Episode Details

Back to Episodes

EU Warns Serbia Over Election Violence

Published 4 hours ago
Description

EU Expresses Concern Over Serbias Election Violence: Protests Escalate Amidst Allegations of Irregularities

The European Union has raised serious concerns about the violence and irregularities in Serbias recent local elections, with President Aleksandar Vucics Serbian Progressive Party claiming victory in all ten contested towns. The EU has urged authorities to investigate and punish those responsible for attacks on observers, voters, party representatives, and journalists.

Monitors reported a peaceful voting process inside polling stations but chaos outside, with incidents of heated arguments, masked groups, and threats. This unrest follows a year of youth protests sparked by a deadly train station collapse in Novi Sad, which challenged Vucics long-standing power.

Clashes resulted in injuries across at least three towns, with students and media workers alleging that pro-government thugs targeted them. Vucic blames opponents for stirring trouble, despite his push for EU membership and close ties with Russia and China.

Police raids at the University of Belgrade headquarters this week, investigating a students death, have drawn criticism for increasing pressure on protesters. Hundreds have been detained or fired since the unrest. Election watchdogs have noted an uneven field favoring the ruling party.

As presidential and parliamentary votes approach later this year or next, Vucics support appears to be waning amidst these tensions, with the world closely watching Serbias response to the escalating situation.

Support the show:
Get a discount at https://solipillow.com/discount/dnn.

Advertise on DNN:
advertise@thednn.ai

This is an automated, high-level news summary based on public reporting.
Report issues to feedback@thednn.ai.

View sources & latest updates:
https://sources.thednn.ai/7b8d2dad47e50fd5

Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us