Net.hrIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 807 days ago Two cities are currently boiling to over 100 degrees Fahrenheit!The article reports on extreme heat across Croatia, noting temperatures exceeding 30°C in most areas. Specific locations like Vukovar, Senj, Požega, Slavonski Brod, and Osijek recorded temperatures around 35–36°C. In Zagreb, the temperature reached 34.7°C at 13:00. Coastal cities such as Pula, Split, and Rijeka also experienced high temperatures, with Rijeka reaching 37.2°C. However, some higher-altitude areas like Zagreb’s Medvednica and Zavižan had significantly cooler temperatures, around 22–28°C.
Bias read (Center): The article provides factual meteorological data without any ideological framing, opinion, or emphasis on political implications. It simply reports on temperature measurements across various Croatian locations.
Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 80): The article provides detailed temperature readings from various locations across Croatia, aligning with the cross-source consensus. It mentions specific cities and temperatures, though some details like 'kuhaju' (cooking) are metaphorical and not factual data. The tone remains neutral, focusing on w
Večernji listIndependentCenterFactual 80Objective 758 days ago These are the hottest cities today. 'Mountains' and land and seaOn June 28, 2026, Croatia experienced extreme heat due to a thermal wave, with the highest recorded temperature of 37.5°C in Imotski, a town in Dalmatia. Other areas such as Senj, Split-Marjan, Čepić, Zadar-airport, and Knin also reached temperatures above 36.6°C. The high temperatures were not limited to coastal regions but were felt across the country, including inland areas like Rašćani, Zagreb-Grič, Pazin, and Račinovci. Even cities like Slavonski Brod, Šibenik, Osijek-Čepin, Valpovo-Tiborjanci, Beli Manastir, Vukovar-Grabovo, and Ploče recorded temperatures around 36°C. In contrast, higher elevations such as Zavižan and Puntijarka on Mount Medvednica had significantly cooler temperatures of 24.8°C and 27.8°C respectively.
Bias read (Center): The article provides factual information about weather conditions without any apparent ideological framing or biased language. It reports on temperature measurements across various locations in Croatia without taking a stance or emphasizing particular political viewpoints.
Why these scores (Factual 80 · Objective 75): This article reports high temperatures with specific city names and measurements, matching the general pattern seen in other sources. However, the phrase 'ALARMANTNE TEMPERATURE' introduces a slightly alarmist tone, which may affect objectivity. The content is largely factual but includes some subje