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Serbian students protest at pro-government media ‘propaganda'

Serbian students protest at pro-government media ‘propaganda'

Arab News29-03-2025

'Informer has been spreading numerous lies and falsehoods for a long time,' said Bogdan Vucic, a student at the Belgrade Faculty of Political ScienceThe nationwide wave of student-led protests against state corruption has raised pressure on the nationalist government of President Aleksandar VucicBELGRADE: Serbian demonstrators gathered for a rally outside a pro-government television channel on Saturday, branding it a 'propaganda tool,' in the latest of nearly five months of mass protests.Holding banners 'Manipulator, not a journalist,' waving Serbian and university flags, and blowing whistles, student organizers called on citizens to join the demo in front of the offices of Informer, a television station with a tabloid newspaper of the same name.'Informer has been spreading numerous lies and falsehoods for a long time,' said Bogdan Vucic, a student at the Belgrade Faculty of Political Science.The nationwide wave of student-led protests against state corruption has raised pressure on the nationalist government of President Aleksandar Vucic.It was sparked by the deadly collapse of a roof at a newly-renovated train station in Novi Sad, Serbia's second city, in November.Since the beginning of the protests, pro-government media have portrayed student demonstrators as 'foreign agents,' alleging they are funded by the opposition and plotting a 'coup d'etat.'Bogdan Vucic said one of his student peers had become a target of both the Informer TV station and the tabloid.'They have published information about his family that goes against the most basic standards of decency, not to mention journalistic ethics,' he said.According to the Press Council — the regulatory body that monitors newspapers — Informer violated the Serbian journalists' code of ethics 647 times in 2024.Many newspapers and channels in Serbia are owned by people with close ties to the government and regularly echo its talking points.Tabloid Kurir said students 'terrorize Belgrade.' Informer alleged they are paid by US aid agency USAID and billionaire George Soros — a regular target of right-wing conspiracy theories.Another pro-government broadcaster, Pink TV, branded the protest movement an uprising supported by Kosovo, which broke away from Serbia in 2008.'Such narratives contribute to making students enemies of the state — it creates a violent atmosphere and divisions,' said Bogdan Vucic.'That's why we want to put an end to what we could call propaganda — very dirty propaganda.'Informer is among the most widely-read newspapers in Serbia, with 57,028 copies printed daily. It is cheaper than its competitors at just 40 Serbian dinars ($0.36) a copy.The group claims its TV channel is the 'most watched among cable networks' in the country.Like other pro-government outlets, Informer benefits from public funding — through advertising purchased by state operator Telekom Serbia — and exclusive interviews with the country's leaders.Meanwhile, 'the situation for independent media in Serbia is increasingly dire,' to the point where they risk disappearing, said Slobodan Georgiev, news director of television channel NOVA S.According to the media watchdog Reporters Without Borders, the majority of Serbian media derive their income from advertising and opaque public subsidies — both sources largely controlled by the ruling elite and dependent on the media groups' political alignment.'Advertisers close to the government, as well as state-owned companies, completely bypass independent media,' said Dragoljub Petrovic, editor-in-chief of the daily newspaper Danas.Critical media and journalists are subjected to various forms of pressure, including vindictive lawsuits, public insults, and being labelled traitors.'Independent journalists face relentless pressure, including direct attacks from the head of state and leading figures of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party,' Georgiev said.In early March, the president called a journalist who had covered the protests 'an imbecile colluding with the demonstrators,' prompting dozens of reporters from southern Serbia to refuse to cover the president's activities in protest.On Wednesday, a television campaign aired on national television labelling journalists from two opposition-aligned networks — TV N1 and Georgiev's TV Nova — 'enemies of the state.''Unless there are real political changes in the coming years, it is likely that no media outlet will remain safe from the influence or control of President Aleksandar Vucic's cabinet,' Georgiev told AFP.Earlier this month students blocked the headquarters of Serbian national television (RTS) in Belgrade for a day, after one of its journalists referred to them as a 'mob.'To reach people in smaller towns across Serbia — where residents often rely on state-backed media that echo Vucic's ruling party line — protesters have spent weeks criss-crossing the country on foot.Contacted by AFP for comment, Informer's editor-in-chief did not respond.

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Ukrainian drones paralyze Moscow airspace for three days in row
Ukrainian drones paralyze Moscow airspace for three days in row

Saudi Gazette

time08-05-2025

  • Saudi Gazette

Ukrainian drones paralyze Moscow airspace for three days in row

MOSCOW — A slew of flight delays and diversions at Moscow airports affected thousands of travelers yet again on Wednesday following another Ukrainian drone attack. Days before the Victory Day parade in the Russian capital — one of the largest public holidays and the most important events for President Vladimir Putin — chaos in Moscow's airspace persisted for the third day in a row. According to the Association of Russia's Tour Operators, some airports have been closed, while around 350 flights have been reportedly affected. At least 60,000 passengers have experienced disruption, with many of them left stuck on board planes for several hours. Russia's Federal Air Transport Agency also warned of flight delays across central Russia "due to the late arrival of aircraft at the initial airports of destination." For a third consecutive day, Russian authorities report downing Ukrainian drones approaching Moscow, disrupting aviation in the outlets claim that a Ukrainian drone attack caused a "collapse" at airports in the Moscow region, forcing airlines to delay departures or divert planes those affected is Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić. His plane was reportedly forced to divert to the Azerbaijani capital of Baku because of the threats in Russian to Serbian state news agency Tanjug, his flight to Moscow to attend the parade was disrupted by what the agency calls "active hostilities between Russia and Ukraine".Brussels issued a stark warning to the Serbian leader a few days ago, indicating that Vučić's visit would violate EU membership criteria and potentially hurt Serbia's accession process to the 27-member Serbian newspaper Novosti reported that Lithuania and Latvia have denied a flight with Vučić on board from crossing their airspace en route to Moscow for the Victory Day parade on Friday, citing "political (...) technical and diplomatic sensitivity".The same outlet also reported that Poland and Lithuania had denied flyover rights to Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, raising similar concerns. His attendance remains uncertain at this also said it would not allow the aircraft carrying leaders heading to the Victory Day parade in Moscow to pass through its airspace."Estonia does not intend to support the event in any way," Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said."We have stressed to our European Union colleagues that as Russia is a country that launched and continues a war in Europe, participation in propaganda events organised by them should be ruled out."In an effort to protect and secure the parade, Putin announced a unilateral 'truce' from Thursday to midnight on Kremlin announced the measure on 28 April, claiming all military actions would halt during that period and urging Ukraine to "follow this example."Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy dismissed the proposal as a "theatrical performance" designed to reduce Russia's international isolation and secure favourable conditions for Moscow's Victory Day events on also said that Ukraine could not guarantee the safety of foreign officials planning to attend Victory Day events in Wednesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said that Russia's unilateral ceasefire during the Victory Day celebrations remains in place and will run from midnight to midnight from 8 to 11 on Wednesday, Russia launched a massive missile and drone attack on Kyiv, killing two people and injuring eight others, including four children, officials reported. — Euronews

1998
1998

Arab News

time19-04-2025

  • Arab News

1998

DUBAI: By the standards of many recent conflicts, the Kosovo war in 1998 and 1999 was brief. It began with an armed uprising by the Kosovo Liberation Army against Serbian rule over the Kosovo region of rump Yugoslavia. President Slobodan Milosevic's regime in Belgrade responded with overbearing force, spawning a massive refugee crisis and raising the specter of a Bosnia-like slaughter of Kosovar Muslims. NATO intervened with a prolonged campaign of bombing, leading to a peace accord and an end to the fighting. In February 2008, Kosovo declared its independence from Serbia amid unprecedented scenes of joy and jubilation. The US and several EU member countries recognized Kosovo as an independent state, but Serbia, backed by Russia, did not. Since then Kosovo, a parliamentary democracy with a lower-middle-income economy, has been in a kind of limbo. As someone who grew up a child of the Bosnian war in Sarajevo in the 1990s, the events in nearby Kosovo are etched forever in my mind. I am all too aware of the ancient hatreds that lay beneath the events there. Historically, Kosovo lay at the heart of the Serbian empire, having been the site of the coronations of a number of Serbian kings during the Middle Ages. Arab News' front page covered escalating Serbian assaults on Albanian villages in Kosovo. Despite gaining a measure of autonomy under the former Yugoslavia in 1974, the mainly Muslim ethnic Albanian population of the province chafed at the continued dominance of ethnic Serbs. In the late 1980s, the leader of the Kosovars, Ibrahim Rugova, initiated a policy of non-violent resistance to the abrogation of the province's constitutional autonomy by Milosevic. The president and members of Kosovo's Serbian minority had long fretted about the fact that ethnic Albanians were in demographic and political control of a region that held deep significance to Orthodox Christian Serbs. During the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia, and even after the break-up of Yugoslavia, Kosovars began to be viewed with growing suspicion by Serb nationalists. Popular support, meanwhile, swung in favor of ethnic Albanian radicals who were convinced their demands for autonomy could not be secured through Rugova's peaceful methods. In 1996, the Kosovo Liberation Army emerged, carrying out sporadic attacks against Serbian police and politicians in a campaign that grew in intensity over the following two years. The heavy-handed response of the Serbian police, paramilitary groups and army triggered a massive refugee crisis that drew the attention of the international media and community. An informal coalition made up of the US, the UK, Germany, France, Italy and Russia, known as the Contact Group, demanded an immediate ceasefire, among other things. Kosovo conflict begins with armed uprising by the Kosovo Liberation Army. NATO launches campaign of airstrikes against Serbia. NATO airstrikes end 11 weeks after they began. Yugoslavia ceases to exist, renamed State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. Montenegro declares independence on May 21, 2006. First direct talks since 1999 between ethnic Serbian and Kosovar leaders on future status of UN-run Kosovo take place in Vienna. Kosovo unilaterally declares independence from Serbia, a move still contested by some to this day. The UN Security Council condemned what it described as an excessive use of force by Serbia and imposed an arms embargo but this failed to halt the violence. On March 24, 1999, NATO began a campaign of airstrikes targeting Serbian military targets. In response, Serbian forces drove hundreds of thousands of Kosovars into Albania, Macedonia (now North Macedonia) and Montenegro. Though the wartime suffering of the Kosovars elicited sympathy and support from the Islamic world, some leaders criticized NATO for sidestepping the UN and labeled its military campaign a 'humanitarian war.' The legitimacy of organization's unilateral decision to launch airstrikes was questionable under international law. However, the UN secretary-general at the time, Kofi Annan, supported the intervention on principle, saying: 'There are times when the use of force may be legitimate in the pursuit of peace.' Arab countries such as Libya and Iraq, which had close relations with Yugoslavia, predictably insisted on a political solution. The Gulf states, led by Saudi Arabia, maintained a focus on the provision of humanitarian assistance and efforts to find a peaceful resolution to the conflict. Saudi Arabia was the first country to respond with aid, dispatching two relief flights that delivered more than 120 tonnes of aid, including tents, dates, blankets and carpets, according to official statements at the time. A Saudi C-130 Hercules relief plane carrying aid flew daily from Jeddah or Riyadh to Albania's capital, Tirana, where Saudi Embassy and air force personnel handled the cargo. Hundreds of displaced Kosovars queue up at Cegrane refugee camp in Macedonia to get supplies after their arrival. AFP The Kingdom also provided a field hospital in Tirana, which opened on May 24, 1999, and 10 other health centers across Albania and Macedonia. A Saudi telethon appeal on April 16 raised almost $19 million. The Islamic Relief Organization in Jeddah, which helped organize it, said it sent $12 million in humanitarian aid. A separate Kuwaiti TV fundraising initiative raised $7 million in one day, with the emir, Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah, personally donating $1 million. Organizations from the UAE set up one of the largest relief camps in Kukes, near the Albanian border, which provided about 10,000 Kosovar refugees with food and access to basic amenities, including a fully equipped field hospital. The Red Crescent set up refugee camps in Macedonia and Albania. The NATO bombing campaign lasted 11 weeks and eventually expanded to Belgrade, causing heavy damage to the city's infrastructure and the inadvertent deaths of many civilians. In June 1999, the Yugoslav government accepted a peace proposal mediated by Russia and Finland. NATO and Yugoslavia signed a peace accord outlining plans for the withdrawal of troops and the return of nearly 1 million refugees and 500,000 internally displaced Kosovars. Most ethnic Serbs left the region. NATO's humanitarian military intervention saved the lives of thousands of innocent Kosovars.

Serbia expels Croatian doctor married to Serb over security threat
Serbia expels Croatian doctor married to Serb over security threat

Arab News

time16-04-2025

  • Arab News

Serbia expels Croatian doctor married to Serb over security threat

BELGRADE: Arian Stojanovic Ivkovic, 31, a Croatian doctor who lives in Belgrade with her Serbian husband and a three-year-old daughter, was given one week's notice to leave the country last week and told she was a security threat. She said a police officer called and said there was a problem with her residence. "When I went to the police station I was given a piece of paper that said I was an unacceptable threat to the security of Serbia and its citizens. I was given one week to leave," she said. "How can you pack up a life in a week?" Stojanovic Ivkovic is one of about 20 Croatian citizens who have been ordered to leave Serbia in the past three months, according to Croatian embassy data. Dozens of others have been refused entry at the border. Relations between Croatia and Serbia, which fought a bitter war in the 1990s, have been strained in recent months after a wave of anti-corruption protests, which Serbian pro-government media have accused Croatia's security service of backing. Stojanovic Ivkovic said the only thing she can think of that may account for her being identified as a security threat after 12 years of living in Serbia was her support for the student-led protests, which included attending several rallies. "However, we do not know if this is the real reason," she said. "We as a family we do not deserve this." She has filed a complaint and hopes she will be allowed to stay with her family. Serbia's Interior Ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. "We are extremely worried that in three days last week we had five cases of expulsion (of Croatian citizens)," Hidajet Biscevic, the Croatian ambassador to Serbia, said.

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