Advertisement Advertisement
Monday, 06 October 2008

Kosovo Still Doesn’t Have its Own Dialling Code



BalkanTravellers.com   

18 June 2008 | Kosovo still does not have its own dialling code for mobile and landline telephones, Albanian media reported today.

According to the electronic media BalkanWeb, the telephone service providers in the region’s youngest country are using other countries’ dialling codes. Experts say that this is harmful to the newly independent state not only in a political aspect, but also economically.

Kosovo is currently services by two mobile phone operators – one of them, Vala, is using Monaco’s dialing code, while the second one, IPKO, is using the Slovenian one. The land line telephone operator has Serbia’s code (381).

After the recent adoption of Kosovo’s constitution, the state’s president and government have the competence to raise the issue of receiving an international dialling code, Anton Berisha, president of the telecommunications regulatory organ, told BalkanWeb. He claimed that having an international telephone code was one of the main pillars of the state.

Read more about Kosovo on BalkanTravellers.com
 

Epicure


Turkey
Balkan Culinary Wars III: Other People’s Meatballs

Ćevapčići from Leskovac, köfte from İzmir or Bulgarian kebapche? Greek keftedes too, please!
Full Story



Curiosity Chest


Greece
Ancient Greece’s Elgin Marbles Stand at the Centre of a 200-Year Long Great Ado

During his term as British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire at the turn of the nineteenth century, Thomas Bruce, Seventh Earl of Elgin, already knew his actions were controversial and that he might go down in history as a “vandal.” But he most likely did not anticipate that, 200 years on, the heated international dispute he caused would continue to rage with full force.
Full Story











Annoyances in the Balkans


Kosovo
The Balkans: Natural Born Historians

The obsession with history is so commonplace on the Balkans that local people do not even notice it. For outsiders, however, it quickly becomes a part of the experience of being precisely in the Balkans and nowhere else. Raymond Detrez, a Belgian scholar of Bulgarian and Balkan Studies, describes this sometimes entertaining and other times annoying, and even dangerous, social phenomenon. Full Story


Insiders' Advice


If the relentless homophobia is already that bad, what's the attitude in general towards HIV/AIDS, given the rather worrying HIV-prevalence in Eastern Europe and Russia?
Full Story



Is it easy to drive in the Balkans? Depends. If you are looking for adrenalin, this is a cheap way to get it. Expats say the best tactics is not to get annoyed.
Full Story



How to pick the right time to go? Winter is beautiful in the high mountains, the problem is, it can be so cold! Then again, who cares how cold it is - the locals have a cheap cure: heavy red wine. Sometimes warmed up.
Full Story



You can't trust local maps. Nor some international travel guides. One of them, for instance, says, that Neretva River in Bosnia and Herzegovina flows FROM the Adriatic towards the inland of the Balkans, never reaching the sea. OK, how about the Neretva delta and channel in Croatia?
Full Story



The Big Book of Travelling


United States
The Rise of Burlesque in New York: Tassels and the City

Burlesque – the more audacious relative of commedia dell'arte, is in revival. A reality in “upside down style”, this creative, witty and softer version of striptease is back on stage, following an absence of nearly 80 years. In New York, Anjeza Bojku scoped out several burlesqee venues for BalkanTravellers.com. Full Story

Thailand
A Short Guide to the Peculiarities of Thai Food