 At the end of February, Serbia still had no confirmed cases of COVID. And then Dr. Vandenberg Nestorović, together with the president of the country, Aleksandar Vucic, publicly in the media said that this virus only exists on Facebook and invited people to go shopping in Italy. Then at the beginning of March, meaning that some leak after this happened, we had the first confirmed case in Serbia. Nine days afterwards, the state of emergency was declared by President Aleksandar Vucic. Then by the end of March, we had cases in which from the national teleco, telecom operator, SMS messages were sent to the citizens by the crisis committee saying that we're looking at Italian or Spanish scenario that a huge number of people will be infected. And then plays along the line of somehow playing the discourse in this direction of panic, which definitely is not something that was favorable to the state in which most people were at the moment. By the beginning of May, we saw introduction of regular state. It was speculated that the biggest reason for that was to be able to proceed with the election campaign, which actually happened. And then soon afterwards, we saw a thousand screens around the president of Serbia holding the first virtual rally, where the faces of supporters of the Serbian Progressive Party were surrounding the president in an empty echoing chamber in which he gave his initial speech. He had a few of those. So we had, as North Macedonia did and as Montenegro had parliamentary elections during the basic period of COVID crisis. And bearing in mind the results, it shows how the political landscape in Serbia is shifting towards something that's quite close. But during the campaign, we basically saw no campaign at all. There was practically no political messages that were streamed strong, either from the side of the opposition who was in a way boycotting the election or from the side of the government with any program messages or something. We ended up with a parliament that's basically exclusively a government without opposition parties. So it's going to be interesting few years in Serbia when it comes to democracy in general and of course digital and all other rights.