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Interview by Vazha Tavberidze As mass protests continue to roil Serbia and Georgia, both countries find themselves walking a ...
The EU choosing “stability” in the current moment means de facto endorsement of violent repression in Serbia. The EU’s timid messaging has in fact encouraged Serbian president Aleksandar Vučić to step ...
Mass protests erupt in Serbia’s capital, Belgrade, as over 140,000 people—led by university students—demand snap elections ...
For the first time in nearly three years, French President Emmanuel Macron held a phone call with Kremlin leader Vladimir ...
Welcome to the Daily News Brief, CFR’s flagship morning newsletter summarizing the top global news and analysis of the ...
Vučić’s visit to Russia raised eyebrows in Brussels, where EU officials warned that such moves risk undermining Serbia’s EU accession path.
Expressing concern over the massive student-led demonstrations in Serbia, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said ...
The protests, which began more than six months ago, escalated sharply over the weekend, with tens of thousands rallying in central Belgrade, demanding the resignation of Vučić.
The Dayton Peace Accords, which ended the war, created a patchwork quilt of a state made up of two devolved entities that ...
Tens of thousands gathered in Belgrade demanding early elections after months of protests spurred by a deadly train station ...
The student movement in Serbia, which has been protesting for months against Aleksandar Vučić's government, has now made ...