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Pobjeda (English: The Victory), Montenegrin in the Latin alphabet (since 1944) Vijesti (English: The News), Montenegrin in the Latin alphabet (since 1997) Dan (English: The Day), Serbian in the Cyrillic alphabet (since 1999) [1] Dnevne Novine (English: the Daily news), Montenegrin in the Latin alphabet (since 2011) [2]
Russian press claimed in 2012 that Russian citizens own at least 40% of real-estate property in all of Montenegro. [31] In 2009, Croatian news portal Globus called Montenegro a "Russian colony", accusing Milo Đukanović of manipulative strategies in post-independence privatizations for the benefits of non-Montenegrins, especially Russian ...
Despite Russian investment into Montenegro, joining the EU became a key goal of Montenegro. Russia continues to spy on Montenegro, GRU officer Igor Zaytsev is known to have travelled to Montenegro on numerous occasions up to 2018, bring in encryption equipment to give to existing or potential agents, including allegedly former Foreign Ministry ...
Thousands of Russian citizens in Serbia and Montenegro voted on Sunday in their home nation's presidential election, with many saying it was a symbolic gesture that would not impact President ...
NATO foreign ministers defied Russian warnings that enlargement of the U.S.-led bloc further into the Balkans would be a provocation. NATO invites Montenegro to join alliance, defying Russia Skip ...
Vijesti was the first newspaper in Montenegro to publish books like a collection of 20th century authors (on the string of other European newspapers), an anthology of Montenegrin authors (in 2006) and Pečat umjetnosti (2007), an interesting (but not original) edition of the greatest painters.
STORY: Speaking to Reuters in Montenegro's Adriatic town of Budva on Monday (September 26), Alexander, 30, a horticulturist, said he had no plans to head home and risk being drafted for the war in ...
In Montenegro, the process of media privatisation was completed in 2014, with more than a decade of delay. The ownership patterns in the media in Montenegro shifted from a donor-supported model, developed during the process of democratisation of media in the late 1990s, to a more interest-driven media business model, dominated by foreign capital.