dailymail.co.uk
<https://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-10272637/Serbia-Russia-pledge-
combat-color-revolutions.html>  


Serbia and Russia pledge to combat 'color revolutions'


Associated

3-4 minutes

  _____  

BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) - Serbia and Russia pledged Friday to combat popular
revolts known as "color revolutions" that the countries' top security
officials described as instruments of the West to destabilize "free states,"
according to a statement issued by Serbia´s interior minister.

In another sign of growing ties between Serbia and Russia, Serbian Interior
Minister Aleksandar Vulin met Nikolai Patrushev
<https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/12/03/17/wire-51308527-1638553188-804_634
x440.jpg> , the powerful secretary of the Kremlin´s Security Council, in
Moscow on Friday.

"It was pointed out at the meeting that the `color revolutions´ have become
a traditional policy instrument of certain centers of power and countries
aimed at undermining statehood and losing sovereignty under the pretext of
democratization, and noted that free countries must resist it," Vulin's
statement said.

The term "color revolution" has been used to describe a series of mass
protests at the beginning of the 21st century that sometimes led to the
toppling of regimes in the former Soviet Union, the former Yugoslavia, the
Middle East and Asia.

The meeting between Petrushev, Moscow´s top security official, and Vulin, a
staunchly pro-Russia politician, came amid growing public discontent in
Serbia with the autocratic rule of President Aleksandar Vucic.

Ecological groups unhappy with the way Vucic's populist government is
combating widespread pollution in the Balkan state have been at the
forefront of recent protests in Serbia.

In this photo provided by the Serbian Interior Ministry, Serbian Interior
Minister Aleksandar Vulin, left, poses with Nikolai Patrushev, secretary of
the Kremlin's Security Council, in Moscow, Russia, on Friday, Dec. 3, 2021.
Serbia and Russia pledged Friday to combat "color revolutions" they said are
instruments of the West to destabilize "free states," according to a
statement issued by Serbia's interior minister. (Serbian Interior Ministry
Press Service via AP)

Vucic and other Serbian officials have denounced such protests and alleged
they were financed by the West to destabilize the country.

Another protest is scheduled for Saturday against two laws passed by
parliament that are seen as laying the groundwork for a lithium mining by
international company Rio Tinto in western Serbia.

Independent Belgrade media reported Friday that Russia and Serbia have
formed a "working group to combat color revolutions."

The group has a task to prevent mass demonstrations and survey opposition
Serbian activists, nongovernmental organizations and independent
journalists, the pro-opposition Direktno portal said. Direktno's report
could not be independently verified.

Vulin said in the statement that as long as Vucic is president, the Serbian
government "will always be focused on cooperation with the Russian
Federation."

Although formally seeking EU membership, Serbia has refused to align its
foreign policies with the 27-nation bloc and has instead strengthened its
political, economic and military ties with Russia and China.

 

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