Camera flashes and the face of Aleksandar Vučić - this is the first thing injured from the fire in Macedonia, who were transported to Serbia for treatment, could see when they opened their eyes. If they managed to open them at all, from severe injuries caused by burns from the fire.
The President of Serbia visited them while they were lying in shock rooms with the entire entourage of photojournalists and cameramen, before their closest relatives had the opportunity to visit them.
Some patients are undergoing intensive treatment and their lives are in danger, which is why Macedonians reacted furiously on social networks.
"Vučić does not want to discriminate, so both Serbs and Macedonians are for political (mis)use," one of them wrote on the X social network.
Another wrote that "Vučić is taking pictures while children are crying, trembling with pain."
"Incredible irresponsibility", adds one user of the networks in Macedonian, who describes the scene where 15 people are standing in a shock room without spacesuits, protective equipment stuffed in front of seriously injured children in hospital cubicles that should be in completely sterile conditions.
One of them added that the reason why so many patients were taken to so many foreign countries is precisely because they need specific care and special conditions.
"Patients' lives are at risk for Vučić's PR," writes one network user.
Macedonians, sorry.
Serbian network users are also reacting to posts from Macedonia, who are apologizing en masse for the behavior of Aleksandar Vučić.
"Sorry for this embarrassment," wrote one Xx user, while another added, "sorry dear people."
The question that is being raised is whether Vučić asked for permission from the families of the injured who are unconscious or from the patients themselves who are responsive.
More than 160 injured, 59 dead
So far, the tragic balance of the big fire in the Puls discotheque in Kočani, North Macedonia is 59 people, while more than 160 are injured. Twenty-two people who are in critical condition are being transported to Turkey, Bulgaria and Greece, and some of the injured have been transferred to Serbia.
The Prosecutor's Office requested the detention of 20 persons, and an international arrest warrant was issued for four.