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Examples
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A Yankee-in-Belgrade post a photo and writes about Stevo Radelic - “a Serbian refugee who has been living just outside of Belgrade now ever since he lost his home in Croatia at the beginning of Yugoslavia's break-up”: “He's made a new life for himself, although a difficult one, creating works of art from pieces of oak.”
Global Voices in English » Serbia: Gypsies’ Houses Torn Down in Belgrade 2009
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Macedonia's border with Kosovo, a province of Serbia, Yugoslavia's dominant republic.
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A fledgling journalist, I had a one-off commission to cover it with him: Yugoslavia's President Tito was the host to President Nasser of Egypt, India's Prime Minister Nehru, Ghana's President Nkrumah and other leaders who believed they could distance themselves from the cold war and create a force for peace and progress.
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In the wake of Yugoslavia's disintegration, a young doctor traces the fate of her grandfather and the meaning of the stories he told—including that of "the Tiger's Wife."
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Yugoslavia's leaders handed out "occupancy" rights to residents in public housing.
Elmira Bayrasli: Resolving Balkan War Crimes: Croatia, It's Your Turn Elmira Bayrasli 2011
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Zupan 1914-87 ran afoul of Yugoslavia's communist censors, but his reputation survived and later grew after tiny Slovenia became independent in the early 1990s.
In Brief: Literature Cameron McWhirter 2011
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The collaborationist French authorities rounded up tens of thousands of Jews and deported them to their death, and the Nazi puppet regime in Croatia murdered hundreds of thousands of Serbs alongside Yugoslavia's Jews.
Menachem Rosensaft: Criminalizing Mass Murder: 65 Years After The UN's First Condemnation Of Genocide Menachem Rosensaft 2011
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The collaborationist French authorities rounded up tens of thousands of Jews and deported them to their death, and the Nazi puppet regime in Croatia murdered hundreds of thousands of Serbs alongside Yugoslavia's Jews.
Menachem Rosensaft: Criminalizing Mass Murder: 65 Years After The UN's First Condemnation Of Genocide Menachem Rosensaft 2011
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A Yankee-in-Belgrade post a photo and writes about Stevo Radelic - “a Serbian refugee who has been living just outside of Belgrade now ever since he lost his home in Croatia at the beginning of Yugoslavia's break-up”: “He's made a new life for himself, although a difficult one, creating works of art from pieces of oak.”
Global Voices in English » Serbia: Thoughts on Doubt and Faith 2009
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It was a tactic that, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR, displaced 2.5 million people, close to 40 percent of the former Yugoslavia's population.
Elmira Bayrasli: Resolving Balkan War Crimes: Croatia, It's Your Turn Elmira Bayrasli 2011
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