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Vucic, 'my party Sns at 46.7 percent, student list at 5.9%'

(ANSA) - BELGRADE, 21 GIU - For Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, his Party of Progress (Sns, conservative) currently has an electoral consensus of 46.7 percent, while a possible list from the Student Movement in Unrest, which could count on 5.9 percent of the vote, according to his data, is in second place. Third force would be for Vucic the Serbian Socialist Party (Sps) of Interior Minister Ivica Dacic, attested at 5.7 percent, followed by a movement led by Savo Manojlovic with 5.2 percent and a party headed by Dragan Djilas, one of the opposition leaders, which would have only 3.7 percent of the vote. All other parties would range between 1 percent and 2 percent. The threshold for entry into the Serbian parliament is 3 percent. In statements made last night on private Prva TV, Vucic returned to condemn the protest actions of students and opposition forces, which he said have been "terrorizing" the population for seven months with illegal initiatives, improvised and unannounced roadblocks, and illegitimate occupations of university faculties. And he referred, among other things, to the recent protest staged by a group of professors and university staff in front of the government headquarters in downtown Belgrade, with tents and gazebos that have been blocking one of the Serbian capital's key road intersections for more than a week. "Today there were only 16 of them blocking the intersection of Kneza Milosa and Nemanjina. The intervention of just one policeman would have been enough to send them away and remove the blockade. But we didn't do that to show people what this is actually about. We want to show the people that there are people without shame and at such a level of shamelessness. We want to show that this is a destructive policy, and that we do not intend to resort to force, until the last moment." He warned of attempts at violence and unrest that he said were being prepared for the new large student demonstration announced for June 28 in Belgrade (on Vidovdan Day, a historic date for Serbia that commemorates the epic battle against the Turks on June 28, 1389, at Kosovo Polje). Vucic went on to say that as a result of the prolonged occupations and disruptions in teaching activities, thousands of students are leaving Belgrade University, led in his view by an "irresponsible rector who supports the protest by causing enormous damage to the entire education system." Many are moving to other universities in neighboring countries-Slovenia, Austria, Croatia, Hungary. (ANSA).