By Tatyana Kekic in Belgrade Serbia is facing the possibility of snap parliamentary elections in April, following the resignation of prime minister Milos Vucevic on January 28. Vucevic’s departure ...
Hours after Milos Vucevic stepped away Tuesday from his role leading the country's government, thousands of protesters poured ...
Serbia’s youth-powered protests have shaken the country’s political establishment, causing the resignation of the prime ...
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic floated the possibility of a snap election in April after his prime minister resigned on ...
Demonstrations around Serbia pose a challenge to the decade-long hold on power by President Aleksandar Vucic, who spurred his ...
Aleksandar Vucic has consolidated power in Serbia and engaged in a geopolitical balancing act that once made him close to Vladimir Putin and now to allies in Europe and Donald Trump.
A canopy collapse, which killed 15 people in the city of Novi Sad, has become a flashpoint reflecting wider discontent with the increasingly autocratic rule of populist President Aleksandar Vucic.
Will the resignation of Serbian Prime Minister Milos Vucevic end months of student-led protests in the Balkan country?
The downfall of the Serbian government is the result of pressure from the domestic public led by students on President Aleksandar Vučić and not pressure from abroad, MEP Tonino Picula, the European ...