The Borneo Post

Bosnia Serbs mark national day amid fears of secession

- By Rusmir Smajilhodz­ic

SARAJEVO: On the eve of the Serbs' national day in Bosnia, Mira Vuletic is not in a festive mood as talk of secession lingers again, stirring fears the country is set to return to the dark years of intercommu­nal conflict.

The holiday, which falls on Sunday, marks the creation of the Republika Sprska (RS), Bosnia's Serb entity that was declared three decades ago – one of the events seen as putting the country on the path to a war in the 1990s that killed over 100,000 people.

“They're stirring up panic and that scares me,” says Vuletic, a 70-year-old pensioner, one of the few willing to give her name in eastern Sarajevo, an area that falls under RS jurisdicti­on.

“But I think they do this to hide their schemes and theft,” Vuletic added, pointing the blame at leaders from all of Bosnia's ethnic groups for endemic corruption.

Tensions have been rising for months in Bosnia with the Serb's political leader Milorad Dodik setting in motion plans last month to withdraw from the country's central institutio­ns including the army, the judiciary and the tax system.

The move earned fresh sanctions from the US on Wednesday, with Washington chiding him for attempting to undermine the landmark Dayton Peace Accords that brought an end to fighting in Bosnia in 1995.

Bosnia was effectivel­y split in two as a result, giving one half to the country's ethnic Bosnian Serbs while the other was to be ruled by a Muslim-Croat federation.

Despite the sanctions, celebratio­ns for the national day moved forward this week as municipal employees hung red, white and blue RS flags across eastern Sarajevo.

The holiday has long been considered a “provocatio­n” by the country's Muslim community who were targeted by Bosnian

Serb paramilita­ry groups just three months after RS was unilateral­ly created in 1992.

For the 30th anniversar­y, RS authoritie­s are planning three days of celebratio­ns, which will include a parade of their police forces in the Serbs' capital Banja Luka.

‘Further conflict’

Dodik's increasing­ly aggressive rhetoric along with his plans to start withdrawin­g from the Bosnian government has cast a large shadow over this year's holiday.

“One should never rule out the possibilit­y of conflict in Bosnia,” warns Srecko Latal, the editor of Balkan Insight, a regional investigat­ive journalism network.

“Dodik is going further and further into a story that may end in an attempt at secession that could not pass without further conflict,” Latal added.

The European Union has remained relatively quiet about the crisis, even as Washington has taken a tougher stance with the new round of sanctions. But Dodik has refused to budge.

“I have no assets in the United States. It is a pure farce to forbid me to manage assets that I do not have,” Dodik said this week, as he accused Washington of scheming to “create a state for Muslims” in Bosnia.

The appetite for a new conflict does not appear to be shared by many in East Sarajevo.

An unemployed man in his thirties said life remains mired in hardship in the impoverish­ed country.

“My father fought for the

Republika Srpska and was even decorated for helping to create it.

“He survives by working hard on constructi­on sites,” says the man who asked to remain anonymous “for fear of not finding work”.

The political crisis has added to the already myriad difficulti­es in Bosnia where low salaries, perennial corruption and dysfunctio­nal government beset by a dizzying bureaucrac­y has taken a toll on the most basic living standards.

“Today I received my monthly pension, which will allow me to live for barely ten days,” said Vuletic. “We continue to live like animals.”

With few options available, Bosnians have been moving abroad en masse, with roughly half a million people leaving in

the past decade alone, according to the non-profit Union for a Sustainabl­e Return.

“If I see that a new conflict is

inevitable, I will immediatel­y flee with my wife,” said the man in east Sarajevo. “I will not fight like my father.”

 ?? — AFP file photos ?? Bosnian Serb police officers take part in a parade marking the ‘Day of Republic Srpska’ parade, in Banja Luka on Jan 9, 2019, defying a 2016 legal ban and angering Bosnian Muslims who view it as a provocatio­n.
MILORAD DODIK
— AFP file photos Bosnian Serb police officers take part in a parade marking the ‘Day of Republic Srpska’ parade, in Banja Luka on Jan 9, 2019, defying a 2016 legal ban and angering Bosnian Muslims who view it as a provocatio­n. MILORAD DODIK
 ?? ?? Republika Srpska flags are flown in front of government buildings in the western Bosnian town of Banja Luka.
Republika Srpska flags are flown in front of government buildings in the western Bosnian town of Banja Luka.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia