Shropshire Star

Striking students in Serbia tell chief prosecutor to ‘fight for law and justice’

The students are demanding justice over the collapse of a concrete construction at a railway station that killed 15 people in November.

By contributor By Associated Press Reporters
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Students carrying a banner reading 'Belgrade is the World again'
Students carrying a banner reading ‘Belgrade is the World again’ (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Serbia’s striking university students have rallied outside the chief prosecutor’s office to demand justice over a concrete canopy collapse that killed 15 people last month in the country’s north.

More than 1,000 students symbolically left letters on the doorstep of the public prosecutor’s office, telling chief prosecutor Zagorka Dolovac that “students expect you to fight for law and justice, without political abuse or corruption”.

Mr Dolovac’s office later responded with a statement inviting a student delegation to a meeting.

Serbia’s universities have been blockaded for weeks as part of a wider movement demanding accountability over the November 1 tragedy in Novi Sad when a huge concrete construction at the railway station crashed onto the people below.

Students shouting slogans and holding a banner with a red handprint on it during a protest
The protests were sparked by the collapse of a concrete canopy collapse that killed 15 people last month (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)

Many in Serbia blame the collapse on widespread corruption and sloppy work on the building renovation, one of a number of questionable infrastructure megaprojects involving Chinese state companies.

Prosecutors have arrested 13 people over the Novi Sad tragedy, including a government minister whose release later fuelled public scepticism about the honesty of the investigation.

Striking students have received wide support in Serbia from their teachers, farmers, actors and others. Tens of thousands joined a student-led protest in Belgrade on Sunday that also reflected wider discontent with the rule of Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic.

Protesting students on Wednesday carried banners featuring red handprints – a protest symbol telling the authorities they have “blood on their hands”.

In an apparent attempt to defuse the student strikes, Mr Vucic has been advertising what he describes as “favourable” loans for young people to purchase flats.

The increasingly autocratic Serbian leader has faced accusations of curbing democratic freedoms despite formally pursuing European Union membership for the Balkan nation.

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