Dragan Kostic is a cameraman with RFE/RL's Balkan Service in Belgrade.
People in the northern Serbian city of Novi Sad lit candles outside a railway station late on November 1 after its concrete canopy collapsed and killed at least 14 people. Serbia has declared a period of national mourning.
A Kazakh refugee in Serbia who has waited nine years for official residence status has finally been given a new kind of document: a "refugee passport." Baha Sarsenov, who fled political persecution in Kazakhstan in 2015, will finally be able to travel again.
Some 30 years after the Balkan wars, Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina still grapple with the legacy of wartime leaders. Both countries are home to public memorials honoring leaders convicted of war crimes, but it's the activists who protest against those displays who face repercussions.
Archaeologists in Belgrade have unearthed new segments of an aqueduct -- part of a 2,000-year-old water supply system built by the Romans. The find in the city, known in ancient times as Singidunum, was made while digging out land for an underground parking garage.
Hundreds of students blocked one of the busiest crossroads in the heart of Belgrade on December 25 in front of government buildings. The protesters accuse the ruling Serbian Progressive Party of electoral theft and are demanding to see the voting register.
More than 30 people were detained at a rally organized by Serbia's biggest opposition alliance, Serbia Against Violence. Police used tear gas after protesters broke windows of the Belgrade City Council. The opposition platform alleges that pro-government hooligans were behind the violence.
Two leaders of the opposition coalition Serbia Against Violence are continuing their hunger strike as supporters protested again in front of the offices of Serbia's Election Commission on December 19, demanding the annulment of local election results in the capital, Belgrade.
Voters in Serbia headed to the polls on December 17 to vote in snap parliamentary and municipal elections, including in the capital, Belgrade. The vote is being closely watched to see to what extent President Aleksandar Vucic's ruling Serbian Progressive Party manages to keep its grip on power.
Dozens of people marched in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, to call for peace in Israel. Jewish communities in Serbia and an association promoting Jewish heritage jointly organized the event on October 15.
The annual LGBT Pride parade was held in the Serbian capital for the 11th time on September 9. Organizers said it was the most attended so far. Police cordoned off protesters waving Serbian Orthodox symbols.
Tens of thousands joined a May 27 anti-government march in Serbia's capital, Belgrade. It was the fourth in a series of protests held in the wake of two deadly gun attacks in early May. The protesters decried the scarce coverage of the protests by the public-service broadcaster, the RTS.
The demolition of a monument in Serbia honoring the fallen of World Wars I and II has sparked the ire of veterans' groups and locals. A Chinese construction company working on a highway project tore down the towering statues of fighters near the village of Negrisori.
Hundreds marched in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, on December 24 to mark 10 months since Russia invaded Ukraine. The event was organized by the Russian Democratic Society, established by Russian expatriates in Serbia who stand against Russian President Vladimir Putin and his attack on Ukraine.