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White City, 31°C

Nemanja Rujevic

He graduated in journalism in Belgrade and as a student started at Radio Studio B. Since 2009 he has been working for the German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle, and since 2013 he has been writing for "Vreme", where he also edits the "Međuvreme" newsletter. He published investigative stories for BIRN, Zdeutsche Zeitung, De Grune Amsterdamer, and Daily Maverick. Winner of the NUNS award for investigative journalism.

The coalition

Comment

Forcing a boycott: What's the point when it doesn't work?

We have already seen all of that, and that the opposition will not "give legitimacy", and that the boycott will "bare the government" and that there will be an "active boycott"... and it was all empty talk. And they are talking again, before the elections that can be won despite the theft of the regime

Belgrade elections scheduled for June 2

Where to go without an agreement between the government and the opposition: There are three paths to the election

Ana Brnabić announced the Belgrade elections for June 2. There is still a theoretical chance that Vučić will "interfere" and for the sake of "stability" perform a legal acrobatics so that the Belgrade and other local elections will be held on the same day. If that does not happen, the opposition will either go to the elections or try an "active" boycott. But not everyone is of the same opinion

Comment

Ana is still here

Back then, Ana Brnabić was presented to the public as a lesbian from Delivery Unit. Over time, she became a progressive. Overriding the new function doesn't change that much

Mediji

"There are readers who are willing to pay for quality"

In the era of instant information and social networks, where the reader is offered fast, short and free, the Swiss magazine "Reportaže" sails against the current. The texts are long, there are no photos, and the price is high. The editor-in-chief of "Reportage" talks about it for "Vreme".

Consumer society

Savers on cash, spenders on cards

A citizen of Serbia swipes his card to pay an average of 102 times a year. Cash still dominates retail, but that could soon reverse. And cards have one big drawback - they take our money more easily