Bosnia's Serb Republic Challenges OHR


Date: Friday, October 2, 2009, 1:00 AM

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http://www.rferl.org/archive/Bosnia/latest/652/676.html

Bosnia's Serb Republic Challenges OHR
By Country / Bosnia
October 01, 2009

PRAGUE -- The parliament of Bosnia's Serb Republic has approved a plan to
pull all Serbian participation in all state institutions unless the
country's International Office of the High Representative (OHR) reverses a
decision concerning the state electricity company.

The October 1 vote sets the stage for a potentially ugly showdown between
the Serb Republic -- which has long wanted the international community to
withdraw its presence in the country -- and the OHR, which is currently held
by Austrian diplomat Valentin Inzko.

The OHR was established in 1995 after the war to oversee the peace agreement
that ended hostilities. Since the end of the war, Bosnia has been split in
two -- the Serb half (Republika Srpska) and the Muslim-Croat half
(Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina) -- and divided power between the two
rivals.

The High Representative presides over both entities and has the power to
impose and enforce laws and fire officials who obstruct the peace.

The trouble began last year, when Bosnian Serb minority shareholders of the
national electricity distributor, Elektropronos, began obstructing its
operations and boycotting board meetings in an attempt to show that a joint
Serbian-Muslim-Croat entity cannot succeed.

Inzko has just taken a series of decisions to keep the Serbs in line and the
power grid operational.

Thursday's vote in the Serb parliament was a direct repudiation of Inzko's
actions.

Threats From Banja Luka

Serb Republic President Rajko Kuzmanovic has called for Inzko to "withdraw
or freeze" his decisions and leave the solution to the electricity grid
problems in the hands of locally-run entities.

Before the vote in parliament, he said the Serb Republic would "not hesitate
to withdraw [its] representatives from Bosnia's joint institutions and to
call on the Serb Republic citizens to declare (their views) in a direct and
democratic way."

But a much wider call has already gone out.

Prime Minister Milorad Dodik wants to see the 14-year-old, EU-run OHR shut
down. He recently told parliament, "The times have changed. It is high time
that Bosnia gets out of the OHR protectorate."

Muslims and Croats, meanwhile, aspire to a more centralized state and are
generally welcoming of EU-style reforms. In the Elektropronos dispute, the
Muslim-Croat federation, which is a majority share-holder in the grid,
supports Inzko.

EU Response

Gordana Knezevic, Radio Free Europe's Balkan Service director, says the vote
shows that members of the Serb parliament share Dodik's contempt for the
international community. She doesn't think Dodik will back down now.

"He's kind of challenging the international community. He's become used to
the idea that, no matter what kind of disrespect he showed for the decisions
of the international community, he's never had to withdraw, or apologize, or
take a step back, because he's never faced a tough response. And the reason
why he didn't face any tough response was the fact that the countries which
are supposed to agree upon policy on Bosnia don't have the same opinions,"
Knezevic said.

"It's the problem of nonexistent European policy toward Bosnia. There's
always someone who disagrees with whatever tough measures should be taken."

Knezivic added that in Sarajevo, the capital of the Federation, there is
little expectation that the OHR or EU will have a decisive response to the
vote.

"Nobody expects that the international community will now react differently
compared to the last few months or last few years. [Dodik] has never
actually faced any efficient or clear or tough decision on the part of the
European Union," she said.

So far, Inzko's office has had no response to the vote.

A Breach Of Dayton?

Sulejman Tihic, a former member of Bosnia's tripartite presidency and the
current head of SDA, the Party of Democratic Action, told RFE/RL's Balkan
Service that the Serb parliament's decision to withdraw from governing
institutions represents a grave breach of the peace deal that ended the war.

"This decision is the most serious violation of Dayton peace agreement we've
seen. The creation of the Office of the High Representative is mandated by
both the constitution [of Bosnia-Herzegovina] and the Dayton agreement. And
Republika Srpska is also a product of Dayton, as is the [Muslim-Croat]
Federation," Tihic said.

"It's not possible to accept one aspect of Dayton and reject another. You
can't approve of Republika Srpska but reject Annex 10 [of Dayton], which
established the Office of the High  Representative. It's not possible to
approve of Republika Srpska but reject Annex 9, which guarantees the
function of public corporations [like the Elektropronos power grid
operator]," he added.

In April, former High Representative Paddy Ashdown told a U.S. Congressional
committee that he has seen a dramatic reversal of progress in Bosnia over
the last few years, largely because of the Serb Republic's scorn for the EU.

Ashdown told the U.S. Helsinki Commission that "the progress of forward
movement of Bosnia and Herzegovina towards a position not just of stability,
but also functionality, as a state has now moved substantially into reverse.
There are elements -- largely in the Republika Srpska -- who would wish to
even undo the reforms toward statehood that have already been established.
And indeed, [they] have been allowed to do so."

Belgrade In The Background

Just as it has never hidden its disdain for Brussels, Banja Luka has never
hidden its loyalty to Belgrade.

The question of whether Serbia is offering either implicit or overt support
in decisions made by Republika Srpska looms over the growing tensions.

On Wednesday, Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic traveled to Banja Luka
for talks with Dodik. In a breach of diplomatic ettiquette, he did not
inform Sarajevo of his visit.

Something similar occurred on September 8, when Serbian President Boris
Tadic showed up at the opening of a new school -- named "Serbia" -- in the
town of Pale without first notifying Sarajevo.

In his remarks at the ribbon cutting, Tadic said Serbia "has a
responsibility to Serbs wherever they are. Serbia is not responsible for the
citizens of Serbia alone; Serbia is responsible for all the people who
belong to our nation."

Milenko Dereta, an analyst based in the Serbian capital, said the episode
was part of an ongoing Serbian campaign to shatter Bosnian sovereignty and
build a unified Serbian nation.

She said it would be "an achievement [in tolerance]" if a school named
"Serbia" opened in Muslim-Croat half of Bosnia.

"But when it's in Republika Srpska," she said, "it's like a... flag being
raised to mark territorial gains." 

 

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