Times Standard (Eureka)

In pro-Putin Serbia, liberal minded Russians seek a home

- By Jovana Gec and Dusan Stojanovic The Associated Press

BELGRADE, SERBIA >> At a central square in Serbia's capital of Belgrade, dozens of Russians gathered recently to denounce President Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine, holding up photos of political prisoners from their homeland.

Across the plaza, a billboard touts the Russian propaganda outlet RT, which has launched an online news portal in the country but is banned elsewhere in Europe. Heroic portraits of a bare-chested Putin adorn souvenir Tshirts and coffee mugs, or are painted on city walls.

These conflictin­g images reflect the complex and delicate relationsh­ip these days between Russia and Serbia.

The Slavic country is Moscow's closest ally in Europe, with historic, religious and cultural ties that are bolstered by Kremlin political influence campaigns. Russia backs Serbia's claim over its former province of Kosovo, which declared independen­ce in 2008 with Western support. And Serbia has refused to impose sanctions on Moscow over the invasion.

At the same time, Serbia wants to join the European Union. Populist President Aleksandar Vucic has denounced the invasion, and about 200,000 Russians have flooded into the country in the past year, with many seeking a new life in a brotherly land free of Kremlin oppression.

“Here in Belgrade, we are not perceived with hostility, and that means a lot,” said Anastasia Demidova, who arrived in the Balkan nation from Moscow three months ago.

“I've been talking to a lot of Serbian people here and other foreigners. When they ask me `what are you doing here,' I say: `We are against Putin and for a democratic Russia and we are against the war in Ukraine, obviously,'” she told The Associated Press.

Others say they fled to avoid being drafted or because Western sanctions crippled their businesses or took away their jobs.

As a result, Russian can be heard spoken everywhere in Belgrade, a city of about 2 million. Russian-owned restaurant­s and bars have sprouted. Private Russian enterprise­s have mushroomed, especially in the IT sector. The influx has sent the price of real estate soaring.

This reminds some here of the wave of Russians fleeing the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, and many of those who stayed in Serbia left their mark on its culture and art.

 ?? DARKO VOJINOVIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A vendor sells refrigerat­or magnets showing a picture of Russian President Vladimir Putin, on main pedestrian street in downtown Belgrade, Serbia.
DARKO VOJINOVIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A vendor sells refrigerat­or magnets showing a picture of Russian President Vladimir Putin, on main pedestrian street in downtown Belgrade, Serbia.

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