Croatian
Summary: Welcome to SBS Radio's Croatian language program. We offer extensive coverage of homeland, national and international news and current affairs, five times a week, via our studios in Sydney and Melbourne with weekly reports from correspondents in Croatia as well as international broadcasters VOA, DW,RFE, and HTV. We cover local events and activities of the Australian-Croatian communities nationwide. Listen to our "Next Generation" program UMREZENI on Tuesday nights, comprehensive sports coverage on Mondays and Thursdays, and MALI LJUDI on Mondays, our program dedicated to parents and children.
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Podcasts:
A new parliament has just been sworn in, in Somalia in the latest move to try to restore order in the east African country, which has been without a fully-functioning government since 1991. Somalia is one of the countries visited by participants i...
A new Human Rights Commission report has called for affirmative action targets for female employment in the Defence Force.
Dr Boris Škvorc analyses the consequences of the mooted closing of the only Croatian weekly in Sydney-
Garbage is a worry for Croatian this week, but Zagreb Lord Mayor managed to find a solution amidst great heath wave.
Now already former editor of the only Croatian weekly Nova Hrvatska Mr Franjo Harmat spoke to us about his decision to close the paper, prior to last minute solution which saw the paper taken over by another publisher.
Pilots have slammed Qantas management over the airline's historic net loss announced today, (thur) saying waste and bad management is to blame.
Resources Minister Martin Ferguson has declared the mining boom is over a day after B-H-P Billiton shelved it's 30-billion-dollar Olympic Dam extension, blaming rising capital costs and lower commodity prices.
Croatian Homeland news with Enis Zebic
Sport from Homeland on Thursday with Zeljko Kovacevic
An exhibition in Sydney is looking at the emerging market of modest dress, focusing specifically on Muslim women's dress.
Amid the intensified asylum-seeker debate, SBS TV is about to screen the second series of 'Go Back to Where You Came From'.
Under laws introduced in Victoria in 2006, anyone knowingly damaging a culturally-significant Aboriginal site could be fined up to 250 thousand dollars. But proving someone knowingly damaged a site has proved notoriously difficult.
A recent special meeting at United Nations headquarters in New York focused on the increased number of young people across the world who are well-educated, but who can't find jobs because they don't have the skills required by employers. &nbsp...
Prime Minister Julia Gillard has announced the government's new funding model for schools will provide equal funding for all school students, regardless of the school they attend. The change will result in every independent school across the n...
All the latest news from Croatia and the region with Domagoj Veršić.