Nedeljnik

Nedeljnik has published interviews with Lech Walesa, Noam Chomsky,[1] Steve Forbes, Michael Bloomberg, Carla del Ponte, and Romano Prodi.

Nedeljnik has published many interviews with influential people from Serbia and the region, as well as world-wide famous people, such as Noam Chomsky,[3] Julian Assange,[4] Toni Morrison,[5] Francis Fukuyama,[6] Khaled Hosseini,[7] Morrissey.,[7] Yuval Noah Harari[8] One of the prominent interviews was with famous former NBA all-star Vlade Divac, in which declared he was leaving Serbia with a great deal of disappointment.

[10] Nedeljnik has also published interviews with many world-famous basketball players and coaches, including Željko Obradović,[11] Dušan Ivković,[12] Božidar Maljković,[13] Igor Kokoškov,[14] Predrag Danilović,[15] Saša Đorđević,[16] and Žarko Paspalj.

[34] In 2017, the Queen of the United Kingdom decorated Branko Rosić, managing editor of Nedeljnik, with a Medal of The British Empire, for his lifetime contribution in creating cultural ties between the two countries.

A few days after the report was published, the Labour Ministry of Slovakia announced it would pay more attention to companies with foreign staff.

"We've found out - and this was also confirmed by Hungarian authorities - that several Serbian nationals working in Slovakia were deceived and were staying here illegally, although they themselves didn't know that", he added.

[38] In June 2017, the Serbian minister of Labor, Employment, Veteran and Social Affairs visited Bratislava, Slovakia and spoke about the ways for joint action in cases of unlawful treatment of workers coming from the third countries.

In November 2017, Serbia and Slovakia signed a protocol on cooperation between in the field of labor and employment, the Serbian government announced.

[34] In August 2019, Nedeljnik discovered that Serbia had granted citizenship to Thailand's fugitive former premier Yingluck Shinawatra, who was ousted ahead of the 2014 coup.

Author of the opinion piece in question was opposition politician Dragan Sutanovac, who asked the editor-in-chief Veljko Lalic if Nedeljnik would publish his column in a part of the weekly where public figures express their views.

"[citation needed] Sutanovac said that in interview for Kurir he didn't say anything regarding the issues Vulin commented in his statement, so it was obvious that article in Nedeljnik he had in mind.

[clarification needed] "The debate with the unpublished article undoubtedly confirms that Vulin has illegally obtained the e-mails exchange between the Nedeljnik's editor and me.

Is Serbia becoming the country of 'Big Brother' in which the state resources are used to intercept the communication between the former Defence Minister and media editor, is now doubtless.

"[citation needed] Reporters Without Borders (RSF) urged the Serbian authorities to investigate the possibility that the government had spied on and intercepted emails between an opposition politician and Nedeljnik.

[49] During the coronavirus crisis in early spring of 2020, Nedeljnik published a series of special issues on global and local influence of the new pandemic.

The research of Ipsos Strategic Marketing shows that more than 70 percent of readers of Nedeljnik are highly educated, and they are the opinion makers, political and business elite of this country.

[53] According to the recent report by the Serbian government’s Commission for Protection of Competition, Nedeljnik controls between 30 and 40 percent of the current affairs magazines market, which includes more than 20 publications [54]

Letter of Marina Abramovic
Cover of LMD in Serbian
Nedeljnik magazine, doctor superheroes