CIN reporter Nino Bilajac is shortlisted for a prestigious award.
Former Head of the Uniformed Police Sector of the Federation Police Administration (FUP), Zoran Čegar, pleads before the Sarajevo Municipal Court on charges of document forgery.
“I am not guilty”, said Zoran Čegar, the former Head of the Uniformed Police Sector of the Federation Police Administration (FUP), as he pleaded before the Sarajevo Municipal Court on charges of document forgery.
The indictment was filed by the Canton Sarajevo Prosecutor’s Office in September 2024, and the date for the continuation of the trial will be determined at a later time.
Čegar’s lawyer requested that the trial be closed to the public due to his post-traumatic stress disorder…
CIN reporter Nino Bilajac is shortlisted for a prestigious award.
Federal Police Administration requested from the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s House of Peoples paperwork about legislators’ accommodation allowances and hiring of advisors for Lidija Bradara, the House’s chairwoman.
Ombudsman for Human Rights in BiH worried about intimidation and harassment of journalists.
Sarajevo Canton Prosecutor’s Office is looking into misuse of living away from home allowances, claimed by the legislators of the FBiH Parliament’s House of Peoples, and how the House chairwoman Lidija Bradara hired her aides.
Judge Azra Miletić was sentenced to 30 months in prison because she took money from defendants prosecuted on organized crime charges.
Sedinet Karić has been handed a one-year prison sentence after the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) accepted a plea bargain Karić enterd with the BiH Prosecutor’s Office.
Businessman Sedinet Karić will receive a one-year sentence for bribing the former director of the BiH Indirect Taxation Authority if the court accepts his plea bargain with the prosecutors.
Sedinet Karić, a private businessman accused of giving a bribe to a former director of the Indirect Taxation Authority of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH), Kemal Čaušević, made a plea bargain with the BiH Prosecutor’s Office.
High Judicial and Prosecutorial Council discussed how to improve the selection process of court-appointed attorneys.
Judges, prosecutors, lawyers, politicians and representatives of non-governmental organizations have discussed CIN’s investigation about court-appointed counsels. They have announced that they are changing the rules to require mandatory record-keeping in a single register of all court-appointed defenses.
The database provides detailed information about 76.2 million KM the courts in BiH have allocated for court-appointed defenses over seven years.
The Office of Disciplinary Prosecutor registered a new case against Jadranko Grčević, the president of the Basic Court in Brčko District.
CIN reporter Nino Bilajac is shortlisted for a prestigious award.
Federal Police Administration requested from the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s House of Peoples paperwork about legislators’ accommodation allowances and hiring of advisors for Lidija Bradara, the House’s chairwoman.
Ombudsman for Human Rights in BiH worried about intimidation and harassment of journalists.
Sarajevo Canton Prosecutor’s Office is looking into misuse of living away from home allowances, claimed by the legislators of the FBiH Parliament’s House of Peoples, and how the House chairwoman Lidija Bradara hired her aides.
Judge Azra Miletić was sentenced to 30 months in prison because she took money from defendants prosecuted on organized crime charges.
Sedinet Karić has been handed a one-year prison sentence after the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) accepted a plea bargain Karić enterd with the BiH Prosecutor’s Office.
Businessman Sedinet Karić will receive a one-year sentence for bribing the former director of the BiH Indirect Taxation Authority if the court accepts his plea bargain with the prosecutors.
Sedinet Karić, a private businessman accused of giving a bribe to a former director of the Indirect Taxation Authority of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH), Kemal Čaušević, made a plea bargain with the BiH Prosecutor’s Office.
High Judicial and Prosecutorial Council discussed how to improve the selection process of court-appointed attorneys.
Judges, prosecutors, lawyers, politicians and representatives of non-governmental organizations have discussed CIN’s investigation about court-appointed counsels. They have announced that they are changing the rules to require mandatory record-keeping in a single register of all court-appointed defenses.
The database provides detailed information about 76.2 million KM the courts in BiH have allocated for court-appointed defenses over seven years.
The Office of Disciplinary Prosecutor registered a new case against Jadranko Grčević, the president of the Basic Court in Brčko District.
The Center for Investigative Reporting (CIN) in Sarajevo is unique in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the first organization of its kind to be established in Balkans. CIN is dedicated to investigative reporting, aimed toward providing fair and unbiased information, based on evidences and solid proof, to BiH citizens who need to make educated decisions.
Downloading of the content of the CIN is permitted with the mandatory reference to the source at www.cin.ba.
Svojim anonimnim prijavama doprinosite integritetu naše zajednice. Molimo vas da iskoristite ovu formu kako biste sigurno prijavili bilo kakvu sumnju u korupciju ili nezakonitu aktivnost koju primijetite. Vaša hrabrost ključna je za očuvanje naših vrijednosti i promicanje transparentnosti.