Username: Password: Remember:


Latest Blog

Dancing Alexander-style, Down Under

15 March 2010 | By Sinisa-Jakov Marusic

Sinisa-Jakov Marusic The issue of national identity is taken seriously by Balkan people – including the least serious among them.


Serbs Mark Sixth Anniversary of Riots in Kosovo
17 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

Six years after ethnic Albanians attacked Serb enclaves in Kosovo in what became the worst single attack against Kosovo Serbs since the 1999 war, reconstruction of damaged property is ongoing but Serbian officials believe that conditions for the return of the Serb population have not yet been established.

Enlargement Commissioner Encourages Serbia EU Integration
17 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

European Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele has conveyed to Serbian officials the support of the European Commission for the country's EU integration process.

Lalovic and Skiljevic: Bad treatment during questioning
18 March 2010 |

Testifying for his defence, indictee Soniboj Skiljevic says detainees complained to him on their arrival at Kula about the way they were treated during questioning conducted before their arrival at the Facility.



Medvedev's Serbian Schedule

Belgrade | 19 October 2009 | Bojana Barlovac
 

Belgrade will welcome Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday with full state and military honors in front of the Palace of Serbia.

Medvedev will be accompanied by a circa 100-strong delegation of associates, ministers and businesspeople. The delegation will include: Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Extraordinary Situations Minister Sergei Shoigy, Gazprom President Sergei Mueller, Russian Railways Director Vladimir Jakunin, and the directors of Moscow Bank and Lukoil.
 
At first, Medvedev will hold a one-on-one discussion in Serbia Palace with President Boris Tadic. The Serbian and Russian delegations will then attend a ceremony for the signing of bilateral agreements, the Serbian Foreign Ministry has announced.
 
Afterwards, Medvedev, accompanied by Belgrade Mayor Dragan Djilas and a representative of World War II veterans, is scheduled to lay a wreath at the grave of Belgrade’s war-time liberators.

Parliamentary Speaker Slavica Djukic-Dejanovic and Russian Ambassador to Serbia Aleksandr Konuzin have confirmed that the Russian president will address the Serbian parliament during the afternoon. The planned address is supposed to last around 30 minutes, after which an official reception in the parliamentary hall will be held in which MPs will get to talk with the Russian leader.
 
According to Medvedev’s spokesperson Nataliya Timakova, his speech in the Serbian parliament will confirm that "there are some special relations between Serbia and Russia." 

"This will be the first speech of a Russian head of state in the Serbian parliament, which testifies to the existence of special relations between Serbia and Russia, as no head of state ever addressed the national assembly," she explained.

During the afternoon, Medvedev is also scheduled to hold a meeting with top Serbian Orthodox clergy.

The evening is reserved for a ceremony marking the 65th anniversary of the liberation of the city at the Sava Centre. The two presidents are set to give speeches at the event.

The Serbian government has reportedly formed a special body, consisting of the most experienced members of various services, to work on security preparations for the president's visit.

See also: Dmitry Medvedev's Biography

Return to Medvedev in Serbia homepage



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):

 
 

Living together. For some those two words are like the green or red wire on a bomb; choose the wrong one, and there’s going to be an explosion.


More Croatians are planning not to go on summer holidays this year because of the financial crisis, according to the results of market research conducted by GfK in February.


The newest Bulgarian shopping mall, “Serdika Center”, was formally opened in Sofia Tuesday.



Trencherman needed the benefit of his significant girth on a trip to this famous Belgrade haunt.


The Rise and Fall of the Worst Car in History, By Jason Vuic


Tim Burton’s latest film, Alice in Wonderland, is easily his most visually stunning yet, showing just how vividly the magic can be put on the big screen. Burton has lined a top-notch cast in front of a green wall allowing him to let his imagination fly, but limiting the actors’ opportunity to give vent to their expressions.