[09BELGRADE791] SERBIA: MEDIA LAW THREATENS COALITION STABILITY

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Published by Wikileaks & Bivol.bg
date: 8/4/2009 7:04 refid: 09BELGRADE791 origin: Embassy Belgrade classification: UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY destination: 09BELGRADE511  NCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 BELGRADE 000791    SENSITIVE  SIPDIS  DEPT FOR EUR/SCE (P. PETERSON)    E.O. 12958: N/A  TAGS: PGOV, PREL, SR  SUBJECT: SERBIA: MEDIA LAW THREATENS COALITION STABILITY    REF: BELGRADE 511    Summary  -------    1.  (SBU) The Serbian Assembly recessed for August on July 30, just  one day before it was to vote on a slate of laws, including the  controversial Information Law written by G-17 Plus.  Government  officials confirmed to us that the recess was the result of an  agreement to postpone a showdown between G-17 Plus, which had  threatened to walk out of the government if the law did not pass, and  the Socialist Party of Serbia, which insisted it would not vote for  the "Milosevic-era" law.  Two journalists' associations, among  others, have criticized the law for posing onerous fines for  "slander," which is poorly defined in the bill.  While the government  has averted a crisis for the time being, when the Assembly resumes on  August 31, it will still have to deal with an issue that threatens to  bring down the current ruling coalition.  Although the government  continues to operate in a state of confusion, the chaos is preferable  to the alternative - a government including the nationalist Serbian  Progressive Party.  The government and the Liberal Democratic Party,  which brokered the agreement, seem to have worked hard to avoid that  possibility.  While the situation may seem untenable, new elections  remain unlikely in the near term.  Serbia's insatiable appetite for  drama and tolerance for chaos make eruptions such as the information  law crisis more the rule than the exception.  In the end, the specter  of Nikolic and his Progressives (backed by Serbia's Nosferatu -  former Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica) ended up reinforcing the  coalition's resolve to not dissolve.  End Summary.    National Assembly Ends Session without Voting  ---------------------------------------------    2.  (U) The National Assembly, which has spent the last few weeks,  including weekends, debating 24 laws which were to be voted on July  31, instead adjourned July 30, postponing the votes until August 31.  Assembly Speaker Slavica Djukic-Dejanovic (Socialist Party of Serbia  - SPS) told the press on July 31 that she called the recess because  the MPs had been working hard and needed a holiday.  Media, however,  speculated that the vote was postponed in order to avoid a  confrontation over the controversial Information Law, since coalition  members G-17 Plus and SPS were at odds over the law.  While  Djukic-Dejanovic publicly denied this, observers noted that coalition  member G-17 Plus had threatened to walk out of the government if the  law were not passed whereas fellow coalition member SPS insisted it  would not vote for the law.  G-17 Plus issued a public statement July  31 denying it had made such a threat and accusing the SPS of trying  to destabilize the government by postponing the vote on the 24 laws.      3. (SBU) Government ministers confirmed for us privately that the  Information Law had shaken the government coalition.  Labor Minister  and Sandzak Democratic Party (SDP) president Rasim Ljajic (protect)  told the Charge July 31 that the government almost fell over the  Information Law, since G-17 Plus head Mladjan Dinkic insisted on the  law.  Ljajic said that, had the government collapsed, new elections  would most likely have brought the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS)  into the government, judging by the party's success in recent  municipal elections (reftel), which would have been a disaster.  SPS  head Ivica Dacic also told the Charge July 31 that the dispute over  the Information Law had caused instability in the government.  Dinkic, who wrote the bill, had insisted that SPS vote for it, and  SPS was willing to abstain in order to achieve a quorum and not vote  against the law but would go no further, according to Dacic.  Dacic  said opposition Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) had stepped in to  mediate the dispute July 30 and had suggested to the Democratic Party  and G-17 Plus that the Assembly recess in order to prevent the  government from falling, although Dinkic had initially resisted the  suggestion.  Dacic also said new elections at this time would have  been a mistake because SNS would then have a role the next  government.    Critics: Law Resembles Milosevic-Era Law  ----------------------------------------    4.  (SBU) Critics, including the Independent Journalists' Association  of Serbia (NUNS) and the Journalists' Association of Serbia (UNS)  criticized the law for including extremely high fines for slander and  for requiring media outlets to keep a large reserve for the payment  of future fines.  These requirements would be difficult or impossible  for smaller media outlets and put any outlet out of business if it  received fines.  Furthermore, the law loosely defined slander,  meaning journalists would have no idea what kinds of statements would  result in fines.  Critics noted that the law would not meet European    BELGRADE 00000791  002 OF 002      Union standards as drafted and would have to be amended during the  accession process.  While proponents of the law said it was needed to  keep the tabloid press from publishing false stories, including  stories naming the minor children of public individuals, critics  compared the bill to the Milosevic-era information law.  Dacic, who  was Milosevic's spokesman in 1990s, was emphatic that SPS would not  vote for the law, saying, "not even a firing squad could have made me  vote for that law," Dacic said, "I lived through a law like that  during Milosvic and we will never return to that dark place, I will  never do that again."    What Happens Next  -----------------    5.  (U) How the Assembly will proceed with the Information Law after  the August recess is unclear.  Suzana Grubjesic from G-17 Plus told  media that the Assembly would pass the Information Law in its current  form when it reconvened August 31, per the agreement with DS and LDP.   LDP MP Zoran Ostojic made a statement July 30 that LDP wanted to  consult journalist associations, the Council of Europe, and the EU on  possible amendments to the law.  DS made similar references to  possible amendments before a vote.  SNS deputy head Aleksandar Vucic  said it was clear the government had no idea what it would do, that  the government was falling apart, and therefore there should be new  elections.    Comment  --------    6.     (SBU) The government's current fumbling of the Information Law  highlights the fragility of the governing coalition.  The only party  who would gain from the fall of the current government would be  Nikolic's SNS, and ultimately their allies, former Prime Minsiter  Vojislav Kostunica and his Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS).  That  said, some in Tadic's DS appear willing to consider risking the  possible consequences of an election in the middle of the economic  crisis in an effort to simplify the coalition politics of the  existing fourteen member coalition.  With tolerance for chaos a  lifestyle for Serbian politicians, the drama surrounding this episode  may become the norm for remaining three years of the coalition's  mandate.  Further deterioration of the economic environment may  further complicate the Assembly's work by the time it reconvenes, a  factor that could either make it more difficult to push the law  through or could lead to its passage being ignored while citizens  focus on their lack of well-being.  End Comment.  BRUSH
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