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Serbien | EuropaAktuelle Einsätze
OSCE Mission to Serbia
(OSCE Long-Term Missions)
Mandatiert seit: 01/01
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Military veteran Zdravko Ponos, an opposition candidate for president in an election in April, tells BIRN that Serbia will struggle to recover from five more years of Aleksandar Vucic.
The draft election laws arose as a result of parallel inter-party dialogues on election conditions, conducted with and without EU mediators, as well as on the recommendations of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions.
In recent years, states in the Western Balkans have increasingly rearmed. The arms purchases – often accompanied by nationalist rhetoric – endanger the fragile trust in a region where conflicts remain unresolved. Serbia plays a key role in these dynamics. Belgrade also uses arms purchases to deepen its relations with Russia and China.
Jan Braathu, a Norwegian career diplomat of ambassador rank, assumed his duties as Head of the OSCE Mission to Serbia on 1 January 2021. … Ambassador Braathu brings with him extensive knowledge of the Western Balkans region, coming to Belgrade from Pristina where he served as Head of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo from 2016 to 2020.
In a sign of warming relations between the two countries, Albania and Serbia on Monday signed a deal enabling citizens of both countries to enter the other one with only their ID cards.
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic on Tuesday announced that early parliamentary elections will be held in April 2022, even though a new government has still has not been formed following the June 2020 elections.
To counter a second coronavirus wave, President Aleksandar Vucic announced a new lockdown. Protesters reacted with fury at his inconsistency, amid wider anger over his strongman leadership.
After the Election Commission ordered a repeat vote at 234 polling stations on July 1, delaying the final result, opposition parties said they suspected it was part of a plan to push up the turnout and so make the election look more legitimate.
Aleksandar Vucic’s party romped home in Serbia’s general elections on Sunday, winning about two-thirds of the votes, early results show – although opposition parties boycotting the polls said less than half the electorate turned out.
[…] Most of the main opposition parties will boycott the vote because of what they say is Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic's iron grip on the country's media and the electoral process, as well as potential coronavirus infection hazards at voting stations.