First published: July 12, 2026 at 11:05 AM
Last update: July 12, 2026 at 09:08 PM
Issue
Issue for July 12, 2026
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Last update: July 12, 2026 at 09:08 PMCards: 4Stories: 1
Fresh issue
July 12, 2026
The July 12 edition combines a thunderstorm warning and a street closure in Sremska Kamenica with updates on the REM Council and the European Parliament's position on Serbia's EU path.
- 11:05 AM
The July 12 FULL pass added three cards: on showers, thunderstorms, and weather warnings across most of Serbia, four independent members' decision to take up work in the REM Council, and the closure of Livade Street in Sremska Kamenica through July 14. It checked N1, Danas, Kurir, Novosti, Google Trends Serbia, Belgrade city and service sources, 021, and the City of Novi Sad website.
- 12:04 PM
The editorial review added Danas's morning report and clarified the REM item's procedural status: four independent members confirmed that they will enter the Council and take up work, while the ninth seat remains unresolved. The Livade card no longer claims a signed detour: the city notice requires another route and attention to work-zone signage but publishes no detour map.
- 07:05 PM
The DELTA pass added a card on the European Parliament's message: it linked Serbia's progress toward EU membership to rule-of-law reforms and democratic standards, and called free and fair elections necessary to resolve the political crisis. Sources for the three previously published cards were rechecked; their facts and deadlines did not change.
- 09:08 PM
The editorial review clarified the status of two institutional items: the European Parliament's position was posted by its official X account on July 12 and was not a new negotiating decision; under parliament's interpretation of the REM law, a resignation statement made before taking office does not end the mandate.
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Issue cards

On July 12, most of Serbia remains under variable cloud with rain, showers, and thunderstorms; N1 expects the heaviest rain, strong wind, and hail risk in Srem, Belgrade, central Serbia, and southern Serbia. The weather service will issue urgent local warnings one to two hours ahead; precipitation should ease in the evening, with highs of 27-31 C.
N1
N1: showers and thunderstorms across most of the country, sunnier in the north
(Pljuskovi i grmljavina u većem delu zemlje, na severu sunčanije)
N1 writes that intense showers with strong wind and hail are possible in Srem, Belgrade, central Serbia, and southern Serbia. It cites orange and yellow weather alarms, RHMZ urgent notices one to two hours ahead, and highs of 27-31 C; precipitation should ease in the evening and overnight.
Read sourceKurir
Kurir: heavy rain flooded Belgrade streets
(SASTAVILO NEBO I ZEMLJU U BEOGRADU: Obilna kiša poplavila ulice širom prestonice, grmljavina ne prestaje, upozorenje RHMZ i dalje na snazi)
Kurir reports heavy rain, thunder, and flooded streets in Belgrade, adding that the RHMZ warning remains in force.
Read sourceNovosti
Novosti: streets under water and thunder over the capital
(ULICE POD VODOM, TUKU GROMOVI NAD PRESTONICOM: RHMZ niže upozorenja, Srbija na udaru jakog nevremena)
Novosti writes that rain in Belgrade has not stopped, strong thunder is audible, and readers are sending footage of water-filled streets. It links the situation to a series of RHMZ severe-weather warnings.
Read source
Dubravka Valić Nedeljković, Ira Prodanov Krajišnik, Mileva Malešić, and Rodoljub Šabić confirmed that they will enter the REM Council and take up work after parliament adopted an authentic interpretation of the Electronic Media Law on July 10. Under that interpretation, a resignation statement submitted before taking office is not a resignation under Article 18(4) and does not end the mandate.
Context: Serbia and EU accession
N1
N1: independent candidates decide to take up REM Council work
(Četvoro nezavisnih kandidata odlučilo da preuzme učešće u radu Saveta REM-a)
N1 carried a letter from Dubravka Valić Nedeljković, Ira Prodanov Krajišnik, Mileva Malešić, and Rodoljub Šabić: after the authentic interpretation of the law adopted on July 10, they decided to take up work in the REM Council. They say their December resignations could not end their mandates because they had not taken office; the letter's authors assign responsibility for the long absence of a functioning Council to the authorities.
Read sourceDanas
Danas: independent members will enter the REM Council and try to make it work
(Nezavisni članovi REM-a ušli u Savet i odlučili da se bore: „Očekujemo minimum konstruktivnosti sa druge strane, ostavku uvek možemo dati“)
Danas quoted Rodoljub Šabić as saying that the four independent members will enter the Council and try to do the work for which they were elected, while expecting at least minimal cooperation from the other side. Šabić said the ninth seat remains unresolved and depends on the promised procedure after national-minority council elections.
Read sourceLivade Street in Sremska Kamenica is closed to traffic from July 9 through July 14 because of carriageway repairs. The City of Novi Sad asks drivers to follow temporary signage.
City of Novi Sad
Coverage: Novi Sad / City services, Urbanism, Environment, Schools and health, Civic initiatives
City of Novi Sad: traffic regime change for repairs in Sremska Kamenica
(Измена режима саобраћаја због поправке коловоза на територији Месне заједнице „Сремска Каменица“)
The City of Novi Sad said that a temporary traffic ban is in force on Livade Street in Sremska Kamenica from July 9 through July 14 for carriageway repairs. Drivers are asked to follow temporary signage.
Read source
In a July 12 post, the European Parliament linked Serbia's progress toward EU membership to rule-of-law reforms and stronger democratic standards. The same message described free and fair elections as necessary to resolve the political crisis and normalization of relations with Kosovo as a necessary step.
Context: Serbia and EU accession
N1
N1: European Parliament names fair elections as necessary to resolve the political crisis
(Evropski parlament: Srbija treba da pokaže istinsku posvećenost vrednostima EU, pošteni izbori rešenje za političku krizu)
N1 carried a July 12 post from the European Parliament's official X account: Serbia's progress toward EU membership was linked to rule-of-law reforms and democratic standards. The post also cited free and fair elections and normalized relations with Kosovo.
Read sourceContext
Long-running stories with updates
Stories
Serbia and EU accession
This story tracks Serbia's EU talks, rule-of-law requirements, judicial reforms, media issues, and foreign-policy conditions. In July, at least five EU states do not support opening Cluster 3, four independent members decided to take up work in the REM Council, and the European Parliament again stressed the rule of law, fair elections, and normalization of relations with Kosovo.
- Serbia has not opened new EU accession negotiation chapters since December 2021.
- In January 2026, parliament adopted amendments to five judicial laws on MP Ugljesa Mrdic's proposal, drawing criticism from parts of the professional community and the EU over prosecutorial autonomy and judicial independence.
- On April 24, the Venice Commission published an urgent opinion identifying shortcomings and seven key recommendations for removing them.
- On May 18, the Justice Ministry sent improved working drafts of the amendments to parliament for transmission to Venice Commission rapporteurs.
- On June 12, Ana Brnabic said the Venice Commission had given a positive opinion, that the package would go to parliament next week, and that the government expects Cluster 3 to open soon.
- The follow-up opinion published on June 16 clarified the status: seven of nine recommendations were implemented, but the return of two of 11 organized-crime prosecutors and the autonomy of the cybercrime unit remain unresolved.
- On June 17, Serbia's parliament opened an extraordinary session with amendments to five judicial laws on the agenda, moving the Venice Commission recommendations dispute from expert review into parliamentary procedure.
- On the evening of June 17, N1 and Danas reported that the High Prosecutorial Council scheduled a June 18 extraordinary session with temporary assignment of public prosecutors to TOK among the proposed agenda items; this addresses one unresolved Venice Commission remark.
- On June 18, VST decided to assign Irena Bjelos, Aleksandar Barac, and Boris Majlat to TOK for three years; Bjelos and Barac return from June 19, while Danas separately carried the Judicial Authority Union's criticism that temporary assignment of prosecutors as a mechanism is not in line with European standards.
- On June 21, SSP, SRCE, PSG, and Solidarnost told EU institutions that, according to them, the Venice Commission and parliament received different texts of the judicial-law amendments; the Justice Ministry denies this and says the parliamentary version differs only because it is in Serbian.
- On June 23, parliament continued its extraordinary session on 32 agenda items and debated 37 amendments to the key judicial laws in the Mrdic package; N1 reports that opposition amendments were rejected. The sitting ended at about 18:00 and is scheduled to continue on June 24 at 10:00. Justice Minister Nenad Vujic again says the proposals are aligned with the Venice Commission and the EU, while opposition MPs also tie the session to questions about EXPO and the 'sound cannon' case.
- On June 24, parliament finished detailed debate on all 32 items of the extraordinary session; Ana Brnabic scheduled voting for June 25 at 10:00. The judicial-law package remains among the items, while the final debate block concerned state guarantees for Srbijagas and Srbijavoz loans.
- On June 25, parliament adopted a package of five judicial laws: amendments to laws on public prosecution, judges, the High Prosecutorial Council, court and prosecutor territories, and bodies for fighting high-tech crime.
- The same day, the government formed a negotiating team for talks with the European Commission on including Serbia in the EU's 'Roam Like at Home' regime, which relates to integration into the EU single digital market.
- On June 26, N1 and Danas carried Dubravka Valić Nedeljković's statement: four elected REM Council members who had resigned are ready to return only with guarantees over the ninth member and the candidate list; the parliamentary committee concluded there are no legal obstacles to their return because parliament did not verify the resignations.
- On July 3, N1 and Danas, citing RFE/RL, reported that the Netherlands officially does not support opening Cluster 3 and that at least five EU states oppose it in total; reasons include rule of law and Serbia's refusal to join sanctions against Russia.
- On July 11, four independent REM Council members — Dubravka Valić Nedeljković, Ira Prodanov Krajišnik, Mileva Malešić, and Rodoljub Šabić — said they would take up work after parliament adopted an authentic interpretation of the Electronic Media Law. The ninth member from the national-minority category remains unresolved.
- On July 12, the European Parliament's official X account posted a position linking Serbia's progress toward EU membership to rule-of-law reforms and stronger democratic standards; it also cited free and fair elections and normalization of relations with Kosovo. No new decision on negotiations or opening a cluster was made.
Timeline
How the story developed
Serbia last opened new EU negotiation chapters in December 2021; that fact again became part of the dispute around Cluster 3.
Parliament adopted amendments to five judicial laws on MP Ugljesa Mrdic's proposal; professional groups and the EU later criticized them as a risk to prosecutorial autonomy and judicial independence.
The Venice Commission published an urgent opinion on the January amendments and issued seven key recommendations to address the shortcomings.
The Justice Ministry sent improved working drafts of the judicial-law amendments to parliament for transmission to Venice Commission rapporteurs.
Ana Brnabic said the Venice Commission gave a positive opinion on the package, that the amendments would go to parliament next week, and that she expects Cluster 3 to open soon.
The Venice Commission published its follow-up opinion: Serbia implemented seven of nine recommendations, but two key areas - the return of two organized-crime prosecutors and autonomy for the cybercrime unit - are not fully implemented.
Parliament put amendments to five judicial laws on an extraordinary session agenda, including laws on public prosecution, judges, the High Prosecutorial Council, court and prosecutor territories, and bodies for fighting high-tech crime.
VST decided to assign Irena Bjelos, Aleksandar Barac, and Boris Majlat to TOK for three years; the decision for Bjelos and Barac passed with nine votes in favor and one abstention, while Majlat's passed with eight in favor, one against, and one abstention.
Platforma za evropsku Srbiju informed EU institutions of allegedly different judicial-law texts for the Venice Commission and parliament; the Justice Ministry rejected the claims of differences.
At the extraordinary session on 32 agenda items, parliament debated 37 amendments to the key judicial laws in the Mrdic package. N1 reports that opposition amendments were rejected; the sitting ended at about 18:00 and is scheduled to continue on June 24 at 10:00.
Parliament finished detailed debate on all 32 items of the extraordinary session; voting, including on the judicial-law package, is scheduled for June 25 at 10:00.
Parliament adopted a package of five judicial laws, and the government formed a negotiating team for Serbia's inclusion in the EU 'Roam Like at Home' regime.
Dubravka Valić Nedeljković said four elected REM Council members whose resignations were not verified by parliament are ready to return only with guarantees: the ninth member should be chosen after national-council elections, and Ištvan Bodžoni should not be on the candidate harmonization list.
RFE/RL/N1/Danas reported that the Netherlands officially opposes opening Cluster 3 with Serbia, while diplomatic sources say at least five EU states oppose it, including three Baltic states and Sweden.
Four independent REM Council members said they decided to take up work after parliament adopted an authentic interpretation of the Electronic Media Law; their earlier resignation statements were interpreted as having no independent legal effect because they had not taken office.
The European Parliament's official X account posted its position on the rule of law, democratic standards, free and fair elections, and normalization of relations with Kosovo. The post was not a new negotiating decision.
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