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Miloš Vučević announces his resignation as prime minister of Serbia following anti-corruption protests over the Novi Sad railway station canopy collapse. removed by KTC , 18:39, 04 February 2025 A Learjet 55 crashes (explosion pictured) into multiple buildings and houses in Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, United States, killing at least 7 ...
Anger drove Marija Petrovic to join student protests in Belgrade in November. A railway station roof had collapsed days earlier in the Serbian city of Novi Sad, killing 15 people. Thugs then set ...
The history of rail transport in Serbia began in the mid-19th century when most of the territory was still held by the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires. The first rail line on the present-day territory of Serbia was inaugurated on 20 August 1854, between Lisava-Oravica-Bazijaš and the train operated on horse-drawn traffic which was replaced in 1856 by steam locomotives.
All public rail traffic for Novi Sad from Subotica and Sombor was moved to Futog railway station, while traffic from Belgrade was moved to Petrovaradin railway station. [36] The Serbian government declared a nation-wide day of mourning for 2 November, [1] while the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina and the City of Novi Sad declared three days of ...
In March 2015, the Government of Serbia announced its plan to establish three new railway companies, splitting the Serbian Railways state-owned company in separate businesses – passenger (), cargo (Srbija Kargo) and infrastructure (Serbian Railways Infrastructure). [6]
Srbijavoz (Serbian Cyrillic: Србијавоз; formerly Srbija Voz, Serbian Cyrillic: Србија Воз, Anglicized: Serbia Train) is the national passenger railway company of Serbia. Srbijavoz is an associate member of the International Union of Railways (UIC) since 2016.
Yugoslav Railways (Croatian: Jugoslavenske željeznice; Serbian: Jugoslovenske železnice, Југословенске железнице; Macedonian: Југословенски железници, romanized: Jugoslovenski železnici; Slovene: Jugoslovanske železnice), with standard acronym JŽ (ЈЖ in Cyrillic), was the state railway company of Yugoslavia, operational from the 1920s to the ...
The current Chief of the Serbian General Staff is Milan Mojsilović; Serbia's military budget is roughly $1.4 billion (approx. 2.1% of GDP) as of 2023 [3] The Serbian army has 40,075 active and 50,000 reserve personnel [citation needed] Serbia does not participate in M2M events in which Kosovo is treated as an independent state