Username: Password: Remember:


Latest Blog

Love Hurts

05 February 2010 |

Simon Cottrell It's a shame that the internet is a virtual medium, because there are a lot of people out there that I'd like to express my deep feelings of friendship to, and having spent the last two years here in Serbia, I'd like to do it in a truly Serbian way.


Feith: 'New Beginning' for Mitrovica
05 February 2010 | Lawrence Marzouk

The International Civilian Representative in Kosovo, Pieter Feith, has said the appointment of a team to create a new Serb-majority municipality in the divided city of Mitrovica could herald a 'new beginning'.

Georgieva, Ciolos Approved with New Commission
09 February 2010 |

The European Parliament has approved the new European Commission at its session in Strasbourg. Kristalina Georgieva and Dacian Ciolos are the new commissioners from Bulgaria and Romania, respectively.

Koricanske stijene: Awareness of Security
09 February 2010 |

A member of the Intelligence-Security Agency of Bosnia and Herzegovina says he spoke to Milorad Skrbic while investigating the murder at Koricanske stijene and "determined that he did not have any operational data about this event".



Leftist Party To Join Albania’s Right-Wing Govt

Tirana | 04 July 2009 |
 
LSI head Ilir Meta
LSI head Ilir Meta
The Socialist Movement for Integration, LSI, announced on Saturday, that it had accepted a request from right-wing incumbent Prime Minister Sali Berisha, to join the ruling coalition after last Sunday’s poll.

Speaking at a press conference in Tirana, the LSI head and former Socialist Prime Minister Ilir Meta said that the decision had been difficult, however this was the right thing to do when the country faced political and economic crises.

 “This is once of the toughest decision I have taken in my two decades in politics,” Meta said. “We are forced to move toward an agreement which serves Albania and Albanians and their European Union integration hopes,” he added, pointing that after the results of Sunday’s poll cooperation with Socialist Party leader and Tirana mayor Edi Rama was impossible.

However, in an interview with Balkan Insight on the eve of the elections Meta had strongly rejected a possible coalition with Berisha.

“It’s not only impossible but also unnecessary,” Meta said in the interview.

Unofficial results from Sunday’s poll show that the Democratic Party’s coalition, the “Alliance  for Change” has so far won 70 seats in the 140-seat assembly, ahead of the Socialist coalition’s 66 deputies,. Third came the coalition headed by the Socialist Movement for Integration, LSI, with four deputies.

Final official results from the Central Electoral Commission are expected on Monday, after the counting by commissioners of several disputed ballot boxes.

Berisha needs one more deputy to secure a parliamentary majority of 71 deputies in the national assembly and has declared that he is open to expand his coalition, while presenting himself as the winner of the poll.

“It was not a wide victory, but it was victory, and whatever small or large victories shine,” he said during a press conference on Thursday.

The LSI, a splinter party from the Socialists, tried repeatedly to cooperate with Rama before the elections but its overtures were rejected bluntly by the Socialist leader.



Main News Page

Comments:
No comments have been posted.
Please read Terms and Conditions first
 

Your name:

Subject:

Comment:

Type in this code (used to prevent spam):

 
 

Whether it’s the Lotto, betting shops or gambling dens, Serbians are up for a gamble in increasing numbers and despite, or perhaps because of, the economic crisis, business is better than ever.


Albania’s parliament has extended the country’s moratorium on the use of speedboats along its coast for another three years. The moratorium is part of an effort to thwart illegal smuggling.


An international competition to manage Arena Zagreb has attracted only one local company.



Trencherman checks out this Celebrity Haunt.


Tim Judah, the Economist's Balkan's Correspondent, and regular Balkan Insight contributor, has fully updated one of the seminal works on the modern history of Serbia, bringing the narrative through to the present day.


Slobodan Trkulja is one of  Serbia’s hottest export items and his compositions and arrangements of traditional Serbian music have been widely praised.