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  2. List of newspapers in Croatia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newspapers_in_Croatia

    Slobodni tjednik – published 1990–1993, the first Croatian tabloid daily launched during the political turmoil in the early 1990s; Sportplus – published from December 2009 to March 2011 as a sports daily spun off from Novi list to compete with Sportske novosti; after 2011 merged back into Novi list

  3. Globus (weekly) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globus_(weekly)

    Originally devised as tabloid, it never took an openly chauvinist approach of Slobodni tjednik and always tried to give the appearance of objectivity. Gradually, its articles began to deal with shady aspects of privatisation, abuses against ethnic Serb citizens and other topics not covered by mainstream media in Croatia.

  4. Novosti (Croatia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novosti_(Croatia)

    Novosti (Serbian Cyrillic: Новости, lit. ' The News ') is a Croatian weekly magazine based in Zagreb.It is published by the Serb National Council. [2] The organization was established in July 1997 in Zagreb, based on the provisions granting the right to self-government for Serbs in Croatia as set in the Erdut Agreement.

  5. Slobodni tjednik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slobodni_tjednik

    Slobodni tjednik ("Independent Weekly" in Croatian) appeared in February 1990, [1] on the eve of first free elections in Croatia.While being one of many media outlets started in the final stages of Communism, Slobodni tjednik was the first to use sensationalist headlines and similar content, which wasn't available in mainstream media of the earlier times.

  6. Nacional (weekly) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nacional_(weekly)

    Nacional is a Croatian weekly news magazine published in Zagreb.Founded in 1995 and owned by photographer and journalist Ivo Pukanić, Nacional quickly gained a reputation for reporting and critical articles about the conservative government led by the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), which was in power during the 1990s.

  7. Croatian Special Police order of battle in 1991–1995 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croatian_Special_Police...

    Lučko ATU members transported by a police AB-212 helicopter. The Special Police Airborne Unit, using three helicopters, was deployed on 17 August 1990 to quell a Croatian Serb insurrection in and around Knin.

  8. Bruno Bušić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno_Bušić

    Upon his return in 1971, he became one of directors of the Hrvatski tjednik (Croatian Weekly). That same year the Yugoslav government issued a crackdown on what had been called the Croatian Spring (Hrvatsko proljeće). Bušić was among those arrested and spent time in prison until 1973. He left Yugoslavia for the last time in 1975.

  9. Vlado Gotovac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlado_Gotovac

    Before being arrested in 1971 Gotovac became the editor-in-chief of Hrvatski Tjednik (The Croatian Weekly), which historian Marcus Tanner explains, "was a real phenomenon – a mass-circulation newspaper with an enormous audience that went way beyond the confines of the Communist Party and made a national reputation." [1]