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Mockery of Press Freedom in Montenegro

Investigative Journalist Should be Free on Bail as Trial Proceeds

Update: On January 17, 2023, the Montenegro Appeals Court cleared Jovo Martinovic of all charges after a seven-year process, including 15 months in detention.

Update: On January 15, 2019, the Higher Court in Podgorica found Martinovic guilty and sentenced him to 18 months in prison for alleged drug trafficking and membership in a criminal organization. He will appeal the verdict. Martinovic already served 14 and half months in prison so faces another possible three and half behind bars.

The one-year detention of Montenegrin journalist Jovo Martinović has raised questions about the country’s commitment to a free press. The start of his trial last week did nothing to allay those concerns.

Detained Montenegrin investigative journalist Jovo Martinović. © Courtesy of Martinović family

Authorities arrested the investigative reporter, known for his exposés on organized crime, in October 2015 with 16 others, charging them with drug trafficking. Journalists who have worked with Martinović – from the Economist, Financial Times, Süddeutsche Zeitung and Vice, among others – sprang to his defense. He personified professionalism and integrity, they said.

Martinović has argued from the start that the sole reason he spent time with the criminal group was his work as a journalist. As he has in other projects, he wanted to document their work.

To date, the evidence against Martinović offered by deputy special prosecutor Mira Samardžić is weak, at best. She has allegedly incriminating statements from two of Martinović’s co-accused, both of whom face jail sentences and have an incentive to cooperate with prosecutors. She also has recorded phone conversations between Martinović and the alleged gang leader, Dusko Martinović (no relation), but defense lawyers and others who have read the transcripts say they contain nothing to incriminate Jovo.

 

Detained Montenegrin investigative journalist Jovo Martinović. ©Courtesy of Martinović family

Indeed, during the first court session on October 27, Dusko Martinović himself said his relationship with Jovo was purely of a journalistic nature: Jovo wanted to make a documentary about the so-called Pink Panther jewel thieves.

The prosecutor has ignored calls from press freedom and human rights groups to free Jovo on bail pending trial. 

By itself, the trial raises serious freedom of expression concerns. Taken together with a spate of civil defamation lawsuits, smear campaigns, and impunity for attacks on journalists, as documented by Human Rights Watch and others, Montenegro seems dismissive of its obligations to respect media freedom. 

As an aspirant to join the European Union, Montenegro also must heed established standards on freedom of expression. The European Commission should highlight this in accession talks to ensure that journalists like Martinović can do their jobs.

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