Monitor (magazine)
Editor-in-chief | Esad Kočan |
---|---|
Categories | News magazine |
Circulation | Weekly |
First issue | October 19, 1990 |
Company | Monitor Ltd. |
Country | Montenegro |
Based in | Podgorica |
Language | Montenegrin |
Website | monitor.co.me |
Monitor (Serbo-Croatian pronunciation: [mǒnitor]) is a weekly news magazine published in Podgorica.
History
Started on October 19, 1990 by journalist
The Socialist Republic of Montenegro was ruled by the Yugoslav Communist League's (SKJ) Montenegrin branch (SKCG); more specifically the triumvirate of Momir Bulatović, Milo Đukanović, and Svetozar Marović[1] who were swept into power the previous year during the anti-bureaucratic revolution, an administrative putsch within Montenegrin Communist League initiated by Slobodan Milošević and carried out with the great deal of help from the state security apparatus that he had gained control of by this time.
Publications
The first issue of Monitor was printed in Sarajevo in 20,000 copies and then distributed in SR Montenegro where it sold in symbolic numbers—only couple of hundred of copies. Although the magazine listed 76 individuals as its founders (among them politicians Slavko Perović, Žarko Rakčević, Ljubiša Stanković, Dragiša Burzan, etc.[2]), in actuality only the editor-in-chief Miodrag "Miško" Perović and main financier Stanislav "Ćano" Koprivica had actual influence on its editorial policy. Following the poor sales of the first issue, the magazine effectively went bankrupt and was only kept alive via individual donations. The subsequent eight issues were also printed in Sarajevo.
Since Koprivica also generously financed the Liberal Alliance of Montenegro (LSCG) and Social Democratic Party (SDP), Monitor was in essence another arm of the same political front. Somewhat similar in tone and political stance to other newly-launched liberal publications throughout Yugoslavia such as Belgrade's Vreme or Split's Feral Tribune, Monitor was also critical of the rising nationalism across the country, especially of the Slobodan Milošević-led authorities in SR Serbia. Furthermore, it also frequently criticized the SR Montenegro leadership, considering them to be Milošević's pawns.
As the League of Communists of Montenegro transformed into the
By spring 1994, Koprivica mostly ended his financial support of Monitor, which is when Miško Perović took over that aspect of the magazine's operation as well. Organizationally, the magazine was under the umbrella of Perović's Montenegropublic company. Although
In September 1995, the magazine's place in the Montenegropublic's organizational structure changed when it was registered within the company as a distinct entity with Željko Ivanović as its managing director.[3] On the same occasion, the same was done with Montenegropublic's other assets: radio station Antena M and radio production studio Mouse.
By the late 1990s, most on the list of original owners signed their stake in the magazine over to Perović, who thus basically became the sole owner.[4]
See also
References
- ^ SKCG campaign for 1990 parliamentary elections in Montenegro - first multy-party elections
- ^ Miodrag Perović, dvadeset godina nakon rušenja Berlinskog zida: Crna Gora je zarobljena zemlja koja tek treba da doživi svoju 1989, projektovana da bude zemlja posluge oligarha i mafijaša, Monitor, December 19, 2009
- ^ Srđan Kusovac: Krajem 1995 započeli su realizaciju projekta “dnevni list”; Pobjeda, 25 March 2010
- ^ Srđan Kusovac o stvaranju “Monitora”, Jokić: Miodrag Perović je procijenio da bi ga spor kompromitovao, jer bi se iznijela istinu o načinu na koji je stekao ogroman novac koji je kasnije, kako sam saznao uložio i u banke čija će se vrijednost mjeriti stotinama miliona eura
External links
- The Monitor website (in Montenegrin)