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Registration plates from June 2008 A 2004–2008 series plate Old car plates 1992–2004 (the same plate is used again since 2008 but with the EU band at left). Slovenian car number plates are vehicle registration plates found on Slovenian cars.
Portal posvećen registraciji vozila; Registracija vozila "Nove tablice od 2011, cena 40 evra". B92 (in Serbian). Beta, Blic. 2010-09-30; Pravilnik o registraciji motornih i priključnih vozila (in Serbian) Car Transport in Serbia
On 6 December 2010, a new design was introduced [3] containing the letters RKS (Republic of Kosovo) on a blue field, a two digit number corresponding to the districts of Kosovo, the coat of arms of Kosovo, a three-digit number and finally two serial letters. [4]
FAP 6G on May Day parade in Ljubljana, 1961. Founded in 1952 by decree of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. On 30 October 1953, the first trucks were produced based on licence from Saurer. [5] Models were 4G and 6G (4 and 6 tonnes). In 1959 factory was extended and capacity growth on 3600 vehicles per year.
The Slovenian National Police Force is the national government agency that handles the responsibility of law enforcement of the Republic of Slovenia.It is composed of the eight police directorates in Celje, Koper, Kranj, Ljubljana, Maribor, Murska Sobota, Nova Gorica, and Novo Mesto. [2]
The Government Building and President's Office (Slovene: Vladna in predsedniška palača), also simply the Government Building (Vladna palača) or the President's Office (Predsedniška palača), is a building in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, that houses the Office of the President of Slovenia, the Secretary-General of the Government of Slovenia, and the Protocol of Slovenia. [1]
A view of the building from across Republic Square. The National Assembly (Slovene: Državni zbor Republike Slovenije, pronounced [dəɾˈʒàːwni ˈzbɔ́ɾ ɾɛˈpúːblikɛ slɔˈʋèːnijɛ] [2] or [-ˈzbɔ̀ːɾ-]; [2] short form državni zbor) is the general representative body of Slovenia.
The standard regular plate consists of three or four randomly assigned numbers, one or two randomly assigned letters, and the first two letters indicate the city, separated by the Croatian coat of arms, while the numbers and the last letters are separated by a dash (example; ZG 000-A, ZG 000-AA, ZG 0000-A or ZG 0000-AA).