In a long interview with Il Contesto, Italian researcher Chiara Nalli exposed a plan to destabilize the Balkans, which includes an NGO-steered “color revolution” in Serbia, an escalation of the conflict between the Republika Srpska and Bosnia central government and a military alliance between NATO member Croatia, Albania and Kosovo.
Ms. Nalli, who is an expert of the Balkans and has spent several weeks in Belgrade interviewing members and leaders of the protest, explained that the student protest, which had started as “apolitical,” in reality was steered from the beginning to topple the Vucic government and replace it with a more pro-EU one. This has recently become clear, when the managers of the protest organized a bicycle tour from Belgrade to Strasbourg, to request EU support for their demands.
The bicycle tour started on April 3 and was well organized so that in each major city support demos and major media presence were staged. After 13 days, they reached Strasbourg and met with MEPs Irena Joveva (Renew), Goran Bosanac (Greens/EFA) and Fabienne Keller (Renew) in the European Parliament, as well as with the deputy mayor of Strasbourg. The students also wrote a letter to the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, which they publicly read.
Promptly, European Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kos (Slovenia) visited Serbia on April 29 and 30, meeting with the state officials, ruling and opposition MPs and other social actors, including protesting students.
“I want to reiterate that what the EU asks from Serbia closely aligns with the demands of the citizens protesting. Most importantly, I want you, the young generation to benefit from the many opportunities the EU has to offer,” Kos wrote on X.