"It seems to me that I will sign it" VIDEO / PHOTO
President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, commented on the Law on Expropriation.
Source: B92
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FOTO TANJUG/ ZORAN ZESTIC/ bg
Asked if he had consulted with lawyers, he said "it seems to me that they will sign the Law on Expropriation".
"I asked for the opinion of legal advisers and I will ask for more... It seems to me that I will sign it, but I'm not sure yet... Do you think I'm afraid of something? There are people whom you cannot threaten, because they are not afraid of anything. Except God and the judgement of history. I really don't care about the protesters. I am accountable only to the people on the elections, I will not pander to the street thugs", Vucic pointed out.
Speaking about the demonstrations, President pointed out that he checked that the public opinion "reacted very badly" to the roadblocks and demonstrations for the weekend.
He reiterated that no law has anything to do with Rio Tinto. He also reminded that the previous government signed contracts with Rio Tinto.
In a real democracy, one would have a real opposition who would be allocated appropriate airing time in the media. In Serbia, the president owns the media so there is no chance for the opposition or for democracy. And even worse, the president is the former minister of information under Milosovic. Just like his friends Putin and Lukashenko, Vucic likes to fabricate "democratic" elections to appear legitimate. But that he is not.
(Tony (a Brit seconded to Berlin), 1 December 2021 00:12)
In a real democracy, one would have a real opposition who would be allocated appropriate airing time in the media. In Serbia, the president owns the media so there is no chance for the opposition or for democracy. And even worse, the president is the former minister of information under Milosovic. Just like his friends Putin and Lukashenko, Vucic likes to fabricate "democratic" elections to appear legitimate. But that he is not.
(Tony (a Brit seconded to Berlin), 1 December 2021 00:12)
In a real democracy, one would have a real opposition who would be allocated appropriate airing time in the media. In Serbia, the president owns the media so there is no chance for the opposition or for democracy. And even worse, the president is the former minister of information under Milosovic. Just like his friends Putin and Lukashenko, Vucic likes to fabricate "democratic" elections to appear legitimate. But that he is not.
(Tony (a Brit seconded to Berlin), 1 December 2021 00:12)