Montenegro Mulls Tougher Penalties to Deter Attacks on Journalists

Commission for monitoring violence against media members, Mihailo Jovovic and Zoran Miljanic. Photo: Savo Prelevic

"The motive for the attack will be determined, but penalties for attacking journalists must also be stricter. The ministry will consider all possibilities about whether journalists should get the status of officials," Miljanic told a press conference after a session of the Commission for Monitoring Violence against Media.

Kocan was attacked on March 28 in front of his house when Dragutin Sukovic, from Podgorica, first verbally insulted him and then tried to use force. Sukovic has been detained on suspicion of endangering security, while police reported that he has been arrested several times since 2010 for attempted murder, drug dealing, domestic violence and assault on police officers.

Commission head Mihailo Jovovic urged the ministry to resolve the motive of this attack, "whether someone attacked Kocan as a journalist, someone sent him [the attacker] there, or it was an attack by an incurable man. If it is revealed that someone sent him, it would be the first time that the preparator of an attack on a journalist was discovered," he told the press conference.

On March 29, civic activists, media organisations and political parties called again on the authorities to protect the safety of journalists and saying they should be given the status of officials. The Ministry of Public Administration, Digital Society and Media announced a consultation on this idea.

"It [official status] should be granted … to introduce a stricter sanctions policy, which will have a deterrent effect," the Southeast European Media Association said in a press release.

Under the criminal code, endangering someone's security incurs a potential...

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