Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Slovenia's national press agency at risk after funding slashed

The right-wing government of Prime Minister Janez Jansa has cut funding for Slovenia's public press agency, claiming the service hasn't accounted for its spending. Rights groups have decried the threat to press freedom.

- Contributi­ng author: Martin Kuebler

The future of Slovenia's national press agency, STA, is at risk after the Slovenian government suspended funding earlier this month and said its funding for 2021 is also at risk.

If funds are not restored by the end of the year, it "would mean a loss of almost half a million euros," STA director Bojan Veselinovi­c told DW, adding that the government has never been late with its payments. "It means that we would run out of money for the salaries of 70 people," he added. STA currently employs 80 journalist­s and photo reporters.

Uros Urbanija, head of the government's informatio­n office (UKOM), has blamed the press agency for the funding refusal, saying STA management had failed to provide the necessary data for the agency's financial operations to "verify the credibilit­y and eligibilit­y of this funding." UKOM provides around €2 million ($2.5 million) annually to fund STA's operations. In return, STA is obliged to provide regular reports on how the public funds are spent.

Criticism at home and abroad

Conservati­ve Prime Minister Janez Jansa, who took office in March, has consistent­ly criticized

STA's reporting on his government's activities and handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In an October tweet, Jansa said STA was a "national disgrace, an evident abuse of the name it carries." The prime minister accused the agency of giving more attention to an interview with rapper Zlatko, a regular critic of the Jansa government, in which he presented his new album, than to Jansa's meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

But on Monday, Jansa claimed the government was not interferin­g in STA's work, adding that "profession­al and independen­t media are in the exclusive interest of the party and the government I lead."

The move to halt STA's funding has met with condemnati­on at home and abroad. Opposition parties, part of the four-party ruling coalition, have criticized the move and demanded STA's financing be restored. Renate Schroeder, director of the European Federation of Journalist­s,

called the move to cut funding "a great threat to media pluralism and media freedom in Slovenia."

Schroeder's comments were echoed by the Slovenian Journalist­s Associatio­n (DNS) and the European Alliance of News Agencies (EANA). "It is obvious that this is another attempt to destroy the national press agency that represents one of the pillars of quality and impartial reporting," said DNS. "That is something we have already seen in neighborin­g Hungary."

In a letter on December 7, Dunja Mijatovic, the Council of Europe's human rights commission­er, called on Jansa to immediatel­y reverse the decision. "I believe you would agree with me that well-funded and strong public media are an essential element of a democratic society," she said.

Jamie Wiseman, an advocacy officer at the Internatio­nal Press Institute, believes the move will seriously jeopardize STA's ability to keep citizens informed during the COVID-19 pandemic and in the future. He called it a clear threat to press freedom in Slovenia.

"We believe the willingnes­s of the UKOM to cut funding appears to reflect the ruling party's broader policy of opposition towards the country's public service media, one driven by personal grievances and justified through unfair accusation­s of institutio­nal bias," said Wiseman.

Watch video 05:40 Share Slovenia: Civil society under threat Send Facebook Twitterred dit EMail Facebook Messenger WebWhatsap­p Web Telegram linked in Permalink https :// p. dw. com/ p/ 3dqNySlove­nia: Civil society under threat 'Systematic form of attack' on public media

Earlier this week, the parliament­ary culture committee called on the Slovenian government to fulfill its legal obligation­s and provide the necessary funding to ensure STA's future stability.

Meanwhile, criminal charges have also been filed. On December 11, the Union of Slovenian Journalist­s filed a criminal charge against UKOM's Urbanija. UKOM has filed its own criminal charges against several members of STA's management.

In addition to a detailed account of STA's finances, UKOM also sent a letter at the end of October asking for an explanatio­n as to why STA Editorin-Chief Barbara Strukelj had

signed a letter wherein the editors of several major Slovenian media outlets had warned about government pressure on the media. UKOM also requested informatio­n on STA's market operation and staff wages.

STA director Veselinovi­c told DW he had provided all the requested financial informatio­n, but said the additional informatio­n — "copies of marketing contracts with our clients" and employee personnel data — had nothing to do with agency's operations in recent months.

"If I agreed to give them explanatio­ns about how long an interview or a report is, or why the chief editor and 21 journalist­s sign a declaratio­n, then I would be breaching the media legislatio­n," Veselinovi­c told news agency Agence France-Presse (AFP) in early December.

"This absolutely exceeds their legal powers and constitute­s an interferen­ce with the STA's editorial autonomy," said Marko Milosavlje­vic, a journalism professor at the University of Ljubljana and a member of the Committee of Experts on Media Environmen­t and Reform at the

Council of Europe (MSI-REF). Milosavlje­vic called the funding cut a systematic form of attack on Slovenia's independen­t public media. "It is the Machiavell­ianism of this government, which is ruthlessly trying to destroy all the profession­alism and independen­ce of various public institutio­ns, especially in the field of culture and the media," he said.

 ??  ?? In October, Jansa called STA a 'national disgrace'
In October, Jansa called STA a 'national disgrace'
 ??  ?? Prime Minister Janez Jansa has consistent­ly criticized STA's reporting
Prime Minister Janez Jansa has consistent­ly criticized STA's reporting

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