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         Yugoslavia Government:     more books (100)
  1. Memorandum of the Government of the Federative People's Republic of Yugoslavia on Slovene Carinthia, the Slovene frontier areas of Styria and the Croats of Burgenland by Government of Yugoslavia, 1946
  2. Local self-government in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia by Jovan Đorđević, 1956
  3. Report to the government of Yugoslavia on a watershed development programme for Pelagonia (Expanded technical assistance program FAO report) by G. C Fuller, 1957
  4. Declaring a state of war between the United States and the Government of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia : adverse report (to accompany H.J. Res. 44) ... Budget Office) (SuDoc Y 1.1/8:106-115) by U.S. Congressional Budget Office, 1999
  5. Report to the government of Yugoslavia on development and improvement of irrigation projects in the Backa region of the Vojvodina (Expanded technical assistance program FAO report) by John L Toevs, 1955
  6. Self-government in Yugoslavia by Stane Kavčič, 1961
  7. Report to the Government of Yugoslavia on a survey of inland fishery problems: 18-29 July 1966 (United Nations Development Programme) by William A Dill, 1966
  8. The People's Front as an all-national political organization;: Speech delivered at the Second Congress of the People's Front of Yugoslavia on the 27th ... Congress of the People's Front of Yugoslavia by Josip Broz Tito, 1947
  9. 33 questions, 33 answers on workers' self government in Yugoslavia by Aser Deleon, 1956
  10. From people's liberation committees to the communes (Information service Yugoslavia) by Dragoljub Milivojević, 1962
  11. International ramifications of Yugoslavia's serial wars: The challenge of ethno-national conflicts for a post-Cold-War, European order by Jacob W Kipp, 1993
  12. Recent developments in Yugoslav local government: Asummation of the formal seminar remarks by Eugen Pusić, 1965
  13. The foreign and domestic policies of Yugoslavia by Josip Broz Tito, 1951
  14. Politics and culture in Yugoslavia (Politics and culture series) by William Zimmerman, 1987

61. Religious Aspects Of The Yugoslavia - Kosovo Conflict
The government of yugoslavia refused to sign the Rambouillet peace accord. The US CIA became involved in destabilizing the government of yugoslavia.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/war_koso.htm
Religious aspects of the
Yugoslavia - Kosovo conflict
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Quotations:
" ...the peace negotiations between the Orthodox [Christian] Serbs, the Catholic Croats and the Muslim Bosnians had collapsed again. And there is no doubt that the religions that are so involved here had neglected in the period of more than forty years since the Second World War to engage in mourning, honestly confess the crimes which had been committed by all sides in the course of the centuries, and ask one another for mutual forgiveness....I think there can be no peace among the nations without peace among the religions!" Hans Küng and Karl-Josef Kuschel, commenting in 1993 on conflict within the former Yugoslavia. Although this quotation refers to Bosnia, not Kosovo, the principle is the same: a missed opportunity in the past and religious intolerance in the present. "Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant" (Where they create a wasteland, they call it peace.) Tacitus (historian, ancient Rome)

62. Congressman Eliot L. Engel (NY17) - Press Release - ENGEL URGES BUSH TO OPPOSE C
the Yugoslav government must meet these three criteria First, the government must cooperate with the International Criminal Tribunal for yugoslavia (ICTY) in
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/press/ny17_engel/pr010330.html
News From: CONGRESSMAN ELIOT ENGEL 17th District, New York
3655 Johnson Avenue, Bronx, NY 10463 - 718 796-9700
2303 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515 - 202 225-2464 Contact: Gary C. Meltz 202-225-2464 For release: March 30, 2001 ENGEL URGES BUSH TO OPPOSE CERTIFICATION ALLOWING SERBIA TO RECEIVE U.S. AID Washington, D.C. - Today, Rep. Eliot Engel and a bi-partisan group of Members of Congress urged President George W. Bush in a letter not to certify that the Yugoslav government has complied with conditions set by Congress for the lifting of U.S. aid restrictions. “Unfortunately, President Kostunica’s Yugoslav government has not met the conditions called for by Congress to lift U.S. aid restrictions. While there has been some improvement in Belgrade, it would be premature at this juncture for President Bush to certify that the Yugoslav government has met the standards laid out by U.S. law,” said Rep. Engel. The letter states that to gain certification by the U.S., the Yugoslav government must meet these three criteria: First, the government must cooperate with the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia (ICTY) in the apprehension of war criminals. Second, they must work to meet the steps called for in the Dayton Accords to end political support for separate Republika Srpska institutions. Third, the Serbian government must enact policies that demonstrate a respect for minority rights and the rule of law. “Currently, indicted war criminals are living openly in Serbia with no fear of arrest. These criminals have committed heinous war crimes in the past and should be forced to stand trial for their violations. The Kostunica government has also chosen not to distance itself from the Republika Srpska. Serbia’s continued support of the Bosnian Serb state serves as a destabilizing force in Bosnia and the entire region. And finally, the Yugoslav government has continued to violate the human rights of its citizens. It is estimated that 500 Albanian political prisoners are being held in Serbian jails on false charges or no charges at all,” said Rep. Engel.

63. Hsp
Whereas, in 1986, Mr.Paraga sued the government of yugoslavia for injuries, both physical and psychological, inflicted on him by prison authorities during his
http://www.hsp1861.hr/english/169.html
HRVATSKI ÈITATELJI KLIKNITE OVDJE
S. RES. 169
Supporting the efforts of Dobroslav Paraga to bring about increased respect for human rights in Yugoslavia I N T H E S E N A T E O F T H E U N I T E D S T A T E S August 4 (legislative day, January 3), 1989 Mr.Riegle ( for him self, Mr.Simon, Mr.Dixon, Mr.Helms, Mr.Levin, Mr.kennedy, andMr.Chaffe ) submitted the following resolution which was considered and agreed to R E S O L U T I O N Supporting the efforts of Dobroslav Paraga to bring about increased respect for human rights in Yugoslavia. Whereas Dobroslav Paraga, who has twice been adopted as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, has endured hardship for openly calling on the Yugoslav Government to honor its commitments under the Helsinki Accords to respect the fundamental human rights of all the citizens of Yugoslavia; Whereas Dobroslav Paraga has been tried on three occasions by Yugoslav courts, the initial charge being that, in 1980,he, along with a Jewish Croatian student, Ernest Brajder, authored a petition oposing torture in Yugoslavia and calling for the release of political prisoners; Whereas, as a result, both men were arrested and, three days later, Ernest Brajder died under what the Department of State calls " mysterious circumstances " ;

64. Yugoslavia
(1) Milovan Djilas, Rise and Fall (1985). In yugoslavia, right from the war s end the government was well organized and firmly in the hands of the Communists.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/2WWyugoslavia.htm
Yugoslavia
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USA History British History Second World War ... Email
In the 19th century several organizations were formed that campaigned for the unification of Slavonic peoples in the Balkans. These demands increased at the end of the First World War On 4th December 1918, a new kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was established. This included Serbia Montenegro and lands taken from Austro-Hungary and Bulgaria The monarch of Serbia, Peter I was the first ruler of the new kingdom and Nikola Pasic became the country's premier. Pasic successfully held the different groups together but his death in 1926 resulted in political turmoil. In January 1929 the new king, Alexander I, established a royal dictatorship and renamed the country Yugoslavia. In the 1930s the Yugoslavian government headed by Prince-Regent Paul allied itself with the fascist dictatorships of Germany and Italy . However, on 27th March 1941, a military coup established a government more sympathetic to the Allies. Ten days later the

65. Government Internet Guide -- In The News -- International
url http//www.ccny.cuny.edu/library/Divisions/government/Iraqbib.html. See also Middle East. url http//www.belfast.org.uk/report.htm. Kosovo and yugoslavia.
http://www.library.usyd.edu.au/subjects/government/newsinternat.html
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This page includes both current issues in world politics and significant issues from the past few years. Chechnya Ireland China Kosovo and Yugoslavia ... Other news sites.
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Perry-Castaneda Library Map Collection United Nations Cartographic Section, political maps of the world
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Russian Attack on Grozny, Chechnya Scout Report on Chechnya, October 1999. url: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sr/1999/scout-991022.html#IntheNews Russia Escalates Chechen War, Risks Reprisals from the West Scout Report on Chechnya, December 1999. url: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/socsci/1999/ss-991130.html#IntheNews
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A Tale of Two Chinas Scout Report on China, August 1999. url: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/socsci/1999/ss-990824.html#IntheNews US-China Standoff - Views from Outside America Scout Report on China, April 2001. url: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sr/2001/scout-010406.html#IntheNews

66. Clinton Declares ÔshamÕ Victory In Yugoslavia
the Yugoslav government that had three points (1) Kosovo must be granted autonomy, (2) NATO must be allowed to station 30,000 ground troops in yugoslavia to
http://www.dallaspeacecenter.org/sham-rpt.htm
D ALLAS P EACE T IMES
June 1999 By Cliff Pearson President Clinton's June 10 declaration of victory in Yugoslavia is nothing more than a public relations sham. As Dallas Peace Center board member Dick Davis said to me the morning of June 11, "You can mess your pants and call it a victory, but that doesn't make it a victory." This war has been a tremendous failure, plain and simple. There is no real victory here for President Clinton or the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and definitely not for the people of Yugoslavia. Peace could have been achieved 11 weeks ago before this war began. But instead of using diplomacy, the U.S. went charging in with military threats. The Rambouillet agreement wasn't an attempt at negotiation, it was an ultimatum a list of harsh demands presented by the U.S. government to the Yugoslav government that had three points: (1) Kosovo must be granted autonomy, (2) NATO must be allowed to station 30,000 ground troops in Yugoslavia to ensure this autonomy; and (3) a NATO-conducted referendum for Kosovo's independence from Yugoslavia would take place within three years. The Yugoslav government agreed to the first condition, and then rejected the second and third, saying they were a gross violation of their sovereignty and the independence of their country. There was nothing diplomatic about this ultimatum. But the Clinton administration coined a new buzzword, "coercive diplomacy" (a fancy way of saying extortion) and decided to solicit the help of NATO in conducting an illegal and immoral bombing campaign, that killed more civilians than it did soldiers.

67. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Yugoslavia
document Location usa Last checked 19990501 Federal Republic of yugoslavia Official information from the government of the Federal Republic of yugoslavia.
http://bubl.ac.uk/link/y/yugoslavia.htm
BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
Yugoslavia
See also: bosnia croatia kosovo former yugoslav republic of macedonia ... A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • Alternative Information Net
  • Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe Geographical Index
  • Ethnologue Language Database: Yugoslavia
  • Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ...
  • World Travel Guide: Yugoslavia Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    Alternative Information Net
    An independent news agency in former Yugoslavia. Includes the latest news in English (subject to a translation delay of up to 24 hours), the AIM Review, weekly bulletins, an archive search and links to related resources. Most stories are in Serbo-Croat.
    Author: Alternative Information Net
    Subjects: yugoslavia
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    news
    Location: switzerland, europe
    Last checked:
    Archaeological Resource Guide for Europe Geographical Index
    Extensive index to European archaeological resources, organised by country.
    Author: Sara Champion and Martijn van Leusen
    Subjects: albania, archaeology links, austria, belgium, bulgaria, croatia, cyprus, czech republic, denmark, estonia, finland, france, germany, greece, hungary, iceland, ireland, italian history, lithuania, luxembourg, former yugoslav republic of macedonia, malta, netherlands, norway, poland, portugal, romania, russian history, slovakia, slovenia, spain, sweden, switzerland, turkey, vatican city, yugoslavia
  • 68. Yugoslavia: An Incomplete Revolution| USIP Newbyte
    While much can be left to market forces, yugoslavia has to find government revenue (and reduce expenditures), straighten out the overlapping and contradictory
    http://www.usip.org/newsmedia/releases/pre2002/nb20001017.html
    U.S. INSTITUTE OF PEACE
    NEWSBYTE
    Media inquiries should be directed to the Office of Communications:
    Phone: 202.429.3828
    E-mail: outreach@usip.org Yugoslavia:
    An Incomplete Revolution
    Although the people of Yugoslavia, in a historic show of strength and unity, have taken a momentous step towards establishing a strong and vibrant democracy, the revolution is not yet complete. What will be the priorities for the democratic opposition as Yugoslavia makes its transition from autocracy to democracy? How can the international community be supportive of these reformers in Yugoslavia? The points below are major highlights and themes that emerged from the discussion. Click here for an archived copy of the audio from the Current Issues Briefing. Milosevic is still dangerous Although out of office and seemingly unable to recover his previous hold on power, Milosevic still has the potential to inflict damage. His supporters have a strong presence in the governments of Serbia and Yugoslavia as well as in the armed forces, police, and other security services. People who loyally served the Milosevic regime still operate within the news media, an area vulnerable to reactionary efforts by Milosevic to re-exert control. Kostunica is finding it difficult to form a Yugoslav government; and the Serbian Parliament - dominated by forces outside Kostunica's Democratic Opposition of Serbia - is resisting dissolution and elections.

    69. Yugoslav Elections | USIP Newbyte
    with a Kostunica regime over Kosovo and Montenegro, especially if the federal government has to It will be a great relief to have yugoslavia rejoin the world.
    http://www.usip.org/newsmedia/releases/pre2002/nb20000929.html
    U.S. INSTITUTE OF PEACE
    NEWSBYTE
    Released:
    29 September 2000 Media inquiries should be directed to the Office of Communications:
    Phone: 202.429.3828
    E-mail: outreach@usip.org Yugoslav Elections:
    What Next?
    On September 27th, members of the Institute Balkans Working Group met and discussed the results of the September 24 Yugoslav elections. During the discussion, the following conclusions were reached by the Balkans Working Group regarding the meaning of the election results and what the current government of President Slobodan Milosevic will do next. The Milosevic regime is cracking, but his fate is still not sealed... The Democratic Opposition of Serbia coalition (DOS) has won a convincing victory in the Yugoslav presidential and municipal elections. The outcome of Federal Parliament elections, however, is still uncertain, though the Opposition should challenge the official figures giving Milosevic and his allies a majority. Under the impression that the Opposition was too fragmented and incompetent to pose any real threat, Milosevic miscalculated when he decided to call elections early under new constitutional provisions providing for direct popular election of the president. Opposition presidential candidate Vojislav Kostunica has proven himself a unifying force and an energetic campaigner who successfully appealed to a wide public, including both the Army rank and file and minorities throughout Serbia.

    70. Serbia And Montenegro Links
    a parliamentary government. Social Democratic Party of Montenegro, Information on recent elections and an anthem. Social Democratic Party of yugoslavia, Party
    http://www.ku.edu/~herron/yugoslavia.htm
    Serbia and Montenegro = Albanian = English = French = German = Hungarian = Italian
    = Serbian
    Categories Daily Regional News News Source Beograd.co.yu Language : SR Legalizacija bespravno izgraðenih objekata
    Poziv za predlaganje projekata iz oblasti kulture za 2004.

    Nacrt Generalnog plana Beograda 2021

    Prikljuèenje 21.000 stanova na toplovod

    Central Government, Ministries and Agencies
    Links related to governmental structure, actions and policies. Federal Government Site Abstract Languages Government News and press releases from the federal government. Includes information on government institutions. Federal Ministries and Agencies Site Abstract Languages Archives Covers holdings and policies. Army Details structure, presents photos and news. Embassy in the US News and consular information. Site appears to be on a transition phase. Federal Bureau of Informatics News about databases and IT legislation. Federal Customs Service Describes the organization's responsibilities. English version is under construction.

    71. ThinkQuest : Library : An End To Communism: A Recent History Of Russia
    led United National Front won 80% of the vote and established the Federal People s Republic of yugoslavia on Nov. 29, 1945. The new government was recognized
    http://library.thinkquest.org/10775/yugoslav.htm
    Index World History
    An End to Communism: A Recent History of Russia
    Follow the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe and Russia from the destruction of the Berlin Wall until the late 1990s. The "KGB" section provides statistics, flags, and information into the historical background of each of Eastern European nations and the former Russian republics. A links page connects to sites about Russia and Russian studies and information on Communism, including the Manifesto of the Communist Party. Visit Site 1997 ThinkQuest Internet Challenge Languages English Students Melissa Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Rachel Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Donald Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Coaches Diane VanAusdall Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Diane VanAusdall Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Diane VanAusdall Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Want to build a ThinkQuest site? The ThinkQuest site above is one of thousands of educational web sites built by students from around the world. Click here to learn how you can build a ThinkQuest site.

    72. Croat Government
    ALAJBEGOVIC, Mehmed (May 7, 1906 in Bihac June 7, 1947 in Zagreb executed) Executed post-war by Communist government of yugoslavia.
    http://www.geocities.com/~orion47/CROATIA/Croatgovt.html
    CROATIAN GOVERNMENT
    PAVELIC, Dr. jur. Ante
    (July 14, 1889 in Bradina - December 28, 1959 in Madrid, Spain)
    Died as result of wounds sustained in the April 10, 1957 assassination attempt in Lomas del Palomar, Argentina.
    Founder of Ustasa Party (1930); Poglavnik (Leader) of Independent State of Croatia (NDH): April 13, 1941 - May 6, 1945.
    ALAJBEGOVIC, Mehmed
    (May 7, 1906 in Bihac - June 7, 1947 in Zagreb [executed])
    Executed post-war by Communist government of Yugoslavia.
    Assignments:

    Final Minister of Foreign Affairs, NDH (late 1944 - May 1945); Minister for [War Damaged Places?/"Skrbi za Postradale Krajeve"] (October 1943 -late-1944); General Consul of NDH, Munich (January 1942 - October 1943)
    Notes: Lawyer.
    ARTUKOVIC, Dr. jur. Andrija Born: Died: 1988, in penitentiary hospital, Zagreb. Assignments: Minister of Internal Affairs: 1943-1945. Minister of Religion and Law, NDH: 1942-1943. First Minister of Internal Affairs, NDH: Apr. 1941-1942. Postwar Prosecution: Extradited from U.S. to Yugoslavia and sentenced to death by shooting, 1986. Sentence delayed due to defendant's illness. FRKOVIC, Ivica

    73. Sites Internet Publics Du Pays: Yugoslavia
    Federal Statistical Office of yugoslavia http//www.szs.sv.gov.yu. government of the Republic of Serbia http//www.serbia.sr.gov.yu.
    http://lessites.service-public.fr/cgi-bin/annusite/annusite.fcgi/etr6?lang=uk&co

    74. Yugoslavia´s New Federal Government
    Thursday, 19 July, 2001. yugoslavia´s New Federal government. by RN Eastern Europe correspondent James Kliphuis, 18 July 2001. Yugoslav
    http://www.rnw.nl/hotspots/html/yugoslavia010718.html
    Bahasa Indonesia Nederlands English Español Português Start Hot Spots
    Hot Spots links

    Archive

    Press Review
    ...
    Press Review Archive
    Thursday, 19 July, 2001 Yugoslavia´s New Federal Government by RN Eastern Europe correspondent James Kliphuis, 18 July 2001 Yugoslav President Vojislav Kostunica has appointed Dragisa Pesic of Montenegro's Socialist People's Party as prime minister of the next federal government. The move should herald the end of the crisis in the current federal government in Belgrade, which collapsed when prime minister Zoran Zizic resigned in protest when Slobodan Milosevic was handed over to the UN War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague. But political analysts in Belgrade have expressed doubts as to Mr Pesic's abilities for finding long-term solutions to the Yugoslav Federation's pressing problems. The government of the Yugoslav Federation (of Serbia and Montenegro) is to be drastically reorganised, and the number of ministers will be reduced: from now on, there will be an equal number of ministerial posts for Serbs and for Montenegrins, five for each side. It will no longer be possible for Serb ministers on the federal government to outvote their Montenegrin colleagues, as happened last month on the controversial issue of co-operation with the Hague Tribunal. According to President Kostunica, the main tasks of the new government will be the country's re-integration in the international community especially with the IMF and the World Bank and the re-organisation of the relationship between Serbia and Montenegro.

    75. Mending Fences In Rump-Yugoslavia
    not least, though not in the first place – because the demise of yugoslavia would cost has no choice but to lure the SNP back into the federal government.
    http://www.rnw.nl/hotspots/html/yugoslavia010703.html
    Bahasa Indonesia Nederlands English Español Português Start Hot Spots
    Hot Spots links

    Archive

    Press Review
    ...
    Press Review Archive
    Tuesday, 03 July, 2001 Mending Fences in Rump-Yugoslavia by RN Eastern Europe correspondent James Kliphuis, 3 July 2001 In Belgrade, Yugoslav President Vojislav Kostunica has started consultations with political leaders from Serbia and Montenegro on forming a new federal government. Federal Prime Minister Zoran Zizic resigned last week in protest over the handing over of Slobodan Milosevic to the War Crimes Tribunal in The Hague. In a separate development, a new government took office in Montenegro on Monday after receiving a vote of confidence in the Montenegrin parliament. The two developments are totally unrelated, strange as it may seem. The new government in the republic of Montenegro (which together with the republic of Serbia forms the Belgrade-based Yugoslav Federation) is made up of political forces which would like to break off all relations with Belgrade as soon as possible. It is a minority government; Montenegro's President Milo Djukanovic, a long-time advocate of independence for his country, failed to collect a clear majority for breaking off all ties with Belgrade in the elections this spring. Pro-Independence Coalition in Montenegro
    The cabinet headed by Prime Minister Filip Vujanovic needs the votes of the small Liberal Party to attain a majority in the parliament of Podgorica; and the Montenegrin Liberals are even more ardent in their wish for independence than Messrs Djukanovic and Vujanovic.

    76. The History Guy: Warfare And Conflict Between Kosovar Albanians And Serbs Since
    Montenegro and the formerly AustroHungarian areas of Slovenia, Bosnia and Croatia to form the new nation of yugoslavia. The new kingdom s government and army
    http://www.historyguy.com/kosovar_serb_warfare.html
    The History Guy: Warfare and Conflict Between Kosovar Albanians and Serbs Since 1912 Home Military History Historical Personalities Email ... Site Map For hundreds of years, the people of Serbia have considered the region of Kosovo to be the homeland of their history and culture. From the late 1300's until 1912 however, this area was ruled by the Ottoman Turks, an Islamic people who once controlled a vast empire. Over the course of Ottoman Turkish rule, many Serbs either left Kosovo or converted from Christianity to Islam. Also, the Albanian Muslim (a Muslim is someone who believes in Islam) population of the area grew, until the majority of Kosovo inhabitants were no longer Serb Christians. Albanians and Serbs are quite different in terms of language, religion and culture. Ever since Serbia acquired Kosovo in the First Balkan War (1912), conflict between these two groups has erupted periodically in this disputed region. Below is a listing of these conflicts accompanied by a brief description.

    77. Yugoslavia - 2002 - Introduction Geography People Government Economy Communicati
    yugoslavia 2002 - Introduction Geography Population government Economy Communications Transportation Military Issues Maps Flags.
    http://www.greekorthodoxchurch.org/wfb2002/yugoslavia/

  • 2002 INDEX
  • Country Ranks
  • DEFINITIONS Yugoslavia - 2002
    http://www.greekorthodoxchurch.org/wfb2002/yugoslavia/index.html
    SOURCE: 2002 CIA WORLD FACTBOOK
    Please ADD this page to your FAVORITES - - - - -
    USA Immigration Services - Visas, Citizenship, Green Card Lottery, Immigration Information
    http://www.greekorthodoxchurch.org/wfb2002/yugoslavia/index.html
    Photius Coutsoukis

    Revised 28-Jan-03
  • 78. Knowledge Net Serbia And Montenegro
    government, Federal government of yugoslavia Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs Federal Ministry of the Interior Montegrin government. more government links
    http://www.tol.cz/look/knowledgeNet/yugoslavia/index.tpl

    79. ASIL Insight--Kosovo Situation And NATO Military Action
    When the Yugoslav government refused to sign the Americandrafted peace accord for Kosovo, and after repeated warnings to yugoslavia, NATO forces have begun an
    http://www.asil.org/insights/insigh30.htm
    ASIL Insights
    The Kosovo Situation and NATO Military Action
    By Frederic L. Kirgis
    March 1999
    When the Yugoslav government refused to sign the American-drafted peace accord for Kosovo, and after repeated warnings to Yugoslavia, NATO forces have begun an aerial bombing campaign against Yugoslav military targets. The question arises whether international law permits the use of armed force against Yugoslavia under these circumstances. Kosovo is a province of Yugoslavia, not an independent state. Even though about 90 percent of its population is ethnic Albanian, the international community has not supported a right of secession for Kosovo. Since Kosovo remains a part of Yugoslavia in fact and in law, the current military action raises questions of external intervention in civil strife. In this case, though, the civil strife is likely to endanger peace and security in neighboring states and has already created large refugee flows into those states. Resolution 1199 thus expressly acknowledged that there is a situation in Kosovo of the nature covered by Chapter VII and recognized the role Yugoslav forces have played in creating the humanitarian crisis in the province, but it did not expressly authorize forceful intervention. The U.N. Secretary General, Kofi Annan, has said that in his view only the Security Council has the authority to decide that the internal situation in any state is so grave as to justify forceful intervention. The clear implication is that if any state or alliance, such as NATO, could intervene on its own, the U.N. system of collective security could be endangered or destroyed.

    80. Yugoslavia - Encyclopedia Article About Yugoslavia. Free Access, No Registration
    Events. January. January 5 The Soviet Union recognizes the new pro-Soviet government of Poland. as Democratic Federal yugoslavia (DFY), which in 1946
    http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Yugoslavia
    Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
    Yugoslavia
    Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Yugoslavia Jugoslavija in all south Slavic languages The Slavic languages (also called Slavonic languages ) are the languages of the Slavic peoples. They are a group of Indo-European languages spoken in most of Eastern Europe, much of the Balkans, parts of Central Europe, and the northern part of Asia. Scholars divide the Slavic languages into three branches:
    • South Slavic , which is further split into Western and Eastern

    Click the link for more information. ) is a term used for three separate political entities that existed during most of the 20th century (19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s As a means of recording the passage of time, the 20th Century was that century which lasted from 1901-2000. Colloquially, this is often known as the nineteen hundreds , referring to the years 1900 to 1999. The twentieth century was a remarkable
    Click the link for more information.

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