United Nations human rights experts have urged Serbian authorities to halt an “intensifying crackdown” on students, academics and other demonstrators, nine months after a deadly railway station collapse sparked mass protests across the country.
The failure of a concrete canopy at the Novi Sad railway station on 1 November, which has now killed 16 people after a teenager died of their injuries in March, prompted widespread student-led protests, with some students occupying university faculties and blocking roads to demand government accountability and transparency.
On?4 August,? that six UN special rapporteurs and one independent expert had observed a “troubling pattern of repression” in the government’s response to the protests, stating, “Peaceful demonstrators have reportedly faced intimidation, physical attacks, surveillance, and arrests, often without legal justification.”
“Students and university officials have allegedly been targeted in coordinated smear campaigns, with state-aligned media publishing hundreds of defamatory articles, and labelling demonstrators as 'terrorists’, a term also used by government representatives,” the UN press release continued.
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Describing an “escalation in policing of peaceful, student-led protests” since late June, the UN office said “authorities have responded with excessive force, arbitrary arrests, and prolonged detentions”, noting “reports of unlawful surveillance, serious injuries, and the deployment of unidentified or plainclothes officers”.
“What we are witnessing in Serbia is a systematic attempt to silence critical voices and dismantle the independence of academic institutions,” the UN experts said. “This is not just a student protest – it is a test of human rights accountability and democratic resilience.”
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“Instead of listening [to] young people’s voices, the Government has chosen to punish them,” the experts added. “This approach not only violates international human rights standards, but also, by its very nature, undermines the very foundation of a democratic society.”
探花视频 has contacted the Serbian embassy in the UK for comment.
The experts also discussed government pressure exerted on educational institutions, an issue the board of the European University Association . The “withholding of state funding for operational costs” as well as “the recent introduction of a new regulation restricting the amount of time academic staff at institutions can spend on research activities” have resulted in “a reduction in professors’ salaries, first to 50 per cent in February 2025 and subsequently to 12.5 per cent since April” – “clearly an unsustainable situation”, the EUA board said.
Speaking to 探花视频, EUA secretary general Amanda Crowfoot said the new regulation “will negatively impact both the quantity and quality of research outputs”, and will “reduce Serbian universities’ capacity to participate actively in international projects, and to apply for funding”. She added, “As well as meaning that some essential research might not be carried out, it can jeopardise partnerships and lead to long-term reputational damage.”
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“We sincerely hope that disruption to students’ education can be minimised, and that both current and future cohorts of students are able to learn and to graduate without limitations,” Crowfoot said. “The EUA board calls for constructive dialogue between all parties concerned, to ensure that this happens.”
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