Saturday, 16 May 2020

Is Eurowings Returning to Croatia this Summer?

May 16, 2020 - Eurowings is among the first to announce the return of flights after a long hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. And as Croatian Aviation (CA) reveals, the airline has decided to launch certain international routes to destinations in Croatia.

Namely, as Croatian Aviation exclusively finds out, Eurowings has decided to launch certain international lines to destinations in Croatia. 

You can see the schedule provided by Croatian Aviation below:

The Cologne - Zagreb line operates twice a week, and in the following period, it will be reduced to once a week.

The Cologne - Zadar line is introduced once a week, on Saturdays, from 20 June.

The Stuttgart - Split line is introduced, once a week, on Saturdays, from 6 June.

The Hamburg - Rijeka line is introduced, once a week, on Sundays, from 21 June.

The Hamburg - Split line is introduced, twice a week, on Tuesdays and Sundays, from 2 June.

The Düsseldorf - Split line is introduced, once a week, on Saturdays, from 20 June.

The Düsseldorf - Rijeka line is introduced once a week, on Saturdays, from 20 June.

The Düsseldorf - Pula line is introduced once a week, on Saturdays, from 20 June.

Eurowings will monitor the situation with the epidemiological situation and border regulations of individual countries and respond in a timely manner by introducing lines. Croatia is one of the most important destinations of this low-budget airline and there is no doubt that in the coming months, Eurowings will return to Croatian airports on an even larger scale, writes Croatian Aviation. 

Recall, this news comes after British Airways announced it would fly to Zagreb and Split next month in a significantly reduced flight schedule compared to their operations before the outbreak of COVID-19.

Namely, from June 1, British Airways will fly between London (Heathrow) and Zagreb three times a week (Mondays, Fridays, and Sundays) on the A320 aircraft.

The route between London (Heathrow) and Split will operate from the same date. The line will run four times a week in June (Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Sundays).

Seasonal routes to Dubrovnik and Pula on British Airways are not on sale for now. It is expected that the number of weekly flights to Zagreb and Split will increase in July, and then the lines from London to Pula and Dubrovnik could start operating in a reduced form.

To read more about travel in Croatia, follow TCN's dedicated page.

Friday, 15 May 2020

Details of Croatia's Coronavirus-Tracking App Emerge

May 15, 2020 — Croatia’s coronavirus contact tracing app will avoid harvesting personal data and instead model itself on its Singaporean and South Korean predecessors, according to Saša Bilić, president of the company tasked with creating it.

The APIS IT head said in an interview with N1 the application spent weeks in development. It will be released in a few weeks.

The app will use Bluetooth technology, not geolocation, to monitor people’s contacts. It will be completely voluntary.

The company said it followed recommendations from other EU countries and kept privacy foremost in mind when building the app.

 “If a person gets sick, they will voluntarily let everyone they have been in contact with over the last 14 days and contact an epidemiologist," Bilić said.

Applications will be interoperable across countries, to align with the tourist season.

“The application will record contact if people are closer than two meters and in contact for more than 20 minutes,” he said. “When someone gets sick, if that person allows, his contacts are sent an anonymized message that they were in contact,” explained Bilić, adding the patient’s name is not revealed.

The app is based on the positive experiences of Singapore and South Korea with the aim of technology helping the medical, epidemiological profession trace contacts.

Bilić especially emphasizes that there is no data storage, that all records are only in a particular mobile device, and that using the application would be part of the responsibility of each of us.

The app will work on Google and Apple devices. The companies will release updates to their mobile operating systems allowing the apps to run — but only for official purposes.

Croatia’s app will fall under the auspices of the Ministry of Health, Bilić said, emphasizing that it will not record names of phone numbers. 

He also said that they are ready for the elections, organizationally and in terms of personnel and that they should start with all the necessary actions as soon as they receive an order from the elections committee.

Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković first mentioned the government’s app on Wednesday.

“New technologies enable much more [help for the healthcare system] than without them,” he said. “Croatia is working on the application. It will protect the privacy of all our citizens.”

At a press conference of the National Civil Protection Headquarters, Interior Minister Davor Božinović confirmed an earlier statement by Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic that Croatia has been working on an application for "catching contacts" for several weeks.

Friday, 15 May 2020

Public Coastal Liner Transport to be Restored on May 18

ZAGREB, May 15, 2020 - The national civil protection authority has decided to lift restrictions as of May 18 on public coastal liner transport, which will enable the restoration of the sailing schedule.

Interior Minister Davor Bozinovic said on Friday this decision put out of force decisions on the extraordinary Olib-Silba-Premuda-Zadar line, which was introduced to supply islands, and the extraordinary Zadar-Ancona freight ferry line.

Asked by the press if the government would be responsible in case of layoffs, as warned by the Croatian Employers Association on Thursday, he said this was not in the Interior Ministry's remit and that if the Economy Ministry asked the national civil protection authority about it, "it will get an answer."

Bozinovic said that because of the favourable epidemiological situation in Croatia, the authority would no longer hold press briefings over the weekend.

The next press conference will be on Monday, while over the weekend the authority will issue press releases with the latest information on COVID-19 infections.

 

Friday, 15 May 2020

Restrictions for Travel across Slovenia-Croatia Border Relaxed for EU Citizens

ZAGREB, May 15, 2020 - The Slovenian government's decision to declare the end of the COVID-19 epidemic has surprised many, and the government spokesman said on Friday that the decision was based, among other things, on the improved situation in Europe and dialogue between Slovenian and Croatian epidemiologists.

On Thursday evening, the government led by Prime Minister Janez Jansa also decided that citizens and residents of the European Union and the European Economic Area (EEA) are free to cross into Slovenia provided that they did not stay outside Europe in the last 14 days.

Restrictions for third-country citizens remain in place. Third-country nationals must undergo a mandatory two-week quarantine, with exceptions for diplomats, members of rescue and relief services, attendance of funeral, lorry drivers and persons with certificates issued by the competent Slovenian ministry showing they will provide urgent services.

Asked by the press about new regulations for travel from Croatia to Slovenia, government spokesman Jelko Kacin said that the two countries now had similar epidemiological situations.

The additional reason for the relaxation of restrictions for travel across the Slovenia-Croatia border is to make it easier for students in the contiguous areas in Croatia to continue attending school in nearby Slovenian towns. Slovenia's schools will reopen their doors for pupils on Monday after two months of online learning.

Slovenia is the first European country to declare an end of the coronavirus epidemic.

Friday, 15 May 2020

Zagreb Company Labud Working Long Hours to Produce Disinfectant

One of the leading Croatian manufacturers of cleaning products, the Zagreb company Labud, which is part of the Meteor Group, has focused all its efforts on multiplying the production of disinfectants since the first days of the outbreak of the coronavirus epidemic in Croatia.

As Novac/Boris Oresic writes on the 14th of May, 2020, working as needed and in three shifts six days a week, Labud has managed to multiply the quantities they deliver to consumers, among which health institutions have priority.

In this Zagreb company's plant in Zitnjak, for weeks now, few people have become bogged down with the accumulated fatigue and stress. Their phones don't stop ringing, and orders arrive minute by minute. A special team receives all of the requests and compiles waiting lists according to which the procurement and production plans are harmonised on a daily basis. This Zagreb company's production plants, fortunately, weren't damaged in the recent earthquake, so they were able to resume production immediately after they got the green light to do so.

Full boxes of various packages of disinfectants are loaded onto trucks every day, as well as other products that Croatian customers are used to in their households, which are very much in demand during this pandemic. To beat the coronavirus epidemic, we must pay special attention to hygiene, both personal and the spaces in which we reside and spend time.

''There is a huge demand for disinfectants, liquid soaps and other cleaning agents. Disinfectants are a strategic product and it's our moral obligation to satisfy the market, primarily for health and other public institutions, but also the food industry and all other industries that use large amounts of disinfectants to do their job. We've also provided additional capacities in our plant in Đakovo,'' pointed out Laura Justinic Skoko, the sales director of this Zagreb company.

According to her, we need to learn some lessons from these bad times. The epidemic has definitely shown how important it is to have and encourage Croatian production and be as independent as possible from imports. According to Justinic Skoko, this doesn't only refer to finished products, but also to raw materials and packaging. The procurement of alcohol as the main raw material was the biggest challenge for Labud, especially in the first weeks after the introduction of the restrictive measures, which made the transport of goods extremely difficult, borders were closed, and some countries restricted the export of strategic raw materials.

''Most of our suppliers are from Hungary and Bulgaria, and we've had certain extensions of deliveries there. Part of the ordered quantities didn't even manage to get to us. We managed the situation in various ways, looking for alternative suppliers. Fortunately, Badel 1862, which is within our group, gave us a certain amount of alcohol,'' revealed Laura Justinic Skoko. Badel 1862 also provided them some workers, considering that the need for labour was increased in Labud.

Prior to the easing of the measures which saw the suspension of public transport, some of Labud's workers had no way to get to work. Workers who did continue to work in these difficult conditions were additionally rewarded for that, and in order to protect themselves from the spread of coronavirus at work, it became mandatory to strictly adhere to all of the recommendations and measures prescribed.

In addition to the price of labour, this Zagreb company's sales director points out, the price of raw materials and transport jumped compared to the time before the outbreak of the coronavirus epidemic. But despite all these increased production costs, they kept their products firmly at the same selling price.

The marketing director of the Meteor Group's Labud, Milica Damjanovic, believes that this situation will teach us to depend on each other more, it will teach us about the importance of togetherness and mutual support, aboout the empathy and strength we have, without even being aware of it, but also about the importance of domestic production.

''We need to invest more in domestic production. Every day, we applaud all of the Croatian producers who provide us with the necessary food, raw materials and finished products important for life, every Croatian farmer, every small producer who makes masks and protective equipment to make our people safer and to ensure that our society can function in such crisis situations, because we know what challenges they're facing,'' Milica Damjanovic pointed out.

For more on Croatian companies, products and services, follow Made in Croatia.

Friday, 15 May 2020

Remote Recruiting in Croatia in the COVID-19 Era

May 15, 2020 - COVID-19 has brought massive change to global working practices. A look the world of remote recruiting in Croatia through the eyes of Matthew Elliott. 

We’re now in week eight of this unique, remote working environment. We know it’s natural to romanticise the idea of returning to ‘normal’; dressing up for work, crowded cafes etc. - all of these one-time annoyances seem almost pleasant compared to the current day-to-day of life in lockdown. Many of us would settle for ‘normal’ again. But why settle? Instead of returning to a new ‘normal’, we're working harder to elevate our recruiting and candidate sourcing in ways that will continue to resonate long after the current crisis has passed. After all, recruitment has always been - and shall continue to be - about building relationships that will serve you in the future. 

Future is the key word - it’s also central to how we react to market changes outside of our control, allied with our ability to thrive after a crisis. In a rapidly changing world, the future of innovation is hard to pin down, but agility, sustainability and thoughtfulness look set to be the hallmarks of success going forward into Summer 2020.

Also, it's important to be aware and nurture this one positive aspect of these current dark times: more attention for the people close to us! Here comes the challenge: replicating this family feel for your company. Your co-workers also need attention... easier said than done when you’re working remotely! So, it's up to you to keep this going during lockdown.

Our advice is: reach out. A smiley over a group chat... a photo via email... even just a "how you doing?" is good enough. Sometimes, one small gesture is all it takes!

COVID-19 has caused all our conferences, meetings and employee training to go virtual, meaning we’re now fully realising our telecommuting abilities! 

Part of the pre-COVID era was that the in-person meeting was the one tool we had to deploy against all manner of problems. Lockdown life has made all of us competent in remote collaborations, doubling our toolset for getting work done and allowing us to select the best tool for the job at hand rather than the only tool at our disposal.

We always hear about how team leaders can create more efficient teams, but there are some things team members can do themselves to contribute. Firstly, develop a stronger sense of ‘we’. Each team should have its own vision and set of established values that guide its interactions. Team efficiency depends on a team working well together at all times. 

Secondly, own your work. For teamwork to really make the dream work, each team member needs to have a well-developed sense of accountability. This is not only in your work quality, schedule, and deliverables, but also your behaviour and interactions with the rest of your team. This sense of accomplishment helps your team continually seek additional improvements and strengthens your team's connection. 

Above all, when team members recognise they are part of a team, self-govern, and choose to be innovative and accountable, it facilitates efficiency and greater output. 

Ultimately, remote working can only be successful if we have effective digital collaboration and communication tools that are accessible to everyone. Now, more than ever, employees need to be connected, collaborative and feel optimistic about the future. 

Finally, never forget the value of people. Recruitment is a people business and at the heart of every email, phone call and video interview is a human. Now is the time for us to share our success stories!  

Oh, and please remember….

Together we can do anything! ??  | Zajedno možemo postići sve!

Manning Global are one of the fastest growing staffing and Managed Services organisations operating globally. We are specialists in providing worldwide contract and permanent recruitment solutions across many industries, offering Quality Flexible Project Solutions for all your HR, Project and Consultancy needs by utilising both local and International Project specialists to offer you the best solutions for your business. Please visit our website: www.manningglobal.com for more information or visit our LinkedIn page for our newest positions in Croatia and the rest of Europe, plus the latest news in Telecoms and IT. 

For the latest coverage of coronavirus in Croatia, follow the dedicated TCN section

Friday, 15 May 2020

Police Director: About 2,700 Foreigners Entered Croatia since May 9

 

ZAGREB, May 14, 2020 - Since borders were reopened on May 9, about 2,700 foreigners have entered Croatia, including a little over 2,100 EU citizens, police director Nikola Milina said on Thursday.

Speaking on RTL television, he said most were from Slovenia, Austria and Germany. As for third-country citizens, they have been mainly from Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Milina said border police were ready for the coming relaxation of restrictions imposed because of COVID-19 and the start of the tourist season.

He said the police continued to collect all data on those entering the country who, he added, receive a Croatian Institute of Public Health flyer on the epidemiological measures they must adhere to.

Milina said police would try to find solutions to expedite border control. If border police notice that a foreigner is ill, self-isolation will be ordered, he added.

He said the fact that Croatia was not part of the Schengen Area created no problems.

Asked if Croatia could expect a new migrant wave given clashes between migrants and police in Bihac, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Milina said the police had stepped up its capacity on the EU's external borders.

"The migrant flow has been markedly reduced, by 50%. There has been no increase in recent days... It's essential that all the countries in the region care for and protect their entry borders and they must step up controls," said Milina.

Friday, 15 May 2020

Renters of Croatian Luxury Villas Express Enthusiasm for Tourist Season

As Poslovni Dnevnik writes on the 14th of May, 2020, right up until the beginning of March this year, it seemed that Croatia could safely expect yet another excellent tourist season. The market for renting Croatian luxury villas with swimming pools was booming, putting everyone into a false sense of security before the coronavirus pandemic spread across the globe.

The market for the renting out of Croatian luxury villas has been growing unstoppably in recent years due to better and better tourist seasons with the rolling around of each and every summer. The beginning of 2020 also promised the continuation of this positive, encouraging and directly upward trend, but with the outbreak of the coronavirus epidemic, everything simply came to a halt. Tportal talked about this topic with Daniel Prebeg, the owner and director of Klick and Book platform. Prebeg rents about 200 Croatian villas, and they're mostly located in Istria.

''There were so many bookings that I was expecting another record year. In the first two months of 2020 alone I made half my earnings from all of last year, and then the pandemic broke out. Over the past two months, I have received only two inquiries, and otherwise there'd usually be hundreds of them. We have a prime time for reservations after Easter and for last minutes, when we earn the most,'' Prebeg told tportal.

His clientele is mostly made up of wealthy guests from Germany and Austria, for whom it's not a problem at all to set aside anything from 500 to as much as 4000 euros per week for a stay in Croatian luxury villas in the interior of Istria or in the vicinity of Croatia's southernmost city and longstanding tourist Mecca - Dubrovnik.

Thanks to decent early bookings, all of his villas currently have reservations. Of that, about 30 percent of arrivals were postponed to later dates or to next year.

''I crossed May and June off because no one will come then. As long as the rule is in force that a German or an Austrian must spend fourteen days in self-isolation after returning from abroad, no one will bother travelling. Now we're all waiting for an official decision to open the borders back up again in Europe. If that happens, I'll fill the villas. There will be no problems then, but if July fails, we're going to have a fight on our hands for survival,'' Prebeg warned.

''In Istria, but also in Dalmatia, we could have a boom if the borders are opened. Croatia is a car destination. Many airlines have failed. It's unsafe for people to fly to Greece or Turkey, for example. And that's why we will be the first choice for many for this summer,'' Prebeg concluded optimistically.

For more on Croatian luxury villas, follow our travel page.

Friday, 15 May 2020

Coronavirus: Nivea Provides Donations to National Organisations in Croatia

As Poslovni Dnevnik writes on the 14th of May, 2020, Beiersdorf, the company which stands behind the wildly popular Nivea brand, has generously donated a massive 340,000.00 kuna to support three organisations in Croatia and neighbouring Bosnia and Herzegovina: namely the Croatian Institute of Public Health, the Croatian Red Cross and UNICEF BiH, as part of its emergency assistance programme during the coronavirus crisis.

This support to humanitarian organisations is part of the international care programme "Care Beyond Skin" by which the Beiersdorf Group wants to take a step beyond its core business - which is unique skin care - and achieve the maximum contribution to the well-being of people, society and the environment, especially in the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Branko Kotarac, General Manager of Beiersdorf Croatia stated that the crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic has endangered our health in a very short period of time and brought our social life to a state of dormancy that almost none of us could have possibly imagined.

''Beiersdorf Croatia wants to provide support through donations to organisations in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina that provide assistance to people during these difficult times, such as the Croatian Institute of Public Health, the Croatian Red Cross and UNICEF BiH.

The Croatian Institute of Public Health - The epidemiologists belonging to the leading public health institution in Croatia and the immediate region are visiting people affected by the new coronavirus, conducting tests and sharing current data and advice related to the safety and protection of the general population. With a generous monetary donation in the amount of 111,300.00 kuna, Beiersdorf Croatia will provide support for the provision of all types of medical equipment - protective suits, goggles, masks, antiseptics and for assistance in the supply of food for people working in the field.

The Croatian Red Cross - During the coronavirus crisis, the Croatian Red Cross has been in charge of organising assistance to the elderly and infirm, people with coronavirus who are being treated at home, people in self-isolation who have no one else to help them, and other socially vulnerable citizens. Beiersdorf Croatia will provide a financial donation in the amount of 111,300.00 kuna to support the Croatian Red Cross wherever its assistance is needed.

UNICEF ​​Bosnia and Herzegovina - Since coronavirus treatment tends to require timely and sometimes intensive care, Beiersdorf Croatia will make a monetary donation in the amount of 29,400 BAM to help UNICEF ​​BiH in the procurement of medical and protective equipment to help those who have become unwell.

The Beiersdorf International Assistance Programme

In late March, Beiersdorf AG announced its international assistance programme: the group intends to provide a grant of 50 million euros to support crisis management, especially in epicentres and regions with less developed public health systems and infrastructure. Beiersdorf will thus work with international organisations and local authorities to ensure maximum support for people in need during the coronavirus pandemic.

Make sure to follow our dedicated section for all you need to know about coronavirus in relation to Croatia.

Thursday, 14 May 2020

How Coronavirus Saved Lika’s Lambs, But Not Its Shepherds

May 14, 2020 — The coronavirus doesn’t cause death and disease wherever it goes. For some creatures, it’s been a savior. Just ask Lika’s sheep, and their worried shepherds.

If you do not know Tomo Matanić’s phone number, just stop by his gate in Mušaluk not far from Gospić and yell: “Hosts!” He will materialize with a quick step and show you the arch in which you will bypass his shepherd dogs. There are five of them, according to Jutarnji List’s Marija Pušića

The boss claims his dogs are dangerous, but only one of them disinterestedly poked his head out of the shade of an old acacia.

A dozen domestic cats hang around the houses, one, the owner's pet, is a tricolor, he says. The others are stalk mice, as well as sausages and bacon from the table.

Matanić is a civil servant who lives in an apartment in Gospić, but for almost three decades he has been renting an agricultural farm on which he breeds “Lika pramenka,” an autochthonous sheep breed from the area. He has about a hundred heads.

The dangerous coronavirus can hardly find its way to his farm, but it will still have very significant consequences in the stables. While in the rest of the world the virus sows disease and even death, here it sows life. 

Due to the coronavirus, Matanić will increase his breeding herd by about fifty head next year. These are lambs that now have no buyers because there is no tourism to go to the Adriatic; no weddings; no birthdays and baptisms are celebrated with a small roast. He doesn't know what will happen next.

Matanić has already reconciled that he will leave the female lambs, and he hopes that everything will get better, to get rid of the male ones, because where will he go in the fall with 50 young rams? 

It is estimated that tens of thousands of lambs will remain unsold in Lika due to the coronavirus situation. 

“The number is constantly around a hundred sheep,” Matanić said. “So far, my market has been Plitvice, where we marketed through our Association of Sheep Breeders Lika. The rest is local for weddings and baptisms. We leave ten percent for the rejuvenation of the herd, but because of the virus, it will be 50 percent, which means that all the female lambs will remain. 

“I went to get rid of the males first,” he added. “I managed a little bit, but it’s all pathetic and sad. I listen to winemakers when they complain that they have wine left. The wine will not spoil, but to us when the male lamb grows to large, we have little use for it.”

If he doesn’t sell the rams now for the skewer, he will try to sell them in the fall for meat. Matanić believes he will have top quality meat, even though the animals will be ten months old. 

The most important thing, he says, is to survive, and everything else will somehow sort itself out.

Matanić maintains his flock demands a top-quality price. The level of his care for the lambs? He plays the sheep music in the barn while they are feeding. To relax them.

Dr. Tomislav Rukavina, a veterinarian and director of the Veterinary Clinic Gospić says that there is no household in Lika that does not have at least a few sheep.

Technically speaking, “Lika lamb” is a product obtained by this special species of sheep bred in the geographical area of ​​Lika. It’s an EU-protected product, but that doesn’t make it any easier to sell. The glut on the market will be hard to move on.

“Who will eat it all, I don't know,” Rukavina said. “My advice to breeders is to adapt, to overhaul the herd, to leave as many female lambs as possible, in the fall to get rid of old sheep, and to sell the males.”

Breeders were told to sell to overstock buyers, who offered well under the value they were used to. 

The lambs must grow in the Lika-Senj County and part of Zadar, in the Gračac area. As for the lamb’s meat, it ripens much later. The flavor and aroma is hard to describe — unique, the shepherds claim.

“How do you describe the smell of a banana?” Rukavina said.

More importantly — how do you persuade a flooded market to buy more lamb?

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