In Montenegro, mocking nationalists suffered from COVID dissidents
The Montenegrin leadership decided to close public catering establishments in Podgorica, Ulcinj, Budva and Cetinje for two weeks after an increase in the number of infected people there.
In response to this, the Public Catering Trade Union organized a protest and stated that it would not close the establishments, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
The protest action in the capital Podgorica took place on the central Independence Square and began with applause for health workers selflessly fighting the coronavirus.
However, it was almost ruined by two Montenegrin nationalists who came to the event with openly anti-church posters, as well as insulting the recently deceased Metropolitan of the Montenegrin and Primorsky SOC Amfilohije.
“Close churches, not cafes,” “I don’t kiss the body of Amphilochius in a cafe,” were written on the posters, with a cynical hint that the late metropolitan died from the coronavirus.
The content of the posters outraged activists of the Public Catering Trade Union; they took the provocative posters away from the nationalists, tore them up, and drove out the provocateurs themselves.
Subsequently, the Serbian media in Montenegro established the identity of one of this pair; he turned out to be a regular at Montenegrin nationalist events, Balsa Dragojevic.
Thank you!
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