Clinton visits Ecumenical Patriarch; due in Athens Saturday night | All Greek banks successfully pass stress tests | International Antique Drama Festival kicks off in Veles | State defaults trigger 'deep recessions': study | Libya Contact Group recognizes rebel council | PM Gruevski submits list of nominees for new cabinet posts to Parliament | EU calls emergency summit on Greece | Greece: 74 fires break out in 24 hours, all but one under control | Greece-US to sign cultural agreement during Hillary Clinton visit | Croatia: Parliamentary elections to be held on December 4 | Wild fire destroys 2,300 hectares of pine wood on Brac island | Code Orange declared in 16 districts for Saturday over hot weather | 150 decares of wheat burn out in North Bulgaria | The District Court of Tirana recognized Lulzim Basha as the new Mayor | EBA published the results of the 2011 EU-wide stress test | Simo Tusevljak: Ejup Ganic was responsible for 1992 attack on JNA convoy in Sarajevo | SNS call for investigation into Srbijagas | Welcome to Germany to open Palic Film Festival | Member of former KLA arrested, and released | Horgos-Bikovo stretch of Corridor X opens | 70 paintings missing from International Gallery of Portraits in Tuzla | 10-meter whale spotted in Rijeka | EULEX : No investigation against Thaci, but nobody has immunity | Drought threatens spring crops | Warlick: I will encourage U.S. investors to invest in Serbia | Jeremic visits Caribbean countries |
10:07 | 0 | Emg.rs
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published yesterday the results of its 2011 EU-wide stress test of 90 banks in 21 countries. The aim of the 2011 EU-wide stress test is to assess the resilience of the banks involved in the exercise against an adverse but plausible scenario.
11:41 | 0 | MIA
In a move that raises the stakes for Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi, an international contact group has agreed to recognize rebel forces as the "legitimate authority" in Libya.
11:42 | 0 | MIA
Failures by governments to pay their debts provoke crippling recessions, two economists at the International Monetary Fund said in a study published on Thursday.