Tomislav Jakić

Tomislav Jakić
Born (1943-03-23) 23 March 1943
Zagreb, Independent State of Croatia
(now Croatia)
Nationality Croat
Alma mater University of Zagreb
Occupation Journalist, TV reporter

Tomislav Jakić (born March 23, 1943, in Zagreb, Independent State of Croatia) is a Croatian journalist, TV reporter and former advisor to president Stjepan Mesić.

Early years

Tomislav Jakić was born on 23 March 1943 in Zagreb, Independent State of Croatia during World War II. His father was a state clerk and his mother was a teacher of german language. He spent his early life in Zagreb and graduated from the Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb.[1]

Before graduating from his faculty, he decided to enter TV journalism and in 1966 he joined the Yugoslav Radio Television (YRT). At first, he worked as a small time reporter but gradually he became a TV anchor and later a foreign policy reporter. One of his first assignments was a report about the Yom Kippur War in 1973 when he travelled to Egypt and was amongst the first foreign TV news crews to enter Sinai. In the 1980s he went on a journalist seminar in the United States and was the first foreign tv reporter to enter a NORAD underground base in the Rocky mountains. In 1979, he managed to negotiate in Vienna the opportunity of reporting closely the signing of the SALT II agreement which was supposed to be reserved only for American and Soviet TV crews but Jakić managed to squeeze the Yugoslav crew amongst them. Due to his excellent knowledge of the german language, he was a regular reporter from Austria, West Germany and East Germany..[1]

Working as a reporter at JRT in the 1960s, Jakić refused to enter the League of Communists of Croatia which was not a common thing to do. It affected him in doing his job. He was banned from reporting on high profile Yugoslav politicians (especially Tito) and he was removed from news cases that involved going out of the country. After a few years, he was allowed on doing reports outside the country but he remained banned from Tito. Jakić was allowed to report on Tito only twice. Once he followed him in Austria and the second time in the Netherlands. Even so, Jakić highly admired Tito as a statesman. After Titos death in 1980, he made a TV documentary about him, and after that, he made 2 more documentaries about Tito during his time at JRT. During his TV reporting career, Jakić made interviews with numerous foreign politicians. The most memorable are Yasser Arafat, Rudolf Kirchschläger and Sir Fitzroy Maclean. He made a friendly connection with Maclean, with whom he contained a contact until his death in 1996. Jakić would later be responsible for bringing president Mesić to visit the grave of Fitzroy in Scotland.

In the 1970s, Jakić was approached by the Yugoslav secret police UDBA. He was asked to inform them about his trips abroad but he refused. For a while, he was under pressure but eventually they backed off him.

Later career

In the late 1980s, he became editor of the news programme at JRT. In 1990, after the first democratic elections in Croatia, Franjo Tuđman came to power as president. Jakić was asked to be the main reporter on Tuđmans tour in the United States and Canada during the Autumn of that year. Jakić reported numerous incidents associated with Ustaše supporters during that tour, including the one where Franjo Tuđman almost held a speech under the picture of Ante Pavelić in Canada.[2]

After his return from the tour, Jakić started witnessing the deterioration of his TV house which came under the rule of the new government and later renamed its self to HRT. At first. all ethnic Serb employees were fired and banned from entering the TV station. After that, all the employees who didn't support Tuđman and the new Croatian nationalistic regime were also fired and banned. Jakić was critical of the new right-wing regime and in 1992, he was officially released from the contract.

A few years later he moved to Prague and started working for Radio Free Europe. He reported on Croatia and the Croatian War of Independence. He wrote articles about the Croatian war crimes in Operation Storm. Soon later he returned to Croatia where for some time he wasn't able to find a job. At the time, he was invited by Silvije Degen to join the Social Democratic Action of Croatia where he became the party secretary for a couple of years. In 1999, he returned to TV for the last time. He was called in Rijeka to become the TV director at Channel Rijeka which was under the control of the main opposition party, the Social Democratic Party of Croatia. He organised the first live coverage of the traditional Rijeka Carnival and organised the debate for the Croatian presidential election, 2000. In 2001, he resigned after his idea proposals were turned down..[1]

Advisor to Stjepan Mesić

After Tuđmans death in 1999 and the victory of the liberal-left coalition in the Croatian parliamentary election, 2000, Jakić tried to regain his old job at HRT but was offered only a job as TV director of the HRT Split local branch. He turned the offer down.

In 2001, he sent a job application to president Stjepan Mesić, who won the presidential elections in 2000. After some time and pressure, Jakić was accepted and became the president's advisor on foreign policy. He was not only his advisor but also wrote most of his speeches. Jakić was responsible for the buildup of new relations with the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He went to Belgrade in 2001 and signed a document which was the beginning of the bilateral relationship between Yugoslavia and Croatia. After the September 11 attacks, Jakić and Mesić were strong supporters of an Anti-terrorist global league. The idea newer came to a true realisation. In 2003, he persuaded president Mesić not to go into the Iraq War. This made Jakić unpopular amongst the US diplomats in Croatia.

Jakić gave his resignation to president Mesić in 2003 and became a columnist for the national newspaper Slobodna Dalmacija where he wrote in a column called Parallels. He wrote about foreign policy and the column lasted for about a year. He gave advice to Mesić for his Croatian presidential election, 2005 campaign, and after Mesić won the elections for his second term, Jakić returned to his old advisory job like before.

During the second presidential term, there were two incidents. The first one was in December 2006 when a video circulated in the media where president Mesić gave a speech in Australia during the early 1990s where he glorified the Ustaše fascist movement. Mesić came under heavy public criticism and it was especially worse since Mesić was a strongly declared Anti-fascist. Jakić organised a fast response and managed to organise a defence system for the president in order how to act in public regarding this incident. The president apologised in a live TV broadcast.

The second incident was in 2008 when George W. Bush announced his visit to Croatia. The protocol for welcoming foreign statesman was always organised by the presidential office but the prime minister at the time Ivo Sanader took control and violated the protocol. In response, Jakić advised president Mesić to avoid welcoming George Bush and suggested going to Southeast Asia on tour as planned. Both Jakić and Mesić were not fond of George Bush coming to Croatia since the beginning. This sparked an incident between the president and prime minister. President Mesić was forced to drop the idea of avoiding Bush when his other advisor Budimir Lončar sabotaged the plans for his own needs. At the end, Mesić was part of the welcome protocol in Zagreb.

Tomislav Jakić was one of the organisers for the 2007 South-east energetic summit in Zagreb where one of the guests was Vladimir Putin. The plan was to bring the South Stream through Croatia but it was never realised.[3]

In 2010, president Mesić ended his second and final term as president. Jakić followed the president's footsteps and retired from politics. Today, he is a columnist for the national weekly newspaper Novosti. His topics are mostly about foreign policy.

Jakić published an autobiography book in 2010 called I didn't howl with the wolves.


Bibliography

References

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