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<https://europeanwesternbalkans.com/2019/04/06/cvijic-right-wing-will-not-ta
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Cvijić: Right wing will not take over the protests in Serbia - European
Western Balkans


Aleksandar Ivković

3 minutes

  _____  

Srđan Cvijić; Photo: BSF 2017/ Aleksandar Anđić

“Obradovic and Dveri don’t stand a chance of taking over the protests. If
this happens, the protests will collapse”, states Srđan Cvijić, senior
policy analyst on EU external relations at the Open Society European Policy
Institute and BiEPAG member, for EWB.

Even though it could seem that, during the recent incursion into the
building of Serbia’s public broadcaster (RTS), right-wing leader Boško
Obradović was rising in prominence, Cvijić emphasises that he and his party
do not represent the majority of the participants.

“According to a recent opinion poll commissioned by the Friedrich Ebert
Foundation in Serbia amongst the participants of the protests in Belgrade,
only 4,2% of citizens protesting support Dveri”, he reminds.

In his view, radicalization of the protests, as the RTS events showed, hurts
the protests because it is alienating the more moderate silent majority.

What might also hurt the opposition is the fact that it does not have a
clear stance towards EU integrations, says Cvijić. Despite some meetings
between several leaders of the coalition “Alliance for Serbia” (SzS) and
some EU officials and MEPs, the position towards the Union remains vague.

“I think that the ambiguous attitude towards the EU doesn’t favour more
moderate parts of the SzS but only right wing groups such as Dveri. This is
why I think it is in the interest of the moderates to intensify cooperation
with their EU counterparts and be more vocal in support of Serbia’s EU
integration”, Cvijić is unambiguous. 

He believes that, in general, the silent majority in Serbia, despite the
overwhelming perception that the EU is siding with the President and ruling
party, would not support an overtly anti-EU political options. 

This is why being anti-EU is a lose–lose situation in the medium long run,
Cvijić concludes. “It is also important to note that SzS represents only a
minority of the people protesting”, he adds. 

The leadership of the protests in Serbia still remains disputed. In the
first few weeks, the attending citizens were exclusively addressed by
prominent public figures not affiliated with any political party, while
opposition members were only present at the events. 

ecently, however, more and more opposition politicians are speaking at the
protests across the country, the main political force supporting these
events being SzS, a broad coalition of parties that includes Dveri. 

 

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