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・ Aleksander Kreek
・ Aleksander Krupa
・ Aleksander Krzyżanowski
・ Aleksander Kunileid
・ Aleksander Kwaśniewski
・ Aleksander Kwiek
・ Aleksander Kłak
・ Aleksander L. Nordaas
・ Aleksander Laak
・ Aleksander Lasoń
・ Aleksandar Vitanov
・ Aleksandar Višnjić
・ Aleksandar Vrhovac
・ Aleksandar Vuković
・ Aleksandar Vulin
Aleksandar Vučić
・ Aleksandar Wohl
・ Aleksandar Yakimov
・ Aleksandar Yanev
・ Aleksandar Yovchev
・ Aleksandar Zabrčanec
・ Aleksandar Zograf
・ Aleksandar Zorić
・ Aleksandar Ćapin
・ Aleksandar Ćirić
・ Aleksandar Ćovin
・ Aleksandar Čanović
・ Aleksandar Čavrić
・ Aleksandar Čubrilo
・ Aleksandar Đokić


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Aleksandar Vučić : ウィキペディア英語版
Aleksandar Vučić

Aleksandar Vučić (, , born 5 March 1970) is a Serbian politician who has been the Prime Minister of Serbia since 27 April 2014. He is also the leader and president of the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS). Vučić served as Minister of Information from 1998 to 2000 and later as Minister of Defence from 2012 to 2013, as well as First Deputy Prime Minister from 2012 to 2014. He is a graduate of the Belgrade Law School.
== Early life ==

Aleksandar Vučić was born in the family of Anđelko and Angelina (née Milanov) in Belgrade. His paternal family hails from Čipuljići near Bugojno in central Bosnia, from where they were expelled by the fascist Ustaše, settling near Belgrade where his father Anđelko was born. Vučić's paternal grandfather Anđelko, great-grandfather Rade, uncles and almost the entire family were killed by the Ustaše. Vučić's mother was born in Bečej in Vojvodina. Both of his parents were economics graduates; his father worked as an economist, while mother was a journalist.
Vučić was brought up in New Belgrade, and finished the Branko Radičević Elementary School, and later a gymnasium in Zemun. He was an excellent student and a junior champion in chess. He graduated from the Faculty of Law, University of Belgrade. He learned English in Brighton, and worked as a merchant in London for some time. After returning to Yugoslavia, he worked as a journalist in Pale. There, he interviewed Radovan Karadžić and once played chess with Ratko Mladić.
As a youngster, Vučić was a fan of the Red Star football club, often attending Red Star's matches, including the one played between Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star on 13 May 1990, which turned out to be a huge riot.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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