According to Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandar Vulin, the country is threatened by an imminent “color revolution” orchestrated by Western intelligence services.
Vulin believes the ongoing unrest in Serbia is aimed at enforcing a pro-Western power shift similar to Ukraine’s Euromaidan revolution in 2014.
Student-led protests against alleged corruption and the government’s handling of a serious fatal accident have been going on for months in Serbia. The demonstrations were triggered in November 2024 after a concrete roof collapsed at a railway station in the city of Novy Sad, killing 15 people.
On March 15, thousands of protesters gathered in Belgrade, where dozens were injured in clashes between police and activists, and protests have continued to varying degrees over the past week.
– A color revolution is taking place in Belgrade, Vulin declared during a meeting in Moscow this weekend, where he met Sergei Shoigu, secretary of Russia’s Security Council.
– Western security services are behind the color revolution as they want to put a new government in power, the Serbian minister continued, adding that the country’s authorities “would not allow it”.
Another video from Belgrade showing the huge scale of the protests taking place against President Vucic tonight.
They are demanding the resignation of the Serbian president.
Hundreds of thousands people are out on the street pic.twitter.com/32Uwnltufe
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) March 15, 2025
Wants to “destroy Serbia”
The President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, has also accused foreign actors of fuelling the unrest in order to destabilize the country, claiming that the opposition is working with intelligence services in Croatia, Albania and the West to overthrow his government.
According to Aleksandar Vulin, the West’s goal is to “destroy Serbia” – because the government in Belgrade is considered pro-Russian and has refused to support sanctions against Russia despite pressure.
He predicts that the forces allegedly behind the protests could soon push for a “radicalization” of the demonstrations – and that violence risks escalating.
– Those who organized (the March 15 rally) would like to see a ‘Maidan’ and are working on making that happen.
Riots and war
The 2013-2014 Euromaidan protests in Kiev were initially relatively calm but soon degenerated into full-blown riots and street wars between police and protesters – with over 100 people also killed and at least 855 injured. In retrospect, it has emerged that intelligence services and other EU and US interests fueled the unrest.
In the end, pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych was forced to resign and was replaced by a pro-Western interim government. The takeover was seen by many as an illegitimate coup d’état and led to the proclamation of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts as independent people’s republics and Moscow’s annexation of the Russian-dominated and strategically important Crimean peninsula.
Since 2014, there has been a de facto war between Ukrainian government forces and pro-Russian separatists in the East, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths, a conflict that escalated sharply in February 2022 when Russia decided to invade Ukraine and “demilitarize” the country.