Pravda (Serbian Cyrillic: Правда, which means "Justice") was a daily tabloid newspaper published in Belgrade, Serbia.
Still, despite yet another impressive electoral showing, SRS had trouble forming a government due to facing a situation where no other party wanted to enter into a coalition with them.
[1] Pravda adopted an anti-establishment editorial policy within the Serbian context and was critical of the Serbian ruling coalition formed around the policy of cohabitation between prime minister Vojislav Koštunica of the Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) and the president of the republic Boris Tadić of the Democratic Party (DS).
[2] Pravda is frequently cited, including by Predrag Popovic, its onetime editor-in-chief,[3] as having been a publication controlled by Aleksandar Vučić and tailored for his personal day-to-day political needs,[2] When the daily got launched in March 2007, Vučić was a high-ranking member of the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), an opposition party whose leader Vojislav Šešelj had been detained in the Hague, awaiting trial, since February 2003.
In a November 2014 interview, upon being temporarily released from detention, Vojislav Šešelj mentioned that the roots of Vučić's row with Serb businessman Miroslav Mišković and the tycoon's subsequent persecution and incarceration[4] were in their past dealings over Pravda: "According to my information, Vučić asked Mišković for money for Pravda on several occasions, but got rejected each time.