“The students’ antigovernmental protests in Serbia, that have shown no signs of relenting in the last four and a half months, are a test for the EU, which should pay more attention to the situation in Belgrade”. This was said to SIR by Balkan analyst Nikolay Krastev. A teenager who had been injured when a canopy of Novi railway station fell off on November 1st, an event that killed 15 people, died last week. With the boy’s death, the victims have risen to 16. “The sieging of 60 faculties all over the Balkan country is going on as well”, tells Krastev, who believes that young people’s support for the protest is going to grow even more. “Serbia is no longer what it used to be, the country is changing and support for President Alexander Vucic, Belgrade’s strongman, is decreasing”. A survey by “New Serbian Political Thought” found that 60% of the population supports the protests”. For the first time since Vucic’s Serbian Progressive Party rise to power in 2012, support for the Party is just at 36%, while the opposition is rated at 41%. At the same time, 44.7% of Serbians would like students to be politically involved in any forthcoming election.