At today’s annual Assembly of the Media Council for Self-Regulation, several issues regarding the work and activities of this body were discussed. The focus was on applications for new membership. After a detailed review of all submitted requests, the Assembly of this media organization decided to grant full membership to 32 media outlets.

The Media Council for Self-Regulation expresses deep concern over the latest actions of the Special State Prosecutor’s Office and Supreme Court judges, who, by extending the pre-trial detention of former Special Prosecutor Milivoje Katnić, used the opportunity to criminalize a group of well-known Montenegrin journalists, intellectuals, and writers.

The Media Council for Self-Regulation recently translated and published the UNESCO study “Handbook for Journalism Educators – Reporting on Artificial Intelligence.” This publication is part of the UNESCO project “Building Trust in Media in Southeast Europe: Supporting Journalism as a Public Good,” supported by the European Union. The project aims to strengthen public trust in media and support quality journalism that serves the public interest.

Ahead of the upcoming parliamentary elections, the OSCE Mission to Montenegro partnered with representatives from media self-regulatory bodies in Montenegro to draft a Manual on effective media reporting during election campaigns with 22 concrete recommendations in line with OSCE and international standards, and the Code of Ethics for Montenegrin Journalists.

Following the presidential elections, several Montenegrin private media have been placing information on alleged irregularities, abuses and malversations related to the electoral process to the Montenegrin public. Unfortunately, instead of helping establish the whole truth via professional journalistic procedures, these media – the leading among them being daily ‘Dan’ – have deeply entered the zone of violating basic professional standards and Codex of Journalists, primarily through violating privacy by publishing identification numbers of citizens, failure to publish rebuttals and by entirely ignoring the basic journalistic rule to hear the other party as well.

Media Council for self regulation presented today on press conference fifth monitoring report on respect of profesional standards in montenegrin media. Compete report is available here..

On 13 and 14 of December 2012 in Budva, Montenegro was held regional conference on self regulation. Conference was organized by Council of Europe in cooperation with Montenegrin Media Council for self regulation. Aim of the conference was discussion about problems media in the region facing with regarding professional and ethical standards. Also one of the main topics was functioning of self regulatory bodies where these bodies exist or problems how to establish self regulatory mechanisms in countries where these bodies don’t exist. On the conference took part participants from Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Romania, Albania and Montenegro as well as international media experts. Each country were