The Centre for Free Elections and Democracy (CeSID) in Belgrade, a nongovernmental organisation which monitors elections, said on Sunday evening after the polling stations were closed that the turnout of 35 percent was the lowest since the introduction of the multiparty political system in Serbia in 1990.
According to the first results, the candidates of Tadic's DS, Nenad Bogdanovic, who won 34 percent of votes of citizens in Belgrade, and Radical Aleksanadar Vucic with 28 percent of votes, will run in the second round of the election for the mayor of the Serbian capital in two weeks.
It is likely that the Democratic Party will have 30 seats in Belgrade's 90-seat city assembly, Radicals will probably have between 25 and 27 seats, the Socialist Party of Serbia of the tribunal's indictee Slobodan Milosevic six, and the G17 of Miroljub Labus and businessman Bogoljub Karic's Power of Serbia Movement five seats each.