The Serbian public prosecutor’s office has only given the reasons for its request to ban the most influential opposition party, but it has still not felt obliged to provide any evidence The Serbian Constitutional court has started dealing with the Serbian public prosecutor’s request to ban the Serbian Renewal Movement (SPO). Those familiar with constitutional court procedures claim that the […]

You have reached a premium content area of Transitions. To read this entire article please login if you are already a Transitions subscriber.

Not a subscriber?

Subscribe today for access to:
Full access to the website and archive of over 26,000 articles

Exclusive monthly, members-only newsletter offering behind-the-scenes views from our contributing writers

A guest, two-month subscription to share with a friend

You can subscribe here to gain access to the entire website.