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Serbian anti-graft protesters march to northern city, plan to block bridges

Posted on February 1, 2025 By admin


Serbian university students arrive at the site of a fatal railway station roof collapse, which happened in November 2024 in the city of Novi Sad, after a two-day 80 km march from Belgrade, in Novi Sad, Serbia, January 31, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Hundreds of students protesting graft they blame for 15 deaths in a building collapse marched Friday (January 31, 2025) through Serbia to the northern city of Novi Sad where they plan to block three Danube River bridges this weekend.

They received a hero’s welcome from fellow students and thousands of local residents in Novi Said after arriving on foot in their two-day, 80 km (50-mile) journey from the Serbian capital of Belgrade.

A small red carpet had been placed on one of the bridges across the Danube that the students crossed as they entered the city.

The bridge blockade planned for Saturday (February 1, 2025) will mark three months since a huge concrete construction at the railway station collapsed in Novi Sad on Nov. 1, leaving 15 people dead.

Carrying wreaths with the names of the 15 victims, the students from Novi Sad and Belgrade on Friday (January 31, 2025) evening together headed toward the station building to honour the people who died in the accident.

Many people cried when the students from Belgrade arrived, reflecting high emotions over the accident and the continuing struggle for justice.

What started as a protest against suspected corruption in construction contracts has developed into the most serious challenge in years to the country’s powerful populist leader, President Aleksandar Vucic.

Meanwhile in Belgrade, a driver rammed a car into a silent protest Friday (January 31, 2025), injuring two women who work as doctors at a nearby psychiatric institution. Media reports say both hit their heads on the pavement and are being examined.

The incident, the third of its kind in weeks, happened in downtown Belgrade during 15 minutes of silence observed daily throughout Serbia, at the same time as the canopy collapsed in Novi Sad.

A witness, Dr. Elena Matkovic, told N1 television that the driver first reversed his car for a short distance, and the protesters thought he would turn around, away from the blockade, but instead, he accelerated forward, slamming into people.

“We really did not expect that he would drive through a crowd of people,” she told N1. “If you are asking me whether we will stop (the blockades,) we most certainly will not. This is not the moment to stop.”

Protesters have repeatedly faced attacks, including on students, with drivers ramming cars into demonstrations on two previous occasions. Two people were seriously injured.

Along the way to Novi Sad on Friday,(January 31, 2025) the students were greeted by cheering citizens who honked their car horns or came out of their homes to offer food and drinks.

Hundreds more people on bicycles headed separately toward Novi Sad on Friday (January 31, 2025) while Belgrade’s taxi drivers said they would come too and give the marchers a lift home on Sunday.

When the students reached the town of Indjija on Thursday (January 30, 2025), roughly halfway along their 80 km (50-mile) route, they were welcomed with fireworks and cheers from residents.

Although most of them spent the night out in the open in a soccer field, the freezing temperatures did not dampen their desire for major change in the corruption-ridden Balkan state.

Nevena Vecerinac, a student, said she hoped the protesters’ demands that include the punishment of all those responsible for the rail station tragedy will be fulfilled.

“We need support from all people. With this energy and mood I hope we can do it, otherwise there will be no brighter future,” said Luka Arsenovic, another student marcher.

Many in Serbia believe that the collapse of the overhang at the train station was essentially caused by government corruption in a large infrastructure project with Chinese state companies. Critics believe graft led to a sloppy job during the reconstruction of the Novi Sad train station, poor oversight and disrespect of existing safety regulations.

Monthslong demonstrations have already forced the resignation of Serbia’s prime minister Milos Vucevic this week, along with various concessions from authorities which were ignored by the protesters who say that is not enough.

Mr. Vucic and other officials have shifted from accusing the students of working with foreign powers to oust him from power to offering concessions to the students while issuing veiled threats against them saying that his supporters’ “patience is running out.”

He said on Friday (January 31, 2025) that “it is clear that the country is under attack both from the outside and from the inside.”

“We will know how to fight, we will be flexible, we will seek conversation and dialogue (with the protesters), but we will know how to save the country,” he added.

The strength and determination of the protesters have caught many by surprise in a country where hundreds of thousands of young people have emigrated, looking for opportunities elsewhere.

Published – February 01, 2025 09:49 am IST



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