Croatia PM Continues Balkan Tradition of Sexist Remarks

TV crews prepare to cover a trial. Photo: EPA-EFE/YOAN VALAT

Croatia's Prime Minister, Andrej Plenkovic, has swiftly apologised for making a patronising and sexist answer to a female journalist after she asked a question about a scandal involving leaked inside information on police and prosecution operations.

"You are sweet, Damira," Plenkovic told reporter Damira Gregoret on Wednesday, after being asked about the scandal which erupted after police arrested an IT worker who had reportedly received the information.

He soon apologised, saying there had been no intention of showing disrespect.

However, Plenklovic's observation forms part of a long tradition among Balkan politicians of making sexist remarks to women journalists.

In August, Zagreb Mayor Milan Bandic told journalist Ivana Pezo Moskaljov to be a "fine lady", during to a visit of a waste landfill site in Zagreb.

"If I was as clever as you are, I would work in Nova TV," he remarked, adding: "You are like a naughty teacher; be a fine lady."

The Croatian Journalists' Association called this remark inappropriate and urged him and other public figures to stop insulting journalists for posing questions in the public interest.

Politicians elsewhere in the Balkan region are often equally patronising to women reporters.

When he was asked in May 2017 about the name of his new civic movement in Serbia, the politician and former Serbian ombudsman Sasa Jankovic told N1's Minja Miletic: "I can tell you, but then I have to kiss you."

In December 2015, Serbian Defence Minister Bratislav Gasic was slated for his gross remark to Zlatija Labovic, a journalist from TV B92, during a visit to a factory in Trstenik.

After she crouched down to get out of her camera operator's way, Gasic said: "I love female journalists who get...

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