In response to the recent post “Omladinski Film Festival Sarajevo: Mounting Allegations of Non-Payment, Intimidation & Financial Mismanagement”, the festival sent us the following response:
Dear colleagues,
In response to the article published on your website regarding the Youth Film Festival Sarajevo (OFF) which was brought to our attention, we are writing to provide a formal rebuttal to the claims made by anonymous authors. We will respect that and will not publish full names.
Firstly, Mr. Muhamed Almughani, director of the film “An Orange from Jaffa”, has been fully paid the prize amount awarded to him, which is €1,000. The award was sponsored by the Festival’s main partner. The jury decided to allocate the remaining €500 of the €1,500 prize fund to another film. This prize structure was publicly communicated via our official website and social media channels as early as last year weeks before!
Furthermore, there is written correspondence from the producers and distributors of Mr. Almughani’s film requesting that the film not be screened, citing that Mr. Almughani did not hold the rights to it. Since he submitted a signed statement claiming rights ownership and the film had already been publicly announced, the Festival did not remove it. Had it not been published already, we would have withdrawn it.
As such, the Festival is now considering withdrawing the prize and requesting a refund from the mr. Almughani. All other accusations made by Mr. Almughani have already been handed over to legal counsel in Poland, where he currently resides. We have also reported an attempt of financial extortion to the local police.
As for the alleged “bribe” of €200, this was not a bribe nor a hush offer — it was a friendly gesture from the Festival as a goodwill compensation for what we understood to be a misunderstanding on the author’s side.
Regarding anonymous authors who claim they were not paid — these accusations are false and misleading. Consider the fact that the Festival hosts over 300 film professionals annually, which amounts to around 1,500 professionals in the past five years. Out of that number, only 5–6 individuals have ever raised such allegations. — In some of those cases, it is true that travel refunds were not processed immediately. However, this was due to authors failing to provide valid production company invoices or insisting on receiving payments via PayPal to avoid taxes or because they lacked legal production entities. Under Bosnia and Herzegovina’s Foreign Transaction Law, and due to the fact that we are not part of the SEPA payment system, banks in BiH cannot process such payments without proper documentation and invoices.
The media reports cited are not credible. Only one media outlet contacted us for a statement; all other allegations were published without any attempt to verify with the Festival.
The Festival holds all payment confirmations, email correspondence, and screenshots, but refrains from publishing them out of respect for confidentiality and business ethics. All screenshots released publicly have been shared by the authors themselves.
It is important to note that Mr. Almughani misled his colleagues by failing to disclose that he had been paid. As a result, several colleagues, acting in good faith, signed letters that have harmed the Festival’s reputation and slowed down payment transfers from sponsors and partners. This delay has impacted three authors from the 2024 co-production market whose payments, initially planned for June, have now been postponed until the end of the year.
Furthermore, your article contains incorrect claims. For the sake of public information: The Youth Film Festival Sarajevo is owned by a registered association. The Festival Director is not the sole decision-maker, nor the only authorized person involved, and the decisions are not made by any single individual. We therefore categorically reject the claims made in your article and formally request that this rebuttal be published in accordance with media standards. Also, your suggestions in the article regarding the revision have no legal grounds in Bosnia and Hezergovina, and you should consider remowing it. All Festival reports for 2024 and revisions came out clean as positive which was confirmed also by Federal Ministry of Culture and Sport.
Your current publication contains elements of defamation.
our accusations that Director Kenan Musić uses Facebook to publish rebuttals, screenshots of emails, and attacks on authors and authorities are entirely false. This can be publicly verified, as he has never made any such statements on Facebook — aside from sharing links.
We demand the immediate removal of this claim, as well as any other content for which you have no evidence.
Regarding the Festival Director’s and Festival team’s travels to other festivals — these trips are financed either directly by international partners or by the Festival itself. This applies to every trip taken this year where Director Musić and team members were officially invited. For each trip, there are formal invitations, confirmations of ticket purchases by the Festival or organizers, and all relevant documentation.
Furthermore, you reference a Reddit post from May, warning authors not to submit to the Festival. This only demonstrates how unfounded the accusations of a few individuals truly are — as this year the Festival received a record number of submissions, including during the June free waiver campaign.
For over 15 years, we have been building this Festival and its accompanying Industry Market with passion and dedication — for authors, professionals, and the wider community. OFF has become one of the most important cultural and industry events in Southeast Europe, a status recognized across the continent.
We have proven that OFF holds tremendous value for a large number of authors who return year after year and who continue to support us through difficult times.
The Festival invests tens of thousands of euros annually in travel and accommodation costs. Therefore, if the claims made were accurate, one must ask: How is it possible that 280 authors and professionals attend each year without issue, while only 3 complain?
This is the real question that needs to be asked when publishing such headlines.
This is not a threat — it is a formal warning that, as with any organization protecting its rights and reputation, our legal team will undertake all lawful actions against anyone who attempts to defame or damage the integrity of the Festival through false claims.
It is true that the Festival has faced financial challenges for years, primarily due to the inadequate support from some governmental and institutional structures towards cultural projects.
Nonetheless, the fact that we continue to organize the second-largest cultural event in the country speaks volumes about the quality of our management and leadership.
Recent events involving Mr. Almughani — who, in a phone conversation where he threatened staff and the Festival Director, confirmed receiving support from local industry elites who advised him how to escalate the issue publicly — only confirm our earlier warnings. Over the past year, we have repeatedly pointed to cases of theft, manipulation, and corruption in cultural funding processes. It was only a matter of time before retaliation would occur — now disguised under the narrative of “wronged authors.” (https://www.klix.ba/magazin/film-tv/umu-upozorava-odluke-fondacije-za-kinematografiju-su-uvod-u-uspostavu-monopola-u-filmskoj-umjetnosti/241216156 , https://www.klix.ba/magazin/film-tv/umu-trazi-hitno-ponistenje-odluke-fondacije-za-kinematografiju-i-smjenu-upravnog-odbora/241219187 etc.)
We maintain deep respect for short films, their creators, and young filmmakers and we fight publicly for it all the time, and for that reason we are under heavy attack for the last few years. We have demonstrated this commitment time and time again. Our approach remains unchanged: we will continue to collaborate with filmmakers and industry professionals who value the efforts and integrity of the Festival — and we will proudly continue to support them, as we always have.