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Borba (newspaper) : ウィキペディア英語版
Borba (newspaper)

''Borba'' (Борба in Serbian Cyrillic) was a Serbian newspaper, formerly the official newspaper of the Yugoslav Communist League (SKJ). Its name is the Serbian and Croatian word for 'struggle' or 'combat'.〔
==History==
The very first issue of ''Borba'' was first published in Zagreb on 19 February 1922 as the official gazette of the Yugoslav Communist Party (KPJ), a banned political organization since December 1920 that nevertheless operated clandestinely in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and later Kingdom of Yugoslavia.. Functioning as the banned Yugoslav Communist Party's propaganda piece, the paper played in important part in disseminating information among the party members, activists, and sympathizers.
On 13 January 1929, a week following the proclamation of King Alexander's 6 January Dictatorship, ''Borba'' got banned.
During World War II ''Borba'' was published in the Republic of Užice. After the World War II liberation by the Partisans, its publication moved to Belgrade.
From 1948 to 1987, the newspaper was also published simultaneously in Zagreb. For a long time, ''Borba'' alternated pages in Serbian Cyrillic alphabet and Gaj's Latin alphabet in the same edition.
In 2002, more than a year following the overthrow of Slobodan Milošević, ''Borba'' along with its distribution network were purchased by Serbian businessman Stanko "Cane" Subotić who bought the government shares in the paper. However, under Subotić, the daily ''Borba'' barely survived, printing no more than several hundred copies a day while according to business records, the company's monthly revenues never exceeded €30,000.〔(Investigation: Mystery Hangs Over Death of Yugoslavia’s Flagship Paper );BalkanInsight, 13 April 2011〕

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