After a year of street protests, Serbia’s students split on what should come next

The Guardian 1 min read 14 hours ago

<p>As a radicalised generation presses its calls for political change, a debate has opened up over whether to join battle by the ballot box</p><p>Midway through a 16-day, 250-mile (400km) march from Novi Pazar to Novi Sad, Inas Hodžić was still remarkably energetic. Like thousands of other Serbian students, he was making his way to the city which, last autumn, become the scene of national tragedy.</p><p>Sixteen people were killed when the newly renovated canopy of Novi Sad’s main railway station <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/01/roof-collapse-serbia-train-station-novi-sad">collapsed</a> on 1 November 2024, a disaster that critics say exposed much more than faulty construction and sparked Serbia’s largest youth-led protest movement since the fall of Slobodan Milošević.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/31/serbia-street-protests-students-split-elections">Continue reading...</a>
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