PACE issues resolution on Bosnia and Herzegovina, angering RS leaders

07/10/2008

On September 30th, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe passed a resolution on Bosnia and Herzegovina aimed at smoothing its future path towards EU membership.

By Jusuf Ramadanovic for Southeast European Times in Sarajevo – 07/10/08

photo

RS Prime Minister Milorad Dodik said RS representatives would never accept the end to entity-based voting in the state parliament. [Getty Images]

At its session in late September, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) passed a resolution urging BiH institutions to move forward with constitutional changes, revoke entity-level voting in the state parliament and strengthen state institutions so BiH could make full progress on its EU bid. It also called for deletion of all discriminatory provisions from the country's constitution.

Entity-based voting, requiring approval by the two separate administrative entities in BiH -- Federation of BiH and Republika Srpska (RS) -- of any parliamentary decision, became law in BiH with the Dayton Peace Accord, which ended the 1992-1995 conflict in the country. Some observers say this voting method is vulnerable to misuse by either entity for blocking parliamentary decisions it dislikes. The Dayton Accord remains the country's constitution.

The resolution stemmed from a report by the PACE co-rapporteurs for BiH, Kimmo Sassi of Finland and Mevlut Cavusoglu of Turkey. Sassi and Cavusoglu attributed an ongoing impasse on BiH reform to the RS, alleging it has been impeding reforms and undermining state institutions.

This report and the resolution met fierce objections from the Bosnian Serb parliamentarians at the session -- Milica Markovic and Mladen Ivanic. They demanded deletion of three parts of the resolution: the ones appealing for revocation of entity-based voting; condemning the RS National Assembly resolution calling for self-determination; and blaming the RS for undermining BiH state-level institutions. However, the PACE deputies rejected their demands.

Related Articles

Loading

Just days before adoption of the CoE resolution, Bosnian Muslim BiH presidency member Haris Silajdzic spoke at the PACE in Strasbourg, France, on this topic. He criticised entity-based voting, saying it constitutes a major obstruction to parliamentary decision-making and thus hinders the progress of BiH on its path to Europe.

Silajdzic also called for "large-scale reform of the Dayton constitution, the lack of which may endanger peace and stability in BiH and the region".

RS Prime Minister Milorad Dodik said RS representatives would never accept elimination of entity-based voting, because "this would mean giving up on the institutional mechanisms underlying the Dayton Peace Accord and maintaining balance in BiH".

Even if the CoE resolution is theoretically nonbinding, BiH must comply with its provisions in order for the CoE to suspend monitoring of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The country became a CoE member in 2002 but still has not met all of the membership conditions imposed on it at the time.

This content was commissioned for SETimes.com.
Loading

Vote

Loading
  • Email to a friend
  • icon Print Version
  • Share/Save/Bookmark.

We welcome your comments on SETimes's articles.

It is our hope that you will use this forum to interact with other readers across Southeast Europe. In order to keep this experience interesting, we ask you to follow the rules outlined in the comments policy. By submitting comments, you are consenting to these rules. While SETimes.com encourages discussion on all subjects, including sensitive ones, the comments posted are solely the views of those submitting them. SETimes.com does not necessarily endorse or agree with the ideas, views, or opinions voiced in these comments. SETimes.com welcomes constructive discussion but discourages the use of copy-pasted materials, unaccompanied links and one-line slogans. This is a moderated forum. Comments deemed abusive, offensive, or those containing profanity may not be published.

SETimes's Comments Policy

SETimes logo

Kosovo: Impasse at the Border

Kosovo: Impasse at the Border

Energy: Issues and Trends

Energy: Issues and Trends

Changing Perceptions: Women in the Balkans

Changing Perceptions: Women in the Balkans

The Balkans: Going green

The Balkans: Going green
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading

Poll

The EU recently chose to delay granting candidate status to Serbia, dashing expectations that the milestone would be achieved this year. How serious is the political damage to President Boris Tadic and the ruling coalition?

Very serious
Serious
Moderate
Insignificant
No damage



View results Add comments