Thousands stream into Belgrade square to protest against populist 
		Serbian leadership
		
		 
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		 [December 23, 2024]  
		By JOVANA GEC 
		
		BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Tens of thousands of people streamed into a 
		central square in Serbia's capital on Sunday for a rally against 
		populist President Aleksandar Vucic and his government, whose tight grip 
		on power has been challenged by weeks of street protests led by 
		university students. 
		 
		The rally at Belgrade's Slavija Square, one of the largest in recent 
		years, was called by students and farmer unions. It was part of a wider 
		movement demanding accountability over the Nov. 1 collapse of a canopy 
		at a railway station in the country's north that killed 15 people. 
		 
		“We are all under the canopy,” read one of the banners displayed at the 
		main Belgrade square. 
		 
		Smaller rallies were also held in the cities of Nis and Kragujevac. The 
		protest in Belgrade started with a 15-minute silence for the victims, 
		and later chants of “You have blood on your hands!” were heard. 
		 
		Many in Serbia blame the collapse on widespread corruption and sloppy 
		work on the railway station building in the city of Novi Sad that was 
		twice renovated in recent years as part of questionable mega projects 
		involving Chinese state companies. Protesters demand that Vucic and 
		those responsible face justice. 
		
		
		  
		
		Serbia's popular theater and movie actors joined the protest, with actor 
		Bane Trifunovic describing Sunday’s rally as “a festival of freedom.” 
		 
		In a show of confidence, the Serbian president on Sunday inaugurated a 
		section of a newly built highway in central Serbia. Vucic said he 
		wouldn't budge to opposition demands for a transitional government and 
		accused his opponents of using students to try to seize power. 
		 
		“We will beat them again,” said Vucic.“They (the opposition) don't know 
		what to do but to use someone's children.” 
		 
		In an apparent attempt to defuse the student-led protests, Vucic has 
		been advertising what he said are “favorable” loans for young people to 
		purchase apartments as well as attracting tens of thousands of doctors 
		and other skilled people who have left the Balkan country for a better 
		life in the West in recent years. 
		 
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            A Serbian flag waves in the wind as people use lights on their 
			mobile phones during a protest against populist President Aleksandar 
			Vucic and his government, whose tight grip on power has been 
			challenged by weeks of street protests led by university students, 
			in Belgrade, Serbia, Sunday, Dec. 22, 2024. (AP Photo/Marko 
			Drobnjakovic) 
            
			
			
			  
            Prosecutors have arrested 13 people over the Novi Sad tragedy, 
			including a government minister whose release later fueled public 
			skepticism about the honesty of the investigation. 
			 
			The weekslong protests reflect wider discontent with Vucic's rule. 
			The populist leader formally says he wants to take Serbia into the 
			European Union but has faced accusations of curbing democratic 
			freedoms rather than advancing them. 
			 
			Opposition parties have said a transitional government that would 
			prepare a free and fair election could be a way out of the political 
			tensions as ruling populists also have been accused of rigging past 
			votes. 
			 
			Serbia’s government has extended school winter holidays by starting 
			them nearly a week earlier to grapple with widening student 
			protests. 
			 
			Classes at universities throughout the Balkan country have been 
			suspended for weeks with students camping inside their faculty 
			buildings. In recent days, more high school students have joined the 
			movement. Occasional violence has erupted when pro-government thugs 
			tried to disrupt the protests. 
			 
			A group of farmers said Sunday that police took away the tractor 
			which they drove into central Belgrade ahead of the protest. In 
			addition to the farmers, Serbia’s students also have received 
			nationwide support from all walks of life including their 
			professors, media personalities, lawyers and prominent individuals. 
			 
			Vucic initially accused the students of launching protests for money 
			but later said he has fulfilled their demands, including publishing 
			documentation relating to the renovation work at the Novi Sad 
			station. 
			 
			___ 
			 
			Associated Press writer Dusan Stojanovic contributed to this report. 
			
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