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[4] [5] The paper is based in Sarajevo and has a relative pro-Bosniak and pro-Bosnian stance (centre-right). [4] [5] [6] In 2006, the Avaz publishing house was expanded with the start of the construction of the Avaz Twist Tower, a 175 m skyscraper in Sarajevo’s Marijin Dvor neighborhood, in the Centar Municipality of Sarajevo. As of 2016, it ...
Since 5 May 2003 the newspaper comes out under the new name "Glas Srpske" in Cyrillic script. Press RS: 2011; 13 years ago () Banja Luka Dr Mladena Stojanovića 29 78000 Banja Luka, BiH: Daily NPC International d.o.o. www.pressrs.ba: 2233-176X: Press RS also has its own web portal. The company NPC International also issues a magazine called ...
The Union for a Better Future of BiH (Bosnian: Savez za bolju budućnost BiH or SBB BiH) is a Bosniak centre-right [3] political party in Bosnia and Herzegovina.The party was founded in September 2009 by Fahrudin Radončić, the founder and owner of Dnevni avaz, the largest daily newspaper in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The Oslobođenje (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Ослобођење; Bosnian pronunciation: [oslobod͡ʑěːɲe]; 'Liberation') is the Bosnian national daily newspaper, published in Sarajevo.
71000 Sarajevo, BiH: Oslobođenje d.o.o. Weekly (Fridays) www.bhdani.ba (English: Days) - political news magazine also known as BH Dani: Magazin Start: Private: Sarajevo La Benevolencije 6 71000 Sarajevo, BiH: Monthly: www.startbih.info: Political news magazine. Preporod: Private: 15 June 1970; 54 years ago () Sarajevo Gazi Husrev-begova 71000 ...
[4] [5] It was published in Sarajevo and distributed in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and abroad. [1] In 1996 its circulation was 60,000 copies, of which 85% abroad. [2] In a 1998 study, Ljiljan was found to proactively employ Turkish, Arabic, and Persian loanwords over Slavic equivalents as a symbolic affirmation of Islamic identity ...
The first non-paper called for the "peaceful dissolution" of Bosnia and Herzegovina with the annexation of Republika Srpska and great parts of Herzegovina and Central Bosnia into a Greater Serbia and Greater Croatia, leaving a small Bosniak state in what is central and western Bosnia, [4] [5] as well as the unification of Albania and Kosovo.
During a meeting of the State Anti-fascist Council for the National Liberation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (ZAVNOBiH) in Mrkonjić Grad on 25 November 1943. [clarification needed] In April 1945, its name was formalized as the Federal State of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serbo-Croatian: Federalna Država Bosna i Hercegovina / Федерална Држава Босна и Херцеговина), a ...