Critics decry lack of political will in Serbian capital to clean polluted air that residents say they can ‘feel and taste’

When the Yugoslav prime minister Džemal Bijedić promised to clean the country’s air at a conference in Belgrade in 1974, a reporter from the New York Times wrote that there was little hope of early relief for the city’s residents, who felt the pollution was getting worse. “The choking, sulphurous atmosphere of Belgrade and several other major Yugoslav cities reddens eyes, shreds nylon stockings and ruins pianissimo passages in the concert hall because of the nearly continuous coughing it causes in audiences,” the writer said.

Half a century later, residents of Belgrade are still holding their breath. “I have asthma and it’s killing me,” says Dejan, 40, a graffiti artist and MC who runs a paint shop in the industrial Palilula district. “It’s not smog, man, it’s a black fog. You cannot see.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Morocco v Croatia: World Cup 2022 – live

World Cup updates from the 10am GMT kick-off And you can email…

Why being rude to the waiter (or other staff) is the worst strategy

After James Corden was accused of being ‘nasty’, psychologists explain why rudeness…

Wunmi Mosaku: ‘I’m Black in America. My feeling about the police is … I’m scared’

The actor has gone from Manchester charity shop rifler to Hollywood’s most…

Digested week: my nerves can’t take the US election, so I’m watching the Discovery channel | John Crace

I also find myself this week mourning the loss of the England…