List of newspapers in Serbia
This is a list of newspapers in Serbia.
Daily newspapers
Belgrade
- Berliner:
- Tabloid:
- Večernje novosti (1953)
- Blic (1996)
- Kurir (2003)
- Alo! (2007)
- Informer (2012)
- Srpski Telegraf (2016)
- Sport:
- Sport (1945)
- Sportski žurnal (1990)
- Economy:
- Privredni pregled (1923)
- Free daily newspaper:
- 24 sata (2006)
Novi Sad
Niš
- Tabloid:
- Narodne novine (Niš) (1944)
Weekly newspapers
- Čačanski glas (Čačak)
- Glas Podrinja (Šabac)
- Kikindske (Kikinda)
- Kragujevačke novine (Kragujevac) [1][2]
- Nezavisna svetlost (Kragujevac)
- Somborske novine (Sombor)
- Subotičke novine (Subotica)
- Užička nedelja (Užice)
Minority languages
- Bratstvo (Bulgarian language) weekly (Niš/Dimitrovgrad)
- Bunjevačke novine (Bunjevac speech) monthly (Subotica)
- Hlas ľudu (Slovak language)
- Hrvatska riječ (Croatian language) weekly (Subotica)
- Libertatea (Romanian language) weekly (Pančevo)
- Magyar Szó (Hungarian language) daily (Subotica)
- Miroljub (Croatian language) quarterly (Sombor)
- Ruske Slovo (Pannonian Rusyn language)
- Žig (Croatian language) twice weekly (Subotica) (defunct in 1999)
- Zvonik (Croatian language) monthly (Subotica)
Defunct dailies
Published in Belgrade, unless stated otherwise.
- Balkan ekspres (1990–1992)
- Slobodna Šumadija (1994, Kragujevac)
- Građanin (1997)
- Naša borba (1994–1998)
- Demokratija (1996–1998)
- Dnevni telegraf (1995–1999)
- NT Plus (1996–2000)
- Lid (?–2000, Kragujevac)
- Nacional (2001–2003)
- Centar (2003-2004)
- Balkan (2003–2005)
- Internacional (2003–2005)
- Ekipa (2005)
- Politika Ekspres (1963–2005)[3]
- Srpski nacional (2005–2006)
- Start (2005–2006)
- Sutra (2007–2008)
- Kurir Sport (2007–2008), sports newspaper launched by Radisav Rodić, the owner of established dailies Kurir and Glas javnosti, Kurir-sport was his second attempt (after his takeover and the eventual failure of Ekipa in 2005) at breaking the decades-long dominance of Sportski žurnal and JSL Sport on the sports daily market in Serbia. However, much like Ekipa before it, Kurir-sport quickly found its readership lagging far behind the two established sports dailies. Launched in late 2007, the paper folded during spring 2008. That was not the end of it, however, as on July 3, 2008, a group of 20 journalists formerly employed at Kurir-sport (out of the total 35 formerly employed at the short lived paper) decided to start a hunger strike in front of the Rodić's company offices claiming that he owes them between 3 and 4 million RSD (~€38,000-50,000) in unpaid salaries.[4]
- Gazeta (2007–2008)
- Biznis (2007–2008)
- Borba (1922–2009)
- Glas javnosti (1998–2010)
- Građanski list (2000–2010, Novi Sad)
- Press (2005–2012)
- Pravda (2007–2012)
- San (2012–2013)
- Naše novine (2013-2015)
References
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