Is Serbia sliding towards authoritarianism or closer to EU membership?

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Is Serbia sliding towards authoritarianism or closer to EU membership?

Serbia applied for European Union membership in 2009 and was accepted as an official candidate country in 2012 but since then little progress has been made towards joining the bloc with Aleksandar Vučić’s government accused of democratic backsliding.

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Serbia’s president Aleksandar Vučić has welcomed the EU’s Enlargement Commissioner to Belgrade for talks about the country’s future membership.

Oliver Varhelyi said he hoped the next European Commission mandate would see Serbia joining the bloc.

But he also pointed out that Serbia needs to continue with democratic reforms and align its foreign policy more closely with that of the EU.

“It is clear that we need the democratic reforms to go ahead,” said Varhelyi, “One cannot forget about the need to align further with the EU foreign policy, this is again something that we have discussed and where we need Serbia to move along and to adjust its foreign policy more and more to EU foreign policy.”

Vučić sounded optimistic that Serbia’s non-alignment with EU foreign policy would not hamper his country’s efforts to join the bloc without saying whether he intended to instigate any meaningful changes.

“I am not sure that it is possible to predict many years ahead but we will prepare to be closer (with negotiations) and I hope that if what Oliver Varhelyi rightly reproached us for, which is our non-compliance with their foreign policy, will not be a hindrance,” he said.

Serbia applied for European Union membership in 2009 and was accepted as an official candidate country in 2012 but since then little progress has been made towards joining the bloc with Vučić’s Serbia, a country he has led since 2017, often accused of sliding towards authoritarianism.

Democratic backsliding?

The country was rocked by weekly protests last year following two mass shootings in May which left 18 people, including nine schoolchildren, dead. Initially demanding tougher gun control laws, the rallies soon morphed into anti-government protests.

Protesters were angry about democratic backsliding under the Vučić government, accusing it of increasing authoritarianism, corruption and having links to organised crime.

The most recent Freedom House report ranks Serbia’s political rights score at 18 out of a possible 40, placing it among the partly free, hybrid regimes category, with a downward tendency towards authoritarianism.

Democracy activists in the country also said they felt betrayed by their government and the EU for failing to move the EU membership process forward and accused Vučić of fuelling hate, intolerance and violence in the country, claims he denied.

And some of Vučić’s political decisions have raised eyebrows in Brussels. Serbia refused to join in with EU sanctions on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.

Vučić has for years claimed to follow a ‘neutral’ policy, balancing ties with Moscow, Beijing, Brussels and Washington. But in an interview with the Russian news agency Tass, Vučić summed up relations between Belgrade and Moscow as “A true friend is recognized in moments of difficulty”, adding that he would continue to resist slapping sanctions on Russia for “as long as possible”.

Serbia has also purchased Russian gas on favourable terms and added Russian hardware to its military arsenal.

Earlier this year, the European Parliament passed a resolution calling for the suspension of EU funding to Serbia if national authorities fail to implement its electoral recommendations and if it’s revealed that Serbian authorities committed electoral fraud. That move came following accusations of serious irregularities in the Belgrade local elections.

Another issue is Kosovo. Serbia’s path to EU membership now depends on its silent consent for Kosovo’s assent to international organisations, such as the UN and Council of Europe.

EU foreign affairs ministers met in Luxemburg in April and agreed to amend a key part of the document concerning Serbia’s negotiations to join the EU. The change means Brussels will freeze Serbia’s accession process into the bloc if it doesn’t implement an agreement on normalising its relationship with Kosovo.

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The main condition for Serbia to comply with is that it must stop obstructing Kosovo’s efforts to join key international organisations, such as the UN, the Council of Europe and NATO.

But Serbia has rejected Kosovo’s independence since it declared independence in 2008. As a UN member, Serbia fears accepting Kosovo’s membership of these institutions will implicitly recognise its statehood.

But despite these issues, EU Enlargement Commissioner Oliver Varhelyi remained optimistic.

“It is clear for me that the next commission will have to be an enlargement commission. The next commission will have to put all of its work and effort to get the new members into the European Union,” he said.

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