New York, March 1, 2007—The Committee to Protect Journalists
is alarmed by anonymous death threats against Robert Valdec,
anchor of the popular weekly program “Istraga” (Investigation)
on Zagreb’s independent Nova TV. The phone and e-mail
messages did not specify the coverage that prompted the intimidation,
but local journalists and press freedom advocates believe they
came in response to the program’s recent re-enactments
of crimes committed in the early 1990s.
“We
call on local authorities to conduct a thorough investigation
and prosecute those responsible for threatening our colleague,
Robert Valdec,” CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon said.
“Given Croatia’s fragile press freedom, every effort
must be made to protect independent journalists from threats
and harassment.”
Valdec began
receiving death threats several times per week in December 2006,
after his program aired segments that re-enacted murders and
other crimes committed during the 1991-92 war, Nova TV staff
members told CPJ. The journalist received anonymous telephone
calls and e-mails threatening to decapitate him. Some of the
e-mails described in graphic detail the manner in which Valdec
would have his head “taken off” and how he would
be “butchered.” Several e-mails were signed by “a
Serb from Serbian Vukovar,” a Nova TV staff member told
CPJ.
Valdec said
he could not identify those responsible for the threats. “Every
week our program covers a story someone doesn’t like,”
Valdec told CPJ in a telephone interview today. He said that
his show has covered organized crime, wrongful imprisonments,
and domestic violence. Croatian prosecutors, Valdec said, have
followed up on “Istraga” investigative stories,
opening several criminal investigations as a result.
Police began
investigating the threats in January but have made no arrests.
Valdec has continued to receive graphic messages, although they
have been less frequent in recent weeks.
CPJ has
documented at least two other recent cases in which journalists
in Croatia received death threats for reporting on sensitive
issues. Drago Hedl, editor of the Split-based independent weekly
Feral Tribune, received an anonymous death threat in December
2005 after reporting on the torture and murder of ethnic Serb
civilians in the eastern city of Osijek. Slobodna Dalmacija
reporter Sasa Jadrijevic Tomas was threatened in 2004 after
exposing a government official’s failure to pay child
support.