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Continue reading →: Croatia: Small business red tape cut in efforts to stimulate self-employment
Although received with a fair amount of skepticism and confusion by many in Croatia the government’s seemingly swift move to cut red tape, simplify small business registration and make it affordable to any entrepreneur or person with a view to entering into a business enterprise is praiseworthy. As of 18…
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Continue reading →: Serbia was aggressor against Croatia: 180,000 Croatians ethnically cleansed to begin with
Had you visited the world’s leading news portals in the past couple of days you wouldn’t have noticed that 16 October 2012 was a very, very significant day in the ICTY for crimes and aggression against Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina in early 1990’s. You would have read a great…
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Continue reading →: EU Nobel Peace Prize, Croatian and Serbian Medals of Tolerance – the bubbles in “bubble and squeak”
The European Union was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last week; a feel-good moment, froth and bubble rising above, obscuring for a moment or two, the economic distress and national disquiet within the several of its member states (Greece, Spain, Portugal …) who are threatened with bankruptcy and sweeping unemployment…
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Continue reading →: Bleiburg, Jasenovac and Hangar Ovcara – inseparable Croatian trinity of pain
An article titled “About Croatian Deaths” by dr. Slobodan Lang was published Thursday 11 October in Croatia’s “Hrvatski List” (No. 490, pages 39 – 40). Its contents encapsulating Croatia’s symbols of pain, memorial area, unique symbols of injustice, agony, suffering, war and post-war crimes into a plea for every person’s…
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Continue reading →: A Bridge On Drina
Google doodles honoured Ivo Andric today. Nobel prize winner for literature in 1961, born 9 October 1892 in Bosnia – widely known in the world for his novel “A Bridge on Drina”. Although fictional, the novel is really a portrait of four centuries, through the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires, that…
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Continue reading →: The Relentless Betrayal
Originally posted on Eyes of the Mind: Today, the eighth of October, marks twenty-one years of Croatian independence, twenty-one years since Croatia severed its last remaining ties with Yugoslavia. It is Croatia’s twenty-first birthday, so to speak, its coming of age. And this Friday, the twelfth of October, is General…
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Continue reading →: Red Poppies of Croatian Independence
Jovial fireworks sparkling across night skies, trumpets sounding cheery elation, rainbow coloured streamers and confetti titillating, balloons hovering dancingly above the heads of reveling crowds in the streets, singing, dancing…the picture scurrying into your mind could easily be that of 4th July celebrations across U.S.A., or other celebrations of Independence…
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Continue reading →: ICTY Games
Originally posted on Eyes of the Mind: On Tuesday, the ICTY Appeals Chamber dismissed a motion for the admission of additional evidence in the continuing saga of the Gotovina et al. trial. What you won’t read in the news reports is that the Appeals Chamber agreed that the additional evidence…
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Continue reading →: Croatia: oppression of religious freedom stemmed from bigotry of Jewish filmmaker’s tantrum
A producer on Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List, Croatian born Branko Lustig, was boycotted in Croatia after telling Zadar primary school children (of Catholic faith who also have Religion as part of school education curriculum) – God doesn’t exist. A Minister in the current Croatian government, swiftly picked up on this…
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Continue reading →: Bob Dylan – senility blowing like it never blowed before
There’s no doubt that Bob Dylan stands high among the greats of rock-and-roll history and that his songs will continue to inspire millions with their poetic imagery, but his latest interview for the Rolling Stone magazine (September 27, 2012 issue) suggests that he has taken his imagery into the realms…
Ina Vukic: I was born in Croatia and live Australia. I have been described as a prominent figure known for my contribution to the Croatian and wider societies, particularly in the context of Croatia’s transition from communism to democracy, as well as for my many years of work as a clinical psychologist and Chief Executive Officer of government-funded services for people with disabilities, including mental health services, in Australia. In 1995, the President of the Republic of Croatia awarded me two Medals of Honor, the Homeland War Memorial Medal and the Order of the Croatian Trefoil for her special merits and her contribution to the founding of the Republic of Croatia. I have been a successful blogger since 2011 and write extensively in the English-language on issues related to Croatian current affairs and democracy, as well as the challenges Croatia faced and still faces in its transition from communism. My goal is to raise awareness of these connections and issues worldwide.