06 January 2009
EFJ Calls on European Union to "Tell Whole Truth" As Journalist is Cleared of Corruption
The
European Federation of Journalists (EFJ), the European group of the
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) today welcomed the decision of
Belgian prosecutors to dismiss a complaint of bribery brought by the European
Anti-Fraud Office against a Brussels-based journalist.
After
five years Belgium
has finally cleared journalist Hans-Martin Tillack, a reporter for Stern Magazine, over a complaint against
him launched from within the European Union hierarchy.
"Although
the apparent intent was to uncover an insider who was feeding him information, nonsensical
allegations of bribery originating from inside the European Commission were clearly
an attempt to discredit him, his character and his journalism," said Aidan White, EFJ/IFJ General Secretary in Brussels.
According
to Tillack's lawyer, a Brussels judge today dismissed the complaint against him
for lack of evidence.
Tillack was first accused in 2002 of bribing an
unidentified European Union official when he was working in Brussels. A complaint to Belgian police led
to raids on his home and office and seizure of his files, telephones and
computer material. A similar complaint, lodged with the German police, was
dismissed within months.
The
European Court of Human Rights in 2007 condemned the police action saying they
breached the journalist's right to protect his sources and ordered the Belgian
government to pay him 40.000 Euro and 10.000 Euro in material and moral damages
respectively.
The
EFJ/IFJ criticised the Belgian police inquiry but said that the original complaints
were laid deliberately, not just to identify an unofficial source within the
European bureaucracy, "but to intimidate the reporter and to constrain his work
of investigating corruption and wrongdoing."
The
EFJ/IFJ has called on the European Union authorities to respond to the latest court
decision by taking responsibility for the mistakes made by its officials, by
apologising to the journalists and by carrying out an independent inquiry to
get to the bottom of a controversy that has for years cast a shadow over
relations between Brussels journalists and the Commission.
"It
is now time to tell the whole truth about how and why these complaints were
made," said White. "There should be an independent inquiry, those who made
mistakes and acted irresponsibly should be held to account, and there should be
full apologies for this tawdry story of politics and policing."
For more information contact the IFJ at
+32 2 235 2207
The IFJ represents over 600,000 journalists in 123 countries worldwide











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