NewsOvernight briefing: Belgrade protest turns violent amid ongoing tragedy response

Overnight briefing: Belgrade protest turns violent amid ongoing tragedy response

It happened while you were sleeping. Here's what global agencies reported overnight from Wednesday to Thursday.

Drove into a crowd of protesters in Belgrade
Drove into a crowd of protesters in Belgrade
Images source: © X
  • A passenger car drove into a group of people gathered at a protest organised on Wednesday in downtown Belgrade. One person was injured and taken to hospital, local media reported on Wednesday. Several thousand people participated in the demonstration in the Serbian capital. The gathered participants observed 16 minutes of silence for the 16 victims of the partial roof collapse at the train station in Novi Sad at the beginning of November. The tragedy has led to a wave of mass protests that continue to this day.
  • The Estonian parliament amended on Wednesday the law on churches and assemblies aimed at separating the Orthodox Church operating in the country from Russian and Kremlin influences. The law passed by parliament is intended to ensure that religious organisations functioning in Estonia cannot be used to incite hatred or violence, as conveyed by the parliament's office.
  • The US Senate endorsed Pete Hoekstra for the position of US Ambassador to Canada on Wednesday, Reuters reported. Hoekstra was previously the ambassador to the Netherlands.
  • Donald Trump announced a 90-day halt on higher tariffs for most countries. "They were getting a little bit yippy, a little afraid," explained the US President, "You have to have flexibility." Trump stated that he was observing the financial markets, which had been "glum" in recent days, and people watching the rapidly rising yields on US bonds on Tuesday "were getting a little queasy."
  • Yemeni Houthis are infiltrating Africa, where they are supplying weapons to terrorists in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, who in exchange help them smuggle equipment necessary for the production of drones and missiles into Yemen, Israeli media warn. Yemeni rebels, like their main sponsor Iran, have established contacts with the terrorist organisation Al-Shabaab and the Islamic State in Somalia, which came relatively easily to them since all parties share hostility toward the United States and Israel.

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