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<https://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-10803491/Bosnias-political-crisis-called-worst-1992-1995-war.html>
  


Bosnia's political crisis called worst since 1992-1995 war


Associated

5-6 minutes

  _____  

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The top international official in Bosnia called the 
escalating political crisis in the country the most serious since the 1992-1995 
war that saw 100,000 people die and warned in a report circulated Tuesday that 
its potential "to become a security crisis is very real."

Christian Schmidt, the high representative overseeing implementation of the 
1995 peace agreement that ended the devastating war, said leaders of the 
country´s Bosnian Serb-dominated entity have systematically challenged its 
provisions and intensified their activities aimed at usurping powers granted to 
the federal government.

The U.S.-brokered Dayton peace agreement established two separate entities in 
Bosnia - one run by Bosnia´s Serbs and another dominated by the country´s 
Bosniaks, who are mostly Muslims, and Croats. The two entities are bound 
together by joint central institutions, and all important decisions must be 
backed by both.

Schmidt said in the report to the U.N. Security Council that the actions by the 
Bosnian Serb entity, known as Republika Srpska, "not only erode the 
fundamentals of the agreement, but directly threaten to undo more than 25 years 
of progress in building up Bosnia and Herzegovina as a state firmly on the path 
towards European Union integration."

The report was issued ahead of a council meeting on Bosnia on Wednesday at 
which Schmidt is expected to present the report. Last July, the council 
rejected a resolution put forward by Russia, which has close ties to the 
Bosnian Serbs, and Moscow´s ally China that would have stripped the powers of 
the international high representative immediately and eliminated the position 
entirely in one year.

The high representative´s powers have come under criticism from Bosnian Serbs 
for not offering the possibility of appealing his decisions, which have 
immediate effect. The Office of the High Representative has dismissed dozens of 
officials, including judges, civil servants and members of parliament, since 
its inception, and overturned other actions.

Schmidt said Republika Srpska´s government and National Assembly have sought to 
chip away at state institutions by creating parallel bodies in the Bosnian Serb 
entity. At the same time, he said, representatives from Republika Srpska 
elected or appointed to the National Assembly and state institutions either 
don´t participate in decision-making or block decisions not in the interests of 
Bosnian Serbs.

"This has the effect of impeding the state´s ability to function and exercise 
its constitutional responsibilities," Schmidt said.

He pointed to "non-existent" legislative output, stalled reforms required to 
advance toward EU membership, international agreements on hold, and the failure 
to adopt a state-level budget for the second year in a row.

On April 16, Schmidt suspended a law adopted by Republika Srpska that would 
have enabled the Bosnian Serbs to take over state-owned property on their 
territory, calling it unconstitutional. Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik said 
in an interview that action by Schmidt couldn´t stop the law from taking effect.

Another contentious issue has been the lack of agreement between Bosniaks and 
Croats in the federation on electoral reforms, which Schmidt said "has prompted 
Croat parties to cast doubt on the holding of the 2022 general elections, 
including by withholding financing for the elections."

Bosnian Croats have claimed discrimination and demanded that the voting system 
be changed to make sure that Bosnian Croats alone choose Croat representatives. 
Bosniak officials have denied the claims, and talks on the election reform have 
been stuck.

Schmidt said the absence of an agreement "does not call into question in any 
way the 2022 general elections which will be held in the first week of October 
under the same rules as in 2018."

On May 4, after the report was drafted, state election authorities scheduled 
the vote for Oct. 2.

Some 3.3 million voters will choose the three members of Bosnia´s multi-ethnic 
presidency, the central Bosnian parliament, the parliaments of the two 
entities, and the president and vice president of Republika Srpska.

"The continuously escalating political crisis, the most serious in the post-war 
period, has undoubtedly raised tensions in the country and poisoned the 
atmosphere, as evidenced by the multitude of interethnic incidents that 
occurred around the Orthodox holidays celebrated in January," Schmidt said.

The high representative said he talked to protesters in January who were 
calling for the international community to react "to the continued destructive 
behavior of the authorities of the Republika Srpska."

"They know from history that in the current dynamic the potential for a 
political crisis to become a security crisis is very real and the international 
community must respond appropriately," Schmidt said.

 

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