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A boycott was initiated in Serbia on January 31. Serbia's boycott was unique in that it occurred in the backdrop of student protests that had been ongoing in the country since November 2024, following the collapse of a train station's canopy in Novi Sad on November 1, 2024. The country has one of the highest prices in Europe, with domestic ...
A boycott was initiated in Serbia on January 31. Serbia's boycott was unique in that it occurred in the backdrop of student protests that had been ongoing in the country since November 2024, following the collapse of a train station's canopy in Novi Sad on November 1, 2024. The country has one of the highest prices in Europe, with domestic ...
Name Stores Type of stores First store in Bosnia and Herzegovina Parent Notes Konzum [1]: 273: hypermarket: 2005: Fortenova Group: Mercator in Bosnia and Herzegovina ceased to exist as an independent legal entity, i.e. a separate business entity and was merged with Konzum.
In 2006, the company opened its largest branch to date, called Super Konzum Tower Centar in Rijeka. Another nine Super Konzum stores followed in 2009, after 67 new Konzum stores were opened in 2007. From 2011, Konzum built another logistics and distribution center in Dugopolje with an area of 85,000 m², which it says is the largest in the ...
The company was established in 2002 when the first Mercator Center Belgrade was opened in New Belgrade. [6] The 50,000 square meter Center underwent a complete renovation and was re-opened in 2012.
Obilićev Venac (Serbian Cyrillic: Обилићев венац), a pedestrian and shopping zone, is located in the city center of Belgrade, Serbia, within the Knez Mihailova Street spatial unit protected by law, and contains a number of residential and office buildings dating from 1900 to 2000.
The town was originally known as "Bosanska Dubica" (Босанска Дубица in Serbian Cyrillic, literally "Bosnian Dubica") but was renamed "Kozarska Dubica" (Козарска Дубица in Serbian Cyrillic) by the authorities of Republika Srpska following the Bosnian War, which was part of a broad political resolution to remove all Bosnian prefixes. [1]
Mokra Gora (Albanian: Malet e Moknës; Serbian Cyrillic: Мокра Гора, lit. 'Wet Mountain', pronounced [môkraː ɡǒra]) is a mountain on the border between Kosovo, Montenegro and Serbia.