They packed up food, water and extra clothes and set off. Hundreds of Serbian university students on Thursday started an 80-kilometer, or 50 mile, march toward the northern city of Novi Sad.
Hundreds of Serbian students set off on a demonstration march from Belgrade to Novi Sad on Thursday (January 30) in the latest anti-government protest triggered by a railway station roof collapse that killed 15 people in November. Real Madrid first club to generate 1 billion euros revenue in a season, Deloitte says
By Tatyana Kekic in Belgrade Hundreds of students in Serbia began their two-day march from the capital Belgrade to Novi Sad on January 30, a journey of approximately 80 kilometers, as the country remains gripped by political turmoil following a deadly infrastructure collapse in Novi Sad late last year.
Hundreds of people, mainly students, set off from Belgrade on a two-day walk to Novi Sad in the latest of a wave of protests in Serbia. The protests started in November after the deadly collapse of a railway station roof,
The march from the capital Belgrade to the northern city of Novi Sad is part of the demonstrations launched by university students across Serbia to demand accountability for the deaths of 15 people in a train station awning collapse last November.
Hundreds of students set off on a protest march of some 90 kilometers from Belgrade to the northern city of Novi Sad on January 30. The demonstrations come amid months of anti-government protests following a deadly infrastructure collapse in Novi Sad in November 2024.
Mayor of Novi Sad, Milan Đurić, has announced that he is submitting his irrevocable resignation. "As a responsible person and politician, I am submitting my irrevocable resignation from the position of Mayor of Novi Sad.
If Serbian President Aleksander Vucic hoped the resignation of his hand-picked prime minister would get students to end nearly three months of anti-corruption protests, he didn't have to wait long for an answer.
Thousands of students blocked traffic at Autokomanda, one of Belgrade's busiest intersections, for 24 hours to protest the Serbian government's failure to prosecute those responsible for the collapse of a concrete canopy at the main railway station in the northern city of Novi Sad in November.
The High Court in Novi Sad extended for another 30 days the detention of the suspects for the fall of the canopy at the Railway Station in Novi Sad on November 1, when 15 people died and two were seriously injured,
Serbia's ruling coalition began talks to form a new government on Wednesday, after Prime Minister Milos Vucevic resigned amid protests and President Aleksandar Vucic floated the possibility of a snap election in April.
Amidst public discontent with President Vucic's administration, Serbian university students are marching from Belgrade to Novi Sad to protest government corruption and demand justice for victims of a deadly construction collapse.