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Novine (English: The Paper), is a Croatian drama series that has been broadcast on Hrvatska Radiotelevizija since 2016. The screenplay for it was written by Ivica Đikić , a journalist who had served as editor-in-chief of Rijeka 's Novi list several years earlier.
On May 7, 2012, Dnevne Novine became the first and, as of October 2012, only free newspaper in Montenegro. [5] Željko Ivanović and Mladen Milutinović, owners of Vijesti and Dan, tried to sabotage the move by threatening to withdraw their papers from the main media distributors in the country (Tabacco, S Media and Štampa). [6]
The first issue of Dan appeared on 31 December 1999. [4] Right from its start, Dan was one of the harshest critics of Milo Đukanović's regime in Montenegro. In May 2001, as Croatian magazine Nacional) began a series of articles and insider interviews on state-sponsored cigarette smuggling in Montenegro under Djukanovic's regime, Dan was the only media outlet in the country to bring the ...
Damir meets a girl in the library, but Izet scares her away after she comes to his apartment to rent a room. Meanwhile, Dino burns the mixer in the studio and Faruk buys a new one from the money everybody thinks he stole from Izet.
In spring 2012, during the 2012 Serbian parliamentary, presidential, provincial, and local election campaign, E-novine ran a Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) banner on its front page thus endorsing the political party led by Aleksandar Vučić and Tomislav Nikolić, both of whom had previously, for almost two decades, been among the leaders of the far-right Serbian Radical Party (SRS). [8]
Pobjeda's mainly Montenegrin readership was diluted following the establishment of the two other newspapers - Vijesti and Dan. Until 1997 Pobjeda was the only print medium published in Montenegro, but from 1997 competition from daily newspapers, together with the complex and sometimes chaotic media situation in Montenegro, made Pobjeda ...
Vijesti openly supported Đukanović [6] who eventually won the highly controversial elections and thus became the president of Montenegro. Vijesti from November 1998: The paper often went to great lengths to be affirmative in its coverage of president Milo Đukanović even if it required leaving out key parts from foreign media reports when ...
The bombing provoked outrage in both Muslim and Serbian media. [3] Srpski Glas joined Nezavisne novine in printing a mostly blank front page three days after the bombing, carrying only the words "We Want to Know" to call for further investigation into the attack. Bosnian television interrupted programming to display the same message. [3]