Travel

Rave

Dutch Journalist & AOL News Very Wrong About Serbia

Posted 17 months ago|1 comment|547 views
Written by
Karl Haudbourg
Serbia-Montenegro
If you're a bored journalist, it's easy to create a sensationalistic story about Serbia and Ex-Yugoslavian countries. Just find a possible mass grave site in Serbia, get a quote about how Serbia a "normal" holiday destination is, and write over and over again about NATO cluster bombs, and NATO's 1999 bombing campaign in Belgrade. That seems to be what Dutch reporter, journalist, freelance correspondent for AOL news, Joost van Egmond did with its story about possible dangers while traveling in Serbia and in Ex-Yugoslavian countries. Is it really that difficult for him to recognize that Serbia and Ex-Yugoslavian countries are not some hostile nations locked in the past?

Hopefully, travel writer and photographer, Laurence Mitchell, author of the Bradt Travel Guides to Serbia, and also to Belgrade, did a wonderful job writing recently a critical and hopefully less biased insider's guide to Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia. Here's a short excerpt, but it's worth reading the whole thing:


Serbia

Misconception: Hostile nation locked in the past.

The reality: Serbia is overturning its bad-boy image to emerge as one of the most exciting countries of the former Yugoslavia. Every year, more and more foreign revellers are drawn to one of the country's big noisy music festivals: EXIT at the Petrovaradin Fortress in Novi Sad or the Dragacevo Trumpet Festival at Guca in central Serbia.

For city slickers: It is no secret that Belgrade has the best nightlife in southeast Europe – weekends tend to last about six days here, with streets busy until the early hours. For a stylish city-centre base, try the recently restored Hotel Moscow, an art nouveau icon. For nightlife with a twist, check out the floating clubs that line the banks of the Danube and Sava rivers.


Outside the capital: There are wine routes to explore in eastern Serbia and the Fruska Gora hills north of Belgrade, and hiking and winter skiing in the mountains to the south. Many of the countryside's sleepy valleys are home to half-hidden, fresco-filled Orthodox monasteries. Although much smaller than the capital, the second city of Novi Sad is also pretty lively, with numerous outdoor cafés crowding its elegant pedestrian zone.

AOL News: Tourism's Not for the Timid in Ex-Yugoslavia by Joost Van Egmond http://www.aolnews.com/world/article/in-...


EMAIL|FLAG THIS POST
COMMENTS
THE RONBOT HUNTER
THE RONBOT HUNTER
17 months ago: Whose viewpoint are you looking at?

The genocide of Muslims was very real and the country side is loaded with un-exploded bombs.

The people are still healing, but have not forgotten the inhumanity of the monsters you are covering up for.

There are better places to go to.

And places that don't have the murderous history of that part of the world.

Besides that your music and dances suck.

I tell it like it is, I pull no punches, tell no lies, and I am as I am

THE ONE AND ONLY RONBOT HUNTER
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

http://movielocker.com/5232 -- installs the viewer

http://www.powercrossing.com/ plays the video on "What happened to the constitution?"

http://www.zshare.net/video/770741931126...

QUESTION OF THE DAY FOR HUMAN BEINGS TO ANSWER.

The Commie Bleeding Heart Liberal is the child molesters and rapists best friend and protector.

The conservative American is the child molesters and rapists worst enemy.

To protect your women and children, who would you vote for?

Who would you believe, trust and support?

Post a Comment
Sign in or sign up to post a comment.