Life in Kosovo discusses the use of fiscal cash registers

This week, Life in Kosovo will discuss the use of fiscal cash registers.

Questions to be covered include: How many businesses have fiscal cash registers? Why do fuel pumps not yet have them set up? What are the technical problems hampering this project? Will the informal economy be stopped?

 

How do the Tax Administration of Kosovo and companies that sell fiscal cash registers evaluate this project, and what do economic experts think? Why are small businesses complaining about the price of the cash registers?

 

To discuss this issue, Muhamet Hajrullahu has invited the following guests to the studio:

 

Behxhet Haliti– director of the Tax Administration of Kosovo;
Driton Shuki – from the “Gekos” company;
Bashkim Shahini – from the “Dukagjini” company;
Arbana Xharra – economics editor of the Zëri daily newspaper; and
Berat Rukiqi – from the Kosovo Chamber of Commerce.

 

During the programme, BIRN will broadcast a report about what people running businesses think about the setting up of fiscal cash registers, and shares their complaints.

 

BIRN will also broadcast a report by journalist Edona Musa that shows the problems faced by Kosovo’s taxi drivers. In particular, Edona asks why some taxi drivers have decided to face time in jail instead of paying fines.

 

More than 100 Applications for the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence Received

This year’s competition for the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence is closed as of today.

Meanwhile, busy BIRN team-members have launched preparations for the selection process which will start this Wednesday, March 7th.

In the upcoming days, we will announce the exact number of eligible applications received per country.

Members of the Selection Committee will begin the process of choosing the journalists to participate in this year’s programme, who will become members of a growing network for journalistic excellence in Balkans.

This year’s programme consists of two seminars, the international research of fellows’ own reporting project, mentoring and editorial followed by the world-wide promotion and syndication of fellows’ articles.

The International Selection Committee consists of six permanent members from the media community in the Balkans, Austria and Germany, as well as one annual member, who is an expert on this year’s Fellowship theme – communities.

The results of the Committee’s deliberations will be announced on March 29th on our website fellowship.birn.eu.com, while all candidates will be individually informed about the results of the fourth annual competition for the Balkan Fellowship.

The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, alongside partners – the Robert Bosch Stiftung and ERSTE Foundation, would like to thank all of the applicants for their interest in the programme and wishes them the very best of luck.

 

Balkan Transitional Justice Launches

The newly created Balkan Transitional Justice programme is launching its website as part of Balkan Insight today, March 1.

Balkan Insight’s Transitional Justice site provides news, analyses, interviews, and investigations on transitional justice issues in the Balkan region.

The aim of the programme is to stimulate a healthy public dialog and further the understanding of transitional justice issues by providing timely, balanced and impartial information.

The main journalistic interests of BTJ are in covering past human rights violations such as war crime trials, regional cooperation on criminal issues, the current situation of refugees and IDPS, progress regarding missing persons, and truth-seeking initiatives.

The articles are published on our website in English, Albanian, Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian, Montenegrin and Macedonian.

The programme is currently expanding its partnership network in order to disseminate its input and increase its impact. The programme’s radio production will start in May 2012.

We can also be found on our Facebook page, followed on Twitter and readers can subscribe to our newsletter on the homepage.

Created as a regional programme of BIRN HUB and supervised by BIRN’s regional director Gordana Igric, this project is funded by the European Commission and Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The Balkan Transitional Justice team consist of six journalists placed in the regional capitals, three translators, and five proofreaders.

Members of the BTJ Journalistic Team are journalists Boris Pavelić from Croatia, Siniša-Jakov Marušić from Macedonia, Marija Ristić from Serbia, Milena Milošević from Montenegro, Denis Džidić from Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Fatmir Aliu from Kosovo, translators Oto Oltvanji from Serbia, Emica Niami from Macedonia, and Belinda Vrapi from Albania and proofreaders Nadira Korić, Lidija Bakarić, Faton Osmani, and Tamara Chausidis.

The English editor of the programme is Andrea Doder, the managing editor is Ana Petruseva, it is managed by Anisa Suceska-Vekic and coordinated by Jessie Hronesova.

 You can explore the website here: http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/page/balkan-transitional-justice-home

 

Panel Debates Balkan Silence on Rape

A panel debate, “Penal policy on sexual violence and treatment of victims”, organized on February 24 in Podgorica, agreed that too little is being done to help victims come forward.

The event was attended by members of the judiciary, the police, international organizations, experts and non-governmental organizations from Montenegro and the region, as well as by journalists and criminology and journalism students from Podgorica university.

In 2011 just two women in Montenegro reported that they were victims of rape, while in 2010 a total of five criminal complaints were filed with the police concerning this crime.

This does not mean that such cases rarely happen but rather that victims remain reluctant to report rapes, it was heard.

The reason for this lies not only in penal policy but also in the low level of confidence in the institutions and the unsatisfactory treatment of victims within the system.

Participants in the debate said that the emphasis needs to be placed on changing attitudes towards victims of sexual violence, starting with the police and health department followed by the judiciary where court hearings sometimes are delayed for years.

There are also no adequate programmes for the rehabilitation of sexual violence victims and society too often blames the victims, it was said.

Maja Raicevic, of the Women’s Safe House, said to few women report rapes as they don’t know how to access information or whom to turn to.

Although by law punishments for rape range from one to 15 years’ imprisonment, the average prison sentences issued by the higher courts in Podgorica and Bijelo Polje is two years and eight months. The highest prison sentence handed down for such a crime was 11 years and the shortest was six months.

“Each case is different. I personally tried several rape cases and each time I delivered a different sentence,” Podgorica higher court judge Dragica Vukovic recalled.

The situation in the region is similarly varied.

Sladjana Jovanovic, from the University Law School, presented statistics from Serbia from the last few years, which show that Serbia has toughened its policy on sexual violence.

“There are fewer suspended sentences in Serbia, prison sentences of one to five years are prevalent, while the number of prison sentences from five to 15 years is increasing,” Jovanovic said.

One problem is that rape is a crime that is difficult to prove, while the lack of specialized services and sufficiently sensitized judges and lawyers additionally aggravates matters.

“A big problem is that the victims are inadequately cared for both outside and within the proceedings, and there are also no state services for assistance and support,” Jovanovic added.

Speaking from Croatia, Djurdjica Kolarec, from the Croatian Women’s Room non-governmental organization said their experience was that “shamefully lenient sentences are delivered for rape, sometimes even suspended sentences.

“Rapes are seldom reported – only one out of 20 women victims reports rape and of the hundred or so reported rapes a year only ten or so end in convictions,” she added.

“Many cases are simply dropped also because, in the course of the proceedings, victims eventually refuse to cooperate,” she continued.

The panel moderator, journalist Jelena Kulidzan, said Montenegro did not have a centre for the protection of victims of sexual violence. Kulidzan noted that victims of violence obtain assistance only from non-governmental organizations focusing on domestic violence.

Montenegrin Justice Ministry representative Branka Lakocevic said the country was ready to adopt best practices from the region and other countries, which was one reason why this debate was useful.

Commenting on media coverage of this topic, Professor Natasa Ruzic blamed the media for often adopting a sensationalistic approach to such crimes, sometimes even disclosing the identity of the victims.

“In a small society like Montenegro it may be better to give a false name instead of initials. But what is important is to eliminate disgusting descriptions of these crimes, which humiliate the victims and result in them reliving the trauma,” she said.

Debate participants stressed the importance of taking a systemic approach to this subject, which implies the creation of a social and institutional environment in which no victim feels discouraged to report a crime.

The debate on the subject of rape was organized by the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence and moderated by journalist Jelena Kulidzan. Her analytical article entitled “Rough Justice for Balkan Rape Victims”, published in November 2011, won second prize in the international fellowship programme, which is awarded by BIRN, the Robert Bosch Stiftung and the ERSTE Foundation.

 

Life in Kosovo debates electoral reform

Tonight, Life in Kosovo will discuss electoral reform.

Questions to be covered include: What has the Commission on Electoral Reform done? How many electoral areas will there be in Kosovo? Will the electoral lists be opened or closed? What is the threshold that political parties must exceed in order to win seats? How can we ensure that there will be no fraud vote to the upcoming elections?  Is it likely that vote theft will be eliminated through the use of electronic voting and biometric identification?

To discuss these and other issues, Muhamet Hajrullahu has invited the following guests to the studio:

Halit Krasniqi – PDK member at the Commission on Electoral Reform;
Imri Ahmeti – LDK member at the Commission on Electoral Reform;
Alban Krasniq – Vetëvendosje representative at the Central Electoral Commission;
Faik Ispahiu – Executive director, Internews Kosova;  and
Jetmir Bakija – from the Institute of Democracy for Development.

New Award for Culture Journalists Announced

Annual ward will add new element to the BICCED project, which opened last Thursday.

The advisory board for the BICCED project has decided to establish an annual award for journalists working in the field of culture. The decision was announced at the annual Advisory Board meeting held on January 28.

Details of the competition will soon be published in Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Serbia and Macedonia.

The annual award will add a new element to the Balkans’ Initiative for Cultural Cooperation, Exchange and Development, BICCED project, which kicked off for the third time last Thursday in Belgrade, gathering journalists from the region at a three-day event consisting of training, study visits and round table on cultural policy.

The project aims is to ensure a supply of objective, balanced and accurate reports on aspects of cultural policy and related themes, in order to provide policymakers in the country and abroad with a better basis from which to formulate policies that expedite the region’s European-oriented transition.

The project also aims to give cultural organisations and experts better insight into the state of cultural policies and practice in the region, as well as to exchange opinions, practices and experiences in the field of policy.

The BICCED project is implemented by the Balkan Investigative Regional Reporting Network, BIRN, SEEcult.org and is funded by the Swiss Cultural Programme in the Western Balkans.

 

The new English-language Editor-in-Chief Andrea Doder joins the Balkan Transitional Justice Team

Andrea Doder, a former BBC international affairs journalist, has joined the Balkan Transitional Justice (BTJ) team today as the English-language Editor-in-Chief.

Originally from Sarajevo, Andrea is a graduate from Guildhall, London and holds a master degree from the London School of Economics. She is also a fluent speaker of BCSM.

 

Andrea joined the BBC in 1994, where she produced and edited news programmes and reported for the World Service radio, World television and BBC News Online.

 

Balkan Transitional Justice is a new programme of BIRN HUB that is designed as a sub-site of Balkan Insight and made possible through cooperation with BIRN BiH.

The first ever regional programme of its kind, funded by the European Commission and the Swiss Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is dedicated to broadening understanding of transitional justice issues and improving the professional standards of journalism in the Balkan region.

News about transitional justice issues (war crime trials, missing persons, reparations, criminal justice efforts, regional cooperation and strategy) is published in English and also in Albanian, BCMS and Macedonian. The Balkan Transitional Justice’s website is currently under construction and contains three mirror language pages of the English home page.

 

The BTJ team started with a training period on February 1, under the editorial guidance of Balkan Insight’s Managing Editor Ana Petruseva and Andrew Gray, former chief editor of Reuters for the Balkans.

 

The training period has been successful beyond all expectations and the system of publishing news in four languages has been running smoothly. Although the website has not been officially launched the work of the BTJ team has already been noticed and some articles re-published in the local media across the region.

 

The official launch of the website will be on March 1, 2012.

 

Life in Kosovo discusses about emergency situations

Tonight, Life in Kosovo will broadcast a debate on the emergency situations in our country.

Do we know how to manage and cope with emergency situations in Kosovo – similar to those we have been faced over the last week?

What are the measures that the municipalities and the central government have taken?

What is the level of coordination among institutions in order to help the citizens? Why the Prishtina municipality has still no alarming system since three years now? I don’t get this part.

To discuss these issues, Jeta Xharra has invited:

Agim Gashi – Head of Directorate for Public Services in the Municipality of Prishtina
Feim Salihu – “Pastrimi” company
Visar Rama – INPO
Ismet Ibishi – Ministry of Internal Affairs
Shemsi Veseli – Deputy of PDK in Prishtina Assambly and KSF deputy minister

BIRN will also broadcast the interview with Dan Kamen from Energy Laboratory at the University of California, who talks about alternative energy sources in Kosovo.

Culture Watch Training in Belgrade

A training for journalists participating in the region-wide BICCED project kicked off in Belgrade on Thursday.

The event will equip journalists from across the region with the skills needed to write for the Culture Watch Online Magazine and forms part of the third round of the Balkan Initiative for Cultural Cooperation, Exchange and Development, BICCED.

The training sessions will be followed later by on-the-job training from BIRN’s experienced editorial team to help the journalists to produce articles focusing on cultural policy throughout the region, which will be published in the dedicated culture section of BIRN’s Balkan Insight web site – www.balkaninsight.com

Dusica L.I. Cook, BICCED programme manager, said that the main goals of the project are to train journalists to write in analytical manner, and to increase the visibility of cultural problems.

“The aim of the project is to provide a constant supply of objective, balanced and accurate reporting on aspects of cultural policy and other related themes, and provide policymakers in-country and within institutions abroad with a better position to create policies that expedite the region’s European-oriented transition,“ she explained.

<!** Image 3 align=”left” >The two day training programme will focus primarily on developing the journalists’ skill set, and will be led by Ana Petruseva, BIRN Macedonia Director and Gordana Igric, BIRN Regional Network Director who will guide the team through five distinct types of articles, writing style, writing tips, and the use of quotations and sources.

Another session will focus on news and analytical writing, helping the journalists to define the two and look at the structure of such pieces.

BIRN web director Milos Milosavljevic will host a session looking at Online Journalism and the use of social networks, and journalists will have learn the specific skills necessary for writing for the web, methods and techniques to promote their stories and the use of the web for research and collaboration.

The programme will conclude with the commissioning of articles which the journalists will work on in collaboration with their local editors in the weeks to come.

Selected candidates for the third round of the BICCED project are Bojana Karanovic (Banja Luka), Mirza Ajnadzic (Sarajevo), Olivera Nikodinovska and Julija ilijevska (Skopje), Arber Selmani and Donjeta Demolli (Pristina), Fatmira Nikolli and Elsa Demo (Tirana), Dimitrije Bukvic, Mladen Savkovic, Tijana Jovanovic Petrovic (Belgrade), and Branislava Lovre (Novi Sad).

The training is organized within the BIRN’s three-year Balkan Initiative in Cultural Cooperation, Exchange and Development, funded by the Swiss Cultural Programme in the Western Balkans.

 

The Boards of Public Enterprises

This Thursday, Life in Kosovo broadcasts a debate on the performance of the boards of public enterprises.

Why has the mandate for members of public enterprises been extended? How much have these boards been politicized and are appointments made based on political affiliations? What is happening with the water company \”Radoniqi\” in Gjakova? Who is in dispute with the new director and why?

To discuss these issues, Muhamet Hajrrullahu has invited:

  • Gani Koci – Deputy Minister of Economic Development;
  • Lutfi Zharku – former Minister of Trade and Industry;
  • Lorik Bajrami – from the NGO Çohu and
  • Shkamb Qavdarbasha – from the NGO INDEP.

During the programme, BIRN will broadcast a report by journalist Edona Musa who addresses the issue of why some of the former board members of “Radoniqi” did not accept the new director.

BIRN also broadcasts a report that shows how many children are going for medical treatment through the funds collected by the Gala Evening of December 1, 2011, organised by the Mother Teresa Society and Life in Kosovo.