Belgrade, Serbia
The biggest surprise in Serbian blogosphere these days is a report from Božidar Đelić, currently in Davos, Switzerland, attending the World Economic Forum. It is interesting and in a way groundbreaking because Mr Đelić decided to let us know how things are using a blog provided by B92. One idea
Careful readers of the Belgrade 2.0 site have probably already noticed little flags in the top right corner, which will, if you click on them, provide guide to Belgrade in English, German, Italian and Spanish . What you probably also noticed is that there is one language missing on the
Source: www.b92.net First results: SRS 28,5 DS 22,9 DSS 17,00 G17 6,8 SPS 6,1 LDP 5,00 (Pay attention: Cvijus owes me a case of beer if these guys make it to the parliament) Update Seats in the parliament: SRS 81 DS 64 DSS-NS 47 G17 19 SPS 16 LDP 15
www.smh.com.au Apparently Serbian and Croatian diaspora in Australia have nothing better to do and no bigger worries, so it seems that their biggest problem was the existence of each other. In all that boredom they decided to sing ‘provocative’ songs to each other and, if plausible, start a fight. Nothing
Kalemegdan, Photo by Damir Cvetojevic Here’s the chance finally to watch the CNN ads for Serbia and Belgrade with the slogan “Moments to remember”: Serbia tourist advertisement on CNN Belgrade tourist commercial on CNN One more with images from Belgrade, and two more with some clips including Exit and Guca
...at the upcoming Serbian elections, January 21st? I know you always wanted to find out the answer to this question, so here’s the chance: Web Voter (other languages avalable – Web glasac in Serbian and Web votuesi in Albanian) is a quiz with 30 questions regarding most areas of political,