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...protesters drew up their excavator and set the entry on fire, overwhelmed troops scooted out the back. The broadcast--the only one seen regularly throughout the country--of an orchestral concert blacked out, as smoke wreathed the tower. Total victory seemed assured when the notoriously tame state news agency, Tanjug, defected to the opposition, calling Kostunica the "elected President of Yugoslavia" in a dispatch signed "Journalists of liberated Tanjug...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The End Of Milosevic | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

...bestial attack on civilian targets last night, NATO barbarians destroyed two bridges in Krusevac community," Tanjug reported May 2 after alliance bombers destroyed a bridge near Pristina, the capital of Kosovo. The report goes on to describe, in bombing, which Tanjug claims killed "at least 60 people." The story was accompanied by a photo of the remains of a bus that was destroyed during the attack, over the caption "NATO genocide in Yugoslavia...

Author: By Alan E. Wirzbicki, | Title: War in the Information Age | 5/6/1999 | See Source »

...Committee to Protect Journalists. Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, along with Fidel Castro of Cuba and Jiang Zemin of China, tops a list of enemies of the free press released by the committee Monday. Milosevic has been notoriously intolerant of independent journalists, both foreign and Yugoslavian. As for Tanjug, it operates out of something called the Ministry of Information, whose sinister, Orwellian name doesn't inspire much confidence in its objectivity...

Author: By Alan E. Wirzbicki, | Title: War in the Information Age | 5/6/1999 | See Source »

This is hardly the only diatribe against the Western press you'll find on the Tanjug wire. A good percentage of the news agency's articles attack stories in the British and American media, particularly those on CNN, which Tanjug says is assuming "a leading role in the new propaganda undertaking...

Author: By Alan E. Wirzbicki, | Title: War in the Information Age | 5/6/1999 | See Source »

Internet access may not be as widespread in Yugoslavia as it is here, but it is the most formidable obstacle any propagandist has ever faced. Tanjug's news stories, thinly veiled propaganda bulletins, now have to compete with the real thing from independent news sources--or at the very least with the NATO version of events...

Author: By Alan E. Wirzbicki, | Title: War in the Information Age | 5/6/1999 | See Source »

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