![A Belgrader reading a local daily newspaper with the headline "A Second Round", looks for the report of September 29 Serbian presidential elections September 30, 2002 in Belgrade.](https://cdn.shortpixel.ai/spai/q_glossy+ret_img/https://iwpr.net/sites/default/files/styles/max_325x325/public/images/focus/GettyImages-1438927%20copy.jpg?h=56d0ca2e)
Focus
Balkans: Regional Reporting & Sustainable Training
Years active: 1999-2010
This programme supports long-term democracy, conflict resolution and European integration in the Balkans by creating a regional network of investigative reporting institutions - the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network - to conduct cross-border research, reporting and dialogue projects, practical training and supportive collaborations with local media outlets.
Milosevic Tightens Hold on Kosovo Serbs
Milosevic is trying to use the Kosovo Serbs to scupper the province's administration.
Comment: I Know Who Killed Bulatovic
The death of a defence minister has raised the question: Who rules Serbia?
Murder Stokes Yugoslav Tensions
The latest assassination in Belgrade is being linked to Montenegro's bid to leave the Yugoslav fold.
Croatia's Future in Europe
Croatia's new leaders must introduce substantial political reforms if they are to be taken seriously by the rest of Europe.
Kosovo Serbs 'Imprisoned' in Their Enclaves
In the ethnically divided town of Orahovac, Albanians are unwilling to forgive the Serb minority for its conduct during the Kosovo conflict.
New Role for Kosovo Women
Albanian women widowed by the Kosovo war are learning to do what was once considered men's work.
Rewriting Bosnia's 'Holy Book'
A proposal by the Bosniak co-prime minister of Bosnia to reform the Dayton agreement is attacked by local Serb leaders fearing it will spell the end of Republika Srpska.
The Kosovo Exodus Continues
Now that the tables have turned in Kosovo, Serbs in the eastern town of Gnjilane (Gjilan) are selling up and moving out of the province for good.
Albanians Celebrate KLA Transformation as Step to Independence
After months of protracted negotiations, the KLA has finally been transformed into a trouble-shooting civilian force. But as Daut Dauti reports, the move has enraged Serbia, which sees the move as the legalisation of a separatist army.