Milanovic: Dodik is our partner, we can’t solve problems without Bosnian Serbs

NEWS 17.01.202219:54 0 komentara
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Croatian President Zoran Milanovic called on Monday the Serb member of the Bosnia and Herzegovina Presidency, Milorad Dodik, "Croatia's partner in BiH" and that the problem of the ethnic Bosniaks "outvoting" ethnic Croats "could not be solved without the Serbs."

“Republika Srpska, i.e. Dodik, is our partner in this turmoil. Who doesn’t understand that either doesn’t understand or is rotten,” Milanovic told the press about the fact that Milorad Pupovac, a member of the parliamentary majority in Croatia and president of the Serb National Council, attended a ceremony marking Republika Srpska Day, which the BiH Constitutional Court ruled is an unconstitutional holiday.

Milanovic said that was “irrelevant” because Pupovac “doesn’t represent anyone (but) a handful of his pals.”

Dodik “didn’t get his hands bloody in the war” and is “a legitimate representative of the Serb People and Republika Srpska in the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which we respect and will always respect,” he added.

“We don’t see that the Serb policy is causing problems for the Croats. Without the Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina, we won’t solve this problem if we care about solving it, and I do care. Some evidently don’t care enough,” Milanovic said, alluding to the demand of BiH Croats and Croatia that the BiH electoral law be changed to prevent the more numerous Bosniaks from outvoting the Croats in elections for the Croat member of the BiH Presidency and House of Peoples’ members.

Milanovic said BiH Serbs “could not have chosen a worse” day to celebrate the day of their entity, adding that it was “chosen wrongly and insults some people.”

“The problem is that thousands of Croats and many more Muslims were killed in Republika Srpska. One simply has to reconcile with that.”

However, he added, the Bosnian Serb entity is “a fact” which was “in some way verified in Dayton.” He said former Croatian president Franjo Tuđman was one of the signatories of the peace agreement signed there in 1995. “There is no going back, unless another war breaks out.”

Milanovic said that although “wrong, bad and silly songs” were sung during the Republika Srpska Day ceremony in Banja Luka on 9 January, he was more interested in the status of BiH Croats. “While we are talking about which songs were sung in Banja Luka, Croats are being deprived of two things, the House of Peoples and the Presidency.”

The issue of the House of Peoples, which might make it possible to form a government without Croat representatives, is more important than the Presidency, he said. That is an attempt to “completely disenfranchise” the Croats because they need control over the House of Peoples “to protect fundamental national interests.”

Commenting on a recent meeting between Bakir Izetbegović, president of the biggest Bosniak party in BiH, and Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković in Dubrovnik, Milanović said Izetbegovic’s policy was dishonest and that he did the same thing when he was received by Milanović in September. “The same story as before. We and the Croats. The Serbs are a foreign factor.”

He reiterated that Croatia’s diplomacy should have stopped the adoption of Council of the EU conclusions on BiH which make no explicit mention of the constituent peoples’ rights. “The Croatian government must be categorical. They should have stopped it, drawn attention, not a scandal.”

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