Vučić: We hate no one, we wish no one harm, we don't want anyone to die...

"If we managed to gather some people today, many more are coming than those who are here, then tomorrow there will probably be more than the few hundreds and thousands I thought," Vučić said.

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Vučić at the rally, Photo: Betaphoto/Milan Obradović
Vučić at the rally, Photo: Betaphoto/Milan Obradović
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.
Ažurirano: 11.04.2025. 19:35h

Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić said today, at the start of the three-day "We Will Not Give Up Serbia" rally in front of the House of the National Assembly in Belgrade, that today's gathering is "a small part of what will happen tomorrow", when the central part of the event is planned, at which he, among others, will address the gathering.

"If we managed to gather some people today, many more are coming than those who are here, then tomorrow there will probably be more than the few hundreds and thousands I thought," Vučić told Prva television at the gathering.

As he stated, today is just a small beginning for the main event tomorrow, adding that Serbia has risen up and that resistance "to those who want to destroy Serbia is growing."

"We don't hate anyone, we don't wish anyone harm. We don't want anyone's death, or anything else, we want the life of Serbia, we are fighting for the life of Serbia and we will succeed in that," Vučić said.

The rally in front of the Serbian Parliament began at around 17.30:200 p.m. with a parade of Serbian and local government flags, as well as a performance by a trumpet orchestra, after which a group of supporters of the Serbian government, along Kneza Miloša Street, brought a XNUMX-meter-long flag to the parliament, which the government claims is the longest in the history of Serbia.

Acting Prime Minister Miloš Vučević said at a rally in front of the Serbian parliament that Serbia would not have survived the onslaught of the color revolution if it were not for the wisdom of one man, President Aleksandar Vučić.

He added that he was proud of everything he saw - the victims from Kosovo and Metohija who walked from Raška to Belgrade, the poor and the students, who only want one thing, and that is to study.

"President Vučić brought us together, he brought us together, and only thanks to his wisdom did Serbia survive," Vučević emphasized.

He emphasized that Serbia has withstood attempts at demolition and that everyone, led by President Vučić, is fighting to keep pupils in classrooms, students in amphitheaters, peasants in the fields, and workers in factories.

Vučević concluded that there had been enough tricks and lies and invited all citizens to come tomorrow, on Lazer's Saturday, to gather together and send a message that "we will not give up on Serbia."

The leader of the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), Ivica Dačić, said at the beginning of the three-day rally "We Will Not Give Up Serbia" in front of the House of the National Assembly in Belgrade that it was a rally of Serbia that wants to defend its national and state interests.

Dačić stated that the greatest ailment of the Serbian people has always been disunity, and that this is a gathering of Serbia that is against blockades and obstructions, "Serbia that wants to develop."

"This assembly is entered or exited only through elections, only by the will of the people, not on the streets and not through violence. Serbia is above all, above all political parties and individual interests," he added.

After Dačić, Vladimir Balać spoke on behalf of the group "Students Who Want to Learn", saying that their love for Serbia is unbreakable.

"We want to study and return to our faculties, and above all, to continue living in Serbia," he added.

The President of the Socialist Movement and Deputy Prime Minister of Serbia in technical mandate, Aleksandar Vulin, stated that the three-day rally "We Will Not Give Up Serbia" in Belgrade, which was organized at the invitation of Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić with the aim of promoting the Movement for the People and the State, shows how necessary it is to unite around Serbia and the "Serbian world".

"This gathering shows how much Serbia needs unity, how much it is necessary for us to gather around Serbia, around the idea of ​​Serbia, around the idea of ​​Serbian independence, around the Serbian world," Vulin told Prva television.

Today's and tomorrow's rallies in Belgrade, in his words, are "an expression of that quiet, silent Serbia, which has been patiently watching and waiting for months for someone to finally understand how important Serbia is."

"Since it seems that no one could understand this, since no one wanted to think about it when undertaking various activities, then the time has come for us to come together and not only say how many of us there are, we know that there are many more of us, but that we are politically united, that we know what we want, what our goal is and that enough is enough, that it is high time for Serbia to start working, progressing, learning," Vulin added.

Asked about the election of the new government, which must be elected by April 18th, Vulin said that he expects it to be elected very soon, before Good Friday - April 18th.

"There is nothing to wait for. Now the question is how long the prime minister-designate (Đuro Macut) will work on his exposé, whether there are still any doubts about the positions in the cabinet, but essentially, the majority in the Serbian parliament exists and it is unchanged. The parliament will vote on whoever the prime minister-designate proposes and I am sure that it will be as soon as possible, immediately after his exposé," Vulin added.

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