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Nikoli dovolj dobri
Slovenia🏛️ PoliticsLean Progressive4 days ago

Nikoli dovolj dobri

The article discusses a proposed change to Slovenia's local election law, which would strip non-citizens living in Slovenia of their voting rights in local elections. This amendment has not yet been implemented because a civil society group collected enough signatures to initiate a referendum, scheduled for autumn. The article raises questions about whether this move will succeed in maintaining foreign citizens' voting rights during the upcoming elections. It notes that the SDS media conglomerate is likely to exert pressure on groups of foreigners, particularly those from former Yugoslav nations. The article highlights the case of Elvis Alukić, president of the Bosnian Cultural Association of Slovenia, who was accused by the online portal Nova24TV of misleadingly presenting his family’s residency history and questioning why his father does not hold Slovenian citizenship despite seemingly meeting the criteria. Alukić responded on Facebook, explaining that his father was illegally imprisoned in concentration camps during the war due to being Muslim and chose to retain Bosnian citizenship for understandable life reasons.

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2 reports

Delo logoDeloIndependent🔒CenterFactual 80Objective 757 days ago
The citizens' initiative would not have new blocks in front of it

The City Council of Celje has approved a spatial plan for constructing 80 new public rental apartments in the Dečkovo neighborhood, known as DN9. The plan includes multi-family buildings, one of which would have up to seven floors. These apartments were already included in last year's agreed-upon housing program, but the local council members from the Celje Mayor's List (CŽL) and the Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) opposed the plan. SDS has indicated it would support any potential referendum on the issue. A civil initiative opposing the construction collected 160 signatures against the project but has not yet decided whether to collect additional signatures for a referendum.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the situation objectively, mentioning both the approval of the spatial plan by the city council and the opposition from specific political groups. It does not use biased language or emphasize one side over the other, providing balanced information about the different positions.

Why these scores (Factual 80 · Objective 75): This article provides factual details about a local planning decision and mentions opposition from CŽL and SDS, as well as a civil initiative collecting signatures. It presents multiple perspectives without clear bias, maintaining a higher level of objectivity and factual reporting compared to the f

Mladina logoMladinaIndependentProgressiveFactual 65Objective 504 days ago
Nikoli dovolj dobri

The article discusses a proposed change to Slovenia's local election law, which would strip non-citizens living in Slovenia of their voting rights in local elections. This amendment has not yet been implemented because a civil society group collected enough signatures to initiate a referendum, scheduled for autumn. The article raises questions about whether this move will succeed in maintaining foreign citizens' voting rights during the upcoming elections. It notes that the SDS media conglomerate is likely to exert pressure on groups of foreigners, particularly those from former Yugoslav nations. The article highlights the case of Elvis Alukić, president of the Bosnian Cultural Association of Slovenia, who was accused by the online portal Nova24TV of misleadingly presenting his family’s residency history and questioning why his father does not hold Slovenian citizenship despite seemingly meeting the criteria. Alukić responded on Facebook, explaining that his father was illegally imprisoned in concentration camps during the war due to being Muslim and chose to retain Bosnian citizenship for understandable life reasons.

Bias read (Progressive): The article frames the issue of stripping non-citizens of voting rights as potentially xenophobic and criticizes the SDS media conglomerate for exerting pressure on certain groups of foreigners. It presents the perspective of Elvis Alukić, who is portrayed as a victim of political manipulation, and抨

Why these scores (Factual 65 · Objective 50): The article reports on a law change that would revoke voting rights from foreigners but notes that a civil society initiative has collected enough signatures to start a referendum. It mentions potential pressure from the SDS media conglomerate, though no primary source is available. The article lean

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