Serbian President Vucic says he will resign within weeks

BELGRADE, June 27 (Reuters) – Serbia’s populist president Aleksandar Vucic said on Saturday he will ​resign within weeks and announced early presidential ‌and parliamentary elections.
Vucic’s announcement came after a year-and-a-half of anti-corruption protests, led by students, that swept across the ​country, following the collapse of an awning ​at a railway station in the northern city ⁠of Novi Sad in which 16 people ​died.
Days ago in the city of Novi Sad, students ​marked the 2024 deaths and demanded snap general elections.
“I will be president for only a couple of weeks, and ​then I will resign,” Vucic told his supporters ​at a pro-government rally in the capital, Belgrade. Vucic’s second ‌and ⁠last mandate expires in mid-2027.
Vucic also said he would help his Serbian Progressive Party win elections, including the early parliamentary vote, originally set for ​2027. He did ​not specify ⁠when he would resign nor when he could dissolve parliament, a precondition ​for early parliamentary elections.
Protesters, opposition and rights ​groups ⁠allege the railway station disaster was a sign of broader government mismanagement of construction projects and ⁠corruption.Activists from ​the student-led movement say they ​want to challenge Vucic and SNS in upcoming parliamentary and ​presidential elections.

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