▲ 2 r/nis

Najbolji oftalmolog za macke u Nisu

Cao ljudi,

Macak muci muku s okom vec skoro dve godine, mislim da se povredio na trn od ruze ili ga je malo mace koje je bilo kod nas kuci neko kratko vreme slucajno noktom povredilo. Vodio sam ga kod par veterinarana, prvi u Duvanistu je bio blago receno totalni debil i mislim da je bas zbog njega stanje jos gore, oko mu se onako zamutilo zbog neke infekcije, a meni baja ladno daje VITAMIN C da mu stavljam jer kao to topi tu naslagu ili kako se vec zove (sto se ispostavilo kao totalna glupost).

Drugi i treci su mi davali neke antibiotike i kapi ali nista nije trajno pomoglo i sami kazu da nemaju trajno resenje (a da operacijom ne izvade oko).

Da li ste imali mozda neki slican slucaj ili ako imate da preporucite nekog dobrog oftalmologa, s obzirom da mi jedinu tu specijalizovanu kliniku Google izbacuje u Bg-u?

reddit.com
u/postnamasti — 1 day ago

Why is no one ever talking about what Muslims have done to Christians in the Balkans?

Meet Slobodan, one of the worst cases of torture and murder during the Bosnian war.

Slobodan Stojanovic was a Serbian boy born in Teslić in 1980, but grew up in Zvornik. He was in the fifth grade of elementary school and was an excellent student.

When the war broke out in Bosnia in 1992, Serbs became a frequent target of attacks by Mujahideen who came from various countries (Iran, Palestine, Sudan) in cooperation with local Muslim Bosniaks...

When Slobodan's father Ilija heard the first shots, on the advice of his neighbor Muhamed Čikarić, he took the note to the barricade in Kruška, which was controlled by the Serbs.

The Stojanović family was under house arrest until June 4, surrounded by Muslim guards until there was an exchange between Muslim and Serbian soldiers. The Muslim soldiers gave three dead Serbian soldiers Slavko, Vlad and Nikola Erić, and the Stojanović family in exchange for six living members of the Muslim soldiers.

The Stojanovics went to the house of their godfather Zoran Milošević from Donja Kamenica.

Little Slobodan cried for his dog and grieved, although his parents warned him not to try to go there because it was dangerous, he once sneaked out of the room without his parents' knowledge and went to his house where he lived to look for the dog.

Slobodan was captured by Muslim soldiers, among whom was Elfeta Veseli, an Albanian from Urosevac who was once married to a Serb, but divorced before the war and thus set out to prove herself to Muslim soldiers.

The worst thing is that Elfeta knew Slobodan's family and Slobodan himself well before the war.

She abused Slobodan, beat him with blunt objects, removed parts of the skin from his head, cut off his ear, tied him up, knocked out 6 of his front teeth, broke both his legs so that he could not move, carved crosses on him, cut his stomach in the shape of a cross where his internal organs were visible.

Most terrifying of all was the fact that Slobodan was alive and conscious during these hours of torture. She ended up shooting him in the left temple where the bullet exited the other side of his head. The crime was observed by Naser Orić who, as expected, did nothing to prevent such a crime.

Father Ilija came to the Muslims and begged them to return his son, where the Muslims told him that the child was alive and well, even though he had been dead for months. So Ilija turned to the supreme command of the VRS.

Little Slobodan was found in a quarry in Novi Selo near Bajrić. The body was transferred to the VMA. Slobodan was buried in Drinjača near Zvornik.

As for Elfeta Vesely, she lived freely in Switzerland with her brother Mohammed, enjoyed traveling, but hid her past.

She was arrested on September 29, 2016, and in 2019 she was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Slobodan's mother Desa died of grief and trauma in 2006. She was seriously ill. She was buried by her husband Ilija and daughter Desa.

Sculptor Miodrag Živković created the sculpture "Boy and Dog", which was supposed to be placed in the village of Drinjača at the crossroads of the roads to Srebrenica, Belgrade and Sarajevo. However, Muslim extremists gathered, i.e. Wahhabis, who rebelled against this and threatened him. Wahhabis, (not normal Muslims) were bothered by the mention of Slobodan Stojanovic as a condemnation, they considered that it was done in the name of Allah and Islam.

This is one of the many such cases, but you will never hear about Serbian and Christian victims in the 90's war, the media will always portrait it as an absolutely one sided conflict, dispite it being a civil war with many war and hate crimes on every side, especially Christian victims in Kosovo being brutally slaughtered.

u/postnamasti — 1 day ago

Slobodan Stojanović (1980-1992) one of the worst cases of torture and murder during the Bosnian war

Slobodan Stojanovic was a Serbian boy born in Teslić in 1980, but grew up in Zvornik. He was in the fifth grade of elementary school and was an excellent student.

When the war broke out in Bosnia in 1992, Serbs became a frequent target of attacks by Mujahideen who came from various countries (Iran, Palestine, Sudan) in cooperation with local Muslim Bosniaks...

When Slobodan's father Ilija heard the first shots, on the advice of his neighbor Muhamed Čikarić, he took the note to the barricade in Kruška, which was controlled by the Serbs.

The Stojanović family was under house arrest until June 4, surrounded by Muslim guards until there was an exchange between Muslim and Serbian soldiers. The Muslim soldiers gave three dead Serbian soldiers Slavko, Vlad and Nikola Erić, and the Stojanović family in exchange for six living members of the Muslim soldiers.

The Stojanovics went to the house of their godfather Zoran Milošević from Donja Kamenica.

Little Slobodan cried for his dog and grieved, although his parents warned him not to try to go there because it was dangerous, he once sneaked out of the room without his parents' knowledge and went to his house where he lived to look for the dog.

Slobodan was captured by Muslim soldiers, among whom was Elfeta Veseli, an Albanian from Urosevac who was once married to a Serb, but divorced before the war and thus set out to prove herself to Muslim soldiers.

The worst thing is that Elfeta knew Slobodan's family and Slobodan himself well before the war.

She abused Slobodan, beat him with blunt objects, removed parts of the skin from his head, cut off his ear, tied him up, knocked out 6 of his front teeth, broke both his legs so that he could not move, carved crosses on him, cut his stomach in the shape of a cross where his internal organs were visible.

Most terrifying of all was the fact that Slobodan was alive and conscious during these hours of torture. She ended up shooting him in the left temple where the bullet exited the other side of his head. The crime was observed by Naser Orić who, as expected, did nothing to prevent such a crime.

Father Ilija came to the Muslims and begged them to return his son, where the Muslims told him that the child was alive and well, even though he had been dead for months. So Ilija turned to the supreme command of the VRS.

Little Slobodan was found in a quarry in Novi Selo near Bajrić. The body was transferred to the VMA. Slobodan was buried in Drinjača near Zvornik.

As for Elfeta Vesely, she lived freely in Switzerland with her brother Mohammed, enjoyed traveling, but hid her past.

She was arrested on September 29, 2016, and in 2019 she was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Slobodan's mother Desa died of grief and trauma in 2006. She was seriously ill. She was buried by her husband Ilija and daughter Desa.

Sculptor Miodrag Živković created the sculpture "Boy and Dog", which was supposed to be placed in the village of Drinjača at the crossroads of the roads to Srebrenica, Belgrade and Sarajevo. However, Muslim extremists gathered, i.e. Wahhabis, who rebelled against this and threatened him. Wahhabis, (not normal Muslims) were bothered by the mention of Slobodan Stojanovic as a condemnation, they considered that it was done in the name of Allah and Islam.

Rest in Peace, Slobodan!

u/postnamasti — 1 day ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 8.6k r/loicense+2 crossposts

Israel strikes Lebanon with the biggest non-nuclear bomb ever used in history

Israeli forces released footage showing a massive controlled demolition in the village of Majdal Zoun in southern Lebanon on June 28. Israeli forces claim they destroyed a 200-metre-long underground tunnel in the village.
The massive explosion echoed demolition tactics used in Gaza, where residential homes have been rigged with explosives and destroyed on a large scale. Rights groups and academics have described the widespread destruction of civilian housing as ‘domicide’ and amounting to ethnic cleansing, as these tactics prevent residents from returning to their homes and villages.

u/EverythingIsFakeNGay — 5 days ago
▲ 393 r/europe

Former Serbian FA president allegedly plotted mafia attack on former Mancherster United captain Nemanja Vidić over FA presidency bid

n1info.rs
u/postnamasti — 6 days ago
▲ 990 r/novisad+1 crossposts

A sad malo lepe teme: Društvo za žaštitu i proučavanje ptica Srbije iznelo je podatak da se na nedovršenom objektu u Novom Sadu, nalazi za sada rekordan broj od 75 gnezda roda.

u/butedobri — 10 days ago
▲ 1.1k r/serbia

Najjači grafit u Vašem gradu?

Da li neko može od ovoga da napravi dizajn za stikere?

u/postnamasti — 12 days ago
▲ 574 r/serbia

Nišlije komentarišu saopštenje Tužilaštva u kome studente sumnjiče za simulaciju zvučnog topa

u/postnamasti — 14 days ago

Why did the world barely react when Serbs managed to stop Kushner and Trump's hotel project at the General Staff building in Belgrade?

I've been wondering about something and I'm curious what people outside Serbia think.

I'm curious why this story received so little international attention.

The General Staff building in Belgrade, heavily damaged during the 1999 NATO bombing campaign, is one of Serbia's most symbolic and historically significant sites. Many people viewed the plan to hand the location over to Jared Kushner's company for redevelopment, reportedly including a Trump Hotel, as inappropriate and disrespectful to both the building's architectural heritage and its historical meaning, and legally has a protected status.

Yet the Serbian government signed an agreement with Jared Kushner's company, backed by interests connected to Donald Trump, to redevelop the site into a luxury complex.

What surprised me even more is that there was barely any international discussion when public pressure, protests, and legal challenges in Serbia ultimately succeeded in forcing the project out.

Former Serbian minister Nikola Selaković stated that the General Staff complex had never legally lost its status as a protected cultural monument. Prosecutors later accused former acting director of the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments, Goran Vasić, of abusing his office in connection with the decision, and he is currently standing trial over the affair. Both are currently on trial.

As a result, the project appears to have been effectively halted, with many in Serbia viewing it as a rare case of citizens and institutions successfully pushing back against politically connected foreign investors.

In many countries, the successful grassroots effort to stop politically connected foreign investors from turning a site associated with war and national memory into a luxury development would seem like a major story. Yet outside Serbia, it passed almost unnoticed.

There were some objections from architects, historians, and opposition figures, but nothing close to the outcry we've seen in other countries over heritage issues.

I'd be interested to hear perspectives from people in other countries. If citizens in your country managed to block a similar project involving a nationally symbolic site and politically connected foreign investors, do you think it would have attracted more international attention?

https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-son-in-law-jared-kushner-secure-controversial-belgrade-real-estate-deal-serbia/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/13/serbia-and-jared-kushner-firm-fast-track-deal-to-develop-protected-belgrade-site

https://www.rferl.org/a/kushner-affinity-belgrade-project-controversy-vucic/33624642.html

https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2025/12/16/kushners-company-withdraws-from-a-controversial-project-in-belgrade/

u/postnamasti — 15 days ago
▲ 2.1k r/serbia+1 crossposts

Why did the world barely react when Serbs managed to stop Kushner and Trump's hotel project at the General Staff building in Belgrade?

I've been wondering about something and I'm curious what people outside Serbia think.

I'm curious why this story received so little international attention.

The General Staff building in Belgrade, heavily damaged during the 1999 NATO bombing campaign, is one of Serbia's most symbolic and historically significant sites. Many people viewed the plan to hand the location over to Jared Kushner's company for redevelopment, reportedly including a Trump Hotel, as inappropriate and disrespectful to both the building's architectural heritage and its historical meaning, and legally has a protected status.

Yet the Serbian government signed an agreement with Jared Kushner's company, backed by interests connected to Donald Trump, to redevelop the site into a luxury complex.

What surprised me even more is that there was barely any international discussion when public pressure, protests, and legal challenges in Serbia ultimately succeeded in forcing the project out.

Former Serbian minister Nikola Selaković stated that the General Staff complex had never legally lost its status as a protected cultural monument. Prosecutors later accused former acting director of the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments, Goran Vasić, of abusing his office in connection with the decision, and he is currently standing trial over the affair. Both are currently on trial.

As a result, the project appears to have been effectively halted, with many in Serbia viewing it as a rare case of citizens and institutions successfully pushing back against politically connected foreign investors.

In many countries, the successful grassroots effort to stop politically connected foreign investors from turning a site associated with war and national memory into a luxury development would seem like a major story. Yet outside Serbia, it passed almost unnoticed.

There were some objections from architects, historians, and opposition figures, but nothing close to the outcry we've seen in other countries over heritage issues.

I'd be interested to hear perspectives from people in other countries. If citizens in your country managed to block a similar project involving a nationally symbolic site and politically connected foreign investors, do you think it would have attracted more international attention?

https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-son-in-law-jared-kushner-secure-controversial-belgrade-real-estate-deal-serbia/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/13/serbia-and-jared-kushner-firm-fast-track-deal-to-develop-protected-belgrade-site

https://www.rferl.org/a/kushner-affinity-belgrade-project-controversy-vucic/33624642.html

https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2025/12/16/kushners-company-withdraws-from-a-controversial-project-in-belgrade/

u/postnamasti — 15 days ago
▲ 109 r/AskReddit

Why did the world barely react when Serbs managed to stop Kushner and Trump's hotel project at the General Staff building in Belgrade?

reddit.com
u/postnamasti — 15 days ago

Serbians effectively forced out the Kushner–Trump plan for the General Staff building in Belgrade with almost no international coverage

I've been wondering about something and I'm curious what people outside Serbia think.

I'm curious why this story received so little international attention.

The General Staff building in Belgrade, heavily damaged during the 1999 NATO bombing campaign, is one of Serbia's most symbolic and historically significant sites. Many people viewed the plan to hand the location over to Jared Kushner's company for redevelopment, reportedly including a Trump Hotel, as inappropriate and disrespectful to both the building's architectural heritage and its historical meaning, and legally has a protected status.

Yet the Serbian government signed an agreement with Jared Kushner's company, backed by interests connected to Donald Trump, to redevelop the site into a luxury complex.

What surprised me even more is that there was barely any international discussion when public pressure, protests, and legal challenges in Serbia ultimately succeeded in forcing the project out.

Former Serbian minister Nikola Selaković stated that the General Staff complex had never legally lost its status as a protected cultural monument. Prosecutors later accused former acting director of the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments, Goran Vasić, of abusing his office in connection with the decision, and he is currently standing trial over the affair. Both are currently on trial.

As a result, the project appears to have been effectively halted, with many in Serbia viewing it as a rare case of citizens and institutions successfully pushing back against politically connected foreign investors.

In many countries, the successful grassroots effort to stop politically connected foreign investors from turning a site associated with war and national memory into a luxury development would seem like a major story. Yet outside Serbia, it passed almost unnoticed.

There were some objections from architects, historians, and opposition figures, but nothing close to the outcry we've seen in other countries over heritage issues.

I'd be interested to hear perspectives from people in other countries. If citizens in your country managed to block a similar project involving a nationally symbolic site and politically connected foreign investors, do you think it would have attracted more international attention?

https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-son-in-law-jared-kushner-secure-controversial-belgrade-real-estate-deal-serbia/

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/13/serbia-and-jared-kushner-firm-fast-track-deal-to-develop-protected-belgrade-site

https://www.rferl.org/a/kushner-affinity-belgrade-project-controversy-vucic/33624642.html

https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2025/12/16/kushners-company-withdraws-from-a-controversial-project-in-belgrade/

u/postnamasti — 15 days ago
▲ 1.1k r/serbia

Prasac maltretira roditelje djaka Karlovačke gimnazije, gospodji ruka da se pozlati

u/postnamasti — 16 days ago
▲ 609 r/serbia

Ćacima oduzete merdevine i brusilica

  1. Na 8. Jun, oko 02:30 dva ćacija su obila ormar za struju kafica Istorija i iskljucili struju da bi se nakon toga uz pomoc merdevina popelili do banera “STUDENTI POBEDJUJU” u nameri da ga skinu, tako sto ce preseci cev brusilicom na bateriju. U toku samog tog njihovom pokusaja da iseku koji je trajao vise od 10 minuta, naisle su dve osobe koje su ih u tome prekinule i oduzele im merdevine, u samom njihovom bezanju sa mesta dogadjaja ti ćaciji su zaboravili brusilicu.
u/postnamasti — 27 days ago
▲ 426 r/serbia

Grupa glupaka, snimljena je kako na Šumaričkom jezeru u Kragujevcu maltertira labuda koji je izašao na obalu

u/postnamasti — 1 month ago
▲ 588 r/serbia

Govedje glave stoje ispred sale Dekanata, u kojoj se broje glasovi za izbor za dekana Medicinskog fakulteta u Beogradu, ne progovaraju i ne zele da pokazu bilo kakvu legitimaciju.

u/postnamasti — 1 month ago