Color Revolution in Serbia Results in High Level Resignations

This is what happens when you don’t ban US social media.

There is no real way to avoid a color revolution if you have these apps in your country.

AP:

Serbia’s populist Prime Minister Milos Vucevic said Tuesday he is stepping down following weeks of massive anti-corruption protests over the deadly collapse of a concrete canopy in November.

The canopy collapse, which killed 15 people in the northern city of Novi Sad, has become a flashpoint reflecting wider discontent with the increasingly autocratic rule of Serbia’s populist President Aleksandar Vucic. He has faced accusations of curbing democratic freedoms in Serbia despite formally seeking European Union membership for the troubled Balkan nation.

Vucevic told a news conference that his resignation is aimed at lowering tensions in Serbia.

“It is my appeal for everyone to calm down the passions and return to dialogue,” he said.

Novi Sad Mayor Milan Djuric also will step down on Tuesday, Vucevic said.

Vucevic’s resignation is likely to lead to an early parliamentary election. The resignation must be confirmed by Serbia’s parliament, which has 30 days to choose a new government or call a snap election.

On Monday, tens of thousands of people joined striking university students in a 24-hour blockade of a key traffic intersection in the Serbian capital. The students have been protesting for weeks, demanding accountability for the canopy collapse that critics have blamed on rampant government corruption.

In another attempt to defuse tensions, Vucic, Vucevic and Parliament Speaker Ana Brnabic on Monday evening urged dialogue with the students, who have garnered widespread support from all walks of life in Serbia with their call for justice and accountability.

Vucevic said the immediate cause for his quitting was an attack on a female student in Novi Sad early Tuesday by assailants allegedly from the ruling Serbian Progressive Party. Vucevic said that “whenever it seems there is hope to return to social dialogue, to talk … it’s like an invisible hand creates a new incident and tensions mount again.”

Yeah, I wonder about this “invisible hand.”

Who could be puppeteering it?

While I am not opposed to attacking female students pushing for anal revolution in your country, it is obvious that this is what the US does to increase tensions. When they were doing a revolution in the Ukraine, Mossad agents were sent in to shoot protesters, which resulted in a storming of the parliament and a collapse of the government.

It’s all so obvious, but the US finds the dumbest dupes – women and “students” – to foment these revolutions they organize on social media apps.

If you have these apps in your country, your own population will be used as an army against you. That is just a fact. You have to ban these apps.