Belgrade

Tadic: Kosovo Partition not on agenda - yet

Tadic: Kosovo Partition not on agenda - yetBelgrade  - Serbian President Boris Tadic Tuesday said that he was not planning to propose a partition of the breakaway Kosovo, but neither did he rule the idea out, while authorities in Pristina angrily did.

"Partition is being discussed in Serbia and the international community and it has been one of the options during all these years," Tadic told an evening press conference. "That option I can consider only when all other options are spent."

Serbia launches investigation of Nazi war-crimes suspect

Serbia, KosovoBelgrade - Serbia's war-crimes court said Friday it had launched an investigation into a US citizen suspected of committing war crimes while serving as a Nazi officer in Belgrade during World War II.

The court said in a statement that 86-year-old Peter Egner was suspected of committing genocide and war crimes against civilians in Belgrade from 1941 until 1944.

In July, US authorities took legal steps to revoke Egner's citizenship saying he concealed his service in a Nazi unit that killed thousands of civilians in a Belgrade death camp after moving to the US in 1960.

Ajvar, tursija and sour cabbage - Serbia's winter delights

Belgrade - Walking down a street or riding an elevator in Belgrade on any given day in September, you are bound sense an aromatic cloud which may be unpleasant for foreigners, but invariably stirs the appetites of the locals.

The scent penetrating from a closed door tells whether a neighbour is frying peppers to store theme in a mixture of cooking oil, water and herbs or to combine them with mashed tomato and perhaps aubergine.

A balcony door may release the rich, sweet smell of plums cooked with sugar and a little water, while the pungent, sour aroma from a white plastic barrel locked away in a basement betrays the presence of sour cabbage. And the recipe books are brimming with other ideas.

IMF urges Serbia to curb spending, pursue reforms

IMFBelgrade  - Serbia needs to curb spending and continue economic reforms in order to keep inflation under control through next year, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned Wednesday.

Serbia is lagging with privatization and structural reforms, and its government faces pressure to meet election promises of increased spending, the head of an IMF delegation, Albert Jaeger, told reporters.

Overspending is expected to push Serbia's current account deficit to 18 per cent of gross domestic product by the end of the year, which it must cover by borrowing abroad.

The IMF said Serbia should seek to cut the deficit to 10 per cent of GDP in the mid-term.

No love lost between neighbouring Balkan churches

Belgrade - There has been very little of turn thy cheek or love thy neighbour in the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC) over the turbulent past year, but instead, plenty of fighting, backstabbing and hostility.

In Belgrade, the capricious hardline Kosovo Bishop Artemije openly went against the Holy Synod, the church government, when it tried to restrain his heavy-handed tactics which led to fistfights among monks in the holy Visoki Decani monastery.

To the west, two years after the tiny republic Montenegro claimed independence from Serbia, its clergy also wants to break away from Belgrade's rule.

Milosevic cronies back in top positions

Belgrade -former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic Many close associates of former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic have regained key positions in Serbia, a press report said Saturday.

"Three have become ministers and two are running state corporations," the Belgrade newspaper Press reported.

This week saw the return of top Milosevic aide Gorica Gajevic, after an eight-year absence from the politcal stage. The former secretary-general of Milosevic's Socialist party SPS was given a senior position in Raska, a town 200 kilometres south of Belgrade.

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