From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Al Jazeera Balkans
Television channel
Television channel
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Al Jazeera Balkans |
| logo | Al_Jazeera_Balkans.png |
| logo_size | 150px |
| image | Al Jazeera Balkans glavni studio Sarajevo.JPG |
| launch_date | |
| closed_date | |
| picture_format | 16:9 1080i (HDTV) |
| parent | Al Jazeera Media Network |
| key_people | Tarik Đođić (General Director) |
| caption | Al Jazeera Balkans's former headquarters at ARIA Center in Sarajevo |
| country | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
| language | Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian |
| area | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
| Croatia | |
| Kosovo | |
| North Macedonia | |
| Montenegro | |
| Serbia | |
| Slovenia | |
| affiliates | Radio Studio 99 |
| headquarters | Sarajevo |
| Trg djece Sarajeva 1 | |
| (inside ARIA Centar) | |
| replaced | NTV 99 |
| sister_channels | Al Jazeera English |
| Al Jazeera Arabic | |
| Al Jazeera Documentary Channel | |
| website | |
| terr_serv_1 | Analogue (Bosnia) |
| terr_chan_1 | Sarajevo area UHF 56 |
| Fojnica area UHF 36 | |
| terr_serv_2 | evotv (Croatia) |
| terr_chan_2 | Channel 105 |
| online_serv_1 | AJB player |
| online_chan_1 |
Šemsudin Skejić (Head of News)
Svjetlana Mustafić (Online editor) Croatia Kosovo North Macedonia Montenegro Serbia Slovenia Trg djece Sarajeva 1 (inside ARIA Centar) Al Jazeera Arabic Al Jazeera Documentary Channel Fojnica area UHF 36
Al Jazeera Balkans (AJB) was an international news television station headquartered in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina aimed at the media markets of the countries that used to be constituent units of SFR Yugoslavia. Part of the Al Jazeera Media Network, it was launched in 2011.
The station broadcast in local variants of the "common language spoken in Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Montenegro" (commonly known as Serbo-Croatian) from 7:30 to 3:30 CET (starting and ending 30 minutes later on the weekends), with both live, pre-recorded original content and subtitled Al Jazeera English programming. The live dirty feed of Al Jazeera English was simulcast the remainder of hours with a text-bug reading "Gledate AJE" () at the top-right corner of the screen. Al Jazeera Balkans was a sister channel of the Arabic language Al Jazeera and the English language channel Al Jazeera English. The station broadcast news analysis and features, as well as documentaries, live debates, current affairs, business, technology and sports news.
History
Purchase
On 22 September 2010, after months of speculation, the Qatari government-endowed Al Jazeera Media Network announced the US$1.56 million purchase of NTV 99, a local channel based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Named Al Jazeera Balkans (AJB), the project was envisioned as "a leader in providing high quality news and current affairs in the region [of former Yugoslavia]" with planned offices throughout the Balkans and bureaus in key locations worldwide.
Preparation
Soon after the purchase announcement, Al Jazeera made a lease agreement with BBI Real Estate regarding the usage of the 800m2 space at the top floors of Sarajevo's ARIA Centar. The station also leased office space in the B2 building located at the top of Balkanska Street in central Belgrade, across the street from Hotel Moskva, converting it into a remote television studio.
In parallel, it set about staffing its planned Balkans operation whose launch was set for January 2011. With the Slobodna Bosna newsmagazine reporting Al Jazeera Balkans offering minimum monthly salaries in excess of €1,000 as well as 5-year term contracts, the run on the station by interested local journalists was sizable.
The network also decided to go after marquee local names for top editorial and/or management positions. It began looking at Croatian state broadcaster HRT's personnel in this regard with Aleksandar Stanković, Denis Latin, and Goran Milić being mentioned as potential transfer targets. Other established names being discussed were additional Yutel veterans such as Zekerijah Smajić and Ivica Puljić, as well as former HRT and Nova TV personality Mirjana Hrga, and Arijana Saračević-Helać from Federalna televizija. However, Stanković reportedly turned down the news director post, saying he was not interested in a management position at this stage of his career. At one point local Sarajevo outlets even announced Latin as AJB's new general director while Milić explicitly denied any negotiations with the network. In the end, the opposite occurred with Milić getting the news director job while Latin eventually decided to stay put at HRT. For the general director position, Al Jazeera hired Tarik Đođić, former general secretary at the Bosnia-Herzegovina Foreign Trade Chamber (VTK).
By the beginning of 2011 it was clear the planned January launch would be postponed as Milić was finishing up at HRT with a rousing sendoff following his final Dnevnik newscast. The veteran broadcaster soon moved to Sarajevo, marking his professional return to the city having previously worked there from 1990 until 1992, first as part of Yutel and later as the Bosnian government's spokesperson in the initial months of the Bosnian War.
In late March 2011, the station aimed for a late summer / early fall launch in September, with news director Milić reflecting on how Al Jazeera Balkans might fit into the Balkans media scene: "There are over 100 television stations in the region [former Yugoslavia] at the moment. We cannot hope to compete with them on the local level, but Al Jazeera will offer its regional access, an idea which was abandoned in the 90s due to wars and emotions those conflicts triggered".
Over the coming months, Al Jazeera Balkans looked into different broadcast models. For a while it entertained the idea of taking over a local station in each of the former Yugoslav countries and turning them into broadcast affiliates. To that end, news appeared about the Qatar Media Corporation making a €25 million bid for TV Avala, a Serbian network with nationwide broadcasting license controlled by Serbian tycoon Željko Mitrović. The approach was confirmed by TV Avala's general manager Bojana Lekić, receiving significant coverage in the Serbian media, especially after information appeared about the Al Jazeera Balkans job interview process including a question about the status of Kosovo. Reportedly, Al Jazeera Balkans wanted to know explicitly where their prospective journalist employees, particularly those from Serbia, stood on the issue of Kosovo's independence. Asked about this hiring practice, news director Milić said: "I can't recall specifically whether that question was asked, but I believe it had been. Those are the questions we ask because we must know what our journalists think about certain issues. Our starting point is the reality that in this part of the world certain countries recognize Kosovo as an independent state while others do not".
The affiliate broadcast model was ultimately abandoned as AJB opted for individual deals with local cable and IPTV providers. Additionally, it decided to provide terrestrial coverage in the Sarajevo area as well as satellite transmission and live web streaming on its own site and on YouTube.
Launch
With €15 million reportedly invested in the project (according to general director Đođić), Al Jazeera Balkans began broadcasting on 11 November 2011, launching their website on the same day. The network's visual appearance was mainly based on that of its English-language counterpart, which lasted until 1 February 2015, when the channel adopted a new graphics package that looked more similar to Al Jazeera America. It broadcast from the Eutelsat W3C satellite, and also offered a live web stream just like its Arabic and English counterparts.
Final broadcast and signal shutdown
Al Jazeera Balkans ceased live news broadcasting on 12 July 2025, concluding nearly 14 years of continuous operation since its launch in 2011. The final live news program aired at 12:00 PM local time, with news presenter Dalija Hasanbegović Konaković delivering the closing sign-off. In her farewell message, Hasanbegović Konaković expressed gratitude to viewers for their sustained trust and support, highlighting the channel’s dedication to providing a platform for underrepresented voices and upholding the principles of truthful and ethical journalism.
Following the final live broadcast, Al Jazeera Balkans continued to air pre-recorded content until the end of July 2025, after which the channel’s signal was scheduled to be discontinued.
The parent company, based in Doha, has not publicly disclosed detailed reasons for the closure; however, reports suggest that financial considerations and strategic business decisions played a significant role. The shutdown affected more than 250 employees.
Audience and programming
According to a report from the Associated Press, "media experts say they hope the broadcaster will offer objective news to a public that was exposed for two decades to local media heavily influenced by politics." Al Jazeera Balkans had a modern studio in Sarajevo and smaller studios in Belgrade and Zagreb. The station had correspondents in Podgorica, Pristina, Mostar, Banja Luka, and Skopje, who reported in the local variants of the Serbo-Croatian language. The station had reporters based in Washington, D.C., London, Berlin, Vienna, Moscow, Istanbul and Jerusalem by utilizing the resources of the current Al Jazeera bureaus around the world. The network served viewers in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia.
Programmes
Al Jazeera Balkans produced its daily content as well as some weekly content (Al Jazeera Business and Sportski magazin) in its studios located at the ARIA Centar. Its weekly interview programmes, Oni pobjeđuju and Recite Al Jazeeri, were shot on remote locations.
Reaction and reception
Bosnia and Herzegovina
With the September 2010 announcement of Qatar Media Corporation buying NTV 99 with a view of turning it into a Balkans-wide news channel, Boro Kontić, head of the Open Society-funded journalist training facility Mediacenter in Sarajevo, likened the arrival of the Arab media conglomerate to the atmosphere before the start of the Bosnian War, when it was announced that Sarajevo was to become regional headquarters for the European TV channel Euronews: "People aren't afraid of a new war, exactly, but rather political upheaval. People feel they are being monitored, if such a large international media company moves into the local market. But it has the potential to become an objective and independent information channel in the Balkans and it could also help to overcome the petty interests that arose after the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia - be it in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia or Montenegro". In terms of Al Jazeera Balkans viewership prospects, Kontić said: "In the beginning it will probably be interesting for people to watch it, because they may be tired of local television stations -- so-called public stations, but what are in essence politically controlled. So they may be interested to see whether there is a different perspective on the region [from Al-Jazeera]. But we have a saying: a wonder lasts but three days".
Borka Rudić, general secretary of the Bosnian-Herzegovinian Journalists Association, found Al Jazeera's decision to come to Bosnia-Herzegovina especially interesting in light of the country not having a strong media market, saying: "Money is not the reason behind the network's decision to settle here. No TV station is completely immune to the desire for political influence. I believe Al Jazeera will affect the public opinion in Bosnia, but I don't fear the strengthening influence of radical Islamic forces. I do not think that the arrival of Al Jazeera immediately increases the influence from the East, or that this was the motive for Al Jazeera to settle in Sarajevo".
Serbia
The June 2011 revelation of Al Jazeera Balkans asking its job applicants to state their personal position/opinion regarding the international status of Kosovo with the answer potentially determining whether they get hired or not while at the same time making a takeover bid for Serbian nationwide television network TV Avala caused a lot of reaction in the country.
Slobodan Reljić, former editor-in-chief at the NIN magazine conveyed that he was not particularly shocked at the way Al Jazeera Balkans picks its staff, saying that contemporary global media outlets have given up on objective journalism. He further added:
Olivera Kovačević, RTS television host, touched on the issue of potential Al Jazeera Balkans journalists from Serbia having to disregard their own country's constitution if the station's hiring criterion is to treat Kosovo as an independent state: "The very act of asking that question during a job interview – thereby interrogating an applicant on his/her political orientation – is in breach of that person's human rights. I accept that every media outlet has an editorial policy, but no one can demand of me to ignore my country's laws and constitution that say Kosovo is part of Serbia. It's going to be a tough call for the broadcasting regulators in Serbia whether to allow an outlet with such policy to own a station that broadcasts nationally in Serbia".
The opposition Serbian Radical Party (SRS) called on the Serbian Broadcasting Agency (RRA) not to allow the Al Jazeera Balkans' purchase of TV Avala due to the "anti-Serb campaign led by the Al Jazeera director for the Balkans, Goran Milić". Speaking at party's press conference, SRS presidency collegium member Vjerica Radeta stated: "Milić has never ceased with his anti-Serb campaign, but the most scandalous of all is that the requirement to get a job at this station is accepting Kosovo as an independent state".
International
''The Spectator'''s Fraser Nelson views Al Jazeera's arrival to the Balkans through the lens of the ongoing global "information war" and the Western media's current standing in that showdown. Discussing the situation in various spots around the globe, he contends that "the BBC has come under fierce competition from Al Jazeera", which the British haven't responded to adequately, bringing up the Balkans as an example where "the BBC World Service closed down its 21-man Serbian radio operation, while Al Jazeera Balkans set about hiring 150 people in Sarajevo headed by the veteran Croatian journalist Goran Milić". He goes on to praise this formula of having "local television champions" rather than "foisting Anderson Cooper on the world".
Tim Judah wrote a piece on the launch of Al Jazeera Balkans in The Economist, going through the various ethnic, religious, political, and linguistic specifics in the former Yugoslavia before wondering "whether people from one part of the Balkans are still interested in the others" outside of "enjoying each other's reality shows". Right after mentioning that "news broadcasts from Sarajevo, Banja Luka, Belgrade and Zagreb are all utterly different", Judah claims Al Jazeera Balkans faces the problem of "many Serbs and Croats assuming it is "Muslim" television". He concludes by saying that Al Jazeera's Arabic service played a key role in the Arab Spring and wonders "what sort of influence Qatar may want, or gain, in the Balkans".
Writing in his blog on The Weekly Standard web site, Stephen Schwartz sees Al Jazeera Balkans (AJB) as "the revival of a "Yugoslav" television network", bringing up AJB news director Goran Milić's past affiliation with Yutel, "a network that attempted to rescue Yugoslavia during its collapse, from 1990 to 1992". Schwartz concludes that "in entering the Balkans, Al Jazeera has opted for an attempted revival of a long-shattered Yugoslav cultural unity, combined with a gambit for greater Islamist influence", but also warns that "its decision comes at a bad time for the region, with Wahhabi radicals agitating across Balkan borders, and the neo-fundamentalist Turkish regime of Recep Tayyip Erdogan bidding for revived prestige in the former Ottoman provinces in Europe". As for the network's financial prospects, Schwartz expressed doubts "that evocation of the long-gone, artificial nationality of the former Yugoslavia will make Al Jazeera’s investment in the Balkans profitable", but offered a possibility of "corrupt politicians dominating the ex-Yugoslav successor states finding it lucrative to have connections to Gulf petrobillionaires".
Shawn Powers, assistant professor at the Georgia State University, claims the Al Jazeera network openly seeks to tap into Muslim-majority countries and markets it believes are hungry for a news agenda that is better tailored to their interests and is eager to tug the geopolitical center of gravity away from Europe and closer to the Arab World:
Film festival
In 2018, Al Jazeera Balkans launched its documentary film festival the Al Jazeera Balkans Documentary Film Festival. Its first edition was held from 21 to 25 September 2018. The festival was established by Al Jazeera Balkans in cooperation with the Al Jazeera Media Network and the Doha-based Al Jazeera Media Institute. Al Jazeera Balkans is currently the biggest buyer of television format documentaries in the former Yugoslavia and annually acquires rights for most of the regional documentary films that are screened during the Sarajevo Film Festival. AJB DOC directly lent its concept from the Al Jazeera International Documentary Film Festival, which was founded in 2005 by Jordanian film director and writer, Abbas Arnaout.
References
References
- [https://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2011/11/20111111201910810159.html Al Jazeera launches Balkans channel]. Aljazeera.com, 12 November 2011.
- [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-15701549 Al Jazeera launches Balkans television channel]. BBC, 11 November 2011.
- (26 May 2010). "Al Džazira u Sarajevu pokreće balkanski TV projekat". [[Blic (newspaper).
- Hawkes, Rebecca. (19 September 2010). "Al Jazeera to launch regional Balkan TV".
- (11 November 2011). "Al Jazeera launches Balkans television channel". BBC News.
- (7 October 2010). "Sjedište Al Jazeere Balkans u BBI Centru". sarajevo-x.com.
- (22 September 2010). "Al Jazeera makes its Balkan debut". [[Deutsche Welle]].
- (14 October 2010). "Minimalna novinarska plata u Al Jazeeri Balkans 2.000 KM". sarajevo-x.com.
- (14 October 2010). "Više stotina prijava na konkurs za rad na "Al Džazira Balkans"". [[Blic (newspaper).
- (14 October 2010). "Navala na Al Džaziru Balkans". [[B92]].
- (3 November 2010). "Al Jazeera ponudila posao Aleksandru Stankoviću". sarajevo-x.com.
- (15 October 2010). "Denis Latin generalni direktor Al Jazeere Balkans". sarajevo-x.com.
- (16 October 2010). "Denis Latin novi direktor Al Džazire Balkan". [[Blic (newspaper).
- (15 October 2010). "Latin direktor Al Džazire Balkan?". [[Blic (newspaper).
- (20 January 2011). "Balkanska Al Džazira spremna za start". [[Politika]].
- (29 March 2011). "Al-Jazeera to start broadcasting in Balkans in fall". [[B92]].
- (16 June 2011). "Al Džazira kupuje srpsku TV Avala?". [[B92]].
- (16 June 2011). "Al Džazira preko Avale stiže u Srbiju?". Frankfurtske Vesti.
- (12 November 2011). "News in the ex-Yugoslavia: Broadcasting to the Balkans". [[The Economist]].
- (12 July 2025). "Al Jazeera Balkans i zvanično prestala s radom, Dalija Hasanbegović Konaković odjavila program". Klix.ba.
- "Al Jazeera Closes Balkan Branch".
- (November 2025). "The Washington Examiner 11 November 2011, Aida Cerkez - ''Al Jazeera launches Balkan broadcast''}}{{Dead link".
- [http://www.rapidtvnews.com/index.php/2011111016927/al-jazeera-balkans-to-launch-11-november.html#ixzz1dQTX2300 Rapid TVNews.com - ''Al Jazeera Balkans to launch 11 November'']
- (26 November 2011). "With Launches in Balkans and Beyond, Al-Jazeera Building New Spheres of Influence". [[RFE/RL]].
- (17 June 2011). "Skandal zbog pitanja o Kosovu: Al Džazira krši Ustav Srbije". [[Press (Belgrade newspaper).
- (16 June 2011). "SRS: Ne dozvoliti rad "Al džaziri"". [[Radio Television of Serbia.
- Nelson, Fraser. (20 October 2011). "Al Jazeera scores another victory in the information war". The Spectator.
- Schwartz, Stephen. (15 November 2011). "Al Jazeera Enters the Balkans". The Weekly Standard.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Al Jazeera Balkans — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report