BELGRADE: Serbians flocked to the polls on Sunday in elections that will likely see populist President Aleksandar Vucic extend his rule in the Balkan country, as he vows to provide stability amid war raging in Ukraine.
The country of around seven million will elect the president and members of the 250-seat parliament and cast votes in several municipal contests.
The polls officially closed at 8:00 pm (1800 GMT) local time, with unofficial results due later in the evening.
The latest surveys see Vucic’s centre-right Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) maintaining its control over the parliament, while the president is poised to win a second term.
“Personally, I see stable progress and I voted in accordance with this opinion,” Milovan Krstic, a 52-year-old government employee, told AFP after casting his vote in Belgrade.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has cast a long shadow over a contest that observers had earlier predicted would focus on environmental issues, corruption and rights.
Vucic has deftly used the return of war in Europe along with the coronavirus pandemic to his advantage, promising voters continued stability amid uncertain headwinds.
“We expect a huge victory. That’s what we worked for in the past four or five years, and we believe we will continue with the great efforts and the development of this country,” the president said after casting his ballot early Sunday.
Serbia’s leading opposition candidate Zdravko Ponos said he hoped the contest would offer a path to institute “serious change” in the country.
“I hope for a bright future. Elections are the right way to change the situation. I hope the citizens of Serbia will take the chance today,” said Ponos.
In the capital Belgrade, the elections were briefly marred by scuffles between parliamentary candidate Pavle Grbovic and supporters of Vucic’s SNS, along with scattered reports of small skirmishes and voter intimidation.
The country’s election commission predicted voter turnout would likely hover around 60 percent, nearly a 10-point jump from the last general elections in 2020.
Serbs from the former breakaway province of Kosovo also participated in the contest and boarded around 40 buses headed north to vote, after authorities in Pristina refused to allow polling centres on its soil.
Decade in power
Only a few months ago, the opposition seemed to have gained momentum.
In January, Vucic axed a controversial lithium mine project following mass protests that saw tens of thousands take to the streets.
The move was a rare defeat for Vucic, who has rotated through a range of positions, including prime minister, president and deputy premier along with a stint as the defence chief during a decade in power.
The polls predict he will win again on Sunday even as the opposition hopes a high turnout could force a run-off.
Analysts, however, say the opposition has little chance of dethroning Vucic or eating away at his parliamentary coalition, which holds a lion’s share of the seats.
The president has also carefully managed the country’s response to the war in Ukraine by officially condemning Russia at the United Nations but stopping short of sanctioning Moscow at home, where many Serbs hold a favourable view of the Kremlin.
The opposition in turn has largely refrained from attacking Vucic’s position on the conflict, fearing any call for harsher measures against Russia would backfire at the ballot box.
Vucic also headed into elections with a plethora of other advantages.
Following a decade at the helm, he has increasingly tightened his grip over the various levers of power, including de facto control over much of the media and government services.
In the months leading up to the campaign, the president rolled out a range of financial aid offers to select groups, prompting critics to say he was trying to “buy” votes before the contest.
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