The Milosevic Show
With only 16 days to go, the Milosevic bandwagon rolls ever closer to the inevitable election victory fanfare.
With only 16 days to go, the Milosevic bandwagon rolls ever closer to the inevitable election victory fanfare.
Yugoslavs were this week disappointed to learn that an internet news site report on the death of President Slobodan Milosevic was a hacker's prank
Serbs flock to the cinema to escape the harsh realities of the Milosevic regime.
There are signs the Kremlin is distancing itself from Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic who has, once again, backed the wrong horse.
Most voters quietly accept that President Eduard Shevardnadze will win the April 9 elections - but they bitterly resent the fact that there is no real alternative.
Making law in and about Kosovo is the only long-term solution to the region's problems.
Serbia's high-speed reconstruction is not the run-away success story portrayed on state television.
Chinese capital is helping to prop up the cash-strapped Belgrade regime.
While recognising the legitimacy of the Russian government's drive to eliminate the destabilising threat posed by Chechnya's uncontrolled militants, Russian tactics in the republic has appalled much of the international community.
Serbia is rebuilding its bridges - and its minds. Academics are reviving the spirit of Brezhnev. China supports Yugoslav Prime Minister Momir Bu La To Vic. And our president boasts: "Our country is the freest and most democratic in the world."