Croatia: No Referendum But Vukovar Gets A Chance To Regulate Against Serbian Cyrillic


inavukic's avatarCroatia, the War, and the Future

Remembering Vukovar Croatia

Croatia’s Constitutional Court on Tuesday 12 August finally ruled on the Committee for the Defence of Croatian Vukovar initiative seeking referendum aiming at removing Serbian Cyrillic script signs from public office building – the Committee had gathered more than 650,000 signatures in their effort to seek a referendum and presented those signatures to the Croatian parliament back in December. They proposed to amend the country’s Law on National Minority Rights so bilingual rights in local government and public offices only applied in areas where the minority makes up at least 50% (and not 30% as is current). The Constitutional Court ruled that there will be no referendum on the matter and that the proposed referendum question was unconstitutional as the proposed change would undermine minority rights. In the same ruling, however, the Constitutional court said that no ban existed in principle on raising the necessary percentage of a minority in…

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One thought on “Croatia: No Referendum But Vukovar Gets A Chance To Regulate Against Serbian Cyrillic

  1. inavukic's avatar inavukic says:

    Thank you, Barbara

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