independent.co.uk 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/serbia-jared-kushner-belgrade-b2858518.html>
  


Serbia looks to fast-track controversial Jared Kushner luxury project


Ivana Sekularac

~3 minutes

  _____  

After signing a 99-year lease deal, Serbia’s parliament began debating a plan 
to fast-track the development 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/jared-kushner-serbia-hotel-approval-b2546514.html>
  of a controversial luxury compound in Belgrade. 

The compound was proposed by the investment 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/serbia-ap-jared-kushner-donald-trump-belgrade-b2518391.html>
  company of Jared Kushner 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-hotel-belgrade-serbia-forgery-b2751435.html>
 , U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law. 

The Serbian authorities and Kushner's U.S.-based Affinity Global Development 
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/serbia-ap-jared-kushner-donald-trump-belgrade-b2518391.html>
  signed the deal in May 2024, allowing the company to overhaul two buildings 
that once housed the headquarters of the Yugoslav People's Army.

The project, which would include a hotel, apartments, shops and office spaces, 
triggered widespread protests among many who see the old headquarters, which 
were damaged in a 1999 NATO bombing campaign, as a culturally significant 
tribute to those who died and a monument to Yugoslav-era modernist architecture.

Still, the Serbian government has pushed ahead. In November 2024, it stripped 
the buildings of their protected cultural heritage label and this week, once 
the debate on the draft law is over, it will vote on whether to speed up 
procedures for obtaining construction licences.

 

Protesters gathering in front of the bomb-damaged former Yugoslav (AFP via 
Getty Images)

Lawyers said it was rare for such a specific project to receive this kind of 
parliamentary attention.

Savo Manojlovic, a legal expert and leader of the opposition Kreni Promeni 
party, said the draft law "suspends all standards concerning the protection of 
cultural property". He said he would ask Serbia's Constitutional Court whether 
the bill was constitutional.

Kushner, who is married to Trump's daughter Ivanka, set up Affinity Global 
Development after stepping down from his job as a White House aide in 2021. The 
investment firm did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Serbia's ruling party has said Kushner's project is of vital interest but has 
not said why.

In an interview on local television, President Aleksandar Vucic said he had 
demanded that a monument to victims of the NATO bombing be built, adding: "And 
now they (Affinity Global Development) are building it with their money."

The vote comes at a turbulent time in Serbia.

Vucic has faced a year of large-scale protests triggered by the collapse of a 
station roof in November 2024 that killed 16 people. Meanwhile, Serbia's sole, 
Russian-owned oil refinery is under U.S. sanctions, raising concerns about fuel 
supplies in the Balkan country this winter.

 

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