Antigovernment protests were held in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, for the 18th week in a row, with the latest demonstration marked by a minute of silence to honor victims of the 1941 World War II bombing of the capital.
Protesters gathered on April 6 in front of the main government building, then marched toward the city hall, where they erected barricades from material collected from construction sites in the city center.
Serbs have been taking to the streets of Belgrade and elsewhere in protest against what they say is President Aleksandar Vucic's autocratic rule and demanding press freedom and fair elections.
Vucic has said he is not intimidated by the antigovernment protesters and repeatedly described their leaders as "fascists, hooligans, and thieves."
"I'm their target as I seek Serbia's political consolidation and economic development," he said after a previous protest.
"There will be no more violence," Vucic said. "Serbia is a democratic country, a country of law and order and Serbia will know how to respond."
In the latest demonstration, opposition leaders went to TV Pink headquarters, which many critics see as a key pro-government media outlet.
Protest leaders laid a wreath at the station in the memory of slain Kosovar Serb leader Oliver Ivanovic, who was shot dead in January 2018 as he arrived at his party office in Mitrovica, a town bitterly divided between Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanians and minority Serbs.
After Kosovo gained independence from Serbia in 2008, Ivanovic became known as a relative moderate in favor of dialogue and compromise with Kosovar Albanians and one of the chief interlocutors for international organizations seeking to bring stability and the rule of law.
Before Ivanovic was slain, TV Pink broadcast programs that critics said unfairly portrayed Ivanovic in a negative manner.
That followed a protest on March 16, when dozens of demonstrators led by far-right opposition politician Bosko Obradovic broke into the headquarters of state broadcaster RTS demanding to be allowed on the air to address the nation.
Their demand was not met, and they were eventually driven out of the building by police, with at least 18 people being arrested.
The protesters have been a diverse group, with many pressing individual demands, and include leaders from the Alliance for Serbia, a loose grouping of about 30 parties and movements.
Protest participants have over the past two years been made up of people from all sides of the political spectrum – liberals, right-wingers, pro-West, pro-Russia, and pro-Europe supporters.
Protest organizers have resisted attempts by some far-right opposition politicians to take control of the demonstrations.
Serbian Antigovernment Demonstrators Take Protest To City Hall, Pink TV
With reporting by BalkanInsight and AFP
Editors' Picks
Top Trending
1
Russian Troops Remaining In Syria Reportedly Lack Food, Water
2Kyiv Says It Broke Up Russian Spy Network Targeting F-16 Fighter Data
3Ukraine, U.S. Say North Korean Soldiers Killed, Wounded In Russia's Kursk
4The Moment A Russian General Was Killed By A Scooter Bomb In Moscow
5'They Look Tense': Photographer Describes Scenes At Russian Base In Syria
6Russian General Charged With Chemical Weapons Use In Ukraine Killed In Blast Claimed By Kyiv
7Bolstered By North Korean Troops, Russia Presses Attacks in Kursk Region
8Shaky Ground: Inside The Russian Military Bases In Syria
9Assad Breaks Silence, Says He Left Syria As Russian Base Came Under Attack
10Environmentalists Warn Of Disaster As Russian Officials Race To Grounded Tankers In Kerch Strait
RFE/RL has been declared an "undesirable organization" by the Russian government.
If you are in Russia or the Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine and hold a Russian passport or are a stateless person residing permanently in Russia or the Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine, please note that you could face fines or imprisonment for sharing, liking, commenting on, or saving our content, or for contacting us.
To find out more, click here.