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Serbia's ruling party claims victory amid reports of vote-rigging – video report

Serbia’s ruling populists claim sweeping victory in election amid vote-rigging accusations

This article is more than 8 months old

Serbia Against Violence opposition says it will not recognise results and will demand a rerun of the ballot

Serbia’s ruling populist party comfortably won Sunday’s parliamentary elections, according to an early official vote count, but political tensions rose over allegations of irregularities in a local election race in the capital, Belgrade.

An opposition group said it was robbed of victory in the Belgrade local election, would not recognise the results and would demand a rerun of the ballot.

Sunday’s parliamentary and local election in the Balkan country pitted the populist president Aleksandar Vučic’s Serbian Progressive party against the Serbia Against Violence opposition alliance.

Vučic’s SNS party won 47% of the ballots in the parliamentary vote, followed by Serbia Against Violence with 23%, according to a near-complete preliminary tally by the state election commission.

Several other smaller parties also competed in the election, which was held only 18 months after the previous presidential and parliamentary vote.

If confirmed in the final vote count, the result means that the SNS party will have an absolute majority in the 250-member parliament and will form the next government on its own.

Officials results for the city hall in Belgrade are yet to be announced, but projections by polling agencies Ipsos and Cesid said SNS won 38% of the ballots in Belgrade while Serbia Against Violence garnered 35%. However, Serbia Against Violence claimed fraud, citing numerous reports of irregularities both during the campaign and on voting day.

Irregularities also were reported by election monitors and independent media. One claimed ethnic Serbs from neighbouring Bosnia were bussed in en masse to vote in Belgrade. Serbia Against Violence charged that 40,000 identity documents were issued for people who do not live in the capital city.

Another report claimed a monitoring team was assaulted and their car attacked with baseball bats in a town in northern Serbia. Allegations have also emerged of voters being paid or put under pressure to vote for the ruling party.

“Problems that marked the election day on 17 December were particularly serious in Belgrade, primarily caused by the intent to influence citizens’ electoral will,” said the independent Center for Research, Transparency and Accountability group, which monitors elections in Serbia.

Vučic and his party have denied the allegations.

The opposition said it would lodge official complaints and called a street protest later on Monday.

“Hyperproduction of voters who do not live in Serbia, let alone in Belgrade, is a flagrant abuse of law,” the opposition politician Marinika Tepić said early on Monday. “We will use all legal means at our disposal to democratically defend the voting will of people.”

The election did not include the presidency, but governing authorities backed by the dominant pro-government media ran the campaign as a referendum on Vučic.

Serbia Against Violence, a pro-European Union bloc, includes parties that were behind months of street protests this year triggered by two back-to-back mass shootings in May.

Serbia, a Balkan country that has maintained warm relations with Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin, has been a candidate for European Union membership since 2014, but has faced allegations of steadily eroding democratic freedoms over the past years.

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