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Serbian Prime Minister Miloš Vučević resigns after months of protests

FILE: Milos Vucevic speaks during a press conference in Belgrade, 2 October 2023
FILE: Milos Vucevic speaks during a press conference in Belgrade, 2 October 2023 Copyright  AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic
Copyright AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic
By Euronews with AP
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Vučević resigned just one day after President Aleksandar Vučić announced plans for urgent government reconstruction.

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Serbian Prime Minister Miloš Vučević resigned on Tuesday following months of protests over a deadly awning collapse in November that killed 15 people.

Vučević's resignation came just a day after President Aleksandar Vučić said "an urgent and extensive reconstruction of the government" was in the works in response to the demands posed by Serbia's striking university students.

However, Vučević said he was prompted to resign on Tuesday morning after seeing reports of attacks against protesting students in the northern city and regional capital of Novi Sad.

One person, a 23-year-old woman, was hospitalised with severe injuries on Monday night after she was attacked by a group of unidentified assailants wielding baseball bats, domestic media reported.

"(The government) has to show ... the highest level of responsibility," he said in a public address on Tuesday.

"In order to not raise tensions in the society any further, I made the decision I just announced."

On Monday, demonstrators launched a 24-hour blockade of a key traffic intersection in the capital Belgrade, stepping up pressure on the authorities.

Serbian farmers on tractors and thousands of citizens joined the blockade that followed weeks of protests demanding accountability for the deadly accident in Novi Sad that critics have blamed on rampant government corruption.

A campaign of street demonstrations has posed the biggest challenge in years to the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) government's firm grip on power in Serbia.

Later on Monday, Vučić, at a joint press conference with Vučević and Parliament Speaker Ana Brnabić, urged dialogue with the students, saying that “we need to lower the tensions and start talking to each other.”

“Any kind of a crisis poses a serious problem for our economy,” said Vučić. “Such a situation in society is not good for anyone.”

The mayor of Novi Sad, Milan Đurić, is also set to resign on Tuesday. Vučević, who hails from Novi Sad, was the city's mayor from 2012 to 2022.

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