Thursday, February 16, 2006

Picture of the Day: Serbia Welcomes EU Representatives



Ultra nationalist legislators stand in protest wearing white T-shirts with the photo of their party leader imprisoned at the U.N. war crimes tribunal at The Hague, Netherlands, on Thursday, Feb. 16, 2006 in Belgrade, while European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso speaks to lawmakers in the Serbia-Montenegro assembly. Barroso, who urged authorities to cooperate with The Hague court, ignored the lawmakers from Vojislav Seselj's Radical Party who carried a banner against cooperation with the U.N. court.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is this dude biting his nails?

Free Seselj! He's just a poor victim of world consipiracy against Serbs.

Anonymous said...

SESELJ dump ass. Give him a capital in HAGA.
Baroso today said that you dunky people need to understand the new reality with Indipedenc of Kosovo.
So if you dont understand that you are dump too. So you stupid people use the brain or chose the europe or still keep colapsing.

Anonymous said...

d

Anonymous said...

Tricked into prostitution in Albania

An estimated 30,000 Albanian women work as prostitutes abroad. Some are kidnapped, but most are tricked with promises of marriages or good jobs in western Europe. They're usually raped and then transported to Italy or Greece, where they're sold to pimps.

Albania is also a transit country for the trafficking of young women from other east European countries. Albanian traffickers buy them from criminal gangs, bring them to Albania, and then transport them to western Europe. Young women often have their passports taken from them, and they and their families are threatened with violence if they try to escape or report the pimps to the police. Those who do manage to return home may be rejected by their families and communities.

Save the Children is tackling the problem of child trafficking in Albania by:

supporting a safe shelter in the port city of Vlora for young women deported to Albania.
raising awareness of the dangers of child trafficking in areas where it's a common problem, and helping young people there to find better education and job opportunities.

We're also working with other Save the Children organisations in Bulgaria, Croatia, Kosovo, Romania and Serbia to prevent child trafficking and support children who've already been abused.

"Every time I see a girl who lives a normal life with her family I ask myself, why shouldn't I be like her?" Mirela, 17, Albania

Anonymous said...

hihih Don't piss off the Serbs or they'll get angry and find something wrong with Albania from 30/04/2002.

If you insist, they'll even castrate themselves to prove the point.

Anonymous said...

Hitler would have been proud.

Jo Negociata, Vetëvendosje.

Anonymous said...

Its a funny thing how people like to take things out of context. All of you comment on Seselj's party but no one talks about the majority parties that are democratic in Serbia, which aspire going to Europe just like the rest of the Balkans.