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Protests outside the National Assembly building in July 2020. Following the vote of no confidence in 2013, Dragan Đilas was dismissed as mayor, [3] and a temporary body was set up by the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), who has ruled Belgrade since then. [4]
Belgrade is the financial centre of Serbia and Southeast Europe, with a total of 17 × 10 ^ 6 m 2 (180 × 10 ^ 6 sq ft) of office space. [155] It is also home to the country's Central Bank. 750,550 people are employed (July 2020) [156] in 120,286 companies, [157] 76,307 enterprises and 50,000 shops.
The area of the lot is smaller, 1.06 ha (2.6 acres) compared to 1.8 ha (4.4 acres), but the total floor area of two planned buildings (one residential, one commercial), remained the same at 38,000 m 2 (410,000 sq ft). The company is obliged to finish the station in Prokop first before it can build anything in New Belgrade.
Temu takes data protection and customer privacy seriously. The company’s payment system is PCI-certified and the company employs industry-standard security measures to protect sensitive customer ...
After the war ended, the city's authorities concentrated on reconstructing the demolished urban infrastructure, pushing the introduction of trolleybuses. [2] City planners have contemplated the possibility of introducing a metro to Belgrade's transit system since the early 1950s, but there were no real projects in that direction. [5]
University of Belgrade in 1890. The University of Belgrade was established in 1808 as the Belgrade Higher School (Serbian: Београдска Велика школа, romanized: Beogradska Velika škola; a Grandes écoles) by Dositej Obradović, Serbian key figure in the Age of Enlightenment.
BIRN's research showed that in the period from 19 March to 1 June 2020, a total of 632 people died in Serbia who had tested positive for COVID-19 which is more than twice as many as the officially announced number of 244 deaths in that period.
Belgrade Waterfront (Serbian: Београд на води / Beograd na vodi, lit. ' Belgrade on the Water '), is an urban renewal development project headed by the Government of Serbia aimed at changing Belgrade's cityscape and economy by revitalizing the Sava amphitheater, between the Belgrade Fair and Branko's bridge, including the Savamala neihgbourhood.