Police and protesters clash in Serbia as crowds demand president's exit


A drone view of demonstrators attending a student-led protest demanding snap parliamentary elections, as Serbia's anti-corruption movement enters a new phase, following the Novi Sad railway station canopy collapse that killed 16 people in 2024, in Belgrade, Serbia, May 23, 2026. REUTERS/Djordje Kojadinovic

BELGRADE, May 23 (Reuters) - Police fired ⁠teargas and clashed with protesters in central Belgrade on Saturday, as tens of ⁠thousands gathered to demand early elections and an end to the more ‌than decade-long rule of Serbia's populist President Aleksandar Vucic.

People crowded into Slavija Square, one of the capital's main junctions, in a fresh eruption of demonstrations that started a year and a half ago when a ​deadly roof collapse triggered a youth-led movement against ⁠alleged corruption and mismanagement.

Officers in riot ⁠gear cordoned off Belgrade city hall, about a kilometre away, before sporadic clashes broke out ⁠between ‌protesters and police near the presidency building and outside a park where Vucic's supporters have been camping since March last year.

Police fired teargas and stun ⁠grenades as they pushed back protesters further down the street. ​Protesters set fire to ‌bins filled with rubbish.

Many in the crowds wore badges with red hands ⁠reading "Your hands are ​bloody," and banners reading "The students are winning".

Anti-government protests started after an awning collapsed at a railway station in the northern Serbian city of Novi Sad on November 1, 2024. Protesters, opposition leaders ⁠and rights watchdogs say it was a sign ​of broader mismanagement.

Vucic and his allies deny accusations of corruption and crackdowns on critics, and say they have taken action to punish those responsible for the roof collapse.

On Saturday, before ⁠clashes broke out, Mirjana Nikolic, rector of Belgrade's University of Arts, told the cheering crowd: "This government is ... afraid of those who are defending their dignity and their rights."

Police estimated the crowd in the square and surrounding streets at 34,300. The Archive of Public ​Gatherings, a group which monitors public gatherings, put the number ⁠at around 100,000.

"I came here to show how many of us there are, how many ​unhappy citizens are and that it is a ‌high time to organise election to make things ​better," Dragan Djuric, a 55-year-old farmer from the town of Sabac said at the rally.

(Reporting by Ivana Sekularac and Aleksandar Vasovic; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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