Issue

Issue for June 16, 2026

This is the stable daily issue page at `/digest/2026-06-16/`: all updates for the day are collected in one feed with a verification log.

Last update: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PMCards: 4Stories: 3

Fresh issue

June 16, 2026

The June 16 issue leads with the NIS update: Serbia and MOL signed an agreement on future management, but the deal still depends on Gazprom Neft and OFAC, while a short extension of NIS's operating license is expected. Later additions cover the Venice Commission's follow-up opinion on the Mrdic laws, Sasa Vukovic Boske's questioning in the Senjak case, and the official Beoinfo source for closures around Usce.

Publication

First published: June 16, 2026 at 06:55 PM
Last update: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PM

Sources
N1DanasKurirNovostiBeoinfo / City of BelgradeGSP BeogradParking servis BeogradBVK021City of Novi Sad

Update log

  1. 06:55 PM

    Created the daily issue for 2026-06-16. Add cards as the source check progresses.

    Cards added: 0. Cards updated: 0.

  2. 06:58 PM

    The evening check added a card on Serbia and MOL signing the NIS agreement, the expected 15-day OFAC-license extension, and a card on closures and transport changes around Usce for the Lenny Kravitz concert.

    Cards added: 2. Cards updated: 0.

  3. 08:31 PM

    The late check added a card on the Venice Commission's follow-up opinion on the Mrdic laws, a card on Sasa Vukovic Boske's questioning in the Senjak case, and updated the Usce card with the official Beoinfo source.

    Cards added: 2. Cards updated: 1.

News feed

Issue cards

Cards in issue: 4
Multiple sourcesPoliticsEconomyEnergy

1. Serbia and MOL sign NIS agreement, but the deal still awaits Gazprom Neft and OFAC

Published: June 16, 2026 at 06:58 PM. Updated: June 16, 2026 at 06:58 PM.

Signing of the Serbian government and MOL agreement on the future management of NIS
Photo: N1, Nenad Kostic / Ministry of Mining and EnergyCredit: N1, Nenad Kostic / Ministarstvo rudarstva i energetike

On June 16, the Energy Ministry and MOL signed a shareholder agreement on the future management of NIS: it takes effect only if MOL reaches a deal with Gazprom Neft to buy 56.15 percent of NIS and receives OFAC approval. The same day, Aleksandar Vucic said from Tbilisi that, based on information he was receiving from Washington, NIS's operating license may be extended for another 15 days.

Context: NIS and sanctions

N1
National mediaIndependent

Serbian government and MOL Group sign shareholder agreement on NIS management

(Vlada Srbije i MOL grupa potpisali akcionarski ugovor o upravljanju NIS-om)

N1 reports the Energy Ministry statement: Dubravka Djedovic Handanovic signed a shareholder agreement with MOL on the future management of NIS, but it takes effect only if MOL and Gazprom Neft agree on the sale and OFAC approves the transaction. MOL is continuing talks to acquire 56.15 percent of NIS; under the agreement Serbia is to buy another five percent of the shares, while the Pancevo refinery should operate for at least the next 10 years at capacity comparable to the four years before US sanctions. The agreement also says Serbian market supply should be protected, subsidiaries including Petrohemija should avoid disruption, and Serbia's representatives should have more influence on board decisions.

Read source
N1
National mediaIndependent

Vucic: I have word from Washington that the NIS operating license will be extended by 15 days

(Vučić: Imam dojavu iz Vašingtona da će licenca za rad NIS biti produžena za 15 dana)

In a second item, N1 quotes Aleksandar Vucic, who told reporters in Tbilisi on June 16 that he expected the NIS operating license to be extended for another 15 days, although he said this had not yet been officially confirmed at the moment of the statement. Vucic described it as his own assessment based on contacts from Washington and added that the period is short, so he hopes the Russian side will accept the agreement to sell its NIS stake to Hungary's MOL.

Read source
Novosti
National mediaOfficial framing

MOL Group: We will ensure NIS development and refinery operations if we become owners

(MOL Grupa: Obezbedićemo dalji razvoj NIS-a i rad rafinerije ako postanemo vlasnici)

Novosti emphasizes MOL's statement: if the company becomes NIS's majority owner, it will ensure further development, secure supply for the Serbian market, and continued operation of the Pancevo oil refinery. The outlet quotes Zsolt Hernadi as saying the agreement with the government does not yet complete the sale: a final deal with Gazprom Neft and US consent are still needed. The article also notes that MOL's OFAC license for negotiations was valid until June 16, while NIS's special license allowed operations, oil refining, crude imports, transactions needed for supply, and technical maintenance until that date.

Read source
LocalBelgradeTransportBelgradeNew Belgrade

2. Traffic around Usce changes on June 17 for the Lenny Kravitz concert

Published: June 16, 2026 at 06:58 PM. Updated: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PM.

Because of the Lenny Kravitz concert at Usce, the city announced full closures on parts of Bulevar Nikole Tesle and Usce Street from 10:00/16:00 on June 17 until 01:00 on June 18. Buses 15, 84, 704, 706, 707, 9A, and 60/60L will use changed routes.

Danas
National mediaIndependent

Transport changes for the Lenny Kravitz concert: where will city buses run?

(Izmene prevoza zbog koncerta Lenija Kravica: Kuda će se kretati gradski autobusi?)

Danas, citing Beoinfo, says a full traffic closure on the part of Bulevar Nikole Tesle from the junction zone with Usce Street to the junction zone with Tresnjin cvet Street runs from 10:00 on June 17 to 01:00 on June 18. Separately, from 16:00 on June 17 to 01:00 on June 18, the section from the roundabout near Usce to the Usce Street junction zone and all of Usce Street will be closed. Lines 15, 84, 704, 706, and 707 will run from 10:00 via Bulevar Mihajla Pupina, Tresnjin cvet, and Bulevar Nikole Tesle; line 9A will run from 16:00 toward Block 72 via Brankova, the Usce roundabout, Bulevar Mihajla Pupina, and Milentija Popovica, while toward Trg Slavija it keeps the route used during Zemun Road works. Line 60/60L toward Novi Beograd (Toplana) will run Brankova - Usce roundabout - Sajmiste - Zarije Vujosevic - Zemunski put - Brodarska, while toward Zeleni venac it will use the 60L route via Sajmiste and Branko's Bridge.

Read source
Beoinfo / City of Belgrade
Official city sourcePublic service

Coverage: Belgrade / City services, Urbanism, Environment, Schools and health, Civic initiatives

Public transport regime changes during the Lenny Kravitz concert

(САОБРАЋАЈ И ПРЕВОЗ: Промена режима јавног превоза током концерта Лени Кравица)

Beoinfo officially confirms the closures: the section of Bulevar Nikole Tesle from the Usce junction zone to Tresnjin cvet is closed from 10:00 on June 17 to 01:00 on June 18, while the section from the Usce roundabout to Usce Street and all of Usce Street are closed from 16:00 on June 17 to 01:00 on June 18. The notice separately says lines 15, 84, 704, 706, and 707 run via Bulevar Mihajla Pupina, Tresnjin cvet, and Bulevar Nikole Tesle; 9A toward Block 72 runs via Brankova, the Usce roundabout, Bulevar Mihajla Pupina, and Milentija Popovica; 60/60L changes route via Brankova, the Usce roundabout, Sajmiste, Zarije Vujosevic, Zemunski put, and Brodarska.

Read source

3. Venice Commission: seven recommendations on the Mrdic laws implemented, two remain open

Published: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PM. Updated: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PM.

On June 16, the Venice Commission published a follow-up opinion on the revision of the Mrdic laws: in the commission's assessment, Serbia implemented seven of nine recommendations, but did not fully resolve the return of two of 11 organized-crime prosecutors or the structural autonomy of the cybercrime unit. This qualifies the more optimistic political framing in which Ana Brnabic spoke on June 12 about a positive opinion and expectations for Cluster 3.

Context: Serbia and EU accession

N1
National mediaIndependent

Venice Commission published its opinion on the revision of the Mrdic laws

(Venecijanska komisija objavila mišljenje o reviziji "Mrdićevih zakona")

N1 reports that the Venice Commission's follow-up opinion says Serbia implemented seven of nine recommendations, but that two key areas remain unresolved. On recommendation 7, the commission acknowledges strengthened institutional capacity at the Organized Crime Prosecutor's Office and a mechanism to replace temporary appointments with regular ones, but notes that two of 11 public prosecutors whose temporary assignments to that office were ended early have not been returned to their posts. On recommendation 8, the commission calls the changed procedure for selecting the head of the cybercrime unit and the creation of a working group positive, but says the recommendation will be fully implemented only after an inclusive analysis, legal changes, or reform giving the unit greater structural and operational autonomy.

Read source
Multiple sourcesIncidentsCourts and ProsecutionBelgradeBelgradeSenjak

4. Sasa Vukovic Boske questioned in the Senjak case; hearing continues tomorrow

Published: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PM. Updated: June 16, 2026 at 08:31 PM.

On June 16, Sasa Vukovic Boske, whom prosecutors describe as the direct perpetrator in the killing of Aleksandar Nesovic Baja at restaurant "27" in Senjak, was questioned at the Higher Prosecutor's Office in Belgrade at his own request. His lawyer Ivan Simic confirmed to Insajder/N1 that questioning will continue on June 17, while the details of the statement remain unknown.

Context: Boske, Senjak, and Autokomanda

N1
National mediaIndependent

Insajder: Sasa Vukovic Boske's questioning continues tomorrow; details of the statement unknown

(Insajder: Saslušanje Saše Vukovića Bosketa nastavlja se i sutra, detalji izjave nepoznati)

N1, citing Insajder and lawyer Ivan Simic, reported that Sasa Vukovic Boske was questioned on June 16 at the Higher Prosecutor's Office in Belgrade at his own request, and that the questioning will continue on June 17. The details of his statement are unknown; at his first questioning he, like Mario S., remained silent. The article recalls that Vukovic and Mario S. were arrested on May 14, two days after the killing at restaurant "27" in Senjak, and that prosecutors first suspected them of attempted aggravated murder, illegal weapons offenses, and creating general danger, later reclassified the branch as aggravated murder, and claim Vukovic was the direct perpetrator.

Read source
Danas
National mediaIndependent

Sasa Vukovic Boske questioned; details of the statement unknown

(Saslušan Saša Vuković Boske, detalji izjave nisu poznati)

Danas relays Insajder: one of the suspects in the killing of Aleksandar Nesovic Baja, Sasa Vukovic Boske, was questioned on June 16 at the Higher Prosecutor's Office in Belgrade, and his lawyer Ivan Simic confirmed that the questioning will continue tomorrow. The outlet says the details of the statement are unknown, recalls Vukovic and Mario S.'s initial silence, their May 14 arrest, and the prosecution's position that Vukovic is the direct perpetrator of the killing.

Read source

Context

Long-running stories with updates

Stories in this update: 3

Stories

Serbia and EU accession

Updated: June 21, 2026 at 04:05 PM

This story tracks Serbia's EU talks, rule-of-law requirements, judicial reforms, media issues, and foreign-policy conditions. In June 2026, the key current episode concerns amendments to five judicial laws, Venice Commission opinions, and expectations around opening Cluster 3.

  • Serbia has not opened new EU accession negotiation chapters since December 2021.
  • In January 2026, parliament adopted amendments to five judicial laws on MP Ugljesa Mrdic's proposal, drawing criticism from parts of the professional community and the EU over prosecutorial autonomy and judicial independence.
  • On April 24, the Venice Commission published an urgent opinion identifying shortcomings and seven key recommendations for removing them.
  • On May 18, the Justice Ministry sent improved working drafts of the amendments to parliament for transmission to Venice Commission rapporteurs.
  • On June 12, Ana Brnabic said the Venice Commission had given a positive opinion, that the package would go to parliament next week, and that the government expects Cluster 3 to open soon.
  • The follow-up opinion published on June 16 clarified the status: seven of nine recommendations were implemented, but the return of two of 11 organized-crime prosecutors and the autonomy of the cybercrime unit remain unresolved.
  • On June 17, Serbia's parliament opened an extraordinary session with amendments to five judicial laws on the agenda, moving the Venice Commission recommendations dispute from expert review into parliamentary procedure.
  • On the evening of June 17, N1 and Danas reported that the High Prosecutorial Council scheduled a June 18 extraordinary session with temporary assignment of public prosecutors to TOK among the proposed agenda items; this addresses one unresolved Venice Commission remark.
  • On June 18, VST decided to assign Irena Bjelos, Aleksandar Barac, and Boris Majlat to TOK for three years; Bjelos and Barac return from June 19, while Danas separately carried the Judicial Authority Union's criticism that temporary assignment of prosecutors as a mechanism is not in line with European standards.
  • On June 21, SSP, SRCE, PSG, and Solidarnost told EU institutions that, according to them, the Venice Commission and parliament received different texts of the judicial-law amendments; the Justice Ministry denies this and says the parliamentary version differs only because it is in Serbian.

Timeline

How the story developed

Serbia last opened new EU negotiation chapters in December 2021; that fact again became part of the dispute around Cluster 3.

Parliament adopted amendments to five judicial laws on MP Ugljesa Mrdic's proposal; professional groups and the EU later criticized them as a risk to prosecutorial autonomy and judicial independence.

The Venice Commission published an urgent opinion on the January amendments and issued seven key recommendations to address the shortcomings.

The Justice Ministry sent improved working drafts of the judicial-law amendments to parliament for transmission to Venice Commission rapporteurs.

Ana Brnabic said the Venice Commission gave a positive opinion on the package, that the amendments would go to parliament next week, and that she expects Cluster 3 to open soon.

The Venice Commission published its follow-up opinion: Serbia implemented seven of nine recommendations, but two key areas - the return of two organized-crime prosecutors and autonomy for the cybercrime unit - are not fully implemented.

Parliament put amendments to five judicial laws on an extraordinary session agenda, including laws on public prosecution, judges, the High Prosecutorial Council, court and prosecutor territories, and bodies for fighting high-tech crime.

VST decided to assign Irena Bjelos, Aleksandar Barac, and Boris Majlat to TOK for three years; the decision for Bjelos and Barac passed with nine votes in favor and one abstention, while Majlat's passed with eight in favor, one against, and one abstention.

Platforma za evropsku Srbiju informed EU institutions of allegedly different judicial-law texts for the Venice Commission and parliament; the Justice Ministry rejected the claims of differences.

Stories

Boske, Senjak, and Autokomanda

Updated: June 20, 2026 at 02:05 PM

This story connects the shooting at a restaurant on Autokomanda, the arrests of Interventna jedinica 92 officers, the figure of Sasa Vukovic Boske, former Belgrade police chief Veselin Milic, and the separate Senjak branch. It is no longer only a crime chronicle but also a story about how police and prosecutors handle cases involving connected people.

  • The Autokomanda branch is about suspicion that some police officers failed to record the shooting properly and helped conceal procedural traces.
  • The name of Sasa Vukovic Boske appears as the figure whom, according to the prosecution's version, the authorities did not properly prosecute after the shooting.
  • On June 11, N1 reported that the commander of Interventna jedinica 92 and a team leader were placed in custody over obstruction of Vukovic's prosecution.
  • On the evening of June 11, N1 reported that Mitar J., Jugoslav S., and Nenad S. denied the allegations, Darko Z. remained silent, and the Higher Prosecutor's Office sought custody for Jugoslav S., Nenad S., and Darko Z. and house arrest with electronic monitoring for Mitar J.
  • In comments to N1, former inspector Sinisa Carevic says the restaurant owner's testimony, cameras, cell-site data, and phone contacts will matter.
  • Retired police colonel Slavica Radovanovic called MUP's work in the Senjak murder investigation sloppy and amateurish and tied the problem to the leadership of the Criminal Police Directorate.
  • The Senjak branch remains a separate but closely related story about a shooting, the killing of Aleksandar Nesovic, and complaints of police violence during questioning.
  • Prosecutor Nenad Lazic told N1 that it would be logical to review the work of the Higher Prosecutor's Office in the Senjak case at the level of the Supreme Public Prosecutor's Office.
  • On June 12, Novosti reported that the Higher Court in Belgrade extended custody for Veselin Milic for up to 30 days, and also extended custody for Sasa Vukovic, Mario S., Danka V., Nenad L., Dejan S., and Jasna Z. in the Aleksandar Nesovic Baja murder case.
  • On June 13, 021 carried the Higher Prosecutor's Office explanation: the part of the complaint against Milic alleging assistance to the perpetrator after the crime was dismissed because further evidence and testimony did not confirm that he called Nesovic to come without security, was in the restaurant at the time of the killing, or removed traces.
  • On June 13, prosecutors expanded the investigation into Aleksandar Nesovic's killing: Sasa V. and Mario S. are suspected of aggravated murder as co-perpetrators, Danka V. of assisting aggravated murder, and evidentiary actions were ordered against Veselin M. and seven others in the failure-to-report and assistance-after-the-crime branches.
  • On June 16, Sasa Vukovic Boske was questioned at the Higher Prosecutor's Office at his own request; lawyer Ivan Simic confirmed that questioning continues on June 17, while details of the statement are not known.
  • On June 18, Novosti reported that Vukovic Boske spent two days giving his defense in the presence of three Higher Prosecutor's Office prosecutors over suspicion in the killing of Aleksandar Nesovic Baja at restaurant "27" in Senjak.
  • On June 20, VJT ordered the Second Basic Prosecutor's Office to form a case and identify unknown persons who, according to the defense, threatened Veselin Milic in Belgrade district jail; the prison administration said it follows safety procedures for all detainees.

Fresh cards on this topic

Timeline

How the story developed

According to N1, Danas, Kurir, and Novosti, a shooting incident took place at the Steak and Wine Bar on Autokomanda. The prosecution later said it suspected that some police officers had failed to carry out the necessary steps after the event.

The Senjak branch intensified through reporting on the killing of Aleksandar Nesovic and complaints of police violence during questioning. N1 stressed that prosecutors were not releasing details, citing the protection of the pre-investigation phase.

All four outlets wrote about the arrest of the commander and officers of Interventna jedinica 92. N1 and Danas stressed institutional failure and procedural violations, Kurir personalized the case through the figure of the commander, and Novosti relayed the official prosecutorial position.

N1 reported that the commander of Interventna jedinica 92 and a team leader were placed in custody, and later detailed the questioning of Mitar J., Jugoslav S., Nenad S., and Darko Z. After the questioning, the Higher Prosecutor's Office sought custody for Jugoslav S., Nenad S., and Darko Z., house arrest for Mitar J., while Slavica Radovanovic called MUP's work in the Senjak branch sloppy and amateurish.

Novosti reported that the preliminary-proceedings judge of the Higher Court in Belgrade extended custody for up to 30 days for Veselin Milic, Sasa Vukovic, Mario S., Danka V., Nenad L., Dejan S., and Jasna Z. in the Aleksandar Nesovic Baja murder case.

021 carried the Higher Prosecutor's Office explanation for dismissing part of the complaint against Veselin Milic: subsequent evidence and testimony did not confirm a call inviting Aleksandar Nesovic to come without security, Milic's presence in the restaurant at the time of the killing, or his removal of traces.

Prosecutors expanded the investigation into Aleksandar Nesovic's killing: Sasa V. and Mario S. are suspected of aggravated murder as co-perpetrators, Danka V. of assisting aggravated murder, and evidentiary actions were ordered against Veselin M., Nenad L., Vuk S., Petar U., Dejan S., Jasna Z., Milos J., and Dusan V.

Sasa Vukovic Boske, whom prosecutors describe as the direct perpetrator in Aleksandar Nesovic's killing, was questioned at his own request; lawyer Ivan Simic said the questioning continues on June 17.

Novosti reported that Vukovic Boske spent two days giving his defense before three Higher Prosecutor's Office prosecutors over suspicions in Aleksandar Nesovic Baja's killing at restaurant "27" in Senjak.

After the defense alleged threats to Veselin Milic in Belgrade district jail, VJT ordered the Second Basic Prosecutor's Office to identify unknown persons, while the prison administration said it strictly follows safety procedures for all detainees.

Stories

NIS and sanctions

Updated: June 19, 2026 at 08:06 PM

NIS is Serbia's key oil company and the operator of the Pancevo refinery. This story follows how sanctions against the Russian stake in the company affect fuel supplies, Serbia's talks with MOL, Gazprom Neft, and the United States, and control over strategic infrastructure.

  • On June 11, 2026, minister Dubravka Djedovic Handanovic said Serbia and MOL had agreed on the shareholder framework around NIS.
  • The next step is an agreement between Gazprom Neft and MOL, followed by approval from the US administration.
  • Before the current OFAC license expired on June 16, 2026, NIS requested a new special license.
  • If Gazprom Neft sells 56.15 percent of NIS to MOL and OFAC approves the transaction, Serbia is supposed to buy another five percent of the shares.
  • With that extra five percent, Serbia's stake would rise to roughly 35 percent, while MOL would remain the controlling owner with 51.15 percent.
  • According to the minister, the Hungarian side has undertaken to keep the Pancevo refinery running at least around the average annual level of the four years before sanctions.
  • By evening, N1 and Danas added expert framing: without changing NIS's statute, the extra five percent does not give Serbia new control, and the question remains dependent on Gazprom Neft, MOL, and OFAC.
  • On June 12, Forbes/N1 added a check on an alternative Serbian buyer: Ranko Mimovic's company, tied to Reuters' report of a EUR 2 billion offer for NIS, had six account blocks over tax rulings in half a year and received a first court dispute for RSD 98,496.
  • On June 13, 021/RTS carried Jelica Putnikovic's assessment: the next key fork is Tuesday, June 16, when existing NIS licenses expire, while the outcome depends on OFAC, concrete contracts, and guarantees for the Pancevo refinery.
  • On June 16, the Energy Ministry and MOL signed a shareholder agreement: it takes effect only if MOL reaches a deal with Gazprom Neft to buy 56.15 percent of NIS and OFAC approves the transaction.
  • Under the agreement Serbia is to buy an additional five percent of the shares, the Pancevo refinery should operate for at least 10 years at capacity comparable to the four years before US sanctions, and Petrohemija should avoid disruption.
  • Aleksandar Vucic said from Tbilisi that, based on information he was receiving from Washington, NIS's operating license may be extended for another 15 days, but this had not been officially confirmed at the moment of his statement.
  • On June 19, Dubravka Djedovic Handanovic said the Serbian side had completed its part of the talks with MOL, and that the next practical step is a Gazprom Neft-MOL agreement acceptable to OFAC.

Timeline

How the story developed

Serbia privatized NIS and the controlling stake moved to the Russian side. From that point on, ownership in NIS became not only a business question but also part of Serbia's relations with Russia, the EU, and the United States.

US sanctions against NIS became a practical threat to the company's operations and required special OFAC licenses so that NIS could continue operating while a solution on ownership was being sought.

MOL and Gazprom Neft announced a preliminary framework for the purchase of 56.15 percent of NIS, but the transaction remained dependent on OFAC, regulatory approvals, and a final sale contract.

Serbia and MOL announced a compromise on the shareholder agreement: Serbia gets additional governance rights, the Pancevo refinery is supposed to keep operating, and the key immediate deadline remains June 16, 2026. Later the minister clarified that Serbia had completed its part, but the deal now depends on Gazprom Neft, MOL, and the United States; evening N1 and Danas items stressed that without a statute change, the extra five percent of shares is not the same as control.

Forbes/N1 checked Ranko Mimovic's company, which Reuters had linked on May 6 to a EUR 2 billion offer to buy NIS. KFT Senator Treasury G.T.7 Dva had its account blocked six times in half a year at the Tax Administration's initiative, and on May 28 a first court dispute for RSD 98,496 was opened against it; this deepened doubts around alternative Serbian offers for NIS.

021, citing RTS, carried Jelica Putnikovic's assessment that the key decision is expected on Tuesday, June 16, when existing NIS licenses expire. She tied the outcome to OFAC consent, concrete contracts, possible governance changes, and the future of the Pancevo refinery.

Serbia and MOL signed a shareholder agreement on the future management of NIS. It depends on MOL's final deal with Gazprom Neft for 56.15 percent of NIS and OFAC approval; the same day Vucic said he expects the NIS license to be extended by 15 days.

Dubravka Djedovic Handanovic said that after the agreement with MOL, the Serbian side has completed its part of the talks, while the final NIS sale now depends on Gazprom Neft, MOL, and whether the solution is acceptable to OFAC.