The son of US President Donald Trump Jr., Donald Trump Junior, landed in Belgrade. He will meet with the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić. It is speculated what the topic of conversation will be.
Several hundred university students blocked the entrance to Serbia’s public television station (RTS) in central Belgrade late Monday, returning the following day in an ongoing protest against what they allege is pro-government bias.
Donald Trump Jr, the eldest son of the U.S. president, met Serbia's President Aleksandar Vucic in Belgrade on Tuesday, Vucic said in a post on Instagram.
As part of the mass student protests in Serbia, the building of Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) in central Belgrade was blocked, and at one point, there was a minor scuffle with the police. The gathered students announced that the blockade of the RTS building would last for 22 hours.
The mass protests following the demolition of the shelter and the deaths of 15 people in Novi Sad lack clear political articulation, making their future uncertain. Students made a mistake by refusing to engage in dialogue with the president of the country,
Protest marches in Serbia’s capital Belgrade and a northern city have seen tens of thousands of people respond to a call from university and high school students to strike as part of a monthslong struggle against corruption in the Balkan country.
President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, speaking about the riots that the opposition caused in the Parliament today, said that it was bullying and hooligan behavior and that he is seeking criminal-legal responsibility for it.
Serbia’s National Assembly devolved into chaos after opposition ministers threw smoke and stun grenades at the ruling party members. During a Tuesday parliamentary session in Belgrade, opposition lawmakers interrupted proceedings with whistles and horns,
Vučić’s political career is rooted in ultranationalism and hooliganism. He supported, if not incited, the atrocities of the Yugoslav wars. Though he publicly renounced his past views in 2008 and broadcast his support for Serbia’s EU membership, his rise to power was fuelled by nothing else.
Since December, students from 65 of the country’s 80 faculties have been on strike. Schools are also on strike, and at major demonstrations, farmers have blocked main roads with dozens of tractors.
FREE TO READ] Ruling party MPs, including eight-months pregnant politician, injured as demonstration turns violent
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