Tuesday, 10 february 2026.
Croatia Charges Serb Ex-Fighters with Russian War Reporters’ Murders
Three decades after Russian reporters Viktor Nogin and Gennadiy Kurinnoy were shot dead during the war in Croatia, two unnamed members of a rebel Serb special police unit have been...
North Macedonia Murder Retrial Convicts Ethnic Albanians of Terrorism
Five ethnic Albanians were convicted of the 2012 killings of five ethnic Macedonians in Skopje after a high-profile retrial in a case that has sparked ethnic tensions in the country.
Facebook, Twitter Struggling in Fight against Balkan Content Violations
A BIRN investigation reveals serious holes in content policing by Facebook and Twitter in the Balkans.
Srebrenica Defendant with Psychological Problems Excused from Trial
Belgrade Higher Court agreed that a Bosnian Serb ex-policeman accused of involvement in killing 1,313 Bosniaks from Srebrenica in 1995 can no longer stand trial alongside his seven co-defendants because...
Bosniak Military Prison Chief’s Conviction Challenged in Belgrade
Husein Mujanovic, who was sentenced to ten years in jail for beating Serb prisoners at a Bosnian Army-run military prison in Hrasnica near Sarajevo during wartime, appealed for an acquittal...
Justice on Hold: War Trial Delays Jeopardise Serbia’s Progress to EU
In the last two years, 30 per cent of court hearings in war crimes trials in Serbia have been postponed, raising concerns about the country’s commitment to the rule of...
‘Like Prisoners’: Chinese Workers in Serbia Complain of Exploitation
Evidence collected by BIRN paints a damning picture of conditions facing Chinese workers in Serbia. Rights experts warn of ‘human trafficking’.
20 Years On, Armed Conflict’s Legacy Endures in North Macedonia
The seven-month armed conflict that erupted between rebels and security forces in North Macedonia in January 2001 is now seen as a turning point for ethnic relations between the country’s...
Far-right extremism in Slovakia: Hate, guns and friends from Russia
Far-right extremism in Slovakia is not limited to Marian Kotleba, though the neofascist leader has, more than anyone else, helped radicalisation go mainstream.
Kosovo MP Candidate Summoned by Hague Prosecutors
Nezir Cocaj, an MP who is running for re-election in next month’s parliamentary polls, was called for questioning by the Specialist Prosecutor’s Office in The Hague, which is probing wartime...
Kosovo Acquits Ex-PM of Falsifying List of War Veterans
Former Prime Minister Agim Ceku and 11 other defendants were acquitted of falsifying a list of Kosovo Liberation Army war veterans so non-combatants could illegally claim welfare benefits.
Taboo-Busting Literature has ‘Liberating Potential’, Says Serbian Author
Sasa Ilic, whose recent award-winning novel addressed the enduring traumas caused by the Yugoslav conflicts, offers an alternative perspective to the nationalist narratives that still dominate Serbian society.