Article 46MDC Serbia erupts in nationwide protests after assassination attempts prompt fears of fascist resurgence

Serbia erupts in nationwide protests after assassination attempts prompt fears of fascist resurgence

by
Cory Doctorow
from on (#46MDC)
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Mass protests have wracked Serbia after critics of nationalist strongman president Aleksandar VuAiA were attacked in a series of failed assassination attempts, compounding VuAiA's own human rights abuses and indifference to popular will.

Among those who were attacked are Serbian Left president Borko StefanoviA and two Serbian Left party activists, who was beaten with iron bars in the city of KruAevac; another assassination attempt was directed at the journalist Milan JovanoviA.

The opposition has demanded that VuAiA accede to a set of demands around respect for basic human rights; in response, VuAiA has said that he would not accede to the demands, "even if five million people show up on the streets" (Serbia's population is six million). In response, protesters have taken up the slogan "#1od5miliona ("one in five million").

Protesters are also marching under the slogan "#STOPkrvavimkoAuljama ("stop bloodying shirts") in reference to a TV appearance by StefanoviA in which he showed the bloody shirt he was wearing when he was beaten.

The protests have united Serbia's left and right for the first time since the 1990s, when similar protests brought down the regime of genocidal dictator Slobodan MiloAeviA (in whose cabinet VuAiA served).

Another slogan spotted both in the streets and on social media says "it has begun" (#poAeloJe), a cry of hope that the protests would grow into a country-wide movement similar to that of the late 1990s.

In the past decade, Aleksandar VuAiA has re-branded himself as a moderate centrist by paying lip service to Serbian integration into the European Union, something his opponents claim is mere camouflage of both his growing authoritarian tendencies at home and his servility to the Kremlin.

So far, he has shrugged off the protests. While government-controlled media has attempted to minimize their size and importance, VuAiA himself has dared his opponents with talks of a snap election which near-total party control over state institutions and media would likely hand him victory. Opposition leaders have said they would boycott such a move.

Belgrade protests against Serbian president Aleksandar VuAiA escalate to nationwide demos [Filip Stojanovski/Global Voices]

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