Serbia's president says the United States plans to introduce sanctions against Serbia’s main gas supplier that is controlled by Russia
Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić has stated that the United States and the United Kingdom will soon impose sanctions on the Serbian oil company NIS, in which Russia's Gazprom holds more than 50% of the shares.
The Petroleum Industry of Serbia, primarily owned by Russia’s Gazprom Neft and its parent company Gazprom, is Serbia’s exclusive gas supplier and controls the main pipelines delivering gas from Russia to Serbian households and industries.
In several Eastern European and Middle Eastern countries, Christmas is officially celebrated on January 7. This stems from the fact that many Orthodox Christian churches adhere to the Julian calendar for their religious observances.
The United States plans to introduce sanctions against Serbia’s main gas supplier, which is controlled by Russia, Serbia’s president said Saturday.
The United States plans to introduce sanctions against Serbia’s main gas supplier that is controlled by Russia, Serbia’s president said Saturday. President Aleksandar Vucic told state RTS ...
The United States plans to introduce sanctions against Serbia’s main gas supplier that is controlled by Russia, Serbia’s president said Saturday. President Aleksandar Vucic told state RTS ...
The United States plans to introduce sanctions against Serbia’s main gas supplier that is controlled by Russia, Serbia’s president said Saturday.
Croatia's premier said European Union leaders will seek a solution to help Serbia steer clear of sanctions targeting a key oil refiner controlled by Russia's Gazprom.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić spoke by phone with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday about the situation in Kosovo and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Vučić announced on his Instagram profile that he had a very good and meaningful conversation with the Russian foreign minister.
Milos Vucevic also pointed out that "if Russia provides official data, Serbia will analyze the information received"
Serbian students protested outside the prosecutor's office in Belgrade, demanding justice for a train station awning collapse in Novi Sad that killed 15, blaming corruption and sloppy work.