Kurir
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Type | Daily newspaper |
Format | Tabloid |
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Owner | Radisav Rodić |
Editor | Antonije Kovačević |
Founded | May 6, 2003 |
Political allegiance | - |
Headquarters | Vlajkovićeva 8, 11000 Beograd, Serbia |
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Website: / kurir-info.co.yu |
Kurir is a high-circulation daily tabloid published in Belgrade. Its first issue appeared at the news stands on May 6, 2003.
In true tabloid style Kurir's tone is abrasive, direct and irreverent. It runs sensationalist stories, often not properly verified, the other serious publications won't touch. Although the paper heavily relies on celebrity gossip it also achieved considerable political influence. With a constantly growing circulation, often in excess of 300,000 copies, no seriuos politician or party in Serbia can afford to ignore it.
[edit] History
While Kurirs history is short, it is also a checkered one. It goes back to the state of emergency declared following the assassination of Serbia's Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, when another daily tabloid named Nacional was shut down.
Using its broad powers under the state of emergency act, Serbian government's Ministry of Culture and Information headed by Branislav Lečić issued a temporary ban on publication of Nacional daily on March 18, 2003 for "publishing a number of articles relating to the state of emergency and for questioning the reasons behind the state of emergency".[1] Then on April 1, 2003, the Belgrade city commercial court started liquidation proceedings against Nacional's publisher in Belgrade, Info Orfej. Despite an appeal, the company's equipment, including 118 computers, was seized on April 21, 2003, two days before the state of emergency ended.
Many of the former Nacional staffers found employment in newly formed Kurir, including Dragan J. Vučićević, ex Nacional deputy-editor-in-chief who took the same post at Kurir. New paper bore an uncanny resemblance to the old one, both in tone and layout. This led many critics to conclude that Kurir continued right where Nacional left off. In addition to Kurir, another similar daily tabloid Balkan attempted to move into the void left by Nacional's ban. Even the original Nacional sort of reappered - under the same financial backing, new staff, and a new name Internacional. However, neither publication could keep up commercially. Balkan folded in early 2005 while Internacional changed its name to Srpski nacional along with a format makover.
Many credit Kurir for providing the final nudge to Prime Minister Zoran Zivkovic's shaky government, forcing it to call early elections for December 28, 2003. Throughout fall of 2003, Kurir mercilessly ran stories of dodgy voting practices in Serbian parliament and blasted the ruling coalition (DOS) MP Neda Arneric for misusing her parliamentary voting rights. The entire fiasco became know as the 'Bodrum scandal'.
They also wrote to no end about Minister of the Interior Dusan Mihajlovic's shady deals done through his own Lutra company. Sources that supplied Kurir with all this insider info appear to be members of G17 Plus which led some observers to accuse this party's leadership of deliberate character-assassination by feeding information to a tabloid they knew would publish anything.
Kurir, for their part quickly turned on G17 too, as soon as they came into power. Tabloid wrote about their party's president (and since March 2004 deputy PM) Miroljub Labus' conflict of interest in arranging for his daughter to get a scholarship through Ericsson company while later taking part in negotiations between that corporation with Serbian telekom.[2]
Later, they turned on National Bank of Serbia governor Radovan Jelasic (also from G17 plus). The issue was his plush villa in the elite Belgrade suburb of Dedinje that governor said he bought for 350,000 euros. Kurir on the other hand claimed it could not have cost under million and a half and finally even found a buyer who offered Jelasic a million for the house. This forced the governor to somewhat modify his original claim and the issue is still unresolved.
On December 8, 2005 it was announced that 90% of Kurir's staff and all but one member of its editorial board left Kurir for undisclosed reasons. Among this group were editor-in-chief Djoko Kesić and his deputy Dragan J. Vučićević, meaning that last issue under their supervision appeared on December 7, 2005.[3]
Kurir named Antonije Kovačević as acting editor-in-chief until permanent replacement is found.
Since May 6, 2006 there is a special issue of Kurir for the western European countries.
[edit] External links
- Kurir official website