washingtontimes.com 
<https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/jul/29/police-clash-anti-government-protesters-serbia-student-expulsion/>
  


Police clash with anti-government protesters in Serbia over student expulsion


The Washington Times https://www.washingtontimes.com

7–8 minutes

  _____  

BELGRADE, Serbia <https://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/serbia/>  — Protesters 
clashed with police on Tuesday in a southwestern Serbian town following the 
reported forced expulsion of a group of students from a faculty building where 
they had been camping for months as part of nationwide anti-government 
demonstrations.

Hundreds of protesters in Novi Pazar chanted slogans against Serbia’s 
<https://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/serbia/>  populist President Aleksandar 
Vucic <https://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/aleksandar-vucic/>  and demanded 
that the students be allowed to return to the building.

Protesters threw bottles at police who responded with batons and shields. 
Police said in a statement they were attacked and acted with restraint while 
preserving public peace. Officers later withdrew as the students chanted 
“victory.”

The students alleged that the unidentified men who broke into the state 
university building between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m. on Tuesday, with faculty 
officials, were members of a private security company in nearby Kraljevo. 
Videos of the alleged break in were posted on social media.

Parliamentary speaker Ana Brnabic said the intervention was requested by the 
faculty management.

Tensions are high in Novi Pazar, a multi-ethnic town some 300 kilometers (180 
miles) from the capital Belgrade. There is a divide between Bosniak Muslims, 
who make up the majority of the population, and Serbs which stems from ethnic 
wars in the 1990s triggered by the breakup of former Yugoslavia.

Student-led demonstrations first erupted in Serbia 
<https://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/serbia/>  after the collapse of a 
concrete canopy collapse at a renovated train station killed 16 people in 
November. Many blamed the tragedy on alleged widespread corruption in state-run 
infrastructure projects.

Vucic <https://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/aleksandar-vucic/>  has stepped 
up pressure on universities to curb the protests challenging his increasingly 
authoritarian rule.

Most faculties in Serbia <https://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/serbia/>  have 
restarted lectures and exams in recent weeks to avoid a study backlog but 
street protests persist, with protesters demanding snap parliamentary elections.

A large student-led gathering in Novi Pazar in April was seen as an important 
step toward bridging the ethnic divide there.

Copyright © 2025 The Washington Times, LLC. 

 

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