The parliament adopted a conclusion stating the incident was an act of violence which insulted human dignity and fomented hatred.
According to Novi Sad-based Radio 021, the Vojvodina parliament also condemned all similar events and other extremist organisations active in Vojvodina and Serbia.
Deputies asked the Vojvodina Security Committee to urgently draw up a report on the activities of all organisations which endanger inter-ethnic relations in the province.
Last week members of the National Front crashed a panel discussion on anti-fascism at the Novi Sad Faculty of Philosophy, calling those attending "communist retards", threatening them by shouting "Serbia to the Serbs" and giving the Nazi salute.
After the incident was condemned by the Serbian authorities and the public, the police arrested about 15 neo-Nazis believed to be also behind numerous chauvinist, racist and anti-Semitic graffiti in Novi Sad and Belgrade.
Shortly after the incident, veteran Hungarian fascists met in Subotica, which Vojvodina Parliament Speaker Bojan Kostres described as an attempt "to proclaim the regime from the Second World War non-fascist," which he added would be to "falsify history".