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The Balkans - Europe Data Release

ACLED records political violence and protests in the Balkans, with widespread peaceful protests.

29 March 2019

Authors

ACLED has recorded over 2,000 political violence and protest events in the Balkans — defined as Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Kosovo, and Serbia — since January 2018. Across all five countries, the most common event type is protests, the majority of which have been peaceful with no intervention. Swells of anti-government protests — mostly expressing dissatisfaction with policies addressing poor socio-economic conditions — occurred across multiple countries in the Balkans throughout 2018 and early 2019. In Serbia, the country with the highest event count, anti-government protests have surged and spread, especially through February 2019. There have also been high levels of anti-police protests in Bosnia and Herzegovina, especially in late 2018, after the alleged cover-up of the government’s role in the death of a young man. As 2019 continues, there will likely continue to be a preponderance of protests in the Balkans, and threatened governments may turn towards intervention to quell discontent.

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