Opponents and loyalists of Serbia’s autocratic president clash in Belgrade

Thousands throw bottles and flares as tensions soar after huge rally to mark anniversary of train station disaster

Nov 3, 2025 - 07:19
Opponents and loyalists of Serbia’s autocratic president clash in Belgrade
Opponents and loyalists of the Serbian president, Alexandar Vučić, took to the streets. Photograph: Marko Đurica/Reuters

Hundreds of riot police separated opponents and loyalists of Serbia’s autocratic president, Aleksandar Vučić, in central Belgrade on Sunday as political tensions boiled after a year of anti-government protests.

Several thousand people faced off on both sides of the police cordons, with officers in riot gear standing in rows between shouting crowds who threw bottles and flares at each other.

Tensions in Belgrade soared a day after tens of thousands of people joined a huge rally in the northern city of Novi Sad which marked the first anniversary of a train station disaster there that killed 16 people and triggered a youth-led movement demanding political changes, challenging Vučić’s firm grip on power.

Anti-government protesters in Belgrade gathered in support of Dijana Hrka, the mother of Stefan Hrka, one of the victims in the station tragedy. Hrka earlier on Sunday said she was launching a hunger strike near a tent camp outside the parliament building that has been occupied by Vučić’s loyalists since March.

Protesters also gathered in Novi Sad and other smaller towns in support of Hrka on Sunday evening.

The commemoration rally on Saturday in Novi Sad also reflected severe discontent with Vučić’s increasingly authoritarian 13-year rule. Youth-led protesters are demanding an early election they hope will oust the populist government from power.

Protesters believe rampant government corruption and nepotism during renovation work on the Novi Sad station building led to negligence and disregard for construction safety rules, leading to the collapse of the concrete canopy on to the people standing below.

Hrka said she was seeking accountability for the death of her son and the 15 other victims. She has also demanded that all detained protesters be released and that Vučić schedule an early parliamentary election, as sought by the university students at the forefront of the demonstrations.

Vučić set up the loyalists’ camp before a large rally in Belgrade in March. The enclosed zone, colloquially known as “Caciland”, apparently serves as a human shield for Vučić, filling a park and a street between his office and the parliament building.

Police have guarded the camp while the area has been off limits to the residents of Belgrade. A shooting incident there last month triggered fears of violence.

Authorities have cracked down on the protesters in recent months, with hundreds detained and police breaking up protests. Pro-government media and officials have called protesting university students “terrorists”, accusing them of inciting violence.

[Source: The Guardian]