4. November 2025.

Attorneys Vladimir Beljanski and Srđan Hromiš, from Novi Sad, together with the Belgrade Centre for Human Rights, hereby inform the public that on 3 November 2025, they submitted an application to the European Court of Human Rights against the Republic of Serbia, on behalf of two university students who, in the early morning hours of 28 January 2025, were victims of severe physical violence perpetrated by four activists of the Serbian Progressive Party in Novi Sad, alleging a violation of Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment).
It should be recalled that criminal proceedings had been initiated against the four activists of the Serbian Progressive Party on suspicion of having committed offences involving violence — violent behaviour and serious bodily injury — on the aforementioned date. Although the incident caused considerable public outrage across Serbia and led to the resignations of the then Prime Minister and Mayor of Novi Sad, the criminal liability of the four accused was never established, as they were pardoned by decision of the President of the Republic, upon the proposal of the Minister of Justice, thereby being released from criminal responsibility.
According to the longstanding and well-established case-law of the European Court of Human Rights, granting amnesties or pardons to individuals accused or convicted of serious human rights violations or violent crimes is incompatible with the obligations arising under the European Convention on Human Rights.
Although the legal representatives of the injured students submitted constitutional complaints to the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Serbia three months ago, challenging the pardons granted to the four accused, the application submitted yesterday to the European Court of Human Rights sets out numerous reasons and arguments — grounded in the jurisprudence and the established practice of the Constitutional Court — demonstrating that, in cases of this nature, a constitutional complaint cannot be considered an effective domestic remedy that must be exhausted prior to seising the Strasbourg Court.
Sonja Tošković Katarina Golubović Kosana Beker Dušan Pokuševski
Sonja Tošković Katarina Golubović Kosana Beker Dušan Pokuševski
Autori: Jelena Ilić, Andrijana Miljković, Petar Vidosavljević
Author Mario Reljanović
Autor: Mario Reljanović
Autori: Sarita Bradaš i Goran Sandić
Autori: Sarita Bradaš i Goran Sandić
Urednici: Goran Sandić, Nevena Trofymenko
Autorka: Nevena Dičić Kostić
Autor: Goran Sandić Stručna recezentkinja: Radmila Dragičević Dičić
n Dimitrijević, Dragoljub Popović, Tatjana Papić, Vesna Petrović, Prvo izdanje 2006. Drugo izdanje 2007. Treće izdanje 2024.
Urednica Nevena Trofymenko
Editors: Dusan Pokuševski, Vesna Petrović
Urednici: Dušan Pokuševski, Vesna Petrović
Editor: Ana Trifunovic
Author: PhD Jelena Simić, Faculty of Law, Union University in Belgrade
autorka: prof. dr Jelena Simić
Editor Ana Trifunović
Urednica: Ana Trifunović
Urednica: Nevena Trofymenko
Editor: Jelena Ilić
Urednica: Jelena Ilić
Authors: Vladica Ilic, Sanja Radivojevic, Petar Vidosavljevic
Autori: Vladica Ilić, Sanja Radivojević, Petar Vidosavljević
Urednik: Demir Mekić
Autor: Lena Petrović
Autori: Branka Bajić Jovanov, Demir Mekić, Dušan Blagojević, Jelena Vuksanović
Urednici: Goran Sandić, Nevena Trofymenko
Autorke: Marina Mijatović, Gorica Đokić, Milja Dimitrijević
Autori: Dušan Pokuševski, Goran Sandić, Sara Dereta
Demir Mekić, autor
Zbornik radova povodom 70 godina od usvajanja Konvencije o zaštiti izbeglica
Vladica Ilić, Luka Mihajlović, Sanja Radivojević
Vladica Ilić, Aleksandar Trešnjev, Tea Gorjanc Prelević
Nevena Nikolić, urednica Goran Sandić, urednik
Urednici: Dušan Pokuševski, dr Vesna Petrović
Urednici: dr Vesna Petrović, Dušan Pokuševski
Nikola Kovačević, Radmila Dragičević Dičić, Marija Vuković Stanković, Lena Petrović, 2016.
Nevena Nikolić, urednica
Bogdan Krasić urednik
Goran Sandić, autor
Miloš Stojković, Dušan Pokuševski