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In July 2024, a series of environmental protests began in Serbia against the Jadar mine, a European Union–backed and Serbian government-approved lithium mining project. The project was proposed by Anglo-Australian Rio Tinto to develop Europe's largest lithium mine in the West Serbian region of Jadar, causing significant backlash due to its potential environmental damage and exploitation of ...
In Serbia, environmental protests had been organised as early as in 2019. [8] In January 2021, the Eco Guard initiative organised a protest in Belgrade , dubbed "Protest for Harmless Air", [ note 4 ] which was attended by between 2,000 and 3,000 demonstrators. [ 9 ]
Serbian protests may refer to: 1988–1989 Anti-bureaucratic revolution; 1991 protests in Belgrade; 1991–1992 anti-war protests in Belgrade; 1996–1997 Serbian protests; 2000 overthrow of Slobodan Milošević; 2008 protests against Kosovo declaration of independence; 2016 Serbian protests; 2017 Serbian protests; 2018–2020 Serbian protests
Four years from now, fields in the Jadar river valley in western Serbia where Djorjde Kapetanovic grows corn and soy to feed his cattle will be turned into a waste dump for Europe's biggest ...
Thousands of people rallied in several towns in Serbia on Monday to protest a lithium excavation project the Balkan country's government recently signed with the European Union. The protests were ...
According to a WHO report, Serbia has higher estimates of premature death due to air pollution than most countries in the European Union. [7] Assessments of air quality based on data from monitoring stations managed by national authorities indicate that the concentrations of air pollutants, especially particular matter, regularly exceed the levels that protect human health. [7]
Environmental activists ended the protest on Branko's bridge around 5:45 PM. [citation needed] At the end of the meeting, the speakers said that "this was a warning blockade" and that they would "give the authorities seven days to fulfill their demands, and if that does not happen, they will continue with the protests in Serbia". [74] [75]
Serbia’s populist Prime Minister Milos Vucevic said Tuesday he is stepping down following weeks of massive anti-corruption protests over the deadly collapse of a concrete canopy in November.