nzherald.co.nz 
<https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/violence-this-week-marks-an-escalation-with-increasing-strain-on-serbias-government/5FJSQRQCOFEJRHNGEVDAEGTIDI/>
  


Violence this week marks an escalation, with increasing strain on Serbia’s 
Government


Ognjen Zoric

~3 minutes

  _____  

Police had arrested nearly 50 people across the country yesterday, and around 
30 riot police were injured.

Today, protesters vandalised the Novi Sad headquarters of the ruling Serbian 
Progressive Party (SNS) and two other SNS offices in the city, RTS television 
reported, during protests spread across Serbia.

In the capital, Belgrade, protesters massed in front of government buildings 
and the Army headquarters, before heading towards nearby SNS offices.

But a heavy riot police deployment kept them from reaching the offices using 
teargas.

“These are no longer peaceful student protests but people who want to provoke 
violence ... This is an attack on the state,” Interior Minister Ivica Dacic 
told a news conference.

At least five police officers were injured today and 14 protesters were 
arrested, the ministry said.


‘Intensifying crackdown’


Frustrated with government inaction, protesters have demanded an investigation 
into the Novi Sad tragedy and piled pressure on right-wing President Aleksandar 
Vucic to call early elections.

Over the past nine months, thousands of mostly peaceful, student-led 
demonstrations have been held, some attracting hundreds of thousands.

But this week’s violence marks a significant escalation and indicates the 
increasing strain on Vucic’s populist government, in power for 13 years.

Since June 28, when around 140,000 demonstrators gathered in Belgrade, the 
Government has responded with an “intensifying crackdown” on activists, 
according to a statement by United Nations human rights experts released this 
month.

Protesters and those linked to the movement have faced a “troubling pattern of 
repression” including excessive police force, intimidation, and arbitrary 
arrest, the experts said.

Vucic has remained defiant, repeatedly rejecting calls for early elections and 
denouncing the demonstrations as part of a foreign plot to overthrow him.

Student protesters have accused the police of protecting pro-government 
supporters while doing little to stop the attacks on their own gatherings.

“The authorities tried to provoke a civil war last night,” the students wrote 
on their official Instagram page.

Vucic, who had visited pro-government encampments yesterday, denied his 
supporters had started the violence.

“No one attacked them anywhere,” he said of the anti-government protesters, 
speaking at a press conference.

“They went everywhere to attack those who think differently,” he added.

While the protests have so far led to the resignation of the prime minister and 
the collapse of his cabinet, Vucic remains at the helm of a reshuffled 
government.

-Agence France-Presse

 

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