Stigao Vučić, može da počne.
Crna Gora
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- Post n°451
Re: Crna Gora
Stigao Vučić, može da počne.
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- Post n°452
Re: Crna Gora
a) zar nije cetinje prijestolnica crne gore?
b) zasto se presjednik inaugurise u podgoricu?
c) zasto se presjednik inaugurise u parlamentu, ako se vec bira direktnim izborima?
d) je li cetinje i dalje deo crnoorkovske drzave ili tamosnji crni orci sami biraju koga ce da priznaju, a koga ne? hoce li slican tretman imati i prilikom odluka o policiji, sudstvu, drzavnim organima, porezima?
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- Post n°454
Re: Crna Gora
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- Post n°455
Re: Crna Gora
Naravno, i Eskobar je tu, da pruzi podrsku demokratiji i slobodi
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- Post n°456
Re: Crna Gora
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- Post n°457
Re: Crna Gora
Notxor wrote:Nemaš pojma - desno Đukaj, Begaj, Osmani, levo Srbi - Milanović, Vučić, Cvijanović.
Zasto si stao sa levim nizom (zapravo desnim, gledano iz perspektive G17 Jakova)? Slede veliki Srbi Zeljko Komsic i strani guverneri, na celu sa Eskobarom.
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- Post n°458
Re: Crna Gora
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- Post n°459
Re: Crna Gora
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Re: Crna Gora
Notxor wrote:Komšić je Bošnjak, šta ti pada na pamet?
Pa da, Srbin koliko i Eskobar (stavise, verujem da je Eskobar skloniji Srbima od tzv. Komsica).
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Join date : 2020-06-19
Location : bizarr nők hazája
- Post n°461
Re: Crna Gora
taman na vreme da nas prosvetliš s obzirom na bezbednosnu osetljivost terenaFilipenko wrote:Odustajem, gasim strim.
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Hong Kong dollar, Indian cents, English pounds and Eskimo pence
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- Post n°462
Re: Crna Gora
Gledaj i plači Marina. Predsednik je odsutan.
Današnjim performansom, @DPSCrneGore Cetinje i naš @SMDPSCG poslali su jasnu poruku - odgovor na pokušaj ponižavanja naše dične Prijestonice inauguracijom novog predsjednika države van Cetinja. pic.twitter.com/AWwkR07I6n
— Ivan Vukovic (@pg_citizen) May 20, 2023
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- Post n°464
Re: Crna Gora
Petnaestogodišnji dječak zadobio je povrede kada je sinoć oko tri sata u centru Bara, na njega fizički nasrnuo B.D. (2004. godište), prenose Radio Bar i Bar info.
"Na sreću, grad je zbog koncerta bio pod pojačanim nadzorom, pa su brzom intervencijom policije spriječene teže posljedice", navode Radio Bar i Bar Info pozivajući se na policiju.
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- Post n°465
Re: Crna Gora
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- Post n°466
Re: Crna Gora
Prema saznanjima “Vijesti”, Đukanović i njegovi najbliži saradnici su pokušali da dobiju neku vrstu garancija od zapadnih partnera da protiv njega neće biti vođeni krivični postupci, ali nisu uspeli da ih isposluju, odnosno da mu obezbede neku vrstu štita od istraga pravosudnih organa.
Izvori “Vijesti” u EU su bili decidirani da nema nikakvog dogovora sa Đukanovićem.
U Vašingtonu nisu mogli da izađu u susret Đukanoviću, pre svega zbog tzv. “Panamskih papira”, i pored toga što mu priznaju zasluge za strateški važne odluke poput priznanja Kosova i ulaska Crne Gore u Severnoatlantsku alijansu. Kako kažu naši izvori bliski Stejt departmentu, dokazi koji se nalaze u “Panamskim papirima” su takve prirode da ne ostavljaju mnogo manevarskog prostora.
Međutim, i iz Brisela i iz Vašingtona, nam je potvrđeno da je principijelan stav EU i SAD da svaki građanin, bez ikakve razlike, mora da ima zagarantovano pravo na pravično i fer suđenje, kao i na sve instrumente koje mu zakoni dozvoljavaju da se brani i deluje u postupku. Drugim rečima, jedno su profesionalna istraga, pravično suđenje, a sasvim drugo upotreba pravosudnih institucija za političke ili personalne obračune ili osvete. Prva opcija će imati podršku zapadnih partnera, druga će biti velika kočnica na putu Crne Gore ka Evropskoj uniji.
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- Post n°467
Re: Crna Gora
zalosna drzava
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- Post n°468
Re: Crna Gora
I met and congratulated President @JakovMilatovic on taking office.
— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) June 1, 2023
The people of Montenegro want to move ahead in its EU accession process.
For this, it is essential to continue to deliver on reforms – we are supporting you every step of the way. pic.twitter.com/8eL0rI9vvQ
ili Roberta....
Odličan susret sa @EP_President @RobertaMetsola kojoj sam predstavio jasnu viziju CG kao prve naredne članice EU. pic.twitter.com/iooAh4UKIG
— Jakov Milatovic (@JakovMilatovic) June 1, 2023
ili...
The decisive fight for European values, peace and future is being waged in #ukraine . I reiterated full solidarity to President @ZelenskyyUa pic.twitter.com/WbS68qwrSP
— Jakov Milatovic (@JakovMilatovic) June 1, 2023
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- Post n°469
Re: Crna Gora
Abazović zakazao sjednicu Vijeća za nacionalnu bezbjednost
Premijer Dritan Abazović sazvao je za sjutra sjednicu Vijeća za nacionalnu bezbjednost, potvrđeno je Portalu RTCG.
Na dnevnom redu sjednice bi trebalo da bude slučaj Do Kvona i lidera Pokreta "Evropa sad" Milojka Spajića.
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- Post n°471
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Krivične protiv službenika MUP-a i 37 osoba zbog lažnog prebivališta u Šavniku
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How Phone Messages Sped the Fall of President Milo Djukanovic in Montenegro
Evidence found in encrypted messages helped speed the fall of Milo Djukanovic in Montenegro. His successor, Jakov Milatovic, says he plans to clean up the country.
- Spoiler:
- https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/08/world/europe/montenegro-president-djukanovic-messages.html
When police forces in Western Europe cracked an encrypted phone app popular with narco-traffickers, the messages they deciphered from the Balkan nation of Montenegro provided shocking evidence of a state captured by crime.
A Montenegrin police officer discussed cocaine shipments with a notorious crime boss, and the son of the head of the country’s supreme court offered to skew verdicts and help with smuggling. Another police officer sent photographs to the leader of an organized crime group to show how his police unit had roughed up members of a rival crime gang. One victim had a pistol stuffed into his throat.
The messages, shared with prosecutors in Montenegro in 2021 but only acted on last year, helped to accelerate the fall of Milo Djukanovic, 61, Europe’s longest-serving elected leader until his defeat in a presidential election in April. Rumors had swirled for years of Mr. Djukanovic’s collusion with criminals, something he has always denied.
“It was evident that the institutions were captured by corruption and organized crime,” Mr. Djukanovic’s successor, Jakov Milatovic, 36, said in an interview last month on his first day at work as president in Podgorica, the capital.
The new leader, an Oxford-educated former economist with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, said the time had come to stop shrugging shoulders in response to “a widespread perception that the whole system is corrupted.”
“Everything started from the top — and that top has been politically defeated,” President Milatovic said, vowing to clean up the judiciary and police force, appoint a new central bank governor and end what he said had been a “state captured by criminals.”
How far he can go depends in a large part on whether parliamentary elections on June 11 confirm Mr. Djukanovic’s political eclipse. That process began three years ago when his previously invincible governing party lost control of Parliament — and the power to appoint ministers responsible for law enforcement.
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A man in a suit and light blue tie emerges from a car.
Jakov Milatovic, center, arrived for his inauguration ceremony in Podgorica, Montenegro, in May, after winning a presidential election in April.Credit...Boris Pejovic/EPA, via Shutterstock
A man in a suit and light blue tie emerges from a car.
In private, European diplomats have long complained about the rot in Montenegro but said there was little they could do. That was partly because the United States was focused on getting the country to join NATO against opposition from pro-Russian foes of Mr. Djukanovic, and had little interest in rocking the boat. Montenegro, with soaring mountains, beautiful beaches and just 625,000 people, sat on the last stretch of the Mediterranean coast not already in the alliance.
There was also scant solid evidence of collusion with criminals, at least until police infiltrated the messaging app Sky ECC, which shut down after its executives were indicted by the United States in 2021 for racketeering.
The decrypted messages sent to prosecutors in Podgorica were only acted upon last year when they leaked in the local media and led to a wave of arrests of people who figured in the messages, all of them appointed during Mr. Djukanovic’s long rule.
These included the longtime head of the Supreme Court, Vesna Medenica; her son, Milos; a state prosecutor; and several police officers, including another frequent user of the Sky ECC app, Petar Lazovic, the son of a former head of the fight against organized crime.
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Police with helmets and riot shields.
President Milatovic has vowed to clean up the country’s police force.Credit...Savo Prelevic/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Police with helmets and riot shields.
“We finally have proof of what we all assumed was going on,” said Zeljko Ivanovic, the chief executive of the country’s leading independent media group, Vijesti. “We should build a monument to the Sky app.”
That Montenegrin criminals, some of them fabulously wealthy thanks to cocaine trafficking and the smuggling of cigarettes into Europe to skirt import duties, had suborned parts of the police force and judiciary has been an open secret for many years but “they were untouchable,” according to Montenegro’s acting prime minister, Dritan Abazovic.
“The narco cartels and smugglers of cigarettes made a network that financed political parties, political parties got power and the criminals felt comfortable,” he said. “But after recent changes everything is now crashing.”
Mr. Djukanovic has long denied having links to organized crime, dismissing such accusations as the work of his political enemies and disinformation generated by Serbia and Russia, both of which wanted him gone because of his support for NATO, which Montenegro joined in 2017. Mr. Milatovic, the new president, is also a strong supporter of NATO, though some of his supporters are not.
In addition to sanctioning arrests, the government led by Mr. Abazovic also targeted the businesses of Mr. Djukanovic’s associates, cutting off revenues from state companies.
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A man in a suit with a red tie sitting in a chair.
Milo Djukanovic, Europe’s longest-serving leader until he lost the presidential election in April, has strenuously denied any links to organized crime.Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times
A man in a suit with a red tie sitting in a chair.
What supporters of Montenegro’s break with Mr. Djukanovic see as a draining of the swamp, however, is viewed differently by the former president and his supporters. They instead see a victory for Serbia and Russia and a politically driven redivision of the spoils.
Zdravko Begovic, president of the Montenegro Bar Association and a defense attorney for the arrested former Supreme Court chief justice, Ms. Medenica, said his client was being blamed for the sins of her son, who may have promised gangsters that he could tip the scales of justice in their favor through his mother.
“But there is no evidence she ever spoke with these people or took their money,” Mr. Begovic said. The mother, unlike the son, a cocaine addict, he added, never used the Sky ECC app.
Mr. Milatovic, the new president, declined to say whether he would like to see his predecessor prosecuted, saying only that Mr. Djukanovic, as a former president, “can have an office, a car and a stipend but he does not have immunity.” Mr. Djukanovic has denied rumors he plans to move to Dubai, saying at a farewell news conference that he has done nothing wrong and will stay in Montenegro.
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A multistory concrete warehouse.
A warehouse at Bar, Montenegro’s main port on the Adriatic Sea, where smuggling has long been rampant.Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times
A multistory concrete warehouse.
Italian prosecutors investigating the mafia accused Mr. Djukanovic of running a cigarette smuggling racket nearly 20 years ago but dropped plans to prosecute him after he steered Montenegro to independence from Serbia in 2006, a move that gave him immunity as it made him the leader of a sovereign state.
In 2016, Jelena Jovanovic, a reporter with the newspaper Vijesti, got a potentially explosive tip-off from the head of an organized crime group who, angry about an attempt by a rival criminal group to blow up his brother, gave her a list of police officers he said were on the payroll of his brother’s would-be assassins.
Ms. Jovanovic, who is watched over by security guards whenever she goes outside because of death threats, wrote about the list without giving any names. But she reported those to the state prosecutor, Milivoje Katnic, a longtime ally of Mr. Djukanovic, and the special prosecutor Stojanka Radovic, who led a subsequent investigation.
Prosecutors, she said, did nothing.
“They could have stopped all this years ago but they didn’t want to,” she said. “Protecting criminals was a state project.”
It was much the same story, according to Mr. Abazovic, the acting prime minister, when Europol in 2021 delivered a first installment of deciphered Sky ECC phone messages to Montenegro. The prosecutor’s office, still run by allies of Mr. Djukanovic, he said, buried the transcripts, insisting there was nothing to investigate. The prosecutor responsible for that decision was arrested in December.
Hiding the evidence became impossible after Libertas, a news portal financed by the U.S. Embassy in Montenegro, was leaked part of the Europol information and last year began publishing decrypted messages.
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Two people walk on a bridge with mountains and clouds in the background.
Montenegro’s capital, Podgorica, in April.Credit...Marko Djurica/Reuters
Two people walk on a bridge with mountains and clouds in the background.
Mr. Lazovic, the son of the anti-organized crime chief, whose messages indicate he tipped off a notoriously brutal crime boss about police surveillance and ongoing investigations, was charged in April along with another police officer with creating a criminal organization, abuse of office, drug smuggling, drug trafficking and complicity in murder.
Mr. Lazovic’s lawyer, Nikola Martinovic, acknowledged that his client had communicated with criminals about drug shipments but said this was done only to win their trust as part an undercover mission to penetrate a particularly brutal narcotics gang.
“He is a victim, not a criminal,” the lawyer said.
Damir Lekic, a Podgorica lawyer who represents members of a rival gang arrested by Mr. Lazovic in the past, dismissed that as highly unlikely. He said his clients had told him in 2017 — long before the decrypted Sky messages surfaced — that the police officer was working foran organized crime group and torturing rival drug traffickers at its behest.
“I didn’t believe them but when I read the Sky transcripts I understood that what they said was 100 percent accurate,” Mr. Lekic said. “I can’t lie. My clients are criminals. But everything they told me turned out to be true.”
Alisa Dogramadzieva contributed reporting.
A correction was made on
June 8, 2023
:
An earlier version of this story misspelled the family name of a defense attorney. He is Mr. Begovic not Mr. Becovic.
Andrew Higgins is the bureau chief for East and Central Europe based in Warsaw. Previously a correspondent and bureau chief in Moscow for The Times, he was on the team awarded the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting, and led a team that won the same prize in 1999 while he was Moscow bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal.
A version of this article appears in print on June 9, 2023, Section
A
, Page
10
of the New York edition
with the headline:
Decrypted Messages Helped Doom Leader of Crime-Filled Nation.
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- Post n°473
Re: Crna Gora
To što je policija procesuirala neke osobe zbog sumnje da su lažno prijavile prebivalište u Šavniku, neće uticati na njihovo pravo glasa kad se izbori u varošici, koji su počeli prije osam mjeseci, nastave. Razlog je to što je birački spisak za lokalne izbore odavno zaključen.
Odgovor DPS
“Zakon o registrima prebivališta i boravišta primjenjuje se jedino na opštinu Šavniku. Da vidimo da li su to radili u drugim gradovima - od Podgorice, Nikšića, Budve... gdje su takođe ogromne migracije stanovništva. Zakon se potpuno selektivno primjenjuje, zbog toga što još nije završen izborni proces u Šavniku, ne bi li se na taj način izvršio dodatni pritisak...”, ocijenio je.
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- Post n°474
Re: Crna Gora
Jakov Milatović za bečki Der Standard
Trenutno oko pet do šest procenata našeg stanovništva potiče iz Ukrajine. Po glavi stanovnika, mi smo jedna od zemalja sa najvećim kapacitetom apsorpcije ukrajinskog stanovništva u Evropi.
“Mnogo ljudi je pobjeglo iz Rusije i našlo mir širom Evrope i ostatka svijeta, uključujući i Crnu Goru. Neki od njih su već imali svoje nekretnine u Crnoj Gori. Imamo oko pet procenata Rusa i pet procenata Ukrajinaca”, kazao je on.
To je preko 60 hiljada izbeglica
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