ZAGREB, February 5, 2018 - The Vojvodina government will support the initiative to repeal a document dating from 1945 under which Bunjevci identified themselves as Croats, after the proposal was put forward to the province's parliament in 2016 by the leadership of a portion of the Bunjevci community who reject their Croatian origins.
The reactions are split on both sides of the political spectrum.
The upcoming visit by Serbian President to Zagreb could bring the country a step closer to the EU.
ZAGREB, February 3, 2018 - Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović said on Friday that she would talk sincerely and openly with Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić so that the outstanding issues between the two countries could be dealt with as soon as possible.
ZAGREB, February 2, 2018 - Milorad Pupovac, a member of the Croatian Parliament from the Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS), said on Thursday that it was important that protocols on good communication and on dealing with outstanding issues be agreed during Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić's visit to Croatia, while symbolic gestures such as apologies were less important.
ZAGREB, February 1, 2018 - Croatia's Defence Minister Damir Krstičević on Thursday said that Serbia's President Aleksandar Vučić was welcome in Croatia, but that he first expects an apology for the Great Serbia military aggression against Croatia.
ZAGREB, February 1, 2018 - By staging its exhibition about the Ustasha-run Jasenovac camp in New York, Serbia attempted to make associations between the (1941-1945) Independent State of Croatia (NDH) and the present-day Croatia, and the Croatian government will never allow that, Prime Minister Andrej Plenković said at the beginning of his cabinet's meeting in Zagreb on Thursday.
ZAGREB, January 31, 2018 - Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić on Wednesday accepted the invitation from Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović to visit Zagreb in mid-February, saying that he would go to Croatia "in good faith so that together we can do something good for our children and our future."
Many wonder who is leading Croatia’s foreign policy.
ZAGREB, January 31, 2018 - Croatia finds it essential that the Croat community in Serbia exercise the same rights which ethnic Serbs enjoy in Croatia, and this means that local Croats should be entitled to having deputies at the local level of authority, at the provincial level and at the state level, the state secretary of the Zagreb-based Office for Croats Abroad, Zvonko Milas, said in Belgrade on Tuesday.