Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nezavisne novine: 27 December 1995; 29 years ago () Banja Luka Braće Pišteljića 1 78000 Banja Luka, BiH: Daily NIGD "DNN" d.o.o. www.nezavisne.com: Unknown: Today's Nezavisne Novine (English: Independent newspapers) emerged from a daily publication Dnevne nezavisne novine which were the first private newspaper in Republika Srpska entity.
The Glas Srpske (lit. ' The Voice of Srpska ' [1]) is a Republika Srpska daily newspaper published in Banja Luka.Together with Bosniak-oriented Dnevni avaz from Sarajevo and Croat-oriented Dnevni list from Mostar, Glas Srpske is Serb-oriented and one of three main ethnic newspapers in Bosnia and Herzegovina addressing various issues primarily from the mainstream or elite perspective among ...
Republika Srpska lies between latitudes 42° and 46° N and longitudes 16° and 20° E. The entity is split into two main parts by the Brčko District; a hilly western part and a more varied eastern part, with high mountains in the south and flat, fertile farmland in the north. Republika Srpska, unlike its counterpart entity, is landlocked.
In August 1999, Nezavisne Novine broke new ground by reporting on the murder of 200 Muslim civilians by Serbian police officers in 1992. [5] With the report, the paper became the first Bosnian Serb paper to report on war crimes by Bosnian Serbs during the Yugoslav Wars . [ 2 ]
Serb control during the Yugoslav Wars. During the Yugoslav Wars, the aim of Republika Srpska (a Serb-controlled territory in the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina) was unification with the rest of what were considered Serb lands — the Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK, in Croatia), Republic of Serbia and Republic of Montenegro – in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia). [4]
The President of Republika Srpska suggests the candidate for the Prime Minister within ten days after the resignation had been accepted, or the voting of distrust or the end of the term due to the dismissal of the National Assembly or shortening terms of the people's representatives. The new Government must be elected within forty days after ...
On May 7, 2012, Dnevne Novine became the first and, as of October 2012, only free newspaper in Montenegro. [5] Željko Ivanović and Mladen Milutinović, owners of Vijesti and Dan , tried to sabotage the move by threatening to withdraw their papers from the main media distributors in the country ( Tabacco , S Media and Štampa ). [ 6 ]
Its editor-in-chief is Ana Ćubela and it is published on 16 pages every day. On October 12, 2009, the daily has changed the format and design, where the newspaper's slogan "Najveće dnevne novine u Srbiji" has dropped, introducing the new billboard campaign "Cela slika na manjem formatu" ("A whole picture on less format").