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Trump's son-in-law raised his hands from the General Staff?
After the protest and the indictment against Minister Selaković, Jared Kushner gave up building a hotel in Belgrade, the Wall Street Journal writes.

Diana Hrka's condition is as stable as possible after 12 days of hunger strike in the cold, veterans say. On the other side of the fence, the Ćaciland tents are heated by generators
It is the thirteenth day that Diana Hrka has been on hunger strike, under a tent, right next to the fence of the tent settlement in front of the Parliament of Serbia and Pionirski Park. maypole young man Stefan, who died in canopy collapse Novi Sad railway station.
She was examined by doctors on Friday she is stable, which was confirmed by people near her, said the N1 reporter. However, after that she was again forced to go to the hospital, from where she later returned to her tent. She addressed the public in the evening.
"Not a single institution, as far as I'm concerned, has started doing its work. I can really die, and the institutions will not start doing their work," said Hrka, adding that she will remain in the same position until further notice.
The veterans who are always with Hrka, said earlier on Friday that her health condition is as stable as it can be, given that she has been on hunger strike in the cold for 12 days.
She has not taken food since November 2nd, her immunity has declined, and two days ago she was in the hospital where she received her first infusion.
She has not been able to move for several days, but is in a wheelchair.
It is quiet around her tent this morning, and traffic in the surrounding streets is moving without stopping, reports FoNet.
Behind the metal fence that separates the area where the tents of Diana Hrka and her supporters are located and the Ćaciland tent settlement, there is also the police this morning.
Conditions in Ćaciland are far more comfortable. The academic plenum announced that a 458 kW diesel unit with a consumption of 87 l/h, worth 30.000 euros, which consumes about 3.500 euros of fuel per day and can heat about 45 tents, was installed in front of the Serbian Parliament. That means 35.000 euros for 10 days - the cost of a new ultrasound - or 350.000 euros for 100 days, or one CT scanner.
"The fenced perimeter with tents, scenography of 'everyday life' and massive logistics is dangerously reminiscent of practices that the world has long condemned - from colonial exhibitions to exhibitions of 'living exhibits' like Expo 1958 in Brussels. We wonder if this is not the revival of the human zoo before Expo 2027 in Belgrade?", the statement reads.
The Academic Plenum tells the Students 2.0 who live in Ćaciland that if they are cold, they should go back to the faculties.
"You will save the money of all citizens of Serbia. Do not agree to be 'living exhibits' of this regime."
In the end, the academic plenum demands the removal of Ćaciland from the center of Belgrade and the calling of extraordinary parliamentary elections.
Çaciland obviously has an unlimited budget, now they have also received a Gen Power diesel generator, manufactured in Turkey, which cannot cost less than 20.000 euros, and at the same time consumes 30 liters of diesel per hour of operation.
If we assume that it works 12 hours a day and consumes 30 liters per hour, we arrive at 360 liters... pic.twitter.com/b7dybeKAEm— Bojan Jankulovic (@BJankulovic55883) November 12, 2025
Ćaciland, an improvised tent settlement, was first set up in Pioneer Park on March 11, a few days before the biggest protest ever held in Belgrade.
After a few weeks, the tents were set up outside the park - on the plateau in front of the National Assembly building.
Their number has been increasing ever since.
At first, so-called students who wanted to study stayed in the tents, and later it turned out that among them there were many older people, employees of institutions, city and state administrations, people with thick criminal records...
Within the so-called Access to Ćaciland, surrounded by a series of metal fences, is not possible for everyone, and music was blaring from the loudspeakers installed more than 10 days ago during the first few days of Diana Hrka's hunger strike.

After the protest and the indictment against Minister Selaković, Jared Kushner gave up building a hotel in Belgrade, the Wall Street Journal writes.

After the criminal charges and the claims he made about them in the tabloids, Branko Stamenković and Zagorka Dolovac announce lawsuits against Uglješa Mrdić

The progressive regime continues to put pressure on TOK. After the indictment, Minister of Culture Nikola Selaković announces the end of the "organized criminal group around the renegade Prosecutor's Office for Organized Crime."

Low productivity, dependence on coal, poorly sophisticated exports and mass outflow of labor force remain key obstacles to the economic development of the Western Balkans, according to a new publication by the German Aspen Institute.

An indictment was brought against the Minister of Culture Nikola Selaković, along with three other suspects, on suspicion of abuse of official position and falsification of an official document.
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