Knežević said that Laković and Čarapić support the overthrow of the constitutional order in Serbia, they told him he had double standards

Correspondence between ruling majority MPs about student protests

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Illustration, Photo: Shutterstock
Illustration, Photo: Shutterstock
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

President and MP of the Democratic People's Party, Milan Knežević, asked Prime Minister Milojko Spajić whether he supports it when the head of his Europe Now Movement's club, Vasilije Čarapić, and the chairman of the parliamentary Committee on Security and Defense, Miodrag Laković, "support the overthrow of the constitutional order in another country" of which, as he added, Spajić was a citizen until recently.

"Is that your position too? Then have character and support the Kamosjutraše, they are someone's children too. I ask because when you needed it, you sent Vučić more messages of adoration and admiration than I did to my wife while I was courting her. PS I don't change hats or parties like the wind blows, especially the one from Belgrade on the water," Knežević wrote on Iks.

Laković responded to that, saying that Knežević was showing double standards.

"Dear colleague, I am sorry that you are showing double standards, so you considered the protests in Montenegro against the DPS government to be democratic and legitimate, which they were, while in Serbia you consider them to be an overthrow of the constitutional order. Students in Serbia have legitimate demands and their fulfillment would make Serbia a better country to live in, I am convinced of that and I wish them that with all my heart," Laković wrote.

Čarapić told Knežević that it is important to have principles in politics:

"When you are against a fake coup in Montenegro, you should be against a fake coup in Serbia. You are either principled or a jerk," he wrote on X.

Spajić said today that they do not support "the interference of our officials in the internal politics of other countries - first MP Knežević, and now Vuković - because we expect the same attitude towards Montenegro."

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