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Thursday, September 7, 2000

Economy Fuels Unrest in Bosnia

Rampant unemployment, corruption and the worst drought in 50 years 
are fueling social unrest in Bosnia

By Nermina Durmic-Kahrovic in Tuzla (BCR No. 168, 1-Sep-00)

Bosnia-Herzegovina faces an autumn of unrest as trade union leaders 
threaten strikes and warn of social discontent in the face of a 
mounting economic crisis.

"The social and economic state of the majority of the workers in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina is extremely critical, because the economy is on 
the verge of collapse," says union leader Sulejman Hrle.

Unrest is expected to focus on the Tuzla canton in northern 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, the biggest and the most populated canton where 
most of the industry and mines are concentrated. Only about 30 per 
cent of its economically active population is working, and salaries 
can be up to 40 months late.

"How can you expect a worker to support a family on one and a half 
German marks (about 30 pence) a day?" metal workers official Muhamed 
Hadzic recently demanded of the premier of the Tuzla canton. He 
warned that his members were planning to camp out in front of the 
government offices in the city.

James Lyon, manager of the International Crisis Group, ICG, in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina agrees the crisis is growing.

"The biggest problem we have to face is the economy," he said. 
"Things are moving far too slowly. Because Bosnia-Herzegovina is 
dependant on foreign aid, its economical structure is not changing 
and foreign aid may soon be halved."

Industrial production is a little over one third of its 1991 level, 
while national per capita income is below half of what it was in the 
same year. Up to half the economically active population is 
unemployed, the value of imports outstrips exports by four to one, 
foreign debts remain high and bankruptcy is rampant.

"This country does not have an economic policy," says Dr. Kasim 
Begic, professor of economic policy in the Faculty of Law in Sarajevo.

The situation is critical across the whole of Bosnia-Herzegovina, 
which was split into two political and economic entities after the 
1992-1995 war and where about 2.5 million people now live.

The worst drought in almost 50 years is adding to the economic woes, 
with agricultural output down 70 per cent this year in Republika 
Srpska. The situation is no better in Muslim-Croat Federation, where 
officials are calling for the government to declare a natural 
disaster.

In Republika Srpska, the elderly recently took to the streets 
demanding payment of their pensions, which are now often a couple of 
months late. Pensioners in the Muslim-Croat entity have threatened 
similar action.

The average monthly pension in Bosnia-Herzegovina is between 50 and 
150 German marks (16 and 48 pounds). There are also social security 
payments for the poorest, averaging from 40 to 100 German marks (12 
to 32 pounds).

According to the latest data, the basic monthly food bill for a 
family of four in Bosnia-Herzegovina is 468 German marks (146.5 
pounds).

The slow pace of repatriation of refugees forced to leave their homes 
during the war and the gradual curtailment of the humanitarian aid 
they receive is adding to the general dissatisfaction.

"If we could return home, we could plant something, some of which we 
could eat and some we could sell. We could perhaps get a cow, it 
would be easier," says Ramiza Hodzic, who was expelled from Zvornik, 
an eastern city under Serbian control.

Trade Union leaders complain that the process of privatisation, key 
to the regeneration of the country, is also being severely hampered 
by corrupt managers who devalue the assets of state companies in 
order to reduce their market price and buy them off themselves.

Sulejman Hrle says the practice has sparked a wave of strikes in 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, "The workers are indicating that some managers in 
conjunction with local officials are deliberately bankrupting firms 
in order to buy them off as cheaply as possible when they are 
privatised."

Allegations of corruption and links between organised crime and the 
government rock the country almost daily.

"Wars, the breaking of structures of the ex-Yugoslav Federation, 
disorder, absence of authority and lack of democracy have turned the 
region of the west Balkans into one of the major havens for organised 
crime in Europe," says a report from the EU sponsored body, the 
Secretariat For the Fight Against Corruption.

The people of Bosnia-Herzegovina hope for a change after general 
elections, announced for November.

But in the meantime, their suffering continues. A viewer begged 
opposition Social Democrat leader Zlatko Lagumdzija on a recent 
television programme: "Please help, I am hungry, my husband has 
pneumonia and we can not afford the medicine."

Nermina Durmic-Kahrovic is a regular IWPR contributor

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