More than 100,000 protesters descended on Serbia’s capital Belgrade yesterday in one of the largest rallies in decades, with students and workers facing riot police and supporters of President Aleksandar Vucic.
Serbia has seen months of anti-government rallies after 15 deaths from a railway station roof collapse triggered accusations of widespread corruption and negligence.
The protests have swelled to include students, teachers and farmers in a major challenge to Vucic, a populist in power for 12 years as prime minister or president.
“We will not allow you to deprive us of our freedoms,” one student said in a series of speeches from a stage.
A security source and witnesses estimated the crowd at well over 100,000 people.
The government denies accusations of graft and incompetence and says Western intelligence agencies are backing a push to destabilise Serbia.
Though the protests have been largely peaceful, police said a car rammed a column of protesters, injuring three people, in a Belgrade suburb, while a group of men attacked and injured a student and university lecture in the centre.
Police said they apprehended 13 people in incidents overnight and early yesterday, including three men after an attack on pro-Vucic farmers’ tractors parked in a ring around Pionirski Park where government supporters have been camping.
Across the street from the park, hundreds of veterans from elite military brigades in maroon berets and bikers, both allied with the students, lined up as the march proceeded between the parliament building and nearby Slavija square.
Students established their own security guards, clad in fluorescent yellow vests, between police and protesters.
“Today we will demonstrate our dissent ... to show what we are striving for, a normal state, a state of law, without corruption, lying, media pressures, persecutions,” said Aleksa Cvetanovic, a 23-year-old student who has been attending demonstrations since December.
Streets were choked as protesters kept up a festive mood, lighting flares and chanting their slogan “Pump it up”.
The students are demanding the release of documents about last year’s railway station disaster in the city of Novi Sad, and accountability for those responsible.
Many had travelled hundreds of miles on foot or by bike.
Prosecutors have charged 13 people in relation to the Novi Sad disaster.

Students and anti-government demonstrators hold 15 minutes of silence, with the flashlights of their mobile phones on, for the victims of the deadly November 2024 Novi Sad railway station roof collapse during a protest in Belgrade. – Reuters