rferl.org 
<https://www.rferl.org/a/serbia-belgrade-election-video-dirty-tricks/32724415.html>
  


With Leak Of Private Video, The Dirty Tricks Begin In Key Belgrade Election 
Battle


Dusan Komarcevic, RFE/RL's Balkan Service

9–11 minutes

  _____  

When international observers visited Serbia at the end of November, they noted 
that the campaign for the December 17 local and regional elections was "highly 
polarized" and marked by "unprecedented" fearmongering and attacks on the 
opposition.

A few days after the election monitors from the Parliamentary Assembly of the 
Council of Europe (PACE) left, things got even worse.

A video showing a Belgrade opposition candidate, Djordje Miketic, enjoying an 
intimate moment was shared across social media and messaging apps. Screenshots 
of the video were then plastered across the front pages of pro-government 
tabloids. On some TV channels, family-friendly clips of the private tape were 
broadcast on the news.

While the latest polls 
<http://www.nspm.rs/istrazivanja-javnog-mnjenja/srbija-novembar-2023.-sns-392-odsto-srbija-protiv-nasilja-25.8.html>
  show that the country's longtime leader, President Aleksandar Vucic, and his 
Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) are on course to win the elections nationwide, 
the race for Belgrade hangs in the balance, with one October poll 
<https://crta.rs/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/CRTA-Istrazivanje-javnog-menjenja-Spetembar-2023.pdf>
  forecasting what would be a rare triumph for the opposition.

Vucic has been in power in Serbia since 2014, first as prime minister and then 
as president. In presidential and parliamentary elections in April 2022, 
Vucic's party won 60 percent of the vote, with the incumbent himself winning a 
new five-year term as president.

These elections are likely to be more of a challenge for Vucic, with the main 
pro-European opposition parties forming a new coalition, Serbia Against 
Violence. That was the slogan of the protesters who took to the streets of 
Serbia this summer, following two mass shootings in May that killed 19 people, 
including 10 in a school. Tens of thousands of Serbian citizens came out onto 
the streets to protest the government's response to the shootings, calling on 
Vucic and other top officials to resign.

'A Message To All Opponents'

One of the members of the new opposition coalition is the left-wing Together 
party, which has five seats in Serbia's 250-seat parliament, the National 
Assembly. Among the party's lawmakers is Miketic, a writer and activist who has 
repeatedly criticized Vucic, Serbia's government, and the local authorities in 
Belgrade.

On November 27, Miketic posted on X, formerly Twitter, saying he had received 
an intimate photo from an unknown phone number in the Viber messaging app. He 
published a screenshot of the photo, which shows a man and woman with blurred 
faces in an intimate position, accompanied by a message saying, "Did you 
prepare Mom for this?"

Miketic said that he received the message less than 12 hours after Vucic said 
that he was a "human disgrace" and implied, in remarks aired on national 
television, that he knew something about the opposition politician. As a 
result, Serbia Against Violence has accused the national Security Intelligence 
Agency (BIA) of facilitating and Vucic ordering the release of the video, 
accusations that both have denied.



Aleksandar Vucic appears on Serbian Progressive Party billboards ahead of the 
December 17 elections in Belgrade. 

On November 29, two days after Miketic's X post, the intimate video became 
widely available online, shared across social and messaging apps, with some 
government supporters claiming the woman was a prostitute. Parts of the video 
were even broadcast on the private Pink TV channel, which is owned by Serbian 
media magnate Zeljko Mitrovic and is known for its pro-government coverage.

Miketic, who is married, confirmed its authenticity and said that the video had 
been stored on a laptop that was stolen from his apartment during a break-in in 
January 2022. Speaking to RFE/RL's Balkan Service, Miketic said that he had 
reported a burglary, the police investigated, but the perpetrators were never 
found.

"The point of this recording was not only to intimidate me, but it is a message 
to all opponents of this regime. If you raise your voice, we will look into 
your private lives, your friends, wives, children, the parties you go to, the 
websites you visit," Miketic said in a statement quoted by Serbian media on 
November 29.

"I don't know what else [better shows] the type of dictatorship we are [living] 
in." Following the publication of the video and accusations that the woman was 
a prostitute, Miketic's wife issued a statement in support of her husband. It's 
not clear when the video was made or what Miketic's marital status was at the 
time.

On December 1, Miketic announced that he was withdrawing from the election 
campaign to protect his family and to devote himself to a legal fight following 
the publication of the video. "I do not want the public slander and tabloid 
attacks on me to threaten the campaign of the Serbia Against Violence 
coalition," Miketic told RFE/RL's Balkan Service. It is not clear yet whether 
he will keep his seat in Serbia's parliament.

Domestic Snooping

The publication of the private video was condemned by Miketic's fellow 
opposition candidates and parties. Serbia Against Violence's candidate for 
Belgrade mayor, Vladimir Obradovic, condemned the attack. "I think that [the 
leaking of the video] has crossed all boundaries of a decent political campaign 
and that this is the dirtiest thing we have ever seen," Obradovic told 
<https://n1info.rs/vesti/izbori-2023/djodjrdje-miketic-se-povukao/>  Serbian 
television N1 on December 1.

In a joint statement published on December 2, the opposition coalition alleged 
that Vucic "ordered the publication" of the video, which it said was 
facilitated by the BIA. "Everything we see and learn indicates clear abuse by 
the security services, which instead of dealing with citizens' safety, served 
to monitor and demonize opposition politicians."



Protesters block traffic on the main highway passing through Belgrade, Serbia, 
Protesters and opposition activists stop traffic in several places around the 
country in June, following weeks of anti-government protests that drew tens of 
thousands to the streets after two back-to-back mass shootings in early May. 

In two separate statements, BIA denied responsibility for "the making or 
distribution" of the video. "No one other than Mr. Miketic and other 
participants…from the explicit video can be held responsible for its origin as 
well as its distribution," the agency said, adding that Miketic "opened up the 
topic of his video in public and he himself must bear the consequences of his 
decision."

In the statement, the intelligence agency also said that it had launched an 
investigation aimed at "establishing all the circumstances related to the video 
itself and the people in it" and said that "it was irrefutably established" 
that the video was "made by a male person who was in the same room."

President Vucic also denied any involvement and accused Miketic of using the 
video to "present himself as a victim." Speaking on Serbia's private Happy TV 
on November 29, Vucic said that the opposition candidate "knows very well who 
filmed him" and that it was not the BIA.

"The Security Intelligence Agency immediately started an investigation and 
concluded that it was taken from a video [and] was not made by a secret camera. 
In the information, I received from the BIA, it was filmed from close range by 
one of their friends," Vucic said.

Prime Minister Ana Brnabic, who is a member of Vucic's SNS party, also denied 
that the footage was leaked from state security structures.

The video leak came amid warnings 
<https://pace.coe.int/en/news/9290/early-parliamentary-elections-in-serbia-pace-pre-electoral-observers-note-highly-polarised-campaign-urge-measures-ahead-of-vote>
  by the PACE of a "highly polarized campaign" before the December 17 
elections, "marked by an unprecedented level of negative campaigning and 
fearmongering, attacks against the opposition and journalists, and serious 
issues related to the media."

During a visit to Serbia on November 23-24, a team of PACE preelection 
observers noted "inflammatory rhetoric, including by high-level officials, and 
hate speech," as well as "pressure being used against opposition members, 
journalists, and civil society activists."

Commenting on the April 2022 elections dominated by Vucic and his party, the 
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said that the voting was 
marred by an uneven playing field, which favored the incumbents. "The combined 
impact of unbalanced access to media, undue pressure on public-sector employees 
to support the incumbents, significant campaign-finance disparities, and misuse 
of administrative resources, led to unequal conditions for contestants," the 
organization's statement of preliminary findings and conclusions found.

Rasa Nedeljkov, program director at the Belgrade-based Center for Research, 
Transparency, and Accountability, which has been regularly monitoring elections 
in Serbia since 2016, told RFE/RL's Balkan Service that this incendiary 
rhetoric came from the government and the president himself. "In his speeches, 
[he] divides the citizens and incites a kind of referendum struggle that tells 
the citizens that, if one political party does not win, there will be bloodshed 
in Serbia," he said.

Serbia's Regulatory Authority for Electronic Media initiated proceedings 
against Pink TV after it showed the video in its morning programming on 
December 1. "The content of the show is clearly of a political preelection 
character (and marked as such)," the regulatory body said 
<https://www.rem.rs/sr-lat/arhiva/vesti/2023/12/pokrenut-postupak-protiv-pmu-tv-pink#gsc.tab=0>
 .

"On the other hand, a sexual act is a completely private event that cannot be 
linked to the nature of information related to political life."


Written by Elitsa Simeonova in Prague based on reporting by Dusan Komarcevic 
and RFE/RL's Balkan Service


 

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