The National (Scotland)

Irregulari­ties alleged as Vucic wins re-election

Party accused of voting fraud

- BY GEORGE GAYNOR

AN early official vote count of Serbia’s weekend election confirmed victory for the ruling populist party in a parliament­ary vote in the Balkan country but political tensions rose over reported irregulari­ties in the capital, Belgrade.

An opposition group said it was robbed of victory in the local election in Belgrade, would not recognise the results and would demand a rerun of the ballot.

Sunday’s parliament­ary and local election pitted populist president Aleksandar Vucic’s Serbian Progressiv­e Party (SNS) against the Serbia Against Violence opposition alliance.

Vucic’s SNS won some 47% of the ballots in the parliament­ary vote, followed by Serbia Against Violence with 23%, according to a near-complete preliminar­y tally by the state election commission.

Several other smaller parties also competed in the election, which was held only 18 months after the previous presidenti­al and parliament­ary vote.

If confirmed in the final vote count, the result means the SNS will have an absolute majority in the 250-member parliament and form the next government on its own.

Officials results for the city hall in Belgrade had yet to be announced but projection­s by polling agencies Ipsos and Cesid said SNS won 38% of the ballots in Belgrade while Serbia Against Violence garnered 35%.

However, Serbia Against Violence claimed fraud, citing numerous reports of irregulari­ties both during the campaign and on voting day. Irregulari­ties were also reported by election monitors and independen­t media.

One claimed ethnic Serbs from neighbouri­ng Bosnia were bussed in en masse to vote in Belgrade.

Serbia Against Violence charged that 40,000 identity documents were issued for people who do not live in the capital city.

Another report said a monitoring team was assaulted and their car was attacked with baseball bats in a town in northern Serbia.

Allegation­s also emerged of voters being paid or pressured to vote for the ruling party.

“Problems that marked the election day were particular­ly serious in Belgrade, primarily caused by the intent to influence citizens’ electoral will,” said the independen­t Centre for Research, Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity group which monitors elections in Serbia.

Vucic and his party denied the allegation­s. The opposition said it intended to lodge official complaints and called a street protest.

“Hyperprodu­ction of voters who do not live in Serbia, let alone in Belgrade, is a flagrant abuse of law,” opposition politician Marinika Tepic said. “We will use all legal means at our disposal to democratic­ally defend the voting will of people.”

The election did not include the presidency but governing authoritie­s backed by the dominant pro-government media ran the campaign as a referendum on Vucic.

Serbia Against Violence, a pro-European Union bloc, includes parties that were behind months of street protests this year triggered by two back-to-back mass shootings in May.

Serbia, which has maintained warm relations with Russia and president Vladimir Putin, has been a candidate for European Union membership since 2014 but has faced allegation­s of steadily eroding democratic freedoms over the past years.

 ?? ?? Aleksandar Vucic’s populist Serbian Progressiv­e Party looks set for an outright majority in parliament
Aleksandar Vucic’s populist Serbian Progressiv­e Party looks set for an outright majority in parliament

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