Vlado Mares
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The personality cult surrounding Yugoslav President Milosevic has reached a new crescendo over recent weeks following calls to deem him 'national hero'.
European Union (EU) oil, intended for the opposition controlled towns of Nis and Pirot, was still being held up by Yugoslav customs control at Presevo on Friday morning.
One year on from the introduction of the Law on Public Information, the Serbian government has stepped up pressure on the independent media yet further, calling for a "decontamination" of the press.
The presence of the Serbian Orthodox Patriarch Pavle at a reception hosted by Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic may herald an end to the churchman's calls for his president's ouster.
Having called for the 'decontamination' of the media, Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic's wife Mira Markovic is once more leading the charge against opposition broadcasters.
The state media is whipping up traditional Serb homophobia by accusing the opposition of 'suspected attraction to the same sex'. It's just part of a strategy to further divide and demoralize critics of the regime, and now the police are playing the same g
One year on from the introduction of the Law on Public Information, the Serbian government has stepped up pressure on the independent media yet further, calling for a "decontamination" of the press.
Serbian human rights activists accuse judges and lawyers of profiting from imprisoned Albanians.
A family tragedy highlights seemingly unbridgeable and painful generational differences in Serbia
Milosevic is using his infamous Information Law to drive independent media out of business.