| Home | Events | Public Statements | World Press Freedom Review | Newsletter & Publications | About IPI | Link Terminal | Contact Us |
|
No journalists killed Public Statements
|
IPI Public StatementsFine Against Czech Journalist Marks A Setback for Press Freedom10 February 2009
The International Press Institute today expressed concern over a Czech court’s 6 February decision upholding a fine against reporter Sabina Slonkova for refusing to disclose the names of confidential sources to the state prosecutor.
The case dates to February 2008, when online news portal Aktualne.cz posted video surveillance footage taken at Prague’s Hotel Savoy and leaked to Slonkova. The footage shows a clandestine meeting shortly before last year’s Czech presidential election between Jiri Weigl, chief of staff to President Vaclav Klaus, and Miloslav Slouf, a lobbyist with alleged links to the Czech underworld. "This fine represents an unsettling trend in Europe – the erosion of journalists’ right to protect their sources,’’ said IPI Director David Dadge. "In Sabina Slonkova’s case, and similar rulings in France and Britain, courts have said that the fundamental right to protect the confidentiality of sources does not apply. Without this right, investigative journalism – and the public’s right to know what their representatives are doing– will suffer." Czech authorities considered the leak a violation of privacy laws, and the police and prosecutors launched criminal investigations. Investigators approached Slonkova for information, but she refused to reveal the identity of the individual who provided her with the footage on the basis that a journalist’s right to protect the confidentiality of their sources is enshrined in national law. This was accepted by all the investigators with the exception of the state prosecutor, who pursued the case against her. On 28 November, she was fined 700 euros for violating the privacy laws. Slonkova appealed, but the fine was upheld by a Prague district court on 6 February. This is not the first time that Slonkova has been singled out for her investigative journalism. In 2002, police foiled a high-level plot to kill Slonkova, after one of the would-be killers turned informer. A former senior Foreign Ministry official, Karel Srba, and four others were found guilty of conspiring to murder the journalist. Slonkova had written several investigative articles questioning Srba’s financial dealings while at the ministry. The fine against Slonkova raises fresh concerns about a backslide in media freedom in the Czech Republic, which currently holds the rotating presidency of the European Union. The court’s ruling in the Slonkova case came only a day after the lower house of the Parliament overturned a Senate veto of a bill containing controversial amendments that would criminalise the disclosure of police wiretaps by the media. If Czech President Vaclav Klaus signs the bill into law, journalists who make public such wiretaps will face a fine of up to 180,000 euros or a jail term of up to five years. The bill has sparked outrage among Czech journalists, who have used leaked wiretaps to uncover graft. "Confidentiality of sources is there to protect investigative reporting, which is essential if journalists are to act in the public interest,’’ Dadge said. For more information, contact: Timothy Spence Read Country Reports on 'Czech Republic':
2007 World Press Freedom Review
2006 World Press Freedom Review 2005 World Press Freedom Review 2004 World Press Freedom Review 2003 World Press Freedom Review 2002 World Press Freedom Review 2001 World Press Freedom Review 2000 World Press Freedom Review 1999 World Press Freedom Review 1998 World Press Freedom Review IPI provides links to other Internet sites only for the convenience of its visitors. IPI is not responsible for the availability or content of these external sites, nor does IPI endorse, guarantee or warrant the information, services or products available at these sites.
IPI International Press Institute
|
IPI MEMBERS LOGIN
PUBLIC STATEMENTS
North Korea,
14 May 2009 IPI: North Korea Should Take the Lead from Iran and Free American Journalists
Russia,
29 April 2009 A Newspaper ?to Serve Society, Not the State?: Russia?s Novaya Gazeta Wins IPI Pioneer Award
Germany,
23 April 2009 More German Journalists Join the Battle to Protect Confidentiality of Sources
Serbia,
23 April 2009 SEEMO/IPI marks tenth anniversary of NATO strike on Radio-Television Serbia (RTS)
International,
20 April 2009 IPI Calls for Release of Journalists Being Used as ?Political Hostages? in Iran, North Korea
Serbia,
16 April 2009 SEEMO/IPI condemns fine handed down to journalist of Serbian newspaper in defamation case
International,
31 March 2009 With All Eyes on the Economy, Don?t Overlook the Barriers to Press Freedom
Cyprus,
31 March 2009 IPI/SEEMO supports the Union of Cyprus Journalists in defending the role of the media
Bosnia Herz.,
26 March 2009 SEEMO/IPI condemns threats against journalists in Republika Srpska (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Europe,
23 March 2009 Call for Entries: 2nd SEEMO Human Rights Photo Award (part of the annual BETA Photograph of the Year Competition)
Europe,
24 March 2009 Dr. Erhard Busek - SEEMO 2009 Award for Better Understanding in South East Europe
Macedonia,
13 March 2009 SEEMO/IPI condemns accusations levelled against Makfax news agency in Macedonia
Serbia,
11 March 2009 Serbian Justice Minister Urged to Intensify Investigation into Unsolved Killing of Editor
Bangladesh,
05 March 2009 IPI Calls for Full Reckoning of Past Crimes against Journalists in Bangladesh
Greece,
25 February 2009 SEEMO/IPI Concerned about Physical Attack on Journalist Abdulhalim Dede during Live Broadcast
Tunisia,
30 January 2009 "They Cannot Control the Sky," Defiant Kalima Editor-in-Chief Sihem Bensadrine tells IPI
Ukraine,
29 January 2009 IPI Applauds Resolution on Ukrainian Journalist?s Murder, Urges Action on Similar Crimes
Albania,
20 January 2009 IPI/SEEMO concerned over eviction of Albanian newspaper TemA from its premises |

