Serbian protesters are back on the streets as clashes with government
loyalists escalate
[August 15, 2025]
By JOVANA GEC
BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Thousands of anti-government protesters returned
to the streets in Serbia on Thursday after two days of clashes with
loyalists of autocratic President Aleksandar Vucic and riot police that
left dozens injured or detained. Police fired tear gas in at least two
cities and numerous other incidents were reported throughout the
country.
In the northern city of Novi Sad, where the anti-Vucic revolt in Serbia
started more than nine months ago, groups of young protesters shouted,
“He is finished,” as they demolished the offices of the president's
ruling Serbian Progressive Party.
The demonstrators broke windows on the party's downtown office and
carried away some documents and pieces of furniture from inside. The
police or Vucic's supporters, who have guarded the office for months,
where nowhere to be seen.
In Belgrade, the Serbian capital, and in Novi Sad, police in the evening
fired multiple rounds of tear gas to disperse the protesters who then
moved to other locations in smaller groups.
Protesters in a downtown Belgrade area at one point scrambled in panic,
some tumbling to the ground as they tried to run away. Videos on social
media showed riot police beating up some protesters and a footage showed
an opposition politician, his head bandaged.
Vucic told pro-government Informer television that “the state will win”
as he announced a crackdown on anti-government protesters, accusing them
of inciting violence and of being “enemies of their own country.”
He reiterated earlier claims that the protests have been organized from
abroad, offering no evidence.

The unrest throughout Serbia this week marked a serious escalation in
largely peaceful demonstrations led by Serbia's university students that
have shaken Vucic's firm grip on power in the Balkan country.
Rival groups on Wednesday hurled rock and bottles at each other amid
clouds of smoke and chaos. An army security officer at the SNS party
offices at one point fired his gun in the air, saying later he felt his
life had been in danger.
Interior Minister Ivica Dacic on Thursday said there were gatherings at
some 90 locations in the country the previous evening.
The Serbian president has faced accusations of stifling democratic
freedoms and of allowing organized crime and corruption to flourish in
the country that is a candidate for European Union membership. He denies
those allegations.
[to top of second column]
|

Serbian police officers block protesters during an anti-government
protest in Belgrade, Serbia, Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Darko
Vojinovic)

The EU's Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kos said the reports of
violence were “deeply concerning.”
“Advancing on the EU path requires citizens can express their views
freely and journalists can report without intimidation or attacks,”
Kos added on the social media platform X.
Police officers on Wednesday formed a cordon around a makeshift camp
of Vucic's loyalists outside the presidency building downtown.
Dacic, the interior minister, accused the protesters of attacking
governing party loyalists. He said “those who broke the law will be
identified and sanctioned.”
University students posted on X to accuse the authorities of trying
to “provoke a civil war with the clashes” at demonstrations. The
rallies so far passed for the most part without incident even while
drawing hundreds of thousands of people.
Occasional violence in the past months mostly involved incidents
between protesters and the police, rather than between rival groups.
“Police were guarding the regime loyalists who were throwing rocks
and firing flares at the protesters," a post by the informal group,
Students in Blockade, said. The account is run by students from
across Serbia who have been protesting the government since late
last year.
Demonstrations started in November after a renovated train station
canopy crashed in Novi Sad, killing 16 people and triggering
accusations of corruption in state-run infrastructure projects.
The protesters are demanding that Vucic call an early parliamentary
election, which he has refused to do. Serbia is formally seeking EU
membership, but Vucic has maintained strong ties with Russia and
China.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |