Thursday, 19 December 2019

New Part of Pula City Mall Opening: McDonald's, Jysk, Bipa and More!

As Novac/Barbara Ban writes on the 18th of December, 2019, the brand new, expanded section of the large and highly popular Pula City Mall is set to finally open its doors on Thursday, featuring well-known, international brands such as Bipa, Baby Centre, CCC, Intersport, Jysk, NKD, Orsay, Leggiero Loft, S'Oliver, Pepco, Tedi, McDonald's and KIK.

Pula City Mall has expanded, welcoming in an additional sixteen tenants and brands spanning 9,400 square metres in total.

As many as 306 new parking spaces will be available to buyers and visitors to the mall, 131 of which are in the garage of the new part of the mall. The total investment in the construction of the expanded part of Pula City Mall stands at around eighteen million euros.

In addition to enriching the region's shopping and trade offer, the expanded Pula City Mall has employed around 100 new employees, boosting the local economy and providing some good news for the Croatian labour market, which is a welcome change given the sea of negativity we seem to be constantly submerged in.

Additional funds have been added to the local budget through communal fees and other types of charges, and a significant contribution is being made to the development of infrastructure and the improvement of living standards in Pula, Istria and the wider region, the investors said when discussing Pula's new expanded shopping centre.

Otherwise, the investor and owner of Pula City Mall is a Croatian design company within the large Austrian MID Group.

In this company's impressive portfolio, there are numerous already realised projects, the most famous of which are the Garden Mall in Zagreb, TC Koprivnica, STC Osijek, STC Sisak, STC Valpovo, Pula City Mall, STC Umag and Galerija (Gallery) Poreč, which is also in Istria.

Make sure to follow our dedicated lifestyle and business pages for much more on investments, doing business, and of course - shopping in Croatia.

Thursday, 19 December 2019

Ferry from Dubrovnik to Kolocep Now Running Twice Daily

The islanders of southern Dalmatia are soon to have their transport wishes granted with the introduction of a new schedule to run from Dubrovnik to Kolocep this winter.

As Morski writes on the 18th of December, 2019, through the administrative department for tourism, economy and maritime affairs, the City of Dubrovnik has made it possible for public transport to take place twice a day today from Dubrovnik to Kolocep, more precisely from the port of Gruz in Dubrovnik to Gornje Celo on the nearby Elaphite island.

Namely, after a public tender was announced and completed, the Mayor of Dubrovnik, Mato Franković, signed a three-year contract worth a massive 1.15 million kuna on transportation with the owner of the trade company "Josip".

The passenger ship "Europa" has a capacity of 63 passengers (33 of which are indoors) and adapted to winter navigation conditions. It will depart daily from the port of Gruz at 06:30 and 15:30 and its returns from Gornje Celo on Kolocep are scheduled for 07:15 and then again at 16:00 with the second ship.

Such a schedule will be valid from December the 18th, 2019 to February the 1st, 2020, and then, in agreement with the local administration on the island of Kolocep, or according to the needs of the islanders, a new schedule will be made.

The ride from Dubrovnik to Kolocep with the Europa ship on this new schedule will be free of charge for students and pensioners, adults resident on the island will pay a ticket costing a mere 10 kuna per direction, while for non-residents, the price will stand at just 20 kuna per direction.

Make sure to follow our dedicated travel page for much more. If it's just Dubrovnik and the surrounding islands you're interested in, give Total Dubrovnik a follow or check out Dubrovnik in a Page for all you need to know about the Pearl of the Adriatic and the extreme south of Dalmatia.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

NGO Accuses Croatia of Escalation of Police Violence Against Migrants

ZAGREB, December 18, 2019 - The Centre for Peace Studies said on Wednesday that police violence against migrants passing through Croatia on their way towards other EU member-states had escalated this year, and accused the authorities of doing nothing to prosecute unlawful actions by police.

In this context the NGO pointed out the latest testimony of a police officer who accused the police leadership and some officers of resorting to illegal methods so as to avoid the registration of evidence of unlawful push-backs of migrants. He also cited cases of arbitrary detention in garages, separation of family members and unlawful use of dogs to force migrants back to Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The NGO says in its press release issued on 18 December, which is observed as International Day of Migrants, that their rights are being violated along the border on a daily basis as well as in other parts of Croatia's territory.

Beatings, the use of electroshocks, branding, and shooting at migrants are just some of the methods which the police use to deter migrants, according to this nongovernmental association.

The Centre particularly criticised the Croatian authorities for being persistent in non-prosecuting reported violence.

It says that some other associations and international institutions as well as local and foreign media have warned about such conduct of police officers when fending off border crossers.

In this context it mentioned Border Violence Monitoring Network, Are You Syrious, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the UN speical rapporteur for human rights of migrants, the Council of Europe, the Croatian human rights ombudswoman and some members of the European Parliament.

More news about the migrant crisis can be found in the Politics section.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Presidential Candidate Katarina Peović Calls for Termination of Vatican Agreements

ZAGREB, December 18, 2019 - The presidential candidate of the Workers' Front and Socialist Workers' Party, Katarina Peović, on Wednesday called for termination of the Vatican agreements saying that they are in gross violation of Croatia's secularity.

She said that over 1 billion kuna (135 million euro) was allocated from the budget to the Catholic Church annually, while the government was claiming there was no money to increase nurses' wages.

"That amount is much higher than 1 billion kuna because there are also non-transparent allocations by local government. For example, Mayor Milan Bandić has set aside 500,000 kuna (67,500 euro) from the City of Zagreb budget to move a cross a few metres away at the Hipodrom (horse racing venue)," Peović told a press conference outside the Croatian Bishops' Conference building.

Peović said that the Vatican agreements had been signed without public consultation, which is against basic democratic standards. She said that terminating these agreements would not be easy, but that Croatia should start running a sovereign and autonomous policy for the benefit of the state, the national economy and the people.

"The actual amounts being allocated to the Church can only be speculated about because the Church does not submit any financial reports," Peović said.

More news about Katarina Peović can be found in the Politics section.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Klis, a Dalmatian Tourism Success Timeline Beyond Game of Thrones & Meereen

December 16, 2019 - Tourism in Klis is booming, and while the alter ego of its famous fortress as the Game of Thrones' Meereen has been one of the major factors, there are also other forces at work. A lesson in responsible tourism development. 

I want to tell you a story, a story that I don't think has ever been told, and it is a nice one. 

It is the story behind the story of one of the lesser-reported, but bigger success stories in Croatian tourism.

The story is about the rise of Klis, the small town whose majestic (and now globally famous) fortress overlooks the Dalmatian capital and guards entrance to inland Dalmatia, the very key to Dalmatia.  

And while the arrival of hit HBO show Game of Thrones put the town on the map as Klis Fortress was transformed into the glorious city of Meereen, and all the tourism spin-offs that this entailed, there is another fascinating story which has contributed to the rise of Klis. This is the story I want to tell, in the form of a TCN timeline, for it is one that we have been inadvertently covering for more than five years.  

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We begin in May, 2014, my first to Klis Fortress. Seasons 4 and 5 of Game of Thrones were filmed in Klis the previous year, with the first episode of the fourth season, and the introduction of Meereen, shown on screens around the world just a month before my visit. Although I have still never watched an episode of Game of Thrones, I was happy to accept an invitation from innovative local tour agency, Vetus Itinera, to join their press trip on their first-ever boutique Game of Thrones tour. The guided tour took in different GoT filming locations - Diocletian's Palace, the quarry and mill at Zrnovnica - before culminating with a GoT banquet at Klis.

It was quite an evening, by lighted torch, and quite a welcome. Among the welcoming committee was Daenerys with her dragon, waiters in authentic costume serving wine from goblets, and an impressive array of local dignitaries, including the young and recently installed Mayor, Jakov Vetma.

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I must confess that I was very impressed with his enthusiasm, obvious love of his town and vision of the future. He saw the tour as a welcome start to a new era in the fortunes of Klis, which he pointed out had been the first Croatian capital and the royal capital of the Trpimirovic dynasty back in the 9th century. And while he noted by the light from the torch lanterns that the fortress did not yet have a proper electrical system, for example, all that was about to change, as he and his team had a plan to restore Klis to some of its former glory. I made a mental note to follow and document the progress of Klis from that moment on, which we have done over the last five years, and now is the time to bring it all together into my little story. 

I was back in Klis for my second visit just three months later, invited to witness the spectacular (and it really IS spectacular) reconstruction of the 1532 Battle of Klis, where the brave Uskok defenders battled the superior numbers of the Ottoman Turks. You can read my report on the night for a Canadian portal here, but what a fabulous evening and way to preserve and showcase the history and heritage of the destination. A battle that was every bit as gripping as Game of Thrones itself. 

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The Uskok tradition runs through the very veins of the town, ever more so today through the special Uskok Association. The name is derived from the word for a Christian refugee fleeing the Ottoman occupation of Croatia and Bosnia. and uskoks developed a special code of honour for fighting the Ottomans and protecting Christianity and its values. Today's uskoks add a touch of colour and authenticity to this already magnificent setting, and they appear in their traditional uniforms all over the country representing Klis - I recently saw them marching with the Alkari from Sinj and the Dubrovnik Trombunjeri at the Vukovar Remembrance Parade, for example. 

The Uskok legends are everywhere. My favourite concerns the name of the parking place below the fortress, Mejdan, as Filip explains in the video 5 Fun Facts about Klis, above. A young Uskok, Milos Parizevic, was in love with a general's daughter, and to prove his love and win the girl, he took on the terrifying Ottoman, Bakota. An underdog in the duel, true love won the day, with our young Uskok hero first slicing the legs off his Ottoman opponent, then his head. He went on to marry the girl. In his honour, the candlesticks in the local church are the same height as him.

Helped, of course, by the popularity of Meereen, visitor numbers started to rise, as Tonci Glavina, then head of the Klis incubator (and now Deputy Minister of Tourism) noted in September 2016:

“With only 10,000 visits and ticket sales for the Klis fortress from three years ago, in 2016, we have grown with more than 30,000 visits. All of this motivates us to work even harder and to persist in the municipality of Klis, recognized as a new star of tourism in the skies of Dalmatia,” says Tonči Glavina, Director of Business Incubator Klis. 

“In addition to the ancient Klis fortress, the Klis municipality 3 years ago did not have the tourism infrastructure, no tourist products, and had very few accommodation possibilities. The only tourist arrivals were daily guests for the Klis fortress, which totaled to around 10,000 a year,” states Glavina.
 
This year, more than 100,000 visitors visited Klis fortress, which is a 51 percent increase over the same period last year.

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We are investing a lot in the reconstruction of the fortress and in expanding products. Thereby we contribute not only to tourism and development of our community but the whole region. This year's ticket revenue is a record-high 5 million kuna, and part of these funds will be further invested in key infrastructure projects and demographic measures intended to improve the quality of life”, states Jakov Vetma.

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And those visitor numbers grew, and grew, and grew. Not in a mass, overtourism way that is the case elsewhere on the coast, but from a very low base to an intelligently developed attraction with content, content, content. 

And content for all the family. Klis, and several other locations inland, became my top recommendation for people wanting something a little bit different (here is what you can experience on a fascinating day trip inland starting from Split). Game of Thrones might be the draw for many, but keeping the kids entertained is also a priority. And in addition to the wonderful armoury museum, there is plenty of opportunity to sharpen your archery and sword-fighting skills under expert guidance. 

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In 2019, the brand new Interpretation center, the tourist attraction worth 1 million kuna, was opened. In the centre through the 3D hologram projections, visitors can learn about extremely rich historical and cultural heritage of the area. The project also includes possibility of 3D mapping on the exterior walls of the Interpretation center, which provides attractive visual content.

Game of Thrones might be getting all the headlines, but this impressive groundwork of infrastructure and content was giving the future of Klis foundations as solid as the fortress itself. A city in the hills just outside the city. A new panoramic webcam so that people could enjoy 'the most beautiful view in Dalmatia.'

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Thanks to EU funds, the fortress is currently undergoing the final works on the installation of special lighting, a project worth 2.8 million kuna, and the appearance of the fortification complex will be enhanced after the reconstruction of the two devastated buildings within the fort and the installation of a summer stage. The total value of the aforementioned works is 5.5 million kuna.

I checked my timeline from that first torchlit meeting with Mayor Vetma - 3.75 years.  

And they say that things go slowly in Dalmatia...

The national media started to notice. Klis has long been popular with locals from Split as an escape from the city. Easily reachable by bus and car, Klis is also a famed culinary spot, offering some of the best lamb in Dalmatia, and there are several restaurants close to the fortress. But something else ws happening as a result of the above (and other) proactive policies of the local administration. By August 2019, the media was reporting that Klis was an increasingly desirable place to live

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The Klis Municipality is recognised for its pro-natal policy, due to which Klis is being chosen by more and more young families with children. Of the only 58 cities and municipalities in Croatia that have a positive natural increase, Klis is one of them for the second year in a row. In order to continue this positive demographic trend, Klis is investing a range of resources directly into demographic measures. One of them was announced to help young families buy land for the construction of a family home on very favourable terms. Klis will thus be the first municipality in the Split-Dalmatia County to introduce such a measure.

With the allocation of over 3.5 million kuna, pre-school and school education for more than 500 children has been funded, and with 300 thousand kuna provided for student and student scholarships, the Municipality of Klis is further assisting 65 pupils and students. For the past two years, workbooks have been funded for all elementary students, while textbooks are provided by Split-Dalmatia County. By the beginning of the next preschool year, Klis will receive its first nursery.

The fortress may be the star attraction in Klis, but it is not the only one by any means. Another fantastic content addition has come in the form of Stella Croatica, the reason for my last visit, and a delightful family day trip for those wanting to learn more about Dalmatian nature, food and traditions - Stella Croatica. 

Stella Croatica, which was crowned Croatian Rural Tourism Champion in 2018, is a multi-purpose complex offering many aspects of the traditional Dalmatian way of life. These include a Mediterranean garden with more than 500 herbs and plants; arboretum; olive and fig groves, vineyard and chef's garden; traditional Dalmatian tavern and original Dalmatian stone buildings around a village square; a factory producing traditional food products; exhibition and museum; and taste and buy option. Take a tour for yourself on the official website.

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It is a really nice day out in its own right, with plenty of fun for the kids, as you can see in the video above. Combine it with all that is happening at the fortress these days, and no wonder those tourism numbers to Klis are on the rise. 

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Along with numerous tourism, economic and traffic predispositions, Klis is a central place of the Croatian past and the starting point of national history. Therefore, it is not surprising that mayor Jakov Vetma believes that Klis shouldn't be named a municipality, but a town. The Municipal Council and the Council of Split-Dalmatia County agree, and have even supported that petition.

The city is made up of people, not buildings. And the important people throughout the history of our people who ruled, lived, and battled in Klis give us that right. It would also be easier to get European funding for future projects if Klis was considered a town, which would improve visibility, development and a better standard for the inhabitants”, concluded Vetma.

To follow the next chapter, follow the TCN news from Klis

 

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

VIDEO: First Parts of Peljesac Bridge Soon to Arrive from China

As Poslovni Dnevnik writes on the 18th of December, 2019, the spacer assembly, or the main load-bearing beam, is composed of elements that are made up of welded steel sheets. These parts will soon arrive from China to Croatia and mark the continuation of the next level of works on Peljesac bridge in Dalmatia.

The first segment of steel span structure for Peljesac bridge has now been fully completed at the plants over in China, and this is something that Peljesac bridge's Chinese builders have commemorated, as can be seen in a short video posted by Croatian Roads (Hrvatske ceste).

About 400 segments of the future bridge's steel span structure will be brought in by ships from China, some parts will be six metres long and some will be twelve metres long.

The first thirty segments from China will be well on their way to the Republic of Croatia, as was reported by Večernji list, who say that Croatian Roads (Hrvatske ceste) are expecting them to arrive in mid-January next year, and they are expected to arrive at Peljesac bridge's actual construction site in late January or early February 2020. Their total weight is an enormous 6,831 tonnes.

As stated previously, the spacer assembly, or main load-bearing beam, is composed of elements that are made up of welded steel sheets. The parts of individual segments of the bridge are assembled at the factory and then transported to the construction site.

The size of the parts that can be assembled at the factory depends on the ability to transport them to the construction site where they will be assembled as a whole to be installed at the final location, within the structure of Peljesac bridge, a long awaited and strategic project for the Republic of Croatia and for the connecting of the territory of the European Union.

Watch the short video video below:

Make sure to follow our dedicated lifestyle page for much more.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Government Dismisses No-Confidence Motion Against Education Minister

ZAGREB, December 18, 2019 - The government on Wednesday dismisses as unfounded the motion for no confidence vote in Education Minister Blaženka Divjak.

The motion, initiated by the Social Democratic Party (SDP), was signed by 31 parliamentary deputies of opposition parties.

"We absolutely reject all the allegations in the motion, including the claims about the protests of the education sector's employees and also the claims about the educational reform," said Prime Minister Andrej Plenković at the start hi his cabinet's meeting in Zagreb.

The explanation provided by the government says that the Plenković cabinet has systematically cared for the improvement of the status of teacher and other employees in the education sector.

Improvements have been made in the material status of those workers, through wards and promotions of the best employees, as well as through the improvement of safety and security at the workplace and equipment of schools, and through further training aimed at the enhancement of teachers' competences, says the government.

It also recalls that in the next 12 months the wages io the education sector's employees would rise through higher wage base and higher job complexity indices for salaries.

More news about politics can be found in the dedicated section.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Croatian Police to Have Higher Wages in 2020

ZAGREB, December 18, 2019 - The government on Wednesday decided to greenlight a rise in monthly pay of Croatian police officers according to the model of 3% rise plus 1% and an additional 2% throughout 2020.

Thus, the wage earned this December and paid in January to police officers with secondary school education will increase by 3%, plus 1% for the wage earned in June 2020 and paid a month later, and in January 2021 they could except the monthly wage increased by 2%.

Thus, the monthly wage of police staff who are employed in the positions for which completion of secondary school education is required will rise by 6.11% in aggregate in January 2021.

Other police officers can count on a 3-percent rise their monthly wage as of September 2020.

Interior Minister Davor Božinović said that this agreement "is the continuity of the performance of this government" and its wish to ensure higher wages to police officers in accordance with the financial possibilities. alongside the provision of better work conditions and equipment.

The agreement on the new model for rising police officers' pay will be signed later on Wednesday by the government and representatives of trade unions of police staff.

More police news can be found in the Politics section.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Regional Cooperation in War Crimes Prosecution Should Comply with European Standards

ZAGREB, December 18, 2019 - Chief State Prosecutor Dražen Jelenić said in Sarajevo on Wednesday that regional cooperation in the prosecution of war crimes should comply with European standards and that currently it was not realistic to expect a separate agreement on the mutual extradition of war crimes suspects.

The establishment of a mechanism or the signing of an agreement between countries in the region on the mutual extradition of war crimes suspects in not realistic for the time being, Jelenić said, expressing at the same time readiness to cooperate on the basis of existing laws.

Jelenić was participating in a meeting of representatives of regional prosecutorial authorities, which was also attended by the Chief Prosecutor of the Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals (MICT), Serge Brammertz.

In a statement to Hina, Jelenić said that it was primarily important for Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to align their actions with the legal standards in force in the EU, including Croatia.

"... that would include the application of the European arrest warrant, which regulates and enables the extradition of a country's citizens to other countries for any criminal offence," said Jelenić.

He assessed regional cooperation in war crimes cases as satisfactory but noted that it could definitely be better.

This requires overcoming obstacles that concern the countries' legal systems as they are no longer as compatible as they were before the break-up of the former state, he said.

"In a way, Croatia's membership of the EU and the high legal standards that we have to comply with, as well as rulings of the European Court of Human Rights, complicate the situation. We are trying to explain our legal situation to our colleagues in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and expect them to adjust their actions in cases requiring regional cooperation to those high standards," Jelenić said.

He confirmed that Croatia wanted to step up cooperation, notably with Serbia, in obtaining evidence in war crimes cases for the purpose of their prosecution.

"We are aware that a large body of evidence as well as a large number of perpetrators are in Serbia, and the problem with that country is that those perpetrators are not prosecuted in line with command responsibility," he said.

MICT Chief Prosecutor Brammertz said at the Sarajevo meeting that closer cooperation between the prosecutorial authorities in the countries in the region was necessary to complete the prosecution of the numerous war crimes cases, warning that in the last three years little had been done in the region in terms of the transfer of cases.

More news about war crimes prosecution can be found in the Politics section.

Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Trilj Christmas Fair to be Held this Weekend!

December 18, 2019 - The Trilj Tourist Board invites everyone to the 7th Christmas Fair, which will be held on December 21, 2019, beginning at 3:00 pm at the suspension bridge.

A variety of Christmas decorations and handicrafts, as well as honey and honey products, will surely give you the best Christmas gift ideas for your loved ones. Furthermore, you’ll support the work and efforts of all exhibitors!

For all visitors, and in the good spirit of Christmas, the Trilj Tourist Board has prepared sweet delicacies of the region to be enjoyed with a hot glass of mulled wine.

A special part of this event will be the charity sale of greetings cards made during workshops organized by the Tilurium Art Association Trilj.

After the fair, the Tourist Board also invites all interested to join them in lighting the fourth Advent candle and enjoy an evening program with Klapa "Sinj", Dream Team "Babe" from Ljubuški, the group "Vertigo" and Branko Medak.

To read more about Inland Dalmatia, follow TCN's dedicated page.

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