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Thursday, 18 May, 2000, 07:30 GMT 08:30 UK
Serb protests to continue
![]() Police and protesters clashed on Wednesday
One of the leaders of the Serbian opposition alliance, Zoran Djindjic, has said resistance to the government's takeover of opposition television and radio stations will be stepped up.
He said the Alliance for Change would call daily protests from Thursday in the capital, Belgrade, and other major towns as part of a wave of civil disobedience against President Slobodan Milosevic.
Six people are reported to have been injured when clashes broke out between riot and stone-throwing protesters. An opposition radio station, Radio Pancevo, had one of its transmitters cut while broadcasting the rally. The call to protest came within hours of Wednesday's dawn raid on Studio B in Belgrade. Police also seized control of three other independent media outlets housed in the same building - radio broadcaster B2-92, Index Radio and the privately-owned daily paper, Blic. Red Star support Crowds gathered in the capital's main Republic Square to listen to a live open-air news broadcast prepared by the journalists of the closed TV station.
Riot police using batons, tear gas and stun grenades tried to prevent the two groups from meeting up, causing a stand-off that erupted into violence. Demonstrators shouted: "Save Serbia!" and "Kill yourself, Slobodan!" By Wednesday night, Belgrade's main shopping area was littered with debris, broken glass and upturned, smouldering rubbish bins. Harassment Opposition protests were also reported in three other Serbian cities.
Studio B began broadcasting government-controlled news later on Wednesday. The associated independent radio channel, B2-92, said it was now concentrating on its internet service. The crackdown on the independent media has sparked international condemnation. Wednesday's raid followed increasing harassment of opposition activists. Members of the radical student movement Otpor were detained by police in several towns after the authorities denounced the group as a "terrorist" organisation. A top government official had called for a crackdown against the opposition after the killing on Saturday of a senior official in Novi Sad that the authorities blamed on the opposition.
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