Mass protests across Serbia have exposed the cracks in the more than decade-long rule of President Aleksandar Vucic.
Despite EU offers of financing, Kosovo says a ‘peace highway’ to Serbia is no longer a top priority. Its fate speaks volumes about the state of relations between the two countries.
From 2012 to the end of 2024, Serbia lost 543.567 inhabitants due to negative natural population growth. According to data from the Republic Statistical Office, during this period, there were 830.177 live births,
On the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp, Tamás Léderer still can't shake the sense that the world hasn't learned from the horrors of the 20th
This footage illustrates a large crowd of striking university students as they block one of the most important roads in Belgrade for 24 hours. A large number of citizens joined them during that period,
Amid growing public discontent over the handling of the Novi Sad railway station tragedy, Milos Vucevic announced on Tuesday that he was stepping down as prime minister.
Demonstrations around Serbia pose a challenge to the decade-long hold on power by President Aleksandar Vucic, who spurred his prime minister to step down.
A canopy collapse, which killed 15 people in the city of Novi Sad, has become a flashpoint reflecting wider discontent with the increasingly autocratic rule of populist President Aleksandar Vucic.
Serbia’s prime minister resigned in an attempt to calm political tensions stoked by weeks of massive anti-corruption protests sparked by the deadly collapse of a concrete overhang at a train station.
Serbia’s striking university students have started a 24-hour blockade of a key traffic intersection in the capital Belgrade, stepping up pressure on the populist authorities over a deadly canopy collapse in November that killed 15 people.
Some of Europe’s largest ongoing demonstrations – against a corrupt autocracy in Serbia – have evolved from anger to being a model of a new society.
They packed up food, water and extra clothes and set off. Hundreds of Serbian university students on Thursday started an 80-kilometer, or 50 mile, march toward the northern city of Novi Sad.