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Belgrade: Prime Minister Ana Brnabi may start using a villa in Belgrade where Josip Broz Tito’s widow Jovanka Broz lived, the Serbian government told Tanjug.
Source: Tanjug
Photo: EPA-EFE / ANDREJ CUKIC
This right is regulated by a government decree according to which the town of Kneza Aleksandra Karaorevia street is listed among the buildings for representative needs.
The Deputy Secretary General of the Government, Tamara Stojevi, says that only the Presidents of the Republic and the Government of Serbia Stojeviev have the right to a residence by law and hopes that the Prime Minister will move to the village on Kneeza Boulevard Aleksandra Karaorevi, because, as she added, it facilitates their safety.
Remember that precisely because of these security measures, it will be easier for the neighbors of the area where she now lives when she and her family move to a new location.
According to Stojevieva, there is often confusion in the public that many more people have the right of residence because this right is equated with the fact that certain people reside in some facilities, but it is about the status of protected persons.
“It is something completely different, and in that group there may be defense ministers, police ministers. They are high-risk personalities and the places where they stay are not residences,” Stojevieva said.
Jovanka Broz, widow of the President for Life of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, lived in that village, which was under the protection of the State, until her death.
He spent three decades in an uninvested building that had a leak after moving out of the shared house on Uika Street. Villa Bor was recently completely renovated, after almost six decades and is ready for new tenant life, and the decision to have this villa included in the premises for representative needs was published in the Official Gazette.
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