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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.

Tadic, Van Rompuy Won't Attend Regional Summit
19 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

A regional conference scheduled for Saturday will go forward even though Serbian President Boris Tadic will not attend the event. There are also indications that the president of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, will not be present.

Dolic: Rape of 17-year old girl
19 March 2010 |

A protected Prosecution witness says she was raped by "soldier Dole" in 1993, identifying indictee Darko Dolic as the person who raped her.



Divided Bosnian City Finally Gets Mayor

Sarajevo | 21 December 2009 |
 
Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Photo by Barbara Matejcic.
Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Photo by Barbara Matejcic.

A mayor has finally been elected to Bosnia’s ethnically divided city of Mostar after a 14-month political deadlock was broken by the top international envoy in the country, Valentin Inzko.

Bosnian Croat Ljubo Beslic's election to the post was made possible by Inzko’s decision last week to change the city statute to allow its councillors to elect a mayor by simple majority.

Previously the mayor had to be backed by a two-thirds majority out of 35 councillors, which proved impossible due to the inability of the strongest Bosniak, Bosnian Muslim, and Croat parties - Party of Democratic Action, SDA, and Croat Democratic Union, HDZ, respectively - to agree on a power-sharing arrangement. 

After the statute was changed, Beslic secured the appointment by winning the votes of 17 councillors, compared to 15 votes won by his Bosniak contender Suad Hasandedic. Besides winning the votes of seven councillors from his party, HDZ, Beslic also secured the backing of representatives from smaller Croat parties.

Hasandedic failed to win the vote although his SDA party holds 12 seats on the city council. Three city councillors abstained.

The failure of HDZ and SDA in Mostar to agree on a mayor since local elections in October 2008 had left Bosnia’s largest southern city without a 2009 budget.  

Civil servants in Mostar had been receiving their salaries through a temporary financing agreement imposed by Inzko.

But after the decision expired in September and the city failed to pay its employees for two months, they went on strike in November pushing Mostar to near total paralysis.



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