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Youth from Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina are determined to build a future without violence

During the “A Step Closer to Peace” program, young people from Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina had a chance to learn about the past of the city of Tuzla, with a focus on the Tuzla massacre, as well as honour the victims and send a message of peace and readiness to work on building a society where crimes like this won’t ever happen again. Furthermore, as part of the program, which lasted from the 24th until the 27th of May, participants had the opportunity to talk to youth, peace and LGBTQ+ activists from Tuzla.

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Open call for lecture: Autotypes and heterotypes: normalization of discrimination and violence

Ukoliko te zanima na koji način se stereotipi i predrasude stvaraju i primenjuju u svakodnevnom životu, kako utiču na našu socijalizaciju i stavove koje imamo o “drugom” i “drugačijem”, ali i njihovoj povezanosti sa diskriminacijom i nasiljem, registruj se za javni čas Autostereotipi i heterostereotipi: normalizacija diskriminacije i nasilja. Inicijativa mladih za ljudska prava (YIHR… View Article

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We call for the responsibility of the director of the school in Kać and the mayor of Novi Sad for celebrating a war criminal

Youth Initiative for Human Rights in Serbia (YIHR Serbia) requests from the Ministry of Education to determine the responsibility of Verica Letić, the principal of the elementary school “Đura Jakšić” in Kać, for the participation of convicted war criminal Nebojša Pavković in a public class organized by this school on April 20th on the topic “Košare: Stories of Heroes” in the hall of this school. According to the daily newspaper “Politika” and the video report of the “Gradske info” portal, the mayor of Novi Sad, Milan Đurić, also spoke at the public event. That’s why we call on the councilor groups in the Assembly of the City of Novi Sad to initiate the impeachment of the mayor because his presence supported Pavković’s participation in this event and normalized the presentation of a war criminal as a hero in front of an audience that included elementary school students.

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Empowered Youth: Prishtina Study Visit

Eighteen young people from Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo visited Pristina for the first time as part of the Study Visit to Pristina, which was part of Mirëdita, dobar dan! festival from May 4 to 6. During the three-day exchange, students had the opportunity to meet human rights and peace activists, as well as representatives of Kosovo institutions, and discuss minority rights in Kosovo, linguistic segregation, war crimes in Kosovo, as well as about the importance of memorialization.

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