The Police Raid: Catalyst for Outrage at University of Belgrade
On March 31, 2026, at approximately 11 a.m., officers from Serbia's Criminal Police Directorate's Anti-Corruption Department entered the Rectorate building of the University of Belgrade without prior notice or a clearly communicated legal warrant, according to university officials. This oldest higher education institution in Serbia, founded in 1808 and home to over 90,000 students across 31 faculties, became the epicenter of controversy. The police seized computer servers and other equipment storing surveillance camera footage, ostensibly to aid an investigation into the unexplained death of a 25-year-old female student at the nearby Faculty of Philosophy three days earlier.
The University of Belgrade Rectorate, a historic symbol of academic independence, houses administrative offices overseeing one of Europe's key public universities. The sudden intrusion, broadcast live by pro-government media outlets, was perceived by students and faculty as a blatant violation of institutional autonomy—a core principle enshrined in Serbia's Higher Education Law of 2017, which guarantees universities self-governance in academic, financial, and personnel matters, subject only to legal oversight.
Within hours, spontaneous gatherings swelled outside the neoclassical Rectorate on Studentski Trg (Student Square), drawing hundreds of students, professors, and citizens. What began as a peaceful vigil quickly escalated, highlighting deep-seated tensions between Serbia's higher education sector and the government.
The Tragic Student Death Fueling the Fire
The probe traces back to March 26, 2026, when a 25-year-old graduate student at the Faculty of Philosophy fell through a fifth-floor window late at night, landing fatally on the plateau below. Described as unexplained by authorities, the Higher Public Prosecutor's Office in Belgrade initiated inquiries into potential criminal negligence or abuse of official position by faculty staff. Earlier, police had accessed the faculty building, and the dean along with three staff members were summoned for questioning.
Police later revealed findings during the raids, including traces of fire from pyrotechnics, an open window, and protest-related items like banners and medical supplies—items linked to ongoing student blockades. However, no direct connection to the Rectorate's servers was evident, raising questions about the scope of the search. The university offered full cooperation for a transparent investigation but decried politicization, especially amid pro-government tabloids accusing Rector Vladan Đokić and Dean Danijel Sinani of having "bloody hands" due to alleged security lapses.
This incident unfolded against a backdrop where faculties have hosted prolonged student occupations, prompting debates on safety protocols versus protest rights in higher education settings.
Rector Đokić's Balcony Address: A Rallying Cry for Autonomy
As night fell on March 31, Rector Vladan Đokić emerged on the Rectorate balcony around 10 p.m., megaphone in hand, addressing thousands. "You can raid university premises, but you cannot raid people's conscience," he declared, echoing sentiments from his full public statement. Đokić clarified that the Rectorate held no relevant data on the student's death, framing the raid as intimidation rather than legitimate inquiry.
He invoked the 15-month student protests sparked by the November 2024 Novi Sad railway station canopy collapse, which killed 16 people amid allegations of corruption—no accountability followed, he noted, contrasting with swift action against supportive academics. Đokić demanded an independent, potentially internationally supervised forensic probe, appealing to European universities and the EU to defend academic freedom.
His words galvanized the crowd, reinforcing the University of Belgrade's role as a bastion of dissent in Serbia's polarized political landscape.
Clashes Erupt: Students Confront Riot Police
Protests turned violent as demonstrators hurled soil from planters and pressed against police lines. Officers, including gendarmerie units, responded with batons and physical pushes, dispersing crowds chanting "traitors" and "dogs." One young man was arrested, and minor injuries were reported on both sides, per eyewitness accounts and media footage.
Police Director Dragan Vasiljević defended the operation at a press conference, citing a court order and discoveries of pyrotechnics, gas masks, and walkie-talkies—items tied to protest logistics. The Higher Public Prosecutor's Office vowed prosecutions for attacks on officers. Reuters reported hundreds clashing in Belgrade's center, underscoring the volatility.
- Protesters attempted multiple cordon breaches.
- Police used truncheons but no tear gas confirmed.
- Crowd dispersed post-rector's speech around midnight.
These events mirrored prior skirmishes in Serbia's anti-corruption movement, where student resilience has tested law enforcement boundaries.
Roots in Novi Sad: Timeline of Serbia's Student Uprising
The raid reignited protests dormant since peaking in March 2025 with 325,000 rallying in Belgrade—the largest in decades. Triggered by the November 1, 2024, Novi Sad disaster (16 dead from a renovated station awning collapse), students blockaded faculties nationwide, demanding accountability, transparency, and anti-corruption reforms.
Key milestones:
- Nov-Dec 2024: Initial occupations at University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy and others.
- Jan-Mar 2025: Marches, taxi driver solidarity, farmer blockades.
- Aug 2025: Police confrontations during de-blockade attempts.
- 2026: Sustained pressure amid government concessions and threats.
University leaders like Đokić backed students, positioning higher education as a pro-democracy force. For detailed analysis, see Balkan Insight's coverage.
These actions have spotlighted Serbia's youth unemployment (around 20% for graduates) and higher ed funding woes, with universities reliant on state budgets amid autonomy strains.
Serbia's University Autonomy: Legal Foundations and Emerging Threats
Serbia's 2017 Law on Higher Education (Zakon o visokom obrazovanju) mandates institutional autonomy, allowing universities to elect leaders, set curricula, and manage finances independently, aligned with the Bologna Process for European Higher Education Area integration. The University of Belgrade exemplifies this, with elected rectors and faculty senates.
However, President Aleksandar Vučić's administration has signaled reforms, with Education Minister Dejan Vuk Stanković proposing ministerial oversight of "negligent" deans post-Novi Sad. Pro-government rhetoric accuses universities of fostering unrest, leading to academic dismissals—over a dozen professors lost jobs for protest support in 2025-2026.
Parliament Speaker Ana Brnabić blamed deans for the student's death, fueling fears of legislative curbs. Critics warn this erodes Serbia's progress toward EU accession, where academic freedom is a Copenhagen criterion.
Government Response: Blame-Shifting and Electoral Warnings
Officials portray the raid as routine justice-seeking, uncovering protest paraphernalia indicating unsafe conditions. Vučić vowed student activists "defeat" in upcoming elections, framing opposition as foreign-influenced. Tabloids amplified negligence claims against supportive academics.
Yet, transparency gaps persist—no Novi Sad culprits prosecuted despite probes. This duality—raiding universities while shielding infrastructure scandals—undermines higher ed trust, with enrollment dips noted in state-dependent institutions.
Stakeholders urge de-escalation: enhanced security without autonomy loss, independent audits for safety.
Global Echoes: Solidarity from European Academia
The EU Commission urged "strict respect for due process without political influence," monitoring clashes. Humboldt University Berlin's executive board condemned the raid as threatening independence, pledging solidarity. Appeals flooded from ECPR and others, viewing Serbia as a canary for European trends—e.g., Hungary's CEU exile, Polish reforms.
These voices highlight academic freedom's fragility amid populist pressures, vital for Europe's knowledge economy (€800bn+ annual research output).
Impacts on Serbian Higher Education and Student Life
Protests disrupt classes, but foster civic engagement—Serbia's GER (gross enrollment ratio) hovers at 70%, with UB central. Raids exacerbate faculty shortages (20% vacancies), mental health strains (post-COVID spikes), and funding cuts (5% real-term drop 2025).
| Aspect | Pre-Protests | Post-2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Blockades | Rare | Chronic |
| Faculty Support | Neutral | Active |
| Gov Funding | Stable | Threatened |
Solutions: hybrid learning, dialogue forums, EU-monitored safety standards.
Photo by Yansi Keim on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Safeguarding Autonomy in Turbulent Times
Prospects hinge on elections, EU pressure, and internal reforms. Students demand accountability; universities, protected autonomy. Positive steps: joint safety taskforces, transparency pacts. For Europe's HE, lessons in resilience—bolster Bologna safeguards against politicization.
Explore opportunities in European academia via AcademicJobs.com resources.
