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Serbian mother wants to survive and join protests after ending her hunger strike

A Serbian woman ended her hunger strike on Monday over the death her son, who was killed in a roof collapse. She said she wanted to remain alive so that she could join the other anti-government demonstrators who were outraged by this disaster.

Dijana Hrka’s son Stefan, 27, was one of 16 people who died last year in Novi Sad when the roof of a renovated train station collapsed.

A youth-led movement of protest sparked by anger over the alleged mismanagement, and the failure to prosecute any one person has led to mass rallies that have called for the resignation and early elections of President Aleksandar Vucic.

Hrka, 48 told journalists in the tent she uses to protest outside Parliament since November 2, "I'm ending my hunger-strike." "I can do a lot more alive."

She told reporters that she had met with students who were involved in protests and discussed how they could work together in future.

The protests that have raged for months have shaken Vucic’s grip on power.

Students, academics, and opposition leaders are leading the protest movement that accuses Vucic, and his populist, nationalist party, of corruption, poor public services, nepotism, and restrictions on media freedom.

They denied the allegations. Some people have claimed that the collapse was an act of terror, while others have accused protesters of exploiting the tragedy for political purposes.

In the capital Belgrade, more than 10,000 Vucic supporters rallied earlier this month. Ivana Sekularac, reporting; Andrew Heavens, editing

(source: Reuters)