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Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe
The state union of Serbia and Montenegro emerged from the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 2003. As the result of a referendum in 2006, Montenegro declared its independence from Serbia, which was recognised by the international community. Serbia became the legal successor to the former state union. On 17 February 2008 the Assembly of the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government of Kosovo in Pristina passed a declaration of Kosovo’s independence from the Republic of Serbia. Germany and the majority of EU Member States have recognised the former Serbian province as an independent state.
German development cooperation with Serbia began immediately after the democratic renewal in 2000 which led to President Slobodan Milosevic being voted out of office. Germany has since become this South East European country’s second-largest bilateral donor after the United States. Since Serbia plays an important part in ensuring political stability in the Balkans, some of the most important goals of German development cooperation with Serbia are to strengthen the country’s democratic structures, promote its further economic development and establish closer relations with the European Union.
The priority areas of intergovernmental cooperation are establishing and developing the public supply infrastructure (energy supply, district heating networks, water supply), promoting small and medium-sized enterprises and advising the government on decentralising the administration and optimising the economic framework. The aim is to implement democratic and market-economic reforms and boost Serbia’s competitiveness.
German Embassy

German Embassy in Serbia
Kneza Miloša 74–76
11000 Belgrade
Serbia
Phone: +381 / 11 / 306 43 00
Fax: +381 / 11 / 306 43 03






