Eastern Europe

Apr 262013

Investigative Reporting Network Follows the Money—And Strikes Gold

Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky may not have died in vain.

ICFJ’s Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) is helping reveal the fate of millions missing from Russia’s treasury—money that Magnitsky contended Russian tax officials stole in a scheme with organized criminals.

OCCRP’s 13 member organizations include investigative reporting centers and news organizations throughout Eastern Europe cooperating to help people in the region understand how organized crime and corruption affect them.

Proxy Platform

The OCCRP has created an international network of investigative reporters tracking and exposing organized crime across Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Republics.

The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP)

One OCCRP project, The Big Bet, examines the criminal elements behind Eastern Europe’s thriving gambling industry.

This program challenges the development community to build citizen demand to reduce corruption, fraud, and other criminal activities through increased exposure to professionally-produced investigative journalism.

See video

Paul Radu’s work on his fellowship has led to a major program helping investigative reporters in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union collaborate across borders. He has also created web resources to help reporters dig for data.

Apr 262010

Pursuing story on energy prices helps resolve municipal problems

Business stories can develop in unexpected, almost mysterious ways, I was reminded recently when the business desk at my host organization took a closer at soaring electricity prices in Serbia. Exploring the factors behind the price hikes showed that some of the long standing problems may not be so impossible to solve as people thought.

Serbia’s state-run power company Elektroprivreda Srbije, or EPS, has been a huge monopoly for decades, a remnant of the Communist era that has dodged several privatization attempts.

Sep 222009

Serbia’s liberals are not so liberal when it comes to media freedom

We all know that politics makes for strange bedfellows, but what happened in Serbia this summer is amazing even by Balkan standards. The country’s long and winding road to democracy took a very strange turn with a new law regulating the media industry. Outlets now face steep fines and the only immediate winners are - lawyers.

 

Dec 242008

Investigative Journalism in the Balkans-a few thoughts

2008 has been a good year for investigative journalism across Balkans’ borders. Investigative journalism centers and networks increased the level of cooperation as they’re finding new common themes to work on.2008 has been a good year for investigative journalism across Balkans’ borders. Investigative journalism centers and networks increased the level of cooperation as they’re finding new common themes to work on.