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On 11 January, protesters gathered in front of the offices of BIA in Novi Sad, inviting the BIA employees over "for a friendly chat". The building was heavily guarded by police. [ 81 ] A large protest was simultaneously organized in Kragujevac by local high-school students, joined by medical workers.
Owner of the Belgrade Daily Telegraph and the weekly European was killed on 11 April 1999. front of his apartment at Svetogorska Street #35 in downtown Belgrade during the NATO air strikes on Yugoslavia. Mirjana Marković Jill Dando: 1961–1999: Journalist: English journalist, television presenter and newsreader who worked for the BBC for 14 ...
Nedeljnik is the publisher of the first monthly publication of The New York Times International Report. Once a month it comes as a gift to readers of Nedeljnik. On 24 pages Nedeljnik presents the best current articles from The New York Times, including special pages dedicated to business, science, arts, politics, and lifestyle. [21]
On 11 December, after weeks of student-led protests, Vučić made concessions including promising that all prosecutorial documents related to the disaster would be publicized, announced that all currently held protestors were released, and pledged to pardon any protestors if they were convicted at trial.
Đukanović immediately reacted to the Serbian tabloid articles, and released a series of controversial statements on June 17, calling the articles "the most ordinary stupidity," and adding that "I believe my colleague in Belgrade will get to the bottom of these writings which reminisce about 2003."
Informer is a Serbian tabloid newspaper based in Belgrade. It is known for its political bias in favor of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) and its sensationalist stories. [7] [8] [9] The newspaper has been accused of spreading disinformation [10] and sensationalism. [11] [12]
Veljko Lalić (born 13 July 1976 in Belgrade) is a Serbian journalist, editor and publicist.. He is the editor-in-chief and owner of Nedeljnik, [1] popular news magazine in Serbia, publisher of the Serbian edition of The New York Times, [2] Le Monde diplomatique, [3] and numerous other publications and books.
Scandal sheets were the precursors to tabloid journalism. Around 1770, scandal sheets appeared in London, and in the United States as early as the 1840s. [4] Reverend Henry Bate Dudley was the editor of one of the earliest scandal sheets, The Morning Post, which specialized in printing malicious society gossip, selling positive mentions in its pages, and collecting suppression fees to keep ...