The mass protests following the demolition of the shelter and the deaths of 15 people in Novi Sad lack clear political articulation, making their future uncertain. Students made a mistake by refusing to engage in dialogue with the president of the country,
Female students are marking International Women’s Day in Serbia by leading the daily street protests against corruption, and thousands later joined a separate student-led rally against the populist go
University students protest over the collapse of a concrete canopy that killed 15 people in Belgrade, Serbia in January 2025. Photo by AP Photo / Darko Vojinovic According to some analysts, the largest student-led demonstrations in Europe since 1968 are taking place today in Serbia.
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Kyiv Independent on MSNAs protests engulf Serbia, President Vucic looks for support East and WestThousands of protestors walked 300 kilometers on March 1 from Belgrade to the southern city of Nis to rally support for an anti-corruption protest that took aim at the ruling party. Serbia's Russia-friendly President Aleksandar Vucic has often used a Kremlin playbook to discredit the protests that occasionally rise in a country balancing between Russia and the West.
Tens of thousands of people marched through Belgrade on Friday to mark the deaths of 15 victims in a railway station disaster and to support a student-led call for a general strike aimed at challenging Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic's hold on power.
Thousands protested against Serbia's government on March 8, with workers and students joining in. The march expressed dissatisfaction following frequent protests since November, when 15 people died in a Novi Sad railway station collapse.
Tens of thousands in Belgrade marched to honor 15 victims of a train station disaster and support a student-led strike against President Aleksandar Vucic's government. This follows nationwide student protests sparked by the collapse in Novi Sad.
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Agence France-Presse on MSNSerbia passes law to lower university fees as protests mountSerbian lawmakers on Thursday passed an education bill that would slash university tuition fees, meeting a key demand made by student-led demonstrators in the Balkan country. The vote came two days after opposition lawmakers lit flares and released smoke canisters in parliament in a show of support for the protest movement.
Ongoing anti-corruption protests erupted into full view this week as Serbian protesters threw the country's legislature into chaos
Tens of thousands of people have joined protesting students in Serbia for a rally proclaiming that “we deserve better” and will no longer accept injustice and corruption in the Balkan country that has
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