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Klix.ba is a Bosnian web portal, the fourth most visited website in Bosnia and Herzegovina. [1] It was founded in 2000 as a forum, called Sarajevo-x, and changed its name to the current one in 2012. [2] Every day it reports on information and news from Bosnia and Herzegovina and the world.
KLIX may refer to: KLIX-FM, a radio station (96.5 FM) licensed to Twin Falls, Idaho, United States; KLIX (AM), a radio station (1310 AM) licensed to Twin Falls, Idaho, United States; Klix (company), a producer of vending machines; Klix airfield, a German airfield used for gliders; Klix.ba, a Bosnian-Herzegovinian online media outlet
The Oslobođenje (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Ослобођење; Bosnian pronunciation: [oslobod͡ʑěːɲe]; 'Liberation') is the Bosnian national daily newspaper, published in Sarajevo.
Večernji list was started in Zagreb in 1959. [3] [4] Its predecessor Večernji vjesnik ('Evening Courier') appeared for the first time on 3 June 1957 in Zagreb on 24 pages [5] but quickly merged with Narodni list ('National Paper') to form what is today known as Večernji list.
The European Union's Copernicus and the World Meteorological Organization reported in April 2024 that Europe was Earth's most rapidly warming continent, with temperatures rising at a rate twice as high as the global average rate, and that Europe's 5-year average temperatures were 2.3 °C higher relative to pre-industrial temperatures compared to 1.3 °C for the rest of the world.
Vijesti was the first newspaper in Montenegro to publish books like a collection of 20th century authors (on the string of other European newspapers), an anthology of Montenegrin authors (in 2006) and Pečat umjetnosti (2007), an interesting (but not original) edition of the greatest painters.
In 1995, shortly after the Dayton Agreement which ended the Bosnian War, Željko Kopanja co-founded Nezavisne Novine, a weekly independent newspaper, in order to "foster improved relationships among Serbs, Muslims and Croats in Bosnia". [2]
The 2014 unrest in Bosnia and Herzegovina was a series of demonstrations and riots that began in the northern town of Tuzla on 4 February 2014 but quickly spread to multiple cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including Sarajevo, Zenica, Mostar, Jajce, and Brčko, [14] [15] among others, for social reasons and with the aim of overthrowing the government.