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Extractions: Saturday, September 17 Cacak-Zablace modernised railroad put into operation ..... Saturday, September 17 Serbia Finance Minister about 'Panzer' affair ..... Saturday, September 17 Illegal business dealings by 'Serbia Railways' ..... Saturday, September 17 Our businessmen going to Washington and Chicago soon ..... Friday, September 16 Law on protection of competition a precondition for Association Agreement ..... Friday, September 16 State ready to fight corruption ..... Friday, September 16 Labus: Serbia has done a lot on the way to EU association ..... Friday, September 16 Memorandum on gasification of Serbia signed ..... Friday, September 16
Extractions: Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Danish Japanese Korean Arabic Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW A Serbian elite police force sharpshooter takes aim near the Kosovo buffer zone BUJANOVAC, Yugoslavia Ethnic Albanians have opened fire on Yugoslav army positions just outside a buffer zone near the Kosovo border in southern Serbia, Serb officials have said. Yugoslav Information Minister Zoran Zivkovic told Beta news agency that a street gun battle on the outskirts of the village of Veliki Trnovac near the Kosovo border lasted about an hour on Wednesday. He added, that two Albanians but no Yugoslavs were injured in the firing, but the soldiers were pushed back about 150 metres from its position by the intense fighting. The NATO-led KFOR peacekeeping force, which patrols the boundary, had no immediate information on the report. IN-DEPTH Yugoslavia in Transition
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Extractions: International Edition MEMBER SERVICES The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Autos SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters Your E-mail Alerts RSS ... Contact Us SEARCH Web CNN.com The eyes are ripped off the posters showing Dragoljub Micunovic, who was seen as the front runner. Story Tools YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS Follow the news that matters to you. Create your own alert to be notified on topics you're interested in. Or, visit Popular Alerts for suggestions. Manage alerts What is this? BELGRADE, Serbia-Montenegro Serbia has failed for a third time in just over a year to elect a new president as voter turnout fell far short of the 50 percent required, figures provided by independent monitors showed. About 36 percent of registered voters cast ballots, preliminary official results showed, less than the 50 percent needed to validate the vote. Tomislav Nikolic was ahead with 44 percent of vote, the state electoral commission said according to The Associated Press. Dragoljub Micunovic, a pro-democracy candidate who led pre-election polls, trailed with only 38 percent. Four other candidates shared the rest of the vote. "This is a defeat for Serbia," Micunovic said, adding he hoped voters would "learn their lessons" in democracy ahead of the upcoming key parliamentary elections in December.
Extractions: CNN Europe CNN Asia Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese On CNN TV Transcripts Headline News CNN International ... Special Reports SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters CNNtoGO SEARCH Web CNN.com Analysts predict Kostunica, pictured with his wife, will win the run-off Story Tools EXTRA INFORMATION Milosevic on trial Yugoslavia in transition The People vs. Milosevic MORE STORIES Kostunica tops Serbia poll The Milosevic years CNN.com Europe More news from our European edition BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Serbia has been voting in the rain to choose its first president since the ousting of Slobodan Milosevic, with the outcome likely to trigger fresh political turbulence. Vojislav Kostunica, president of the Yugoslav federation, is widely expected to defeat Yugoslav Deputy Prime Minister Miroljub Labus in the second round vote. Kostunica has vowed to force out the Serbian government led by his arch-rival, Zoran Djindjic. Moderate nationalist Kostunica, 58, who advocates cautious reform, and pro-Western free-market liberal Labus, 55, emerged ahead of nine other candidates in the first round two weeks ago to qualify for the run-off. Kostunica is the firm favourite, but much attention this time is focused on whether turnout will reach the 50 percent minimum legally required for the vote to be valid. Turnout was 55.5 percent in the first round.
Extractions: SVETI STEFAN, Yugoslavia Leaders of Yugoslavia's two remaining republics ended 90 minutes of talks Monday with little agreement on the future of the federation. Pro-Western Montenegrin officials are pushing for more autonomy, and warned that a bid for independence would be forthcoming if the ultra-nationalist Serbs don't bend on Montenegro's proposal for a loose federation of two autonomous states under the Yugoslav banner. Serbia and Montenegro have been at odds in recent years over Montenegro's insistence that it have economic reforms and closer ties with the West. Yugoslavia's conflict with NATO over the province of Kosovo earlier this year deepened the divide.
Extractions: BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) The Serbian parliament voted Thursday to send a delegation to Paris peace talks on Kosovo this weekend, but lawmakers blasted NATO for threatening to use force to get the talks moving. The West is "knocking on an open door," Serbian Premier Mirko Marjanovic told parliament. "We stay open for a peaceful solution" of the Kosovo crisis. The vote was 227-3 with three abstentions.
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Extractions: Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Danish Japanese Korean Arabic Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW PLOVDIV, Bulgaria Violence in southern Serbia has been condemned by neighbouring countries as they examined ways of improving security in the Balkans. The presidents of Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey called for "an immediate and complete cessation of violence" in the area at a summit that ended on Friday. The statement came a day after Belgrade presented a 63-page peace plan for ending the violence between ethnic Albanians extremists and Serb forces in a buffer zone between Kosovo and Serbia. Presidents Petar Stoyanov of Bulgaria, Ion Iliescu of Romania and Ahmet Necdet Sezer of Turkey condemned attacks by ethnic Albanians and said the NATO-led KFOR force must stay in Kosovo. The statement said the presidents "reaffirmed ... their commitment to a multi-ethnic and undivided Kosovo." IN-DEPTH Yugoslavia in Transition
Extractions: Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Danish Japanese Korean Arabic Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW BELGRADE, Yugoslavia Serbia's new reformist government has taken the reigns of power after its parliament voted in the country's first democratic regime in half-a-century. New Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, rewarded for his role in helping oust former president Slobodan Milosevic last October, told the parliament he would introduce a major package of reforms and work towards creating a prosperous country. Djindjic, the 48-year-old who heads the Democratic Party, and who had spent time in Germany escaping arrest by Milosevic's authorities in the 1980s, also promised that those accused of war crimes would be held to account. He was speaking as the chief U.N. war crimes prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, left Belgrade disappointed on Thursday after Yugoslav leaders rejected her demands that Milosevic be tried in the Netherlands rather than before domestic tribunals. The parliament of Serbia, the dominant republic in the two-member Yugoslav federation, appointed the new cabinet with 168 votes in favour and 55 against following a lengthy debate on the Balkan state's future.