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The leader of the Dveri movement, Boško Obradović, stated today that allowing him and his party colleague Ivan Kostić to explain the reasons for the hunger strike on a 60-minute live program on Serbian radio and television at night would be a step significant to start a dialogue and overcome the political crisis.
“If there is no such step, then we see that the government is ready for everything, so that the other party is not heard, so that citizens cannot hear the voice of the opposition,” Obradovic said at a press conference in front of the National Assembly. .
Obradovic asked the authorities what was debatable in his first four lawsuits, which refer to the respect of Resolution 1244 and the Serbian Constitution on the issue of Kosovo and Metohija, the indiscriminate operation of the prosecution and the courts, the protection of the Serbs in the region and the Serbian Orthodox Church and media freedom.
“Our four demands cannot be met without our fifth key demand, which refers to a constructive dialogue between the government and the opposition, the postponement of the elections and the agreement on a new electoral mandate that would be carried out with free and fair elections”, said. is Obradović.
He noted that only by postponing the elections would the conditions be met to meet his other demands. He also evaluated that “the first four requests are a test for the government to show its true face.”
He also said that they sent a request to the Secretary General of the Serbian Assembly that Dveri’s elected medical team can always come to his invitation and visit them, and that he will ask a priest of the Serbian Orthodox Church to visit them and if they want to give them communion.
Obradovic evaluated yesterday’s statement by the Secretary General of the Serbian Assembly as “hypocritical”, that he was “abusing his role, manipulating and lying” and stated that the government obviously deliberately wanted to prevent his closest relatives and associates and the from Kostic to come. Having support Obradovic said that the regime had not announced his hunger strike for six days, and evaluated that he had “entered the phase of total silence and ignoring everything that is happening” in front of the Chamber of the National Assembly.
“By fencing and preventing people from approaching, greeting or supporting us, they want to send a picture that we are alone in our demands,” Obradović said. According to him, judicial institutions can accelerate the end of the strike by making the decision to annul the unconstitutional continuation of the electoral process.
Obradovic said he perceived all comments by opposition representatives of different political spectrums as well-intentioned, but added that “he does not see that by remaining silent, tweeting and sitting at home, they can fight for free and fair elections.” Commenting on the current situation in Montenegro, he emphasized that it is the only country in modern Europe to judge a high church dignitary, who speaks of the extent of the persecution to which the Serbian Orthodox Church and Orthodox believers are exposed. Obradović believes this is “the beginning of the end and that Milo Đukanović is nearing its end.”
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