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Bosnia Is Turning Me Into a Feminist

01 September 2010 | By Jessie Hronesova

No one ever said it would be easy to work as a female researcher in a patriarchal society, which Bosnia certainly is, especially in rural areas. 



Belgrade, Pristina Deny ICG 'Land Swap' Claim
01 September 2010 | Bojana Barlovac, Petrit Collaku

Belgrade and Pristina have denied claims by the International Crisis Group that the two sides have privately discussed the possibility of a land swap to resolve their dispute over Kosovo.

FM: Macedonian Delegation to Meet “Name” Mediator
02 September 2010 | Sinisa Jakov Marusic

UN mediator Matthew Nimetz is to meet Macedonia's delegation to the UN General Assembly in September to discuss the "name row" with Greece, Macedonia's Foreign Minister has confirmed.

Koricanske stijene: Escorted by Neighbours
02 September 2010 |

Protected Prosecution witness K8 testified at the trial for crimes committed at Koricanske stijene and said his neighbours Zoran Babic and Dado Mrdja escorted the convoy of civilians on August 21, 1992.



Controversy Over Skopje City Clock

Skopje | 09 March 2009 |
 
The old station is now a museum
The old station is now a museum
The recent idea by one of the front runners for the position of Skopje's Mayor to restart the clock adorning the old city train station, which has stood still since the morning of July 27 1963 when a devastating earthquake struck the Macedonian capital, has stirred public controversy and debate.

If elected mayor in the March 22 municipal and presidential elections, Koce Trajanovski from the ruling conservative VMRO DPMNE party said in his election program that he would activate the clock and mark every hour not with a chime but with a folk song.

"Trajanovski wants to show that time in Skopje keeps moving, that it didn't stop,'' wrote the local daily Dnevnik in its comment piece on Friday. ''But, given what we have seen (in the election campaign and in the work of the previous city mayors) so far, Skopje seems to have stopped, the only thing that is moving is stupidity.''
 
The daily suggest Trajanovski should buy himself a MP4 player or an iPod if he wants to listen to folk music every hour, rather than subject Skopje's citizens to his bad taste. The clock is a testimony to the tragic event of 1963 in which hundreds of people lost their lives, and should not be used for the political adventures of a partisan with less than sophisticated tastes, Dnevnik's editorial commentary said.

The modernist station was one of the few buildings left standing after a massive earthquake crushed the city. The clock reads 5:17 to mark the time of the tremor. The train station, now an art museum, is a reminder of that moment in history.

The controversy is the latest over plans put forward by the ruling party for changes to the city's appearance in which critics accuse the government of promoting architectural tastelessness. Last Month the mayor of Skopje’s central municipality elected from the same party suggested a giant singing statue of Alexander the Great be erected in the city square.

Reporting by Sinisa -Jakov Marusic



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Comments:
barbarism
2009-03-09 19:39:30
barbarism

barbarism
2009-03-09 20:08:21
What Koče Trajanovski did say about Skopje City Clock is just a gibberish. It is a lack of political reason. A huge emptiness. The government of City of Banja Luka (BiH) did almost the same thing in almost identical or analog situation. In 1969 Banja Luka had a devastating earthquake, and the main City Clock stopped to work - same as in Skopje. Since then that clock symbolized that tragic moment for Banja Luka and its citizens, and also a huge help and solidarity which banjaluka had receive, during that time, from people, cities and all states of yugoslavia. (The City of Skopje also did help in rebuilding of Banjaluka. I went to primary school Skopje.) A few years ago the Banjaluka city administrations decide to renovate the main city square where was that clock. And from then we don't have that same city clock - our memory, but rather new symbol of bad sense, irresponsibility and stupidity. They destroyed and really lost that old clock during those works on the square and change it with "better" one, and "more" "artistic" - which is, by their narrative, original clock but "little improved" -, with one which even doesn't have a clock mechanism and now have a sticker pointer. Shame on them. But don't do the same stupidity or similarity. Don't let to those politicians to dictate your life and manipulate your needs. And even with that folk music which is suggested to mark every hour it is going to be a real horror for skopje and skopje citizens and even if you rethink that skopje is a multiethnical city and belongs to every one and not only to Trajkovski and people he "represent". Save your city from political and cultural barbarism. hvala i faleminderit dražen

Gruev's earthquake
2009-03-09 20:40:18
Gruev era definitely

-
2009-03-09 20:44:43
How jealous are you Greeks of our glorious PM Nikola Gruevski? Go on Gruyo with the good work.

ristohisto
2009-03-12 10:10:09
Gruev? who's this, I've read of a Nikola Gruios, a fallen hero in the Greco-Italian war of 1940-41; his name is on a memorial in Florina prefecture...

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