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Serbian protesters set up road block over parliamentary vote

Opposition supporters gather in front of Belgrade's city council building as police officers stand behind the city council's doors during a protest in Belgrade. — AFP
Opposition supporters gather in front of Belgrade's city council building as police officers stand behind the city council's doors during a protest in Belgrade. — AFP
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BELGRADE: Protesters on Monday launched the first of several announced road blocks in Belgrade over alleged electoral fraud in Serbia's recent parliamentary and local elections.


President Aleksandar Vucic meanwhile denounced the violence in the capital the previous evening and claimed there was evidence it had been planned in advance.


A few hundred demonstrators blocked the street in central Belgrade where the public administration and local self-government ministry is located.


The protesters, mainly students organised under the "Borba" (Fight) movement, were supporting the outcry from the opposition that started on December 18th, a day after the elections. They are calling for a revision of the electoral list, claiming that it was the source of the alleged electoral fraud.


After the December 17 elections, Vucic's party said it had secured a commanding victory.


But international observers -- including representatives from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) -- reported "irregularities".


The allegations led to continuous protests in front of Serbia's electoral commission building lasting several days.


Seven members of the main opposition camp, united under the banner "Serbia Against Violence", meanwhile began a hunger strike aimed at getting the results annulled.


Serbian opposition demonstrators broke windows as they tried to storm Belgrade city hall. A heavy police presence pushed them back with the help of pepper spray.


Vucic said two police officers had been "severely injured" during the protest, with others sustaining lighter injuries. More than 35 "bullies" were being prosecuted, he added.


He described the incidents as an attempted "forcible takeover of state institutions", and said there was evidence that everything had been prepared in advance.


Prime Minister Ana Brnabic told a local TV station on Sunday that the scenario had been known in advance, and thanked Russian security agencies "who had information that had shared with us".


Early on Monday, Vucic met the Russian Ambassador in Belgrade Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko and briefed him on the Sunday's incidents.


Shortly before, Russia had denounced what it said was Western interference.


"The attempts of the collective West to destabilise the situation in the country are obvious," Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told state-run news agency RIA Novosti.


A deputy from the opposition "Serbia against Violence" coalition, Radomir Lazovic retorted: "Always everyone else is at fault except the government."


He said he had been beaten by policing during Sunday night's clashes. — AFP


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