Serbian Ruling Party and Opposition Meet for First Time

Representatives of the ruling Serbian Progressive Party and opposition Alliance for Serbia met on Tuesday behind closed doors at the Belgrade's Faculty of Political Science, in the presence of NGOs, to discuss conditions for upcoming elections.

"It is a good sign that we sat down together. It is a sign that there is an awareness that there is a great need to talk, and that already means something," the dean of the faculty, Professor Dragan Simic, told media, Tanjug news agency reported.

Simic confirmed that the meeting was about the conditions for holding elections, which was one of the main objections opposition put to the ruling Progressives over several months of street protests that are still being held every Saturday in the Serbian capital.

Serbian media reported that the meeting was attended by Serbian Interior Minister Nebojsa Stefanovic, and two MPs from the ruling Progressive Party, Vladimir Djukanovic and Vladimir Orlic.

From the opposition, the meeting was attended by leaders of the Alliance for Serbia, Dragan Djilas, Zoran Lutovac, Miroslav Aleksic, Marinika Tepic and Tomislav Zigmanov.

According to Simic, the meeting was initiated by the Open Society Foundation. Media reported that the meeting was also attended by other NGOs.

The Alliance for Serbia stressed in a press release afterwards that "these were not negotiations between the authorities and the opposition".

It said that it would respect the request of the organisers that the discussions between the participants at the meeting not be made public.

The executive director of the Open Society Foundation, Milan Antonijevic, told BIRN that the meeting was held in a constructive atmosphere and said there would be another meeting soon.

Although the...

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