Serbia and Montenegro

Serbia and Montenegro (Serbian: Србија и Црна Гора, Srbija I Crna Gora, abbreviated as "SCG") was the name of the state union of Serbia and Montenegro. They used to be two separate Yugoslav republics. In 2006, they became their own countries.

State Union of Serbia and Montenegro
Државна Заједница Србија и Црна Гора
Državna zajednica Srbija i Crna Gora
1992–2006
Flag of Republic of Serbia and Montenegro
Anthem: 
Location of Republic of Serbia and Montenegro
StatusFederal republic (1992–2003),
State Union (2003–2006)
CapitalBelgrade
Common languagesSerbo-Croatian (1992-1997)
Serbian (1997-2006)
Governmentrepublic
President 
• 1992–1993
Dobrica Ćosić
• 1993–1996
Zoran Lilić
• 1996–2000
Slobodan Milošević
• 2000–2002
Vojislav Koštunica
• 2002–2006
Svetozar Marović
Prime Minister 
• 1992–1993
Milan Panić
• 1993–1998
Radoje Kontić
• 1998–2000
Momir Bulatović
• 2000–2001
Zoran Žižić
• 2001–2003
Dragiša Pešić
• 2003-2006
Svetozar Marović
Historical eraPost–Cold War
• Constitution
April 27, 1992
• 
April 28 1992
November 1, 2000
February 4, 2002
• 
June 5 2006
Area
2006Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1850: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).
Population
• 2006
10832545
CurrencyYugoslav dinar (1992-2003)
Serbian dinar (Serbia 2003-2006)
Deutsche Mark (Montenegro 1999-2002)
Euro (Montenegro 2002-2006)
Calling code381
Internet TLD.yu
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Serbia
Montenegro
¹Membership as FRY
ISO 3166-1=CS,UTC offset = +1

It was on the west-central Balkan Peninsula, next Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia on the western sides, Hungary to the north, Romania and Bulgaria to the east, North Macedonia to the south and Albania to the southwest, with just over 200 km of coast on the Adriatic.

Serbia and Montenegro worked together in only some political areas. The states had separate economic policies and currencies (money). Although both the states now had more freedom to do as they are pleased than they did as Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Serbia and Montenegro were still a Sovereign State united under one government.

The people of Montenegro still wanted independence though, on 21 May 2006 they held a vote to ask the Montenegrins whether they still wanted to stay in the union. The independence vote was won by 55.5%. On 3 June 2006 Montenegro declared independence; followed by Serbia's declaration of independence two days later on 5 June 2006 .

Serbia And Montenegro Media