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"Kosovo is Serbia" in Polish stickers in the city center of Poznań, Poland "Kosovo is Serbia" (Serbian: Косово је Србија, romanized: Kosovo je Srbija) is a slogan that has been used in Serbia since the 1980s, later popularized as a reaction to Kosovo's 2008 declaration of independence from Serbia.
Kosovo is Serbia rally on February 21, 2008 in Belgrade SRS supporters demonstrating against Kosovo's declaration of independence, Belgrade, 2008. On February 21, a very large demonstration called Kosovo is Serbia (Косово је Србија, Kosovo je Srbija) was held in Belgrade in front of the Parliament organized by the Serbian government, with up to hundreds of thousands people ...
"Kosovo is Serbia" (Косово је Србија / Kosovo je Srbija), slogan and catch-phrase used in Serbia since Kosovo's 2008 declaration of independence. " Serbia to Tokyo " (Србија до Токија / Srbija do Tokija ), slogan and catch-phrase used by both Serbian nationalists (to taunt rival neighbouring ethnic groups ) and Serbs ...
Serbia strongly opposed Kosovo's declaration of independence, which was declared on 17 February 2008. On 12 February 2008, the Government of Serbia instituted an Action Plan to combat Kosovo's anticipated declaration, which stipulated, among other things, recalling the Serbian ambassadors for consultations in protest from any state recognising Kosovo, which it has consistently done.
In December 2023, the list of participants of the Pesma za Evroviziju '24 was published, including Breskvica with "Gnezdo orlovo". [38] The song was allocated to the first semi-final (held on 27 February 2024) and it qualified for the final (held on 2 March 2024), [ 39 ] where it finished second, behind Teya Dora 's " Ramonda ", winning 17 ...
Her video clip on YouTube, when she sang the song "Oj, Kosovo, Kosovo" and the Serbian national anthem Bože pravde with journalist Aleksej from Siberia, was especially noticed and became viral. [3] When she was choosing her pseudonym, she decided that it would be Zorja because in Slavic mythology she is the goddess of morning light, birth and ...
The speech was delivered to a crowd of an estimated million or more attendees, [a] [1] and came against a backdrop of protracted ethnic tension between ethnic Serbs and Albanians in Kosovo and increasing political tensions between SR Serbia and the other constituent republics of the then SFR Yugoslavia caused by the anti-bureaucratic revolution.
The battle was fought on the Kosovo field in the territory ruled by Serbian nobleman Vuk Branković, in what is today Kosovo, about 5 kilometers (3.1 mi) northwest of the modern city of Pristina. The army under Prince Lazar consisted mostly of his own troops, a contingent led by Branković, and a contingent sent from Bosnia by King Tvrtko I ...