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Similar discussions were sparked on other defining issues of the Croatian left-right divide with Council and/or its members being on the other side of the divide in opposition to various Serbian [9] and left-leaning [10] publications and organizations such as newspaper Novosti or Hrvatski antifašistički savez.
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
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.
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.
Književni tjednik. Književni tjednik ("Literary Weekly") was a literary and cultural magazine. Its Editor-in-Chief was Pavao Tijan. In six months, between 18 December 1941 and 28 June 1942, 21 issues were published, initially weekly and later biweekly.
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Novi list (lit. ' New paper ' ) is the oldest Croatian daily newspaper published in Rijeka . It is read mostly in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County of Croatia , but it is distributed throughout the country.
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.