Serbian PM to visit Putin ahead of April 2 presidential vote

AP  |  Belgrade 

Serbia's populist prime minister says he will pay an official visit to Russian President Vladimir Putin, a trip apparently designed to boost his bid for the Serbian presidency.

The former ultranationalist now self-declared pro-reformer, Aleksandar Vucic, has been playing a balancing act between the West and over the future of Serbia.



Serbian media said today that Vucic hopes his visit to Moscow on Monday will finalize a deal with Putin over a delivery of six MiG-29 fighter jets ahead of the April 2 presidential vote in Serbia.

Vucic hopes to win enough votes to avoid a runoff two weeks later.

Serbia has turned mostly anti-Western and pro-Russian after a military intervention 18 years ago that ended with its former ethnic-Albanian province of Kosovo declaring independence in 2008.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Serbian PM to visit Putin ahead of April 2 presidential vote

Serbia's populist prime minister says he will pay an official visit to Russian President Vladimir Putin, a trip apparently designed to boost his bid for the Serbian presidency. The former ultranationalist now self-declared pro-EU reformer, Aleksandar Vucic, has been playing a balancing act between the West and Russia over the future of Serbia. Serbian media said today that Vucic hopes his visit to Moscow on Monday will finalize a deal with Putin over a delivery of six MiG-29 fighter jets ahead of the April 2 presidential vote in Serbia. Vucic hopes to win enough votes to avoid a runoff two weeks later. Serbia has turned mostly anti-Western and pro-Russian after a NATO military intervention 18 years ago that ended with its former ethnic-Albanian province of Kosovo declaring independence in 2008. Serbia's populist prime minister says he will pay an official visit to Russian President Vladimir Putin, a trip apparently designed to boost his bid for the Serbian presidency.

The former ultranationalist now self-declared pro-reformer, Aleksandar Vucic, has been playing a balancing act between the West and over the future of Serbia.

Serbian media said today that Vucic hopes his visit to Moscow on Monday will finalize a deal with Putin over a delivery of six MiG-29 fighter jets ahead of the April 2 presidential vote in Serbia.

Vucic hopes to win enough votes to avoid a runoff two weeks later.

Serbia has turned mostly anti-Western and pro-Russian after a military intervention 18 years ago that ended with its former ethnic-Albanian province of Kosovo declaring independence in 2008.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

image
Business Standard
177 22