Yugoslavia no longer exists. It began to break up in the 1990s and became a number of different countries. Some of those countries are now members of the European Union and some are not.
No , not yet
No. Yugoslavia began to break up in the 1990s. Some new countries that formed as a result of that breakup joined the EU in 2004 and later than that. Some of the countries that were part of Yugoslavia are not members of the EU, but may join in the future.
There are 28 countries in the European Union of which two, Croatia and Slovenia, were part of Yugoslavia.
Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Serbia, Montenegro, and Macedonia were once a part of Yugoslavia.
Citizens of EU nations can live, work, or study in any member nation. Passports must be presented by citizens when traveling between EU nations. Tariffs between member nations were ended in 1968. The common currency of the EU is the Euro. Thirty nations belong to the EU. To belong to the EU, member nations must give up some of their sovereignty. which of these?
If you mean how many countries in the EU use the EU currency, the Euro, the answer is 17.
No, In historical terms the area once covered by Yugoslavia has generally been fought over for centuries by the Austrians and the Turks.
The UK belongs to Europe. Even if it left the EU, it has not changed continents.
At the moment ( 2009 ) Bosnia and Herzegovina doesn´t belong to the EU.
No, the UK (United Kingdom) consists of England, Wales, Nothern Ireland and Scotland. The Netherlands (also called Holland)does belong to the EU (European Union)
It's in the EU, UN and Council of Europe and it attends G20 meetings.
It belongs to a number of international organisations. Like the Commonwealthof Nations, NATO, UN and EU.