intellinews.com 
<https://www.intellinews.com/tensions-rise-in-serbia-as-protesters-clash-outside-parliament-409266/>
  


Tensions rise in Serbia as protesters clash outside parliament


/ Gavrilo Andric via Instagram

~4 minutes

  _____  

Tensions flared outside Serbia’s parliament on November 2 after police blocked 
Dijana Hrka, the mother of a victim of last year’s Novi Sad railway station 
collapse, from beginning a hunger strike, prompting crowds to gather in her 
support.

Hrka, whose son Stefan was among 16 people killed when a train station roof 
collapsed on November 1, 2024, began her hunger strike in front of the National 
Assembly, demanding that President Aleksandar Vucic meet three conditions 
related to accountability for the tragedy.

As night fell, anti-government protesters faced off with supporters of Vucic’s 
ruling Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), who are camped nearby in an area known 
as “Ćaciland”. Witnesses reported cannon shots, fireworks and bottles being 
thrown between the groups, while police formed a cordon to keep them apart.

Videos shared on social media showed pyrotechnics fired toward the area where 
Hrka and journalists were gathered. Supporters accused pro-government groups of 
launching the attacks, though police did not immediately respond to the 
incidents.

The confrontation took place following a massive public demonstration against 
the government. On November 1, over 100,000 people gathered in Novi Sad to mark 
one year since the canopy collapse, according to the Archive of Public 
Gatherings, which described it as the biggest event in the city’s history. The 
disaster, which killed 16 and injured one, has become a rallying point for 
anger over corruption and government negligence.

The turnout underscored the persistence of Serbia’s protest movement, which has 
united students, civic groups and citizens demanding greater accountability and 
reform.

President Vucic appeared to strike a conciliatory tone earlier on November 2, 
saying he was open to holding elections ahead of schedule but did not specify a 
date. “We will meet the demands of the blockaders... elections will be held 
before the deadline,” Vucic told reporters while touring construction of the 
new national stadium in Belgrade.

Student organisers, however, dismissed the remarks as insincere. Late on 
November 2, they urged citizens to leave the streets of central Belgrade as 
tensions rose. “We are asking everyone to get off the streets to safety,” they 
said in a social media post that was later deleted.

By evening, police maintained a heavy presence around parliament as rival 
groups exchanged slogans against each other and the government.

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/126801dc4cc2%242a56a4c0%247f03ee40%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to