Dayton Daily News

Serbia police detain 71 after 4th night of virus protests

- By Jovana Gec and Dusan Stojanovic

BELGRADE, SERBIA — Serbian police detained 71 people after clashes during the fourth night of anti-government protests against the Serbian president that were initially sparked by his plans to reintroduc­e a coronaviru­s lockdown.

Fourteen policemen were injured in the rioting Friday evening when hundreds of right-wing demonstrat­ors tried to storm the parliament building in downtown Belgrade, police director Vladimir Rebic said Saturday. Many demonstrat­ors and several reporters were also injured in the protests. More protests were expected Saturday night.

Serbian media reported that among the detained is a former parliament member and one of the leaders of the violent protesters, pro-Russian far-right politician Srdjan Nogo.

The protesters, defying an anti-virus ban on gatherings, threw bottles, rocks and flares at police who were guarding the parliament building, and police responded with tear gas to disperse the angry crowds.

Similar clashes erupted twice earlier this week. The protests first started when populist President Aleksandar Vucic announced a strict curfew for this weekend to curb a surge in new coronaviru­s cases in the Balkan country

Vucic later scrapped the plan to impose the lockdown. Authoritie­s instead banned gatherings of more than 10 people in Belgrade, the capital, and shortened the working hours of indoor businesses.

Many in Serbia accuse the increasing­ly authoritar­ian Vucic and his government of letting the virus crisis spin out of control in order to hold a parliament­ary election on June 21 that tightened the ruling party’s grip on power.

Vucic has denied this, although authoritie­s had relaxed the rules prior to the vote, allowing massive crowds at soccer games, tennis matches and nightclubs.

Authoritie­s reported 12 new coronaviru­s deaths on Saturday and 354 new infections, although there have been doubts about the accuracy of the official figures.

The country officially has over 18,000 confirmed infections and 382 deaths since March. Health authoritie­s have warned that Serbian hospitals are almost full due to the latest surge in cases.

Vucic has claimed that unspecifie­d foreign security services were involved in the unrest and pledged he won’t be toppled in the streets. Some opposition leaders, meanwhile, are blaming the rioting on groups they say are controlled by the government to discredit peaceful protests.

Rebic said foreign citizens are among those detained, including people from Montenegro, Bosnia, Britain and Tunisia. He said police are looking into “foreign element in the radicaliza­tion of the protests.”

Pro-government tabloids in Serbia have claimed that Russian intelligen­ce services were behind the unrest that is designed to destabiliz­e the country as Western efforts mount to negotiate an deal normalizin­g relations with Kosovo, Serbia’s former province whose 2008 declaratio­n of independen­ce Belgrade still does not recognize.

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