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Glas javnosti (Глас јавности, meaning "Voice of the Public") was a daily newspaper published in Belgrade. After publishing a newspaper from April 1998 until January 2010, the people behind the project have since then run an online news portal and YouTube channel under the same name.
Majority of the staff followed him. They then hooked up with another businessman Radisav Rodić (owner of the printing company ABC Produkt that printed daily issues of Blic and its offshoots) and under his financial backing started a new paper called Glas javnosti (the first five issues were called Novi Blic). Rodić thus entered the world of ...
Dragan Milošević (Serbian Cyrillic: Драган Милошевић; born 12 December 1954) is a doctor, politician, and administrator in Serbia.He served in the Assembly of Vojvodina from 2000 to 2004 and has been a member of the Novi Sad city assembly.
Zarobljena zemlja: Srbija za vlade Slobodana Miloševića ... Glas javnosti, March 9, 2006 (in Serbian) 9. marta Milošević nije mogao pasti, B92, March 9, 2006
The DS–DSS coalition fell apart in early 2008, and a new election was called for later in the year. The LSV contested this election in an alliance with the DS on an electoral list called For a European Serbia; Marton received the 117th position on the list. [11]
The first issue of Kurir appeared at newsstands on 6 May 2003. [3] While Kurir's history is relatively short, it is also a checkered one. It goes back to the state of emergency, declared following the assassination of Serbia's Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić, when another daily tabloid named Nacional was shut down.
Vučićević entered political life in the 1990s as a member of the Serbian Renewal Movement (Srpski pokret obnove, SPO).He appeared in the third position on the party's electoral list for the Yugoslavian parliament's Chamber of Citizens in the 2000 Yugoslavian general election and was not elected when the party failed to cross the electoral threshold in the division.
Kovačević joined with Ivan Đurić (then living in exile in Paris) to create the Movement for Democratic Freedoms (Pokret za demokratske slobode, PDS) in the 1990s.He later founded the League for Šumadija–Šumadjia Coalition in 1997 and appeared in the first position on its electoral list for the Kragujevac division in the 1997 Serbian parliamentary election. [4]