Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Serbian students plagued by bad food, rising prices

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FACING exorbitant tuition fees, deteriorat­ing facilities and subpar food, students in universiti­es throughout Serbia are turning to social media platforms and resorting to a black market meal trade to fight back against conditions that some liken to a “horror movie.”

For Slobodan Todosijevi­c, a civil engineerin­g student in Belgrade, the declining quality of services offered by universiti­es is all the more concerning as costs continue to rise.

Last year, fees in his program jumped from 108,000 dinars to 130,000 per year ($1,000 to $1,200) – a considerab­le sum in the Balkan nation where the median monthly wage is just 73,700 dinars.

At Serbian universiti­es, tuition fees do not cover textbooks or housing costs, and some students are also forced to pay an additional fee out of pocket to sit for exams.

“The windows are in such a terrible state that when the wind blows a bit stronger, you can’t hear the lecturer. The facilities resemble a setting of a horror movie,” Todosijevi­c told Agence FrancePres­se (AFP).

“I think the tuition fee increase is unjustifie­d, especially considerin­g the studying conditions,” he said, adding that most textbooks available to students were decades old. In the last month alone, tuition fees have been hiked at more than a dozen different programs at universiti­es across Serbia, according to public records.

Like countries across the globe, Serbia has been slammed by rising inflation. Prices averaged 12% higher in 2023 compared with the previous year.

With little to no income, students are feeling the squeeze.

“I don’t see any significan­t improvemen­ts at any level. I don’t know on what basis tuition fees were increased,” said Dorotea Antic, a member of the student organizati­on STAV at the University of Novi Sad in northern Serbia.

SKIPPING MEALS

Earlier this year, STAV conducted a survey calling attention to the university’s lackluster cafeteria system. Beset by substandar­d food and a limited number of facilities, the system doesn’t have enough capacity to serve the existing student body.

Of the 1,356 students surveyed, 81% said they had skipped meals due to overcrowdi­ng.

In a city with an estimated 50,000 students, more than 12,000 are eligible to eat at the university’s cafeterias, yet only one facility is operationa­l.

“We first published the survey results on social media and then printed posters and put them up around the campus where students who eat in the cafeteria pass by, so that as many people as possible could see it,” Antic told AFP.

The criticism and study published by STAV have not been warmly received by all.

“When we put up the posters, there was a big commotion. There is even a video where an activist from the ruling party came to tear down our posters and insult us,” Antic added.

The Student Centre Novi Sad – an arm of the university charged with overseeing student welfare – also panned the survey.

The group “rejects, as a mere fabricatio­n and falsehood, the results of the alleged research on student dissatisfa­ction with the quality of food and hygiene in the student cafeteria, which was made public by a certain organizati­on called STAV,” the center said in a statement. To protest, students have also taken to social media, using TikTok to describe in comedic detail the poor quality of the meals served at university cafeterias.

FATIGUE

A black market on social media where students buy each other’s student cards to pay less for meals has also flourished due to the lower prices for students on government-backed scholarshi­ps.

To add to their woes, rents in Serbia’s two major cities, Belgrade and Novi Sad, have become increasing­ly unaffordab­le for students after an influx of Russian immigrants to the Balkan country following the invasion of Ukraine.

Emilija Milenkovic, a member of the student group Borba, said young people coming from other cities often have difficulty finding housing, especially with a shortage of space in dormitorie­s.

“I’m living with my parents again, and I commute almost every day depending on my university commitment­s, which doesn’t make me happy at all,” said Anja Gvozdenovi­c, a student at the University of Belgrade who moved back home last year due to the surge in rent prices.

Gvozdenovi­c now commutes nearly 200 kilometers (124 miles) every day by train from her parent’s home near Novi Sad to the capital and back.

“It’s the mental fatigue that becomes decisive,” she said. “I rarely manage to truly study and gather strength and concentrat­ion.”

 ?? ?? The balconies of a dormitory in Belgrade, Serbia, April 4, 2024.
The balconies of a dormitory in Belgrade, Serbia, April 4, 2024.

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