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Students from Novi Sad came to assist the farmers and the unit was eventually forced to pull back. Around 30 tractors reached the campus in Novi Sad. [149] [150] On the same day, citizens also protested in Pirot [151], Prijepolje [152] Smederevo [153], Svrljig [154], Vršac [155] and Zrenjanin. [156]
The Novi Sad Higher Public Prosecutor's Office initiated an investigation. [41] More than 40 people, including construction minister Goran Vesić, were subjected to questioning. [42] At least 11 people were allegedly arrested or brought in to the prosecutor’s office by the police, including Vesić, who said that he had voluntarily surrendered ...
Novi Sad railway station (Serbian: Железничка станица Нови Сад, Železnička stanica Novi Sad) is the main railroad station in Novi Sad, Serbia.The current station, located at Jaše Tomića Boulevard, was opened in 1964, after closing the old railway station from 1883 previously located at what is today the Liman fresh market.
As part of the 2017–2022 construction of the Belgrade–Novi Sad high-speed railway, the station was partially upgraded and reconstructed, including works on the canopy, staircase, plateau, and the addition of a ticket booth and six elevators. The works were to be finished on 28 May 2023, but they extended.
In connection with the construction of the Belgrade–Novi Sad high-speed railway in 2017–2022, the station was partially reconstructed and upgraded, including works on the plateau, canopy, staircase, and addition of ticket booth and six elevators. Works will be finished in May 2023.
New Belgrade (Serbian: Нови Београд / Novi Beograd, pronounced [nôʋiː beǒɡrad]) is a municipality of the city of Belgrade. It was a planned city and now is the central business district of Serbia and South East Europe. Construction began in 1948 in a previously uninhabited area on the left bank of the Sava river, opposite old ...
Today, the station links Belgrade to Vršac, Sremska Mitrovica, [10] Šid, Valjevo, Požega, Užice, Niš, the Montenegrin cities of Podgorica [11] and Bar, as well as Novi Sad via a high-speed intercity route and other cities. [12] It is also served by the primary variations of BG Voz's lines 1, 3 and 4. [13]
The NATO bombing left Novi Sad without any of its three Danube bridges, communications, water, and electricity, which severely impaired the day to day living of the residents of the city. Water services were restored only after two years, partially due to funding from Britain, one of the countries which bombed targets in the city in 1999. [ 3 ]