Borba (newspaper)
Borba
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description | Serbian newspaper |
language | Serbian |
publishing company | Izdavačko preduzeće Novine Borba |
First edition | February 19, 1922 |
attitude | 2009 |
Editor-in-chief | Olivera Zekic |
editor | Izdavačko preduzeće Novine Borba |
ZDB | 2214096-7 |
The Borba (The Struggle), Serbian - Cyrillic Борба , was founded in 1922 and was the party newspaper of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia . After the end of Yugoslavia , the daily was published in Serbia until 2009 .
history
The first edition of Borba was published in Zagreb on February 19, 1922 . After the establishment of the royal dictatorship of Alexander I , the newspaper was banned on January 13, 1929.
During the Second World War , it was brought out for a few weeks in 1941 in Užice , which had been liberated from the partisans . In the winter of 1942/43 it appeared in the Bosnian town of Drinić . After the liberation of Belgrade on November 15, 1944, Borba was the first Yugoslav daily newspaper to be published in the capital. In 1948 the editorial team moved back to Zagreb. After the Serbian government brought Borba under its editorial control, several former independent editors founded Naša Borba .
The Borba was privatized at the end of 2008 . The first revised edition appeared on January 15, 2009, and the newspaper was discontinued that same year.
responsible
As publishers , chief editors and directors factors included Ante Ciliga , Milovan Djilas , Zlatko Šnajder , Vladimir Copic , Ivan Krndelj , Ognjen Prica , Josip Kraš , Veselin Masleša , Marijan Stilinović , Puniša Perovic , Veljko Vlahović , Vlajko Begovic , Lazar Mojsov , Moma Marković and Vladimir Dedijer .