve coverage of transitional justice issues.

Journalists examined strategies for employing social media and online content to enhance and promote investigative work, as well as innovative ways of presenting investigations in multimedia formats to deepen readers’ understanding and gain a wider audience.

The Balkan Transitional Justice journalists were joined at the meeting by the Balkan Insight team of correspondents and editors for a series of joint cross-regional editorial discussions.

BIRN Macedonia Receives USAID Funding

BIRN Macedonia has signed a grant agreement with USAID in Macedonia for a 30-month project aimed at enhancing cooperation between civil society organisations and media and strengthening investigative journalism in the country.

BIRN Macedonia will implement the project in partnership with the Centre for Civil Communications, SCOOP Macedonia, KOD TV magazine and Koha daily newspaper.

In partnership with local media and NGOs, BIRN Macedonia will organise a series of events designed to bridge the gap between civil society organisations and media and foster valuable relationships between NGOs and journalists.

In addition, the project will award grants to journalists for investigative stories, offer mentorship and guidance to journalists in the editorial process and arrange publication for investigative stories on various issues in the country.

The project will run until June 2015.

Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence Shortlisted for European Press Prize

Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence programme and its editor Neil Arun have been nominated for the European Press Prize 2012 in the Innovation Award category for the outstanding innovation of the year.

In order to encourage regional networking among journalists and advance balanced coverage on topics that are central to the region as well as to the European Union, the Robert Bosch Stiftung and the ERSTE Foundation, in cooperation with the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, BIRN, have initiated the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence programme in 2007.

Each year, ten Balkan journalists are competitively chosen to receive funding and professional support to conduct their own research project.

Adrian Mogos, a Romanian journalist and Fellowship alumni, has been also nominated in the News Reporting  Award category, for the reporter or specialist expert whose work has made a decisive impact.

Awards will be also made in two further categories – the Editing Award and the Commentator Award.

The idea for the awards was born in 2011 when representatives of seven European media foundations joined forces to launch the European Press Prize in order to reward excellence in journalism across all 47 European countries. They agreed that launching the awards would encourage high-quality, innovative and independent journalism.

Each award carries a prize of 10,000 euros, to be spent wherever possible on a personal project that may in turn enrich the practice of journalism.

The winners will be announced later this month by the jury which is chaired by veteran British journalist and editor Sir Harold Evans, and the awards will be presented on February 26 at the De Balie Debating Centre in Amsterdam.

BIRN Meeting Brings Balkan Journalistic Teams Together

As a result of a new two-year grant from the United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office, BIRN is bringing together its team of journalists from across the Balkans for a two-day training.

At the meeting in Belgrade from January 12-13, the Balkan Transitional Justice team will also develop a series of major cross-regional investigations, discuss project activities for the forthcoming two years and development session aimed at enhancing investigative reporting skills and techniques for covering transitional justice issues.

Those attending will include BIRN’s reporters, translators, television editor and radio producer, and the session will also introduce to the entire team the new English-language editor-in-chief for Balkan Transitional Justice, Matthew Collin.

The Balkan Insight team of correspondents and editors will also be present at the meeting for joint cross-regional editorial discussions.

“This is an important opportunity to get all our journalists together, face to face, and work on strategies and collaborative projects for the future,” said Collin.

“The exchange of ideas should be fascinating and form the basis for some important investigative work,” he said.

The United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office is now the third donor for the Balkan Transitional Justice project, alongside the European Commission and the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland.

Discussion: How a person skipped a trial on murder charges

Justice in Kosovo broadcast a programme about how someone accused of attempted murder was released by the police without charge.

Questions covered included: What happened to farmer Rifat Thaçi on the day he decided to go out for a picnic with his family? Why did the defendant, 72-year-old Ramë Rama, allegedly try to kill Mr. Thaçi? How it is possible that even after such a serious crime, the prosecution released Mr. Rama from detention?

What is the opinion of the parties involved in this process? When the prosecution failed, was the imam of the village successful in resolving the conflict? Finally, what did the chief district prosecutor for Mitrovica say about this decision?

To discuss these and related issues, researcher Petrit Kryeziu interviewed:

  • Rifat Thaçi,
  • Hajrie Thaçi,
  • Izet Hajrizi and
  • Avdyl Ramaj – the injured parties;

  • Fadil Idrizi – the village imam;

  • Shyqyri Syla – chief prosecutor from the District Prosecution in Mitrovica; and

  • Kadri Begolli – acting director of the Office of the Disciplinary Council.

The report started with Mr. Thaçi, who spoke about what happened during a picnic with his family, which turned into a crime scene: when they arrived at the planned place for picnic, they encountered a barrier fence. Mr. Thaçi broke the fence in order to walk across land belonging to his friend, where trouble broke out.

Contrary to Mr. Thaçi, Mr. Rama claims that the fence that was broken was in his land. A fight broke out, which ended when Mr. Rama fired two bullets, injuring Thaçi in the leg and head.

This case was passed on to the judicial bodies in Mitrovica. The suspect was put in detention. The district prosecutor proposed extending detention for two months, but after ten days the same prosecutor asked to substitute house arrest for detention, on the grounds that the parties had settled the dispute between themselves.

Regarding this, Mr. Thaçi said “I don’t know how the prosecutor concluded that we have agreed with Rama. Who said to her that we have agreed? Due to Rama’s release, my family feels victimised again. In order to avoid fights and troubles, we have moved here, to Prishtina!”

Similarly, Mr. Hajrizi said “I don’t know what kind of prosecutor this is, who releases a person who has committed such a crime, and at the same time points out that the families have agreed – which did not happen at all.”

“I have tried to help these two families reach reconciliation. However, after a month, I did not contend with it any longer,” said Mr. Idrizi, a village imam.

Mr. Syla said “there was a technical mistake made by the prosecutor, who asked to substitute the [detention] measure, because the sentence that highlighted the fact that the families had agreed was left in the computer from previous proposals.”

He went on to say that “this mistake is nothing compared to the [other] mistakes that happen due to the working conditions within the prosecutor[’s offices].”

Video: http://www.jetanekosove.com/drejtesia/959/Alb