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A student from Novi Sad Law School, Stefan Karanović, reported to the police that he received death threats through social media, as the Novi Sad Administrative Court Department abolished the second disciplinary sanction for which he was suspended of the faculty for 36 months.
“I feel threatened and upset, just like all the members of my family,” Karanovic told Beta.
He added that he doubts that the threats are related to his victory before the Administrative Court.
The report against Karanović, under which he was suspended from the Faculty of Law, was signed by 44 professors and assistants of that institution of higher education, and the Administrative Court returned the case to the Faculty of Law for a new decision.
The Faculty of Law is obliged to reimburse Karanović for the expenses of the administrative dispute, the verdict of which Beta was aware of is stated.
“The fact that, according to the court, it is not only an illegal act of the dean and the commission, but also that the report signed by 44 professors and assistants of the Faculty of Law is disorderly can only be explained by a severe abuse position and autocracy basic values guaranteed not only by domestic law, but also by international law, “Karanovic told Beta recently.
He added that he was willing to accept the “public apology” of those who signed the report against him, but added that it is not just a personal relationship. “The prosecution and the police must be urgently involved because such actions are a threat to all citizens, students, parents and tarnish the reputation of each one of us,” Karanovic said.
He announced that he would ask for compensation of 150,000 euros. Stefan Karanović was suspended and expelled from the faculty for 36 months, and the faculty repeatedly refused to issue him a certificate of passing exams. Therefore, Karanović enrolled in the Law School of Bosnia and Herzegovina, where he had to start from scratch.
He previously said that the Law School suspended him on suspicion that he wrote texts that related that school to the crime, and then they made the decision not to issue him a certificate and letter of resignation.
The president of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia, Sonja Biserko, sent a letter to the President of Serbia, Aleksandar Vučić, late last year, asking him to help the suspended Karanović obtain a certificate and a certificate. of the exams he passed and evaluated that the behavior of the faculty was “inappropriate.” Sonja Biserko sent the same letter to Serbian Prime Minister Ana Brnabić and former Minister of Education Mladen Šarčević.
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