Members of Djindjic's family, former government officials and a delegation of the Democratic Party, led by Djindjic's successor at the post of party president, Serbian President Boris Tadic, laid wreaths at Djindjic's grave in the Alley of the Great Men in Belgrade's New Cemetery.
Serbian Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica this morning laid a wreath in front of the government building, at the site where Djindjic was killed.
Serbia and Montenegro's President Svetozar Marovic today presented Djindjic's wife Ruzica with a high state decoration which was posthumously bestowed on the slain prime minister. Marovic said that Djindjic was honoured for his great contribution to the development of democracy and commitment to building civil society in Serbia.
Later in the day, the Democratic Party held an event commemorating Djindjic.
Thirteen people, former members of the Serbian Interior Ministry's Special Operations Unit and the "Zemun mobster clan", were indicted for Djindjic's murder. The trial, which started in December 2003 at Belgrade's Court for Organised Crime, is still ongoing.