The article discusses a dispute between the Slovenian Journalists' Association (ZNP) and Reporters Without Borders (RSF) over claims that a recent parliamentary inquiry law amendment threatens the confidentiality of journalistic sources. ZNP criticizes RSF for spreading misleading information, asserting that the amendment does not grant investigative committees authority to disclose sources or breach privacy. They argue that the law explicitly protects source confidentiality and that RSF’s claims are unfounded. The article further notes that the amendment was designed to counter previous leftist efforts to block parliamentary inquiries into specific companies linked to politician Robert Golob. It suggests that the opposition’s reaction stems from a sense of collective paranoia and an attempt to export manipulated narratives abroad to pressure the center-right government.
Bias read (Left): The article frames the opposition's concerns as a legitimate defense of journalistic freedoms but implies that the left's reaction is driven by fear and misinformation. It portrays the amendment as a response to past leftist tactics and suggests that the opposition is using exaggerated claims to inc






