This summary is part of a research project carried out between March and October 2006 in support of the International Institute for Communication and Development (IICD), one of The Communication Initiative (The CI)'s partners.
In the lead up to open hostilities in Yugoslavia, as various media outlets began to broadcast ethnically intolerant criticism of anti-government groups, Belgrade’s Radio B92 refused to participate in race-baiting and pro-Serbian censored government statements. As a result, the station came under the scrutiny of pro-government censors and a secret police apparatus that actively attempted to close and inhibit the station’s news distribution.
Attention began focusing on Radio B92 when it distributed information by a critical group of purged university professors, docents, assistants and researchers - called ETF Monkeys - about the government’s attacks on independent universities in Yugoslavia. After the Serbian government adopted legislation regulating activities at universities and overseeing a subsequent purge of ‘politically unsuitable’ personnel (a total of 58), the ETF Monkeys began distributing news and commentary against the Serbian government and ruling elites.
Despite several attempts to shut down Radio B92, some of which were temporarily successful, Radio B92 managed to distribute its reports domestically via information and communication technology (ICT) cooperation with international allies. Principally, Radio B92’s efforts revolved around internet (streaming audio in Real Audio format) and email news services.
The author asserts that once the government realised that its efforts for full closure were unsuccessful, it encouraged its allies and agents to commit minor isolated attacks on the internet servers aiding Radio B92 and its associated un-censored allies. The author cites four specific types of government-induced internet censorship tactics: investigating Radio B92 staff’s email communications with foreigners (1992); infiltrating OpenNet with secret police informants (1996); pressuring Telecommunications providers to give access to encrypted files (1997); and lastly, hijacking the domains of both b92.net and opennet.org (1999). The author further claims that the common feature of these activities were to monitor the activities of the media outlets’ employees, and that the most serious activities focused on explicit censorship of Radio B92’s servers and radio frequency jamming/station closure.