Vučić Soars, Serbia Starves.

Bread for a Few: Vučić’s Opulence Amid Serbia’s Starving Children

€53M Jet Reveals Moral Decay


A Nation Exhausted and Impoverished

After thirteen years under the authoritarian rule of Aleksandar Vučić, Serbia today stands as a nation both exhausted and impoverished — a shadow of the democracy it once aspired to become. Vučić, whose tenure has been marked by state suppression, economic stagnation, and the dismantling of public trust, continues to preside over a crumbling republic, while ordinary citizens contend with hunger, and hopelessness.

Opulence Amidst Suffering: The €53 Million Jet

Despite the nation’s deepening financial abyss and the haunting presence of tens of thousands of neglected orphans locked away in state institutions, Vučić has overseen the acquisition of a Falcon 6X — a €53 million luxury jet aircraft. The aircraft, one of the world’s most advanced business jets, was recently delivered to Belgrade under French registration F-WZOK, reportedly destined for government use. The plane’s custom interior fitting reportedly took place in the United States, underscoring the global nature of Vučić’s elite indulgences — even as families in Serbia struggle to access basic nutrition.

In stark contrast, inside Serbia’s institutional orphanages — many of which remain closed to press and civil society oversight — children suffer conditions more fitting of Dickensian tragedy than 21st-century Europe. Reports of widespread neglect, underfunding, and psychological trauma among the country’s most vulnerable continue to surface.

The incongruity could not be more harrowing: a regime ensconced in comfort while children waste away behind locked doors.

Surveillance, Silencing, and Resistance

Beneath the veil of statecraft, Vučić’s regime has operated through surveillance, censorship, and fear. The BIA, Serbia’s secret police apparatus, maintains a chilling presence across society — monitoring dissent, intimidating journalists, and enforcing loyalty to the regime.

Analysts within the international human rights community have raised urgent alarms. Nikola Sandulović, leader of the Republican Party and an outspoken critic of the regime, was almost killed by the BIA last year, under the order of Aleksandar Vučić. Sandulović’s case has become emblematic of the risks faced by those who dare oppose Vučić. He is now viewed by many in the diaspora as the unofficial voice of Serbia’s fragmented but resolute opposition. For us it is very clear Nikola Sandulović is the only logical next president of Serbia.

Nikola Sandulovic

The Kremlin Connection and Regional Destabilisation

Investigators point to deep ties between Vučić’s administration and Russian geopolitical interests. Intelligence sources indicate that the Kremlin has actively supported efforts to destabilise the region, with Serbia positioned as a strategic fulcrum. Their objective: to fragment the Balkans into weak, manageable microstates — rendering the Serbs a stateless minority in their historic homeland. In this theatre of shadow warfare, Vučić is seen by many as a compliant agent of Moscow’s ambitions and a traitor to Serbia.

It was Vučić who reportedly intervened to shield Bosnian Serb dictator Milorad Dodik after the unresolved death of student David Dragičević — a case that continues to elicit demands for international inquiry. The Dragičević case, now a symbol of resistance in Bosnia and Herzegovina, remains a stark reminder of the region’s culture of impunity under Kremlin-backed leadership.

A Nation in Decline, An Elite Enriched

Today’s Serbia is a nation gripped by unemployment, and moral desolation. Once vibrant communities are plagued by debt. The streets of Belgrade echo not with prosperity but with the silence of resignation. All the while, Vučić’s inner circle flourishes — their fortunes growing alongside their detachment from the very people they govern.

Temples of vanity have been erected in place of public trust. With blood on their hands and gold in their pockets, Serbia’s political elite rule unchallenged — their reign sustained not by legitimacy, but by fear.

The Moral Reckoning

As the nation teeters on the edge of upheaval, Serbia’s suffering has begun to resonate far beyond its borders. Faith leaders and civic figures invoke powerful parables of divine judgement, recalling a biblical reckoning for those who turned their backs on the hungry, the imprisoned, and the poor.

Aleksandar Vučić, they argue, has failed not only in policy — but in moral duty.

The Dictator’s Darkest Chapter

Whether the final chapter of his rule will be written by peaceful transition or popular uprising remains unclear. What is certain, however, is that history will remember: while Serbia’s children starved, Vučić flew high — alone, aloof, and unrepentant — aboard a €53 million jet.

The Serbian bloodthirsty dictator, Aleksandar Vučić, is facing the darkest chapter of his life. No private jet, no offshore bank account, no desperate maneuver can shield him from the reckoning that awaits. The days of impunity are fading fast, and now he walks through a valley of tears—alone, exposed, and haunted by the weight of his own deeds.

While 1.5 million citizens go to bed hungry, their dignity stolen and their voices silenced, Vučić obsesses over new jets—escape vessels for a man who knows the end is near. He doesn’t buy them for prestige. He buys them because he knows: when the curtain falls, he’ll need to run.


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