The Limited Times

Serbia: Thousands protest violence after two shootings

5/8/2023, 8:56:38 PM

Highlights: Two shootings left 17 dead last week in Serbia. At the call of several opposition parties of the left and right, mill. Slogan: "Serbia against violence". Tens of thousands of people marched Monday night in Belgrade to demand the resignation of political leaders and against the promotion of violence in the media. "We are here because we can't wait any longer. We have waited too long, we have been silent too long," a teacher at a primary school told the crowd before protesters left for government headquarters.


Two shootings left 17 dead last week in Serbia. At the call of several opposition parties of the left and right, mill

Slogan: "Serbia against violence". Tens of thousands of people marched Monday night in Belgrade to demand the resignation of political leaders and against the promotion of violence in the media, a few days after two shootings that left 17 dead, including in a school.

The demonstrators gathered in front of the parliament, at the call of several opposition parties of left and right. "We are here because we can't wait any longer. We have waited too long, we have been silent too long, we have turned our heads too long," Marina Vidojevic, a Serbian teacher at a primary school, told the crowd. "We want safe schools, streets, villages and cities for all children," she added, before protesters left for the government headquarters.

In their call to demonstrate, broadcast by the left-wing party "Ne Da (vi) mo Beograd" ("Let's not drown Belgrade"), opposition parties demand "an immediate end to the promotion of violence in the media and in the public space (...) and the resignation" of political leaders, including the interior minister and the head of the intelligence services, accused of inaction.

Reality TV programs in the viewfinder

The departure of Education Minister Branko Ruzic was initially among the demands, but he resigned on Sunday, offering his condolences to the families of the victims of a "cataclysmic tragedy".

The opposition is also calling for the suppression of reality TV programmes that "promote violence, immorality and aggressiveness" and the closure of pro-government newspapers that they accuse of spreading "false information" with the aim of harming political opponents.

"This climate was created by the system (in place), concretely the first man is at the root of this Serbian misfortune," said Radovan Bojicic, a 67-year-old pensioner, referring to President Aleksandar Vucic, whose departure protesters also demanded.

Disarmament plan

Several leaders of Vucic's conservative Serbian Progress Party (SNS) accused the opposition of "politicising" the two killings to attack the head of state and the government.

Serbia was shocked by two shootings last week in less than 48 hours. In the first, a 13-year-old schoolboy opened fire Wednesday at a school in Belgrade, killing eight classmates and a security guard. Then, on Thursday, a 21-year-old man killed eight people with an automatic rifle in two villages south of Belgrade.

After these shootings, the Serbian president promised to launch a large-scale disarmament plan. According to the Small Arms Survey (SAS), 39% of people in Serbia own a firearm, the highest rate in Europe.

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