Wednesday, May 22, 2013


Latest Balkan News

Five Serbs Released From Libya

Officials say five Serbia citizens have returned home after spending 21 months in captivity in Libya. More

The Serbian and Kosovar prime ministers, Ivica Dacic (left) and Hashim Thaci

New Serbia-Kosovo Talks In Brussels

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle hailed the April 19 agreement as “historic,” but called for “concrete steps” to implement it. More

Serb Ex-NBA Star Danilovic Stabbed

Former Serbian basketball star Predrag Danilovic, who played in the NBA before becoming general manager of Partizan in Belgrade, has been stabbed and seriously injured in a bar fight in the Serbian capital. More

The two men are wanted in connection with the high-profile killing of lawyer Stanislav Markelov among other crimes.

Russian Nationalists Held Over Killings

Two members of a Russian ultranationalist group allegedly involved in high-profile killings have been arrested in Serbia and Ukraine. More

Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic

Serbs Urged To Accept Kosovo Deal

Serbia's Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic has urged Serbs living in northern Kosovo to accept an EU-brokered agreement on normalizing relations between Belgrade and Pristina. More

More Balkan News

Latest Blog Posts

Petar II Petrovic-Njegos: A Holy Saint Or A Racialist Scholar?

The Metropolitan of Montenegro has raised eyebrows in some circles by announcing that he is going to propose a controversial 19th-century prince-bishop for canonization. More

Video 'Dare To Tell The Truth': What Press Freedom Means To Me

While Freedom House classifies 13 of RFE/RL's broadcast countries as "not free," and Reporters Without Borders (RSF) puts three of RFE/RL’s broadcast countries squarely in the worst category, RFE/RL journalists are still on the ground, determined to report the news. More
Blog Archive


Features & Commentary

Twenty Years On: The Unfinished Lives Of Bosnia’s Romeo And Juliet

Bosko and Admira, who became known to the world as Sarajevo's Romeo and Juliet, were killed on a bridge in the Bosnian capital 20 years ago.
More

U.S. Congressman Engel Says Serbia, Kosovo Can Now 'Look Forward To Future'

Eliot Engel, the top Democrat on the U.S. House of Representative’s Foreign Affairs Committee, spoke to RFE/RL about the recent normalization agreement between Serbia and Kosovo and the prospects for reconciliation.
More

Video Interview: EU's Enlargement Chief Finds Many Ways To Say ‘More Work Needed’

Stefan Fuele, the European Union commissioner for enlargement and neighborhood policy, has called on the EU-hopeful countries of the Eastern Partnership and the Western Balkans to do more to prove their commitment to democratic values. Correspondent Daisy Sindelar spoke to Fuele during his visit to RFE/RL headquarters in Prague on May 9.
More

Interview: U.S. Congressman Says Deal With Serbia Gave Kosovo ‘Nothing'

Representative Dana Rohrabacher, who sits on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, is one of the United States' staunchest supporters of Kosovo's independence. In an interview with RFE/RL, he's critical of the EU-brokered agreement reached last month between Belgrade and Pristina, saying it did not create the preconditions for long-term peace and stability in the Balkans.
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Serbian Orthodox Church Rocked By Sex Scandal

The Serbian Orthodox Church has formally removed from duty a powerful 74-year-old cleric bishop implicated in a sex scandal allegedly involving orgies and the rape of underage boys and girls.
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Landmark Belgrade-Pristina Deal Faces Hurdles In Northern Kosovo

Belgrade and Pristina’s landmark agreement to normalize their relations is facing difficult hurdles on the ground in the Serb-majority municipalities of northern Kosovo.
More

Justice Activists Call For ‘Serious’ Review Of UN War Crimes Court

International justice activists say that after 20 years, it is high time for a "serious, critical, and constructive review" of the work done by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
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Landmark Ruling Gives Hope To Parents Of Serbia's 'Stolen' Babies

The European Court of Human Rights has found Serbia guilty of failing to adequately investigate the fate of a baby boy who his mother claims was taken away from her at birth. The ruling is a major victory for the hundreds of parents who believe their newborns were stolen and sold for adoption as part of a long-running scheme involving staff at state-run hospitals in Serbia.
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Coming To America: A Bosnian Refugee Empowered

Natalie left Bosnia as a refugee when she was just 20 years old. She says that, while she struggled to adjust to life in the rainy city of Seattle, being treated as an equal in the United States made it all worth it.
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RFE/RL's Balkan Service promotes the values of democracy, human rights, and freedom of expression in a region where genuine media freedom remains elusive and where many media outlets remain divided along ethnic lines.
 

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