Oliver Vujović

Oliver Vujović (born October 1969) is a Yugoslav, German and Austrian former journalist, co-founder and today Secretary General of the international press freedom group South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO).

Vujović graduated in economics (public relations) and is now PhD candidate in Vienna. As a child he had a role in the TV series Salaš u Malom Ritu (1975).

Between 1987 and 2000 Vujović worked as a freelance journalist in South East Europe, interviewing over 400 leading personalities and publishing over 3500 articles in the period. He worked in Belgrade with Indeks 202, Radio Belgrade (1988-1989 and Radio B92 (1989-1991), of which he was one of the founders,[1] then he was correspondent from the Balkans for the Austrian daily Die Presse in Belgrade (1991-2000). After the Yugoslav Ministry of Information decided to recall his accreditation, from 1994 to 1997 Vujović reported from Skopje (Macedonia) and Szeged (Hungary), also under the pseudonym David Fatschel. In the same period he was also Querleser Wien Correspondent for South East Europe.[2]

In 1998-1999 Vujović later worked in the private sector, as Product manager in Henkel CEE in the Vienna headquarters and as Director and responsible for marketing in the newly founded company Henkel Yugoslavia.[2]

In 1999 he founded together with Christine von Kohl the magazine BALKAN Südosteuropäischer Dialog (later Balkan anders) and supported the establishment of the web portal BalkanPoint.org[3]

In 2000 Vujović founded with a group of 40 editors and media owners the international press freedom group SEEMO, of which he is Secretary General. SEEMO was between 2000 and 2015 affiliate of the International Press Institute. Vujović organised the first meeting between leading media representatives from Serbia and Kosovo (with over 100 editors-in-chief and media executives) in Ohrid in May 2003.[2]

He later founded also the South East and Central Europe PR Organisation (SECEPRO), of which he also is Advisor. He is the initiator of the South East Europe Media Forum (annual event), the Istanbul Media Days (annual event), and the Investigative Journalism Days.[1]

Vujović has been editor, co-editor, author or co-author in several books, publications, research articles, research papers and magazines. Some of publications: Guide for Investigative Reporters, Investigative Reporting in SEE etc. Also editor and publisher of SEEMO Media Handbook (annual), of the book Media and Minorities in South East Europe (2006), and publisher of the De Scripto magazine.[2]

According to a research made for the Romanian Institute, Vujović is the leading expert for media and media situations in South East Europe, with a big political influence. He directly influenced the liberalisation of the visa regime for journalists from South East Europe travelling to the EU, while his protest letters stopped between 2001 and 2004 several governmental decisions that were not in compliance with international standards. As result of one of his protest letters to officials in Tirana, a minister in Albania resigned.

Publications

References

  1. 1 2 OEAD.at
  2. 1 2 3 4 CV, SEEMO.org
  3. Balkan point
  1. Beate Ursula Joseph: Journalism Education in Countries With Limited Media Freedom, page 243-244
  2. Katerina Balabanova Media, Wars and Politics: Comparing the Incomparable in Western and Eastern Europe, Page 74

External links

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