06. dec. 2007 – kl. 10.25

EU-reporter vinder sag om kildebeskyttelse

Tillack-sagen er slut. Afgørelsen blev en vigtig sejr for ytringsfriheden og kildebeskyttelsen. Klart signal til EU om at være forsigtig i angreb på journalister.

Hans-Martin Tillack, tidl. Bruxelles-korrespondent for tyske Stern, får ret – og erstatning på 40.000 euro. Belgisk politi begik overgreb mod ytringsfriheden, da man ransagede hans hjem og kontor i jagten på EU-lækager. Det har Menneskerettighedsdomstolen i Strasbourg netop afgjort.

Initiativet til razziaen i 2004 blev taget af OLAF, EU's anti-korrutionsafdeling, som ville spore kilderne til Tillacks artikler om finansskandaler i EU-systemet. Men der skete aldrig mere. Mistanken blev ikke til tiltale.

I dag hævder EU-kommissionen, at den aldrig har bedt belgisk politi om at ransage hos Tillack og at Kommissionen derfor ikke er part i sagen. Men de færreste iagttagere tror på denne udlægning.

Aidan White, generalsekretær i European Federation of Journalists, kræver at OLAF lægger alle facts på bordet:

”Vi kan ikke lukke denne sag, før vi har garantier for, at den slags aktioner mod journalister aldrig vil gentage sig.”

En lovændring i Belgien har siden razziaen medført, at den belgiske kildebeskyttelse er blevet stærkt forbedret.


EFJs pressemeddelelse:

Media Release
27 November 2007

EFJ Welcomes Victory in Tillack Case -- Now Full Story Must Be Told

The European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) today welcomed the stunning victory in the European Court of Human Rights in the case of Hans-Martin Tillack, a reporter whose house and offices were raided by Belgian police on the urging of fraud investigators within the European Unions three years ago.

"At last this shocking violation of journalists' rights has been rectified," said Aidan White, EFJ General Secretary, who in 2004 sat alongside Tillack, a reporter for the German magazine Stern, while Belgian police trawled through boxes of his personal files in an efforts to find a whistleblower inside the European Commission who had fed him information about financial scandals. "Now we want to know who ordered the police to be called in and why have the Belgian police taken so long to come up with a report."

The EFJ, which supported Tillack in court cases against the Commission and in his appeal to the European Court, says the judgement once again reinforces the protection given by European law to journalists to protect their sources and against unlawful seizure of their material.

The EFJ says that a full report of who authorised the action against Tillack and who delivered the demands to the Belgian police to investigate him must be made by the European Union Anti-Fraud agency OLAF.

"It's time for OLAF to tell the full story," said White. "We can only draw a line under this case when we know that action has been taken to ensure this sort of vindictive acation against a reporter some people found troublesome will never be repeated."

Belgian police raided Tillack’s home and office and seized papers and confidential documents after OLAF officials complained about him, claiming that he had bribed officials for information about alleged fraud at the EU statistics agency, Eurostat, which he published in two articles in 2002. No evidence has emerged to sustain this complaint and three years after the searches there has been no official report and no charges brought against Tillack, who worked for Stern in Brussels from 1999 to 2004 covering EU affairs.

The case shocked journalists working in the Brussels’ press corps and increased fears within the European journalists’ community that government officials and national police forces have increasing disregard for protection of journalists’ sources.

For more information contact Aidan White, General Secretary International Federation of Journalists at aidan.white@ifj.org or + 32 478 258 669

The EFJ represents over 250,000 journalists in over 30 countries

Tags: Mediejura, Mediepolitik, Pressefrihed Af: Andreas

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