Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Eurosphere agenda: “Portugal opposition topples government…”Serbia leading the Way in Europe’s Refugee Crisis

http://ift.tt/1WPTc2C

It’s not often that we Serbs get to be the good guys. Historically, whenever our name is mentioned, it’s usually in relation to accusations of causing World War I or Slobodan Milosevic and the four bloody wars he fomented in the mid-’90s. But ever since refugees from Syria, Iraq, and elsewhere started fleeing their homelands and crashing on Europe’s shores, with more than 200,000 refugees passing through Serbian territory this year, our countrymen have set an example for the rest of the continent, teaching our neighbors, even the larger and wealthier among them, a lesson not only in compassion but also in good policy.

Portugal opposition topples government
Portugal’s left-wing opposition rejects the minority government’s programme, forcing its ousting, and paving the way for a new administration.
German ex-Chancellor Schmidt dies at 96
Former West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt – an architect of the European Monetary System – has died aged 96, his office says.
VIDEO: The skilled diplomacy of Helmut Schmidt
Former West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt – who led the country from 1974 to 1982 – has died aged 96, his office says.
Europe responds to Cameron’s EU reform proposals

Europe responds to Cameron’s EU reform proposals

MAIN FOCUS: Catalonian parliament votes for secession | 10/11/2015

The Catalonian parliament voted on Monday in favour of a resolution for the region’s secession from Spain. The separatists have put themselves in an impasse with this move, some commentators criticise. Others blame the Catalans’ desire for independence on the EU.

The insufferable ease of nationalism in the Balkans

The recent Serbia-Albania football match was like a microcosm of the twenty-first century Balkans: lots of intense, emotional nationalism and “othering” and in the end, the result was completely irrelevant.

A Belgrade view. Photo used with permission of author.It was a pleasant Sunday evening in Elbasan, Albania. Crowds were murmuring in the streets, creating a ruckus rarely seen in the town before. Police were everywhere. Trained snipers were strategically positioned on rooftops of every highrise in town. In approximately 2 hours, an event attracting tens of thousands of people would start; defining everyday life in the Balkans for weeks to come. It was a football game, a EURO qualifier, a game between Albania and its archrival, Serbia.

Communist nostalgia in Eastern Europe: longing for the past

Why is communist nostalgia on the rise in Eastern Europe, and is it more than just a passing fad?

Ukraine: Europe’s forgotten refugees

While the world focuses on refugees arriving in Europe from warzones in the Middle East, the plight of those fleeing war in Ukraine has been forgotten.

 

 

Vía Erkan’s Field Diary http://ift.tt/1Pngm12


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