https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gb5fy0qax4
For those who are not very familiar with Serbian interior affairs, let’s introduce two important players from today’s conversation.
Aleksandar Vučić is a repetitive character here. He has been in power in Serbia in various abilities since 2012, and appears to have been very effective in concentrating his powers, first as prime minister and later as president. Vicic is not only a current dictator, but also a great survivor of the previous dictatorship. His first major political appointments under the Milosevik regime of 1998, as he repeatedly genocide wars with his neighbors, which led to a war of genocide with his neighbors known as the Yugoslav War.
Vicicz’s current rule has been controversial from the start and has actually been the subject of protest for a long time. Free speech and violent suppression of political activity are not far from this government, and voting fraud has been well documented in the country’s previous elections.
Importantly, now Serbia is not a member of the European Union, but is a candidate for membership since 2012, a process that seems to have been nowhere these days, but interestingly, despite clear democratic erosion, it has not deteriorated. Serbia’s substantial lithium deposits could play a role in this process.
However, Serbia also has a strong history of recent protests. A movement that literally means “resistance.” The movement formed at the same time that Alexandervić served as Minister of Information, gradually organised a gradually organized systematic political resistance against a more violent regime during the war. Today we’ll explain the legacy of OTPor! And the recent protests in Serbia today.
Today’s guests are:
Blanca Churcic He is a longtime cultural activist and co-founder of Novi Sado’s Group for Conceptual Politics. She edits the activist platform tenant He has led many publication and translation projects in critical theory and contemporary art.
Student protesters Višnjavukajlović I’m a third-year student in Scene Architecture, Technology and Design at Novi Sad’s Faculty of Technology. She is currently one of the students taking part in the lockdown and strives to maintain evidence and a clear perspective through all of that.
Aleksandar ReljićBorn in Belgrade in 1974, the journalist and filmmaker works in the documentary section of Vojvodina’s Radio-Television. Over his 20-year career, he has focused on documentaries on xenophobia, nationalism, war crimes, and inter-ethnic relations in former Yugoslavia.
Dejan Tomka He is a Belgrade-based audio producer, activist and media creator, and is actively involved in ongoing student-led protests in Serbia. He uses social media and sound to amplify calls for truth, justice and democratic change
Thank you for hosting Foto Storm Media Podcast Studio!
Standard Time Talk Show S2E19: A World Beyond the Institutions
Creative Team
Réka Kinga Papp Anchor
Daniela Univazo’s author and editor
He is well-versed in Eurozin’s Aquil Art Director
Szilvia Pintér Producer
Julia Sobota’s caption and translation
Zsófia Gabriella PAPP Digital Producer
management
Priyanka Hutschenreiter Project Manager
Judy Sikos’s Financial Manager
Réka Kinga Papp Editor-in-Chief
Csilla Nagyné Kardos Office Administration
Video Crew
Gergely
BensBod key camera
István Nagy Sound
Post Production
Nóra Ruszkai Video Editor
István Nagy Lead Video Editor
Milán Golovics Dialogue Editor
Dániel Nagy Dialogue Editor
art
Victor Maria Lima Animation
Cryptomatic theme music
Disclosure
This talk show was produced by Display Europe.
The programme is jointly funded by the European Commission and the European Foundation for Cultural Affairs.
Importantly, the views and opinions expressed here are solely by the authors and speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Enforcement Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor the EACEA can be held responsible.

Source: Eurozine – www.eurozine.com
