Reference

The Ko si bre ti portal: submitting anonymous reports in Serbia

Ko si bre ti is a portal launched on July 10, 2026 for anonymous reports of corruption, abuse of authority, public-official conduct, and other irregularities. The site says a tracking code is issued after submission; publicly available information does not yet identify the receiving body, a response deadline, or a data-protection contact.

Updated: July 12, 2026 at 01:02 PMReviewed: July 12, 2026 at 01:02 PMPolitics

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Ko si bre ti portalKo si, bre, ti reportanonymous corruption report Serbiareport public official Serbia

What it is

Ko si bre ti is, by its own description, an official website for reports of public-official misconduct, corruption, abuse of authority, and other unlawful acts or irregularities. It began operating on July 10, 2026, after President Aleksandar Vučić had announced its launch. The site footer names the Cabinet of the President of the Republic of Serbia.

What can be submitted

The site has three sections: public-official misconduct, corruption, and “other.” In the first two it gives examples: using an office for personal, political, or financial gain; bribery, influence peddling, unlawful mediation, and abuse of public authority. The form asks what happened, when, and where; the site also allows attachments, including documents, photographs, audio, video, and other materials.

How anonymity is presented

The portal promises submission without a name, telephone number, or email address, and says the system is technically and legally secured. It also warns that anyone seeking full anonymity should not include identifying details in the description or supporting material. This is the portal's own claim, not an independent assessment of its safeguards.

Current status

The home page says a unique access code is issued after submission to track status and that a received report is already being processed. N1 reported Vučić's statement that his team would open all reports and that he would look at each one. The site does not yet say which body reviews each category, where reports may be forwarded, what response deadline applies, or what outcome a reporter can receive.

Why it matters

The portal creates a separate no-registration channel, but an access code makes it possible to follow a status; it does not itself confirm that police, a prosecutor, the Anti-Corruption Agency, or an inspectorate has opened a case. Where a formal procedural status is needed, the rules of the competent body also matter. The Ko si bre ti site does not yet set out those rules.

What is still unknown

It is still unclear whether the organisers will publish rules explaining how reports are handled: who controls the data, who receives each category, the time limits and possible outcomes, and how a status can be checked with the code. Until those rules appear, the claim of “complete anonymity” and the promise of processing should be read as the portal's position.

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