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#Ana Brnabić
misspeppermint2003 · 2 months
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Picrew Animated Portraits of World Politicians 5
After the fourth part, I made the fifth one for my "Picrew Animated Portraits of World Politicians" collection with an image maker. It also consists of 12 more politicians from different countries.
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French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal (left), Swiss President Viola Amherd (middle) & former French President François Hollande (right)
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Swiss Vice President Karin Keller-Sutter (left), former President Alain Berset (middle) & Federal Councillor Élisabeth Baume-Schneider (right)
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German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (left), Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili (middle) & Polish President Andrzej Duda (right)
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Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabić (left), Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis (middle) & former Croatian President Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović (right)
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15
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garfieldfrombalkan · 17 days
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Ana burn-a-bitch
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gtaradi · 2 years
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Gorkić je govorio o ženskoj strani Brnabićke, pardon, Vučića
Jel’ se to samo meni čini da se Hrvati sprdaju s Vučićem kao Ukrajinci s Putinom? Gorkić je govorio!
Gorkić Taradi – Konobar s olovkomFacebook | Twitter | Instagram | TikTok Brnabić je lupila šakom o stol baš onako, muški, a sad će i Vučić pokazati nam svojega!Gorkić je govorio! Prijelomna vijest stara decenijama: Vučić nametnuo sankcije Srbiji!Gorkić je govorio! Srbi za sve krive Hrvate! U tome su slični Hrvatima jer i oni za sve krive Hrvate (doduše one nepodobne)!Gorkić je govorio! Srbi…
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cgvijesti · 2 years
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Hrvatski mediji: Ako niste znali, Srbija je defakto priznala Kosovo
Hrvatski mediji: Ako niste znali, Srbija je defakto priznala Kosovo
Foto: EPA/Nova/Slobodna Dalmacija Piše: Slobodna Dalmacija Posle gotovo pet godina dužnosti srpske premijerke konačno je i Ana Brnabić vidjela Kosovo i Srbe koji tamo žive. Kako bi je pripremio za ponovnu ulogu predsnednice Vlade, Aleksandar Vučić je mandatarku, umjesto sebe, poslao u ritualno ponižavajući obilazak ‘svete srpske zemlje‘. I to netom nakon što je Kosovo defakto priznato dogovorom…
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vanista · 4 months
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„A szerb hatóságokat előre figyelmeztették
hogy a Nyugat az ellenzéki tüntetések álcája alatt újabb színes forradalmat akar végrehajtani az országban. Belgrád külön köszönetét fejezi ki az orosz különleges szolgálatoknak az információkért.” Ana Brnabić szerb miniszterelnök (Káncz Csaba)
Hála a jó istennek. Bajban ismerszik meg a jó barát. Ha a szuverenitásvédelmi erőfeszítéseink a Nyugat ellen kudarcot vallanak, remélem, nekünk is lesz hova fordulnunk.
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vernadskova · 5 months
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I could've saved Ana Brnabić
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uraandri · 2 months
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ali ana brnabić koja se hvata za 1914. i priča kako su tada deca išla u rat u svom komentarisanju pokretanja nezavisne istrage izbora. da se ubiješ koje smo mi degenerike doveli na vlast
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equalityvoices · 3 months
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Trailblazers in LGBTQ+ Leadership Across Europe
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Stefanos Kasselakis Breaks New Ground
Stefanos Kasselakis, an openly gay former employee of Goldman Sachs, has achieved a historic milestone in Greece by becoming the leader of the Syriza party, a significant leftist opposition group. Since 2019, he has been married to Tyler Macbeth, and his election marks a substantial advancement in LGBTQ+ representation within the Greek political landscape.
Europe’s Leadership in LGBTQ+ Representation
Europe is a global leader in terms of LGBTQ+ political representation, with Luxembourg, Ireland, Serbia, and Andorra currently having openly gay individuals at the helm of their governments. This highlights the continent’s forward-thinking approach to LGBTQ+ rights and inclusion.
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Latvia’s Presidential Milestone
Edgars Rinkevics of Latvia became the region’s inaugural openly gay head of state earlier this year, a significant development since his public coming out in 2014. Rinkevics has utilized his role to champion equal rights for all.
Trailblazers in Iceland and Belgium
Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir of Iceland was the first openly gay government head globally, leading her country from 2009 to 2013 and playing a pivotal role during the financial crisis. Elio Di Rupo, former Prime Minister of Belgium and later head of the Wallonia region, has also been a vocal supporter of LGBTQ+ rights.
Luxembourg’s Advocate for Normalcy
Xavier Bettel, Luxembourg’s Prime Minister, has been transparent about his sexuality and stresses its normality. His marriage in 2015 to his partner was a landmark event, marking the first time an acting EU leader married a same-sex partner.
Ireland’s Symbol of Change
Leo Varadkar, who has been Taoiseach of Ireland twice, from 2017 to 2020 and again starting in 2022, is Ireland’s first gay leader. His election is emblematic of the shifting social norms in Ireland, a country with a traditionally conservative Roman Catholic background.
Serbia’s Progressive Leadership
Ana Brnabić of Serbia holds the distinction of being both the first female and the first openly gay individual to be appointed as Prime Minister. In 2019, she became the first openly gay prime minister to become a parent while in office.
Europe’s Inclusive Political Landscape
The emergence of these leaders reflects a broader movement towards inclusivity and acceptance of the LGBTQ+ community in European political spheres. Their influential positions are not just breaking barriers but are also creating pathways for future LGBTQ+ individuals in the realm of politics.
©equalityvoices.org
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mariacallous · 2 years
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On September 11th, thousands of people brandishing religious symbols and Russian flags answered a call from the Orthodox Church and took to the streets of Belgrade to protest against EuroPride 2022 being held in the Serbian capital.
EuroPride 2022 was launched the next day: a week of conferences and cultural events, due to end with a pride march through the streets of Belgrade. Citing security reasons, the government's 11th-hour decision to ban the march was met with fury by the participants.
EuroPride is the annual European meeting of the LGBTIQA+ community, and this was its first time in the Balkans and South-East Europe. At the first EuroPride conference, the Serbian Prime Minister, Ana Brnabić, who is openly lesbian, tried to quell the anger.
"I’m doing my best, I increase the visibility. I have given myself no other right than all of you have. And that is not a lot of rights, I admit.”
This message did not go down well. EuroPride organizers, slammed the ban, as a breach to freedom of assembly. 
«If anybody else can march, and the police is always providing sufficient protection,_and we are the only social group that cannot march, then it’s discrimination", stormed EuroPride 2022 coordinator Goran Miletić.
“_Who is threatening us? And why aren’t they banned? Why are we banned? It’s a peaceful protest! It’s a further degradation of rule of law, a further degradation of our human rights, a further degradation of our constitutional rights._It’s exactly why we need to be on the street on the 17th on Saturday. We must stop this!" said Marko Mihailović, director of the event.
All EuroPride venues were under heavy police protection. In defiance of the ban, volunteers mobilized for the event prepared banners for the Pride. Nothing would prevent them from marching. Many foreign LGBTI activists were there to show their support.
“Human rights in general are never granted. And we’ve seen this also in other fields, like reproduction rights or refugees and immigration rights. We have seen a lot of things going back and forth. It does seem like a constant struggle" sighs Annie Papazoglou, from Greece, before adding, in a smile:"But this is our lives, we must live them to the fullest. That's why we are here, and we are queer, and proud!".
A recent poll states that a majority of Serbs would agree to less restrictive legislation toward members of the LGBTIQA+ community, but also that the stigma is still very strong.
Maja Žilić is from the Youth Initiative For Human Rights Serbia. 
“We have a very high rate of suicide among LGBT teenagers. Especially when they come from local communities outside of Belgrade. People are still very homophobic.  They can't express themselves the way they want to. So they come to Belgrade to work, to study. That's why I came here too."
Maja and her team had organized a public awareness session in the city centre.
“_We are here to say that democracy means everyone has the right to protest.__For some people here there is a ban on their right to protest_”, explains Dejana Dexy Stošić to a woman passing by the group of activists.
“If these people are ill, I really cannot support them, and I just feel sorry for them!", exclaims the woman, before scurrying away.
“She said that gay people have mental diseases!" sighs Dejana, taken aback. "We do have pretty strong reactions, but  we also have pretty good ones. A lot of people actually didn't know about certain things.They ask things like: "They really can’t visit their partner in hospital?” and we answer, “No! That's one of the requests of the Pride march. For homosexual couples have the right to visit their partner in hospital, or to have the right to actually inherit from their partner, things like that. J_ust basic human rights!_"
LGBTIQA+ activists are campaigning for the legal recognition of same-sex couples. A draft law, deemed unconstitutional by the Serbian President, has long been delayed. Aleksandra Gavrilović is from the Lesbian Human Rights Organization LABRIS. She is fighting for a reform of the Serbian family law. Aleksandra founded a family with her partner. Five years ago, she gave birth to triplets through artificial insemination. 
“The first problems started when the children were born, since they were born prematurely, they were in an intensive care unit for premature babies. And my partner could not come to visit them because only parents are allowed to do so. And according to the law in Serbia, parents are a father and a mother. It is a constant fear that you are living with, because the law does not protect us, a constant fear of what will happen if something happens to me. Will my partner, since she has no legal status, be able to have custody of the children?" she explains, before concluding:"We need one comprehensive law, that will include everything -inheritance, health insurance, and all the elements that protect us and are related to our life."
European Commissioner for Equality Helena Dalli, several ministers, and many European MPs and ambassadors attended Belgrade’s EuroPride. They called for the Serbian government to reconsider the ban on the march, deemed by the European Council as a violation of the European convention on Human Rights.
Terry Reintke is a Member Of European Parliament (Greens/EFA), and LGBTIQA+ Intergroup Co-President.
“Europride is happening in a context where democracy, rule of law, liberal societies, freedom in our societies are under attack. Not only by authoritarian movements inside of Europe, but also, for example, when we look at the Russian aggression towards Ukraine.
And this makes it even more important that now we say : we have to defend these values, we have to defend these rights. And this is why EuroPride will be a symbol of that. “
Boško Obradović is leader of the Dveri Party and close to the Orthodox church and one of the main figures of the anti-Pride protests. While he tolerates legislative amendments on issues like inheritance or visitation rights in hospitals and prisons for homosexual couples, going any further, for him, is out of the question.
“For decades, we have been suffering constant pressure from the EU and NATO. For us to adjust and adapt our value system and our politics to their view of the world. EuroPride is only one part of that agenda that is imposed on us.
That package also includes the obligation to recognize independent Kosovo, impose sanctions on Russia, and also to hold EuroPride in Belgrade. We perceive Europride as part of the occupation agenda that comes to us from the West."
A few hours after meeting the parliamentarian, we hear a very different viewpoint from Aleksandar Savić, alias "Alexis Vandercunt Plastic", hosting Belgrade's monthly Drag party in a reconverted warehouse in the city outskirts.
A drag queen at night, Aleksandar is an activist during the day, with Da Se Zna, an association supporting victims of homophobic violence.
EuroPride, he says, acted as a trigger.
“We had a huge increase of violence in the past month. Four times more than in a year, since the same month of august in 2021." he tells us. "The good thing with EuroPride is that it basically provoked this hate to come out. Because in the past few years everyone was pretending that it doesn't exist, and that everything is going so well. And now it's all out so we can deal with it. And I think that reality check is going to be, I believe, very important for the queer community_to realise that if we don't fight for ourselves, no one is going to fight for us.”
Another 11th-hour decision from the government finally authorised a much shorter version of the march to take place, under the protection of more than 5,000 police. For its participants, the Belgrade event, even restricted, is a landmark moment in history for EuroPride, which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. 
The battle is not over, concludes Goran Miletić, the Belgrade EuroPride2022 Coordinator.
“We marched, we showed that we are citizens, that we are here together, that there is solidarity. The fight will continue, this is just one episode. And I think no-one else will ban Pride ever in the future.”
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ODLUČENO! Ana Brnabić kandidat za predsednika Narodne skupštine
https://www.novosti.rs/vesti/politika/1341663/odluceno-ana-brnabic-kandidat-predsednika-narodne-skupstine
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head-post · 2 months
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Serbian PM says December elections were legitimate, “not a single vote was stolen”
The December elections were legitimate, Prime Minister Ana Brnabić said on live television in response to a call by the opposition, the international community and the European Parliament for an international investigation, adding that such a move would violate Serbia’s sovereignty, Euractiv reports.
The December elections were widely condemned by local and international politicians, observers, citizens, organisations and civil society, as well as in a European Parliament resolution. There were widespread press reports of vote buying, pressure on voters and bringing Serbs from other countries to vote, but the Serbian government, which won the election, maintains that nothing untoward happened. Brnabić said on Prva:
“Not a single vote was stolen. A fly couldn’t pass, let alone for something to be stolen. Repeated elections are the most realistic option for Belgrade. It is not a question of majority, we do have a majority, but President Aleksandar Vučić has set a standard – mathematics is not politics.”
An international investigation would “suspend institutions and law in Serbia”. 
Read more HERE
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noisynutcrusade · 4 months
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Vučić tightens grip in Serbian election marred by fraud claims – POLITICO
BELGRADE — Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić looks set to tighten his grip on power — with early exit polling suggesting a sweeping election win for his ruling party — although his government is facing accusations of major irregularities over the course of Sunday’s vote. Speaking at the headquarters of Vučić’s Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), Prime Minister Ana Brnabić said the ruling party was…
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lamilanomagazine · 5 months
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Il Presidente Luca Zaia ha incontrato la Premier serba Ana Brnabić a Belgrado
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Il Presidente Luca Zaia ha incontrato la Premier serba Ana Brnabić a Belgrado Il Presidente della Regione del Veneto ha incontrato la Premier serba. Affrontati temi economici e politici, in particolare è stata trattata la possibilità di lavorare per un Business Council con la Serbia. “Ho trovato la conferma di grande attenzione verso il nostro Paese e verso il Veneto”, ha dichiarato Zaia al termine dell’incontro. Il Presidente della Regione del Veneto, Luca Zaia, è stato ricevuto venerdì 17 novembre 2023, a Belgrado, presso la sede del Governo, dal Primo Ministro della Repubblica di Serbia, Ana Brnabić. L’incontro è stata l’occasione per affrontare le principali tematiche economiche, il ruolo delle imprese venete nel paese e il possibile progetto di un Business Council con la Serbia. In particolare, sono stati approfonditi i temi legato all’impiego delle tecnologie e allo sviluppo dell’intelligenza artificiale anche con riferimento alla sanità. All’incontro era presente, inoltre, l’Ambasciatore d’Italia, Luca Gori. Sempre nel corso della mattinata, all’ambasciata d’Italia di Belgrado, il Presidente Luca Zaia aveva incontrato gli imprenditori italiani, tra i quali una significativa componente veneta, impegnati in Serbia. “Ringrazio il Primo ministro Brnabić per l’accoglienza che mi ha riservato e la cortesia con la quale mi ha ricevuto. Abbiamo affrontato un’ampia panoramica di temi di interesse comune. Ho trovato la conferma di grande attenzione verso il nostro Paese e verso il Veneto”, ha dichiarato il Presidente della Regione Veneta al termine dell’incontro con la Premier Serba.... #notizie #news #breakingnews #cronaca #politica #eventi #sport #moda Read the full article
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trojerucica-blr · 6 months
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Narodni sud Pravde liked
Срђан Ного
@srdjan_nogo
Supreme žvala
@avucic , shamelessly buys the people, students, pensioners, socially vulnerable, etc. with the cards it advertises. These cards only fill his pockets, and the pockets of Ana and Igor Brnabić, Neša Roming, Sava Terzić, Ostoja Mijailović, who take a percentage from each transaction for processing. But this card from the picture, offered by
@georgesoros , is the real one. It is issued without any laws, without the name of the beneficiary, and its owner is not subject to the laws of the countries in which it is located. She receives regular payments without doing anything. The owner of this card can rob, kidnap, rape, kill with impunity, and not be criminally or materially responsible for it. They don't pay for public transportation, they have lawyers and all legal assistance free of charge, and the only punishment they can get is expulsion from the country, but only when the conditions for that are met and when their home countries accept them, of course with a serious monetary compensation to receive them back to your country. And until then, they remain, and can repeat criminal acts countless times without punishment.
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cgvijesti · 2 years
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Kurti: Neka Brnabić dođe da vidi šta je demokratija
Kurti: Neka Brnabić dođe da vidi šta je demokratija
Foto: RSE Premijer Kosova Aljbin Kurti rekao je da premijerka Srbije Ana Brnabić može da dođe na Kosovo da vidi koliko je ono demokratsko. Kurti je rekao da će Brnabić ući na Kosovo sa ličnom kartom Republike Srbije, prema postignutom dogovoru. “Neka Brnabić uđe na Kosovo sa ličnom kartom koju su izdale vlasti u Beogradu i neka vidi da funkcionišemo kao demokratska država, koja je…
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joannmathews · 8 months
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Women and Adversity: Ana Brnabic Prime Minister of Serbia
Women and Adversity: Ana Brnabić Prime Minister of Serbia Ana Brnabić, Prime Minister of Serbia (2023-e1691509876865.jpg) We get into complicated territory when we talk of the Balkan Penisula, a region in southeastern Europe. Eleven countries comprise the Balkans and Serbia is one of them. Serbia didn’t become totally separate from the other Balkan states until 2008 when Kosovo declared its…
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