Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nebojša_Medojević> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 56 of
56
with 100 triples per page.
- Nebojša_Medojević abstract "Nebojša Medojević (Serbian Cyrillic: Небојша Медојевић) (born June 13, 1966 in Pljevlja, Montenegro, SFR Yugoslavia) is a politician in Montenegro. He is the president of Movement for Changes (PZP), a political party emerging from the Montenegrin NGO Group for Changes. The party seeks to promote and further the country's integration towards the European Union and supports political and economic reforms to bring it in line with \"European standards\". He was a member of G17 Plus. This party maintains close ties to and is modelled after the G17 Plus organisation in Serbia. G17 Plus has made economic policy a priority in all post-October 5, 2000 coup Serbian governments either initially as NGO or later as a political party.In a 5 June 2005 article, Tim Judah described Medojević as \"the most popular politician in the country.\"[1]The British Helsinki Human Rights Group described him as a \"typical second-generation reformer in the mould of Georgia’s President Mikheil Saakashvili and Ukraine’s Viktor Yushchenko, both brought to power in Western-inspired ‘colour revolutions’ which saw old favourites, Eduard Shevardnadze and Leonid Kuchma cast aside.\" Thus, the Group predicted in June 2006 that he has been ordained as Montenegro premier Milo Đukanović's eventual successor.[2]In late April 2006, Medojević led a delegation of opposition politicians to the National Democratic Institute (NDI) in Washington for assistance in bringing democracy to Montenegro. The opposition politicians included some from the Socialist People's Party of Montenegro (SNP), the party that has served as Montenegro's main opposition party since Đukanović kicked its founding members out of the ruling Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro in 1997.An article in a May 2006 edition of the Economist suggested that such a pro-Serbian party would have to make way for the likes of Medojević as Đukanović's main challenger, following a victory by the pro-independence bloc in the Montenegro independence referendum.Nebojša was his party's candidate in the 2008 presidential election. He came in third with nearly 17% of the vote.".
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageExternalLink CountryReport.asp?CountryID=17&ReportID=265&ChapterID=819&next=next&keyword=.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageExternalLink details.cfm?ID=11231.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageID "5209908".
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageLength "2948".
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageOutDegree "25".
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageRevisionID "707725157".
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Category:1966_births.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Category:Living_people.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Category:Movement_for_Changes_politicians.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Pljevlja.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Category:University_of_Montenegro_Faculty_of_Electrical_Engineering_alumni.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Democratic_Party_of_Socialists_of_Montenegro.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Eduard_Shevardnadze.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink European_Union.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink G17_Plus.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Leonid_Kuchma.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Mikheil_Saakashvili.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Milo_Đukanović.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Montenegrin_presidential_election,_2008.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Montenegro.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Movement_for_Changes.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink National_Democratic_Institute_for_International_Affairs.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Non-governmental_organization.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Overthrow_of_Slobodan_Milošević.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Pljevlja.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Serbian_language.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Socialist_Federal_Republic_of_Yugoslavia.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Socialist_Peoples_Party_of_Montenegro.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Socialist_Republic_of_Montenegro.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLink Viktor_Yushchenko.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nebojša Medojević".
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:BLP_sources.
- Nebojša_Medojević wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Montenegro-politician-stub.
- Nebojša_Medojević subject Category:1966_births.
- Nebojša_Medojević subject Category:Living_people.
- Nebojša_Medojević subject Category:Movement_for_Changes_politicians.
- Nebojša_Medojević subject Category:People_from_Pljevlja.
- Nebojša_Medojević subject Category:University_of_Montenegro_Faculty_of_Electrical_Engineering_alumni.
- Nebojša_Medojević hypernym Politician.
- Nebojša_Medojević type List.
- Nebojša_Medojević type OfficeHolder.
- Nebojša_Medojević type Person.
- Nebojša_Medojević type Politician.
- Nebojša_Medojević type Diacritic.
- Nebojša_Medojević type List.
- Nebojša_Medojević type Politician.
- Nebojša_Medojević type Redirect.
- Nebojša_Medojević comment "Nebojša Medojević (Serbian Cyrillic: Небојша Медојевић) (born June 13, 1966 in Pljevlja, Montenegro, SFR Yugoslavia) is a politician in Montenegro. He is the president of Movement for Changes (PZP), a political party emerging from the Montenegrin NGO Group for Changes. The party seeks to promote and further the country's integration towards the European Union and supports political and economic reforms to bring it in line with \"European standards\". He was a member of G17 Plus.".
- Nebojša_Medojević label "Nebojša Medojević".
- Nebojša_Medojević sameAs Q11790414.
- Nebojša_Medojević sameAs Nebojša_Medojević.
- Nebojša_Medojević sameAs m.0d7_27.
- Nebojša_Medojević sameAs Q11790414.
- Nebojša_Medojević wasDerivedFrom Nebojša_Medojević?oldid=707725157.
- Nebojša_Medojević isPrimaryTopicOf Nebojša_Medojević.