BRUSSELS – European Movement International released a statement on the situation in Serbia, which stresses the Government’s controversial response to COVID-19 crisis, as well as deep democratic shortcomings in the country.
EMI also launched a petition “Serbian democracy is under threat – The EU must act”, calling the signatories to join their call on European leaders.
“Ever since the start of the COVID pandemic, regimes in Europe and around the world have used the current crisis to compromise democratic principles. Recent events in Serbia are consistent with that trend and constitute a negative development for democracy and civic space in a country that has been on the path to EU accession for a while but where democracy has been in rapid decline for years”, the statement reads.
According to EMI, the Serbian government’s management of the health crisis has raised many questions.
“Its decision to hold large public events and go ahead with the national elections, in the peak of a health crisis, confounded many and made the imposition of draconian lockdown measures right after the elections seem politically motivated. In a country ablaze with the suspicion that the data on infections and deaths caused by COVID-19 has been manipulated by those in power, trust was already low”, EMI stated.
In such an atmosphere, it assessed, it is citizens’ fundamental right to hold their government to account.
“The wave of protests instigated by young people and joined by citizens from all walks of life is a manifestation of the Serbs’ wish to voice their legitimate concerns about the government’s handling of its response to the pandemic. Their right to protest should neither be denied nor met with violence. Trying to silence protesters and journalists through the exercise of force is a violation of fundamental rights. Similarly, the freedom to protest should not be highjacked by a small minority of protesters’ intent to soil that right with the use of violence”, the statement emphasises.
EMI further stressed that, after years of steady descent away from European democratic norms, the current political unrest that has engulfed Serbia is not a symptom of the health crisis. It is, according to the organisation, the result of deeper, much further-reaching structural and democratic shortcomings in the country.
“It is imperative that measures adopted by the Serbian government during the health emergency remain proportional to the threat of the crises and that they respect democratic values. Citizens require openness about the decisions that affect them and wish to be involved in the response to a health crisis that has cost far too many lives. Civil society and the media should be given a strong, independent role in keeping in check the country’s path towards recovery”, EMI stated.
Beyond the pandemic, democratic and structural reforms, that will safeguard inclusive and transparent decision-making, strengthened by an independent media and permitting dialogue with civil society, are vital to regain citizens’ trust and keep a trajectory towards a European future.
“The transformative power of European integration has at its core the need for demonstrating respect for the rule of law and fundamental democratic principles in Serbia, according to the EU’s founding values. The EU must ensure that the Serbian government lives up to its responsibilities in the context of the accession negotiations”, the statement reads.
The statement concludes with the assessment that the European Union is a community of values based on fundamental and human rights.
“The EU and its institutions, as well as member states and non-state actors, must make a stronger and more targeted effort to uphold and promote European values and fundamental rights in member states and candidate countries”, the statement concludes.