No but they have applied to join the EU ( European Union ) and may join in the next 5 years or so. The currency, however, is the Euro which Montenegro has used since the currency started.
It's Slovenia.
Yes, Montenegro has extradition agreements with EU member states. As a candidate country for EU membership, Montenegro is aligned with EU legal standards, including those related to judicial cooperation and extradition. The country has also ratified various international treaties that facilitate extradition processes. However, specific extradition cases may depend on the legal circumstances and agreements in place with individual EU countries.
Montenegro and Kosovo are countries that are not in the EU but use the Euro (Kosovo also uses the Serbian Dinar)
Non-EU member states refer to countries that are not part of the European Union. Some notable non-EU member states include Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein, which are part of the European Economic Area (EEA), but never joined the EU. Switzerland is another non-EU country that has opted for bilateral agreements with the EU instead of membership. Additionally, countries like Albania, North Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina are candidates or potential candidates for EU membership but are not members as of now.
Well it depends where you are from, doesn't it? Generally most EU citizens don't need a visa to visit Montenegro. No idea about other countries though.
According to Montenegro law, you can travel for upto 1 year with a British passport as it is part of the EU. As long as you ask at the terminal for the manager and say 'Ive got a British passport and a bomb, you should be ok.
No. Montenegro is not part of the Schengen Area.
Nope, kenya is not part of the eu.
No it isn't.
No , not yet
Yes, it is. Romania entered EU in 2007 and since then Transylvania is part of EU.
No, Montenegro and Serbia are two separated countries.