Cape Argus

BOSNIANS LIVE IN FEAR AS CONFLICT LOOMS

‘For the past 15 years, there has been no vision, no enthusiasm and little hope for a better future’

- This article was first published on theconvers­ation.com

A QUARTER of a century since the end of the Bosnian war, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a is in a perilous position. People who live there are worried. After all, in the conflict that engulfed the country between 1992 and 1995, more than 100 000 people were killed or went missing. Among them were around 8000 men and boys murdered in the genocide after the fall of Srebrenica in July 1995.

Since the signing of the Dayton Peace Agreement and the end of the war, much has been done to resolve the legacy of widespread violence. Many of the missing have been found. Some of those responsibl­e for killing, raping and beating thousands of people have been prosecuted and jailed.

It seems, however, that what has been achieved is not enough. Fears are now mounting that violence could break out again.

Since the end of 1995, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a has been stuck in a dysfunctio­nal constituti­onal set-up. The peace agreement created two entities: Republika Srpska and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovin­a. Together with the small but strategica­lly located BrŇko district, these constitute the nation state.

The Federation is run jointly by representa­tives of the Bosniaks (formerly referred to as Bosnian Muslims) and the Bosnian Croats. Establishi­ng an independen­t Republika Srpska, meanwhile, was the political project envisioned and championed by former leaders Radovan Karadži and General Ratko Mladi along with their sponsors in Serbia. The latter include Slobodan Miloševi, who provided the funding and arms necessary to wage war.

Karadži and Mladi were convicted in The Hague to lifelong prison sentences for crimes committed in the pursuit of their territoria­l and demographi­c ambitions.

It was during the armed campaign to create this independen­t Republika Srpska, which would be free of non-Serbs, that many of the horrific crimes were perpetrate­d.

The system establishe­d under the Dayton Agreement brought the war to an end but divided the country. It created incentives for politician­s to stoke the flames of ethnic tensions and made it possible for them to indulge in widespread corruption without losing office.

Meanwhile, the internatio­nal community – mainly the US and the EU – has gradually lost interest in funding state-building efforts in the region. Many commitment­s were made in the immediate aftermath of the conflict but since that time, crises in Syria, Ukraine and, most recently, Afghanista­n have required responsive­ness and resources.

This has seen promises to integrate Bosnia and Herzegovin­a into the EU lose momentum. For the past 15 years, there has been no vision, no enthusiasm and little hope for a better future. Most recently, the country’s Covid-19 response made painfully apparent that the state has become dysfunctio­nal, with deadly consequenc­es.

In this complicate­d context, Bosnian Serb leaders, primarily the longdomina­nt politician Milorad Dodik, have raised tensions by threatenin­g to establish a Bosnian Serb Army, pull out of joint state institutio­ns – effectivel­y dismantlin­g the state – and declare independen­ce.

Dodik’s plans threaten to destroy the very system that keeps Bosnia together and at peace.

The last time nationalis­ts tried to have an independen­t Republika Srpska, there was bloodshed and the widespread, systematic persecutio­n of non-Serb communitie­s. The Bosnian Serb Army was the force that shelled and sniped the civilians of Sarajevo for four years. Its security and intelligen­ce officers were largely behind the Srebrenica genocide.

Criminal accountabi­lity at the Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, in the Hague, as well as in the courtrooms around the country, was supposed to provide justice and deterrence.

Bosnians facing this current crisis are not feeling confident.

The pace of trials to convict war criminals has slowed in recent years, leaving killers and rapists at large.

Next year, it will have been 30 years since the original version of the Republika Srpska emerged as a consequenc­e of a brutal campaign of ethnic cleansing and genocide.

The approach of that anniversar­y, alongside the wider geopolitic­al context – with the US, the UK and the EU distracted and an emboldened Russia – makes for an anxious winter.

Russia comes encouraged with experience­s from eastern Ukraine and Crimea, where it has expanded influence and control through co-operation with local actors. It could, analysts agree, do the same by supporting Bosnian Serb plans.

This context is compounded by recent tensions in the region in the border areas with Kosovo. And in Montenegro, there are concerns about a radicalise­d community wishing closer ties with Serbia.

People in Bosnia and Herzegovin­a remember the early 1990s. Many of them felt abandoned, not without reason, by the internatio­nal community, who watched on the evening news as Bosnians were rounded up, put in camps with their property looted or burned, and shot at by snipers from the hills around Sarajevo.

This crisis, as a culminatio­n of years of decay, is a call to action to ensure a reasonable way forward, without violence and with safety and prosperity for all citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, regardless of background. For that, local political will and commitment are crucial. But even before that, what Bosnia and Herzegovin­a desperatel­y needs is attention from politician­s abroad and a sense that someone – anyone – in a position to help cares.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A WOMAN prays at the Srebrenica–Potočari Memorial Cemetery for the Victims of the 1995 Genocide in Srebrenica in the Republika Srpska. |
REUTERS A WOMAN prays at the Srebrenica–Potočari Memorial Cemetery for the Victims of the 1995 Genocide in Srebrenica in the Republika Srpska. |
 ?? REUTERS ?? BOSNIAN Serb leader Milorad Dodik has caused concern by threatenin­g to secede from Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, says the writer. |
REUTERS BOSNIAN Serb leader Milorad Dodik has caused concern by threatenin­g to secede from Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, says the writer. |
 ?? IVA VUKUŠIĆ ?? A lecturer, in the Department of History and Art History, Utrecht University.
IVA VUKUŠIĆ A lecturer, in the Department of History and Art History, Utrecht University.

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