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‘Wait for results’ of investigation into sonic weapon claims, Serbian ambassador says

He told The World With Yalda Hakim that no illegal weapon was used at the anti-government protest in Belgrade and that “independent experts” had been invited to investigate.

“According to statements of our government officials… nothing [illegal] was used that day,” Goran Aleksic said.

“Independent experts were invited to come to Serbia to do a thorough analysis of this. And I think the best thing is to wait for the results of that and then to draw conclusions.”

More than half a million people have signed a petition calling for an independent investigation.

Recent footage has added to mounting speculation surrounding dispersal tactics used at the 15 March demonstration attended by tens of thousands of people in Serbia’s capital.

The incident took place during a 15-minute period of silence to honour victims of the Novi Sad disaster in 2024 – when a concrete canopy at a rail station collapsed, killing 16 people.

Footage shows protesters holding up their lit mobile phones when suddenly there was a swooshing sound, and the crowds started running away.

Sonic weapons, which are illegal in Serbia, emit sound waves that can trigger physical and psychological effects, including dizziness, severe headaches, sharp ear pain, disorientation, eardrum ruptures, or even irreversible hearing damage.

Serbia’s populist president, Aleksandar Vucic, has dismissed the claims as “lies and fabrications”.

Ilic Sunderic, who was at the rally, said it was “quiet and peaceful and then we heard something we could not see… like a sound rolling toward us”.

It was, she said, “a subdued sound lasting only two to three seconds but very unusual and very frightening, like a sound from hell”.

“I have been going to protests for 30 years, but I’ve never heard anything like this,” she added.

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Hundreds of others have offered similar accounts, and officials have issued often contradictory denials, prompting calls for answers.

Several Serbian rights groups said on Tuesday they had taken the issue to the European Court of Human Rights after collating more than 4,000 statements from people who complained of various physical and psychological problems after the incident.

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