Serbia's striking students and populist president to hold parallel
rallies as tensions spike
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[February 15, 2025]
By IVANA BZGANOVIC
KRAGUJEVAC, Serbia (AP) — Serbia’s striking students and supporters of
populist President Aleksandar Vucic have planned parallel rallies on
Saturday as both mark the country's Statehood Day with notably
contrasting messages.
The student-led protest is the latest in a nationwide anti-graft
movement that reflects mounting calls for fundamental political changes
in the Balkan state, triggered after a concrete canopy on a railway
station in the northern city of Novi Sad collapsed on Nov. 1, killing 15
people.
The rally, in the central industrial city of Kragujevac, is set to draw
tens of thousands of people who, bedsides demanding justice over a fatal
accident, have been asking to root out rampant endemic corruption and
respect for the rule of law.
Students chose Kragujevac for Saturday's rally because of its history;
In 1835, Serbia was still part of the Ottoman Empire. People in
Kragujevac announced a new constitution that sought to limit the powers
of the then-rulers. The date is now celebrated as the Statehood Day.
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The students arrived at the city on Friday and were met with cheers and
support by the residents. Ahead of Saturday's protest, they organized
marches in various parts of the country, encouraging people to converge
in Kragujevac. Some walked, others ran or cycled. Along their journey,
people greeted them with food and refreshments and offered
accommodation, many crying and expressing hope for change.
Meanwhile, in Sremska Mitrovica, a small town northwest of Belgrade,
Vucic is expected to recycle a traditional nationalist theme, warning
that the West wants to unseat him by force and that this could lead to
the breakup of the country.
Serbian authorities are expected to bus in thousands of their supporters
from throughout Serbia as well as Bosnia to Sremska Mitrovica on
Saturday. Some opposition activists have said they will try to prevent
their arrival.
The anti-graft movement is Vucic's biggest challenge in recent years.
The president — who has ruled Serbia with a firm grip on power for more
than a decade— and his right-wing Serbian Progressive Party have been
previously accused of stifling democratic freedoms, publicly
discrediting opponents and rigging elections, according to international
vote observers.
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Residents welcome students in the Serbian industrial town of
Kragujevac, who have arrived to protest the deaths of 15 people
killed in the November collapse of a train station canopy, Friday,
Feb. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)
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The canopy disaster, widely believed to have happened due to
government corruption, has become a flashpoint for wider discontent
with the authoritarian rule, with university students at the
forefront of the anti-graft uprising. Their determination, youth and
creativity have struck a cord among people widely disillusioned with
politicians.
Prosecutors have charged 13 people over the canopy fall, and
protests have forced the resignation of Serbia’s prime minister. But
students have said their protests will continue until their demands
for full accountability are met.
In the past three months, the president has shifted between accusing
the students of working for foreign powers to offering concessions
and claiming he has fulfilled each of their demands. But during a
trip to the Serb-controlled part of neighboring Bosnia this week,
Vucic has reiterated claims about an alleged plot from abroad to
overthrow him and his government.
The authorities, Vucic said, “couldn’t believe how much money has
been invested to bring down the government in Serbia.” He offered no
proof for the claims.
Vucic's trip to the Serb-controlled part of Bosnia was apparently
designed to stress Serbian unity with the Serbs in Bosnia, where a
bid to create a pan-Serb state in the 1990s’ was widely blamed for
triggering a bloody war that left more than 100,000 people killed
and millions displaced.
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Associated Press writers Jovana Gec and Dusan Stojanovic contributed
to this report from Belgrade.
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