Serbian president tries to find a way out of historic protests and public outrage after train station collapse.
As the biggest protests since Slobodan Milošević’s regime rock Belgrade, POLITICO explains everything you need to know.
23hOpinion
Jacobin on MSNSerbia’s Student Movement Offers Hope in Dark TimesIn the week leading up to a major protest in Belgrade this past Saturday, Donald Trump Jr made his appearance in the Serbian ...
President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, said this evening in Brussels, after the meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark ...
President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, once again, speaking from Brussels, confirmed that no sonic weapon was used during the ...
In civilised societies, elections represent a logical and democratic means of overcoming major political and social crises.
14h
France 24 on MSNWhy has the EU kept silent on Serbia’s massive protest movement?As hundreds of thousands of Serbians take to the streets of Belgrade to protest what they describe as rampant corruption and ...
The image of countless mobile phone flashes lighting up Belgrade’s Slavija Square on the night of 15 March, which many ...
One protester said she recalled hearing a strange, "unnatural" noise resembling a jet engine, followed by a powerful rush of ...
Bosnian authorities have issued an arrest warrant for ethnic Serb leader Milorad Dodik, a senior police officer has said, as ...
The widely banned acoustic weapon emits a targeted beam that causes sharp ear pain and can temporarily incapacitate people.
Pro-European demonstrations have taken place in the capital cities of Serbia, Romania and Hungary over the weekend.
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