The most numerous team is a 29-member crew of the BBC.
Newspapers from other countries established in the area of the former Yugoslavia have shown great interest, the Dnevnik daily reported.
The funeral of former Serbian and Yugoslav President Milosevic, who died in his cell of the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague last Saturday, is scheduled for 1500 hrs Saturday in his hometown of Pozarevac, some 80 kilometres southeast of Belgrade. He will be buried in the yard of his house, and the funeral will be held without state or military honours.
The coffin of Milosevic, whom the UN tribunal charged with genocide and crimes against humanity, is exhibited in the Belgrade-based Museum of the Revolution.
Before the casket was prepared for public viewing, museum director Ljiljana Cetinic on Thursday issued a statement strongly opposing this move. The decision on displaying Milosevic's casket in the Museum of the Revolution was made by the Serbian Government's department for the managing of real estate and property.
She said that this move undermined the autonomy of cultural institutions.
On Friday, directors of another 23 cultural institutions supported Cetinic, issuing a letter protesting against Milosevic's casket being displayed in a museum.
According to Reuters, "efforts by his Socialist Party and the ultranationalist Radicals to secure a state funeral for Milosevic failed to sway the pro-Western government. But his coffin, on view in Belgrade since Thursday, attracts a steady stream of tearful believers."
According to some estimates, over 10,000 people, mainly elderly people and membrs of Milosevic's Socialist Party, have so far paid their tribute passing by the casket.