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World / Europe

Student protestors in Serbia call for general strike

Published: 22 Jan 2025 - 03:10 pm | Last Updated: 22 Jan 2025 - 03:11 pm
Thousands of teachers, students, and citizens protest during a one-day work stoppage in Belgrade on January 20, 2025, following the November 2024 collapsed of a roof at a train station in Novi Sad, that killed 15 people. Photo by Oliver Bunic / AFP

Thousands of teachers, students, and citizens protest during a one-day work stoppage in Belgrade on January 20, 2025, following the November 2024 collapsed of a roof at a train station in Novi Sad, that killed 15 people. Photo by Oliver Bunic / AFP

AFP

Belgrade: Student organisers in Serbia called for a general strike this week, according to an announcement Wednesday, in the latest move to increase pressure on officials over the fatal collapse of a train station roof last year.

The Balkan country has been hit by regular protests after a roof at a train station in the northern city of Novi Sad collapsed in November, killing 15 people, following restoration work at the facility.

The announcement posted on social media by a leading student group called for Serbians to engage in "general civil disobedience" on Friday and to avoid going to work, shopping and engaging in other normal daily life activities.

"Let's take freedom into our own hands! Your participation makes a difference," said the statement.

Calls for a general strike have been growing in recent days following a raft of strike announcements by scattered unions and professional organisations.

Public outrage has fuelled almost daily protests and road blockades across Serbia, with many attributing the deaths in Novi Sad to corruption and poor oversight of construction projects.

University students have largely emerged as the leaders of the movement and have been blockading campuses across the country for months.

More than a dozen people have been charged in connection with the northern city's train station tragedy, including former transport minister Goran Vesic, who resigned days after the incident.

Under pressure from the protests, the government has also released documentation related to the station's renovation project, claiming it has met all demands and accusing demonstrators of being backed by foreign powers.

But protesters are demanding greater transparency into the investigations.

They are also protesting against the government's response to the protests and against physical attacks targeting student demonstrators, which organisers have alleged were carried out by hooligans sent by authorities.