Naser Kelmendi has acquired property worth 6 million KM on a salary that averaged 360 KM a month and a number of money-losing firms in Sarajevo.
Naser Kelmendi has acquired property worth 6 million KM on a salary that averaged 360 KM a month and a number of money-losing firms in Sarajevo.
Employees of two weapons factories in BiH say that their directors ordered them to violate safety rules for disassembling and transporting explosive devices. Binas in Bugojno is storing some 221,000 explosive devices in warehouses, some in very bad condition.
Mate Šimić, a car dealer from Grude, was arrested again after the BiH Prosecutor’s Office changed a prosecutor on the case under the police pressure.
Cars with foreign number plates have accumulated fines worth 17.3 million KM in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Just 3.2 million KM of that sum has been collected. Police is unable to enforce the payments abroad.
Soon after Ivica Tončev, a low-profile businessman turned politician, moved from Austria to Serbia about five years ago, he quickly established himself as…
On-line portals and private outlets in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Serbia and Croatia offer to write your B.A. or M.A. and Ph.D. dissertations for prices
The German stock exchange in Frankfurt could not thwart a fraud cooked up by two Bosnian brothers to pump up the price of worthless shares…
Athletes and clubs with political connections get more budget money as politicians seek to use games for their ends.
On June 1, the municipality of Novi Travnik turned over 150 cubic meters of stone to the Bugojno firm of Stonex for construction of a veterans’ memorial. That monument was never built.
Last July a group of citizens who communicated via Internet forums in Germany exposed a grand share fraud that involved people from Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH).
First Bank loan funds were used in illegal construction on Cape Zavala and a waterpark that never happened. Both projects were linked to ruling party vice president and former President of Serbia and Montenegro Svetozar Marovic and members of his family.
Despite the advice of the World Bank, the government of Montenegro refused to seize the bank controlled by the family of former Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic even though a low interest loan hung in the balance. Instead, it spent two years trying to remove government funds from the ailing bank.
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