Marija Šajkaš / CPJ Guest Blogger
Marija Šajkaš is a New York City-based writer and researcher. She is a foreign correspondent for the Belgrade-based weekly, Novi Magazin, and founder of 4 Better Media, a media research consultancy.

Two-fold risk for Serbia’s women journalists as attackers target their work and gender
“In the past five years I was publically called many things. I was an old hag, a sterile, cheap Soros’ prostitute, a hooker, not f***ed enough, in need of a good prick, and destroyer of the Serbian Orthodox Church,” said Tatjana Vojtehovski, a Serbian television journalist with a large presence on social media. “My response…

How influence of Russian media risks making Serbia a Moscow bureau
For a couple of days last month, uninformed tourists visiting Serbia could easily have believed that the country is a Russian outpost. With large photos of Vladimir Putin on their covers, Serbian tabloids–by far the biggest source of print information in the country–were engaged in a discussion over whether the Russian President would defend Serbia…