'Zastava' is a
Serbian industrial conglomerate based in the city of
Kragujevac, 86 miles (138 km) southeast of
Belgrade. It is most known for its
Fiat-based automobiles, which began assembling in
1955 for
Eastern European markets. The firm also manufactures military and sporting small arms, most of them based on Russian or German design, under the name
Zastava Arms.
Zastava Current Models (2007)
★ '
Zastava Skala'
★ '
Zastava Koral'
★ '
Zastava Florida In'
★ '
Zastava 10'
See also
★ '
Zastava Auto'
★ '
Zastava Trucks'
Automotive history

Promotional material depicting Zastava factory. Particular emphasis was added on making clear Yugoslavia was not aligned with the USSR.
The company is best known for its locally built versions of the
Fiat 128.
During the
1970s and
'80s, Zastava sold its compact cars in
North and
South America and
Western Europe under the "
Yugo" brand. Its final model, the
Yugo Sana, was styled by Italian designer
Giorgetto Giugiaro and launched in 1990, but its career was cut short by the
Yugoslav wars, and Yugo had disappeared from most Western markets by
1993. In
1999, the factory came under
NATO bombing during the
Kosovo War missions.
Like the
Eastern bloc manufacturer
AutoVAZ, maker of the
Lada, the post-communist era has been difficult for the company, and following its withdrawal from Western markets, has developed few new models such as Yugo Florida and continues to manufacture the Fiat 128 based range of cars for the various
Balkan states.
In September 2005, the company signed a new agreement with
Fiat - under the name
Zastava 10 the factory will produce a version of the 2003
Fiat Punto for the Balkans. It is scheduled to make up to 16,000 cars yearly. In October 2005, Zastava concluded an agreement with the US weapons manufacturer
Remington Arms to offer its sporting arms in North America.
Timeline
The 1950s and 1960's
The ancestor of the factory was a cannon-casting plant, founded in 1853.
The first vehicles in
Kragujevac were
Ford trucks. They were made exclusively for the Yugoslavian Army in the late 30's, since today's "Zastava" was a gun factory named Vojno-Tehnicki Zavod (Army Technical Institute). A small number of vehicles was made until the outbreak the war in 1941. Then in the early 50's some number of Jeeps was made, but the deal with
Willys-Overland (
Chrysler) went off, and the production stopped.
After the second world war the factory got a new name: Zavodi Crvena Zastava (meaning "'Red Flag Plant'"; later the "Crvena" (Red) was dropped from the name). It first started building passenger cars in 1954. The first Zastava cars were variants of the
Fiat 1400,
1300 and
1900. The 1300 cm
3 four door sedan, known in Italy as "Milletrecento", was a modern car at that time. (Fiat introduced it in 1961.) Many people in former Yugoslavia think it was the best car ever made by Zastava, despite to the fact it is forty years old model.
Next came the
Zastava 750 in 1962. It was almost the same as the
FIAT 600D but badged as a zastava and a few minor changes i.e. Speedometer, Seats, Door handles, (4cyl, 767 cm3 , 25 HP OHC engine, rear wheel drive). Its mass production started in the early sixties, it was produced until 1981 however they were still made until 1985. Documents on some Zastava 750's prove this.
Throughout the 60's Zastava built more Fiat based cars that evolved from the
1100,
1300/1500,
124, and
125 Fiat models. But Fiat 124 and 125 were never built in Yugoslavia. The Fiat 125 was imported from Italy and later from
Poland. FIAT 124 was very rare in Yugoslavia.

"Go New, Go Yugo" UK Promotional Leaflet
The 1970s
In the beginning of the seventies Zastava made another arrangement with Fiat. In 1971 Zastava introduced the
Zastava 101 (4cyl, 1116 cm3 OHC, 55HP, front wheel drive), which is based on
Fiat 128. It had a restyled rear panel, and later became available as a
hatchback, a style that had not ever been released in Italy.
It was said that model 101 should be produced in Yugoslavia for both Yugoslav and Italian market, and vice versa, in the Italian market would have been sold under the marque
Innocenti. It was soon nicknamed ''Stojadin'' as a pun on ''sto jedan'' (101) (Stojadin is a male name, although
folk etymology also associates it with ''sto jada'', "a hundred woes", due to the poor performance of the first models). In spite of this negative record, the car was a good seller in the domestic market. Yugoslavs used to buy it because of its moderate price, simple mechanics, cheap spare parts and low maintenance cost.
The 1980s
In the mid-seventies, Zastava management decided to develop a new model, still based on the same Fiat engine. It was originally to be known as Zastava 102, but the name was dropped in 1981 and the car released as
Yugo 45. It was styled by Zastava with some help from Fiat engineers. Technically it was related to the
Fiat 127 but keeping much of the Fiat 128 mechanics; externally it followed the style of the
Autobianchi A112 but with a more square appearance. Several variants were made with 903cc, 1116cc, and 1301cc engines. The 1116cc and the 1301cc versions were sold in the USA as the Yugo GV, GVL, GVS, GVX, GV Plus, and the Cabrio, a
convertible.

The
Yugo, the only Zastava to be marketed in the United States
Later in the eighties, the Yugo 45 went through several modifications, most importantly the adoption of a 5-speed gearbox. The marque used for passenger cars was changed from Zastava to Yugo. The Yugo 45 and its derivative models were later renamed
Yugo Koral, the Zastava 101 range (based on the Fiat 128, available as sedan or hatchback) were also unified under a single model denomination,
Zastava Skala. Nonetheless, the numerical classification would still stand for some export markets, as it was the case for the United Kingdom.
These were Zastava's best years in number of cars assembled, around 230,000 cars a year. Zastava cars were to be sold in 70 countries at the time, with 27,000 exported to Western markets. The factory also started to make
trucks, under
IVECO licence.

Zastava Yugo Florida from the early 1990s
The 1990s
In 1988 a new model was released called the
Zastava Florida (known as Yugo Sana or Yugo Sana Miami, in some countries). Its exterior designed by
Giorgetto Giugiaro, with a body shape similar to
Fiat Tipo or
Citroën ZX.
In the early 90's, Zastava was affected greatly by the Balkan Crisis. The factory production became unstable because problem with supplies. Exports were impossible during those years, because trade sanctions against Yugoslavia. Between 1992 and 1995 it was under
UN sanctions, and then between 1998 and 2000 it was under EU and US sanctions. As a result, many of Zastava
subsidiaries abroad were forced to cease trading, as it was the case with Zastava (GB) Ltd, in the
United Kingdom[1], and Yugo Cars, in the
United States.
In 1999, during the
Kosovo War,
NATO aircraft deliberately bombed the Zastava conglomerate plant in
Kragujevac, as it was considered a military target as
Zastava Arms infrastructure was also located on site. Nevertheless, the bombing did not completely halt the production, as there were still three working shifts even during the height of NATO bombing (Zastava factory has operated continuously since it was built).
[2] Some of the car manufacturing buildings were damaged and workers injured.
[3]
The 2000s

Zastava Factory

Zastava Koral
After the war, there were trade talks to Hungarian firms, to assemble Yugos in
Hungary, but this agreement haven't been concluded because of hesitating of the Yugoslavian partner. (But
Zastava Trucks are assembling in Hungary, near to Pécs, with IVECO engine.)
Yugos were face-lifted and new versions are introduced in the
Belgrade International Motor Show in
2002. The new Yugo Koral IN had a 1,3l 80HP motor with
BOSCH electronic injection, the transmission designed by
Porsche, slightly new internal and external design, improved safety, and lots of extra details which were missing from former models.
The new generation of Yugo was granted a
FIA certificate, so it was in compliance with European standards.
In October 2000,
Vojislav Koštunica (also a Yugo owner) became the new president of Yugoslavia, and soon after the sanctions against the country were lifted, so the export market was once again open. The production had fallen to a mere 9 percent of its pre-1990 230,000 vehicles annual capacity, with exports of around 4,000 vehicles. The new Yugoslav government a $50 million reorganization effort in cooperation with the
World Bank, which resulted in mass layoffs, and its intention to privatize the company.
[4]
A new prototype for the Yugo Florida, know as Florida 2.0 was made, equipped with the same engine of
Fiat Bravo 2.0.
Cancelled Project: Zastava Motor Works
In 2002 the American entrepreneur
Malcolm Bricklin, who had previously imported Yugo into the United States, signed a deal with Zastava to re-introduce the company's products back in America
[5][6]. Bricklin's intention was to sell the cars for less than $10,000, under the brand name ZMW (as in Zastava Motor Works) which in the United States would, of course, be pronounced Zee-M-W. However, even though a website proclaiming the brands arrival was produced by Bricklin's company, by 2006 his intentions had switched to importing products from Chinese car marker
Chery instead
[7].
Zastava Influence
Zastava currently sells
Zastava Korals in
Serbia,
Montenegro,
Croatia, the
Republic of Macedonia,
Greece,
Lebanon,
Czech Republic,
Libya,
Syria,
Tunisia,
Poland, and
Egypt (where Zastava cars are produced under the marque of the state owned
Nasr car company). As well as all the Koral versions available, other models include the Florida and Skala.
In October 2005, an agreement with Fiat was reached for production of the
Fiat Punto by Zastava for
Eastern European markets, which would be commercialed as the
Zastava 10[8][9]. The Koral IN L, with a fuel injected 1.1 L
Peugeot engine, met the
European Union safety standards in a test supervised by the German
Technischer Überwachungsverein (Technical Monitoring Association). This may pave the way for export to
E.U. countries.
In addition to the Zastava 10, Zastava is currently negotiating with Fiat for the production rights to another model not yet in production, a C-segment sedan, codenamed Project D200, to be manufactured for Fiat by Zastava and/or
Tofaş of Turkey. It will compete with the
Dacia Logan.
Zastava Arms
Main articles: Zastava Arms
Zastava, in addition to producing cars, is the sole producer of military firearms in Serbia. Most of its line of small arms is derived from the
Soviet Kalashnikov design.
References
1. http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk/6799b62184dfcb176d6527c181b70290/compdetails UK Companies House record ond Zastava (GB) Limited
2. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/314953.stm "Human chains guard Nato targets", ''BBC News''. Friday, April 9, 1999 Published at 09:37 GMT 10:37 UK
3. http://www.agitprop.org.au/stopnato/19991217zastnasy.php
4. http://globalpolitician.com/articledes.asp?ID=2058&cid=3&sid=97
5. http://www.invest-in-serbia.com/archive/2002_05/2002_05_12_1.htm
6. http://www.forbes.com/2002/04/23/0423yugo.html
7. http://www.dispatch.com/business-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/02/22/20060222-D1-03.html
8. http://www.zastava10.com Zastava 10 Official Website
9. http://www.zastava-yugo.de/pageID_2968427.html
External links
★
Official site
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Official site for press releases and information
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Official Zastava 10 site
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Zastava Arms Official Site
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Zastava Trucks Official Site
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Zastava German Club
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Zastava Czech Club
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Auto oglasi Zastava cars from owners