Video Western Balkans

In Serbia, the students lead the fight against corruption since 1998

Since the collapse of Novi Sad’s train station in November, student-led protests have erupted across Serbia, inspiring a nationwide movement against corruption. They follow the tracks of their parents, as our guests explain.

Published on 2 June 2025

Aleksandar Vučić has been in power in Serbia since 2012 in varying capacities, first as prime minister, later as president, and seems to have concentrated power very effectively. Vučić is not only a current-day autocrat, but a great survivor of a previous autocracy: his first major political appointment was as minister of information in 1998, under the Milosevic regime as it waged its genocidal war against its neighbors, known colloquially as the Yugoslav wars.

Vučić’s current reign has courted controversy from the get-go, and has been a subject of protests practically all along. The violent repression of free speech and political activities are not far from this government, and ballot fraud has been well documented in the country’s previous elections.

Now, crucially, Serbia is not a member of the European Union but has been a candidate for membership since 2012, a process that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere recently, but interestingly, also hasn’t deteriorated, despite the clear democratic erosion. Serbia’s sizable lithium deposits may play a role in this process.

But Serbia also has a strong recent history of protest: famously the Otpor! movement, literally meaning "Resistance". This movement formed at the same time as Aleksandar Vučić served as minister of information and gradually, incrementally organised political resistance against an even more violent regime in wartime. Today we discuss the legacy of Otpor! and the recent protest movements in Serbia today.

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Our guests are:

Branka Ćurčić is a longtime cultural activist and co-founder of the Group for Conceptual Politics in Novi Sad. She edits the activist platform TENANT and has led numerous publishing and translation projects in critical theory and contemporary art.

Student protester Višnja Vukajlović is a third-year student of Scene Architecture, Technology, and Design at the Faculty of Technical Sciences in Novi Sad. She is currently one of the students participating in the blockade and strives to stay grounded and maintain a clear perspective throughout it all.

Aleksandar Reljić, a journalist and filmmaker born in Belgrade in 1974, works in the Documentary Department at Radio-Television of Vojvodina. Over his 20-year career, he has focused on documentaries about xenophobia, nationalism, war crimes, and inter-ethnic relations in the former Yugoslavia.

Dejan Tomka is an audio producer, activist, and media creator based in Belgrade, actively participating in the ongoing student-led protests across Serbia—both on the streets and through her online presence. He uses social media and sound to amplify voices calling for truth, justice, and democratic change.


Recorded at the Foto Storm Media Podcast Studio.

Creative team

Réka Kinga Papp anchor
Daniela Univazo writer-editor
Merve Akyel  art director, Eurozine
Szilvia Pintér producer
Julia Sobota captions and translations
Zsófia Gabriella Papp digital producer

Management

Priyanka Hutschenreiter project manager
Judit Csikós  head of finance
Réka Kinga Papp  editor-in-chief
Csilla Nagyné Kardos office administration

Video Crew

Gergely Áron Pápai DoP
Bence Bodoky camera
István Nagy sound

Postproduction

Nóra Ruszkai video editor
István Nagy lead video editor
Milán Golovics dialogue editor
Dániel Nagy dialogue editor

Art

Victor Maria Lima animation
Crypt-of-Insomnia theme music


In partnership with Display Europe, cofunded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the Directorate‑General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.

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