Bosnia's Serb Republic President criticises last report of Valentin Inzko.

By bne IntelliNews November 8, 2011
Serb Republic President Milorad Dodik criticised the sixth report of High Representative to Bosnia Valentin Inzko to the Secretary General of UN, accusing Inzko of making false statements in the report, federal news agency FENA reported. The political situation in Bosnia is unstable mainly due to the failure of the six major political parties to form a state-level government, the report states. Inzko criticised the political leaders from the Serb Republic, claiming they are obstructing the adoption of a state budget by insisting on its reduction. Inzko commented that the result has been state authorities operating under a limited financial structure since Jan 1, which has reduced their powers and effectiveness. The report claims that the Bosnian Serb authorities have not given up threats to carry out a referendum on the Serb Republic's secession from Bosnia. The two leading Bosnian Croat parties HDZ BiH and HDZ 1990 also criticised Inzko's report, denying the High Representative's claim that HDZ BiH and HDZ 1990 exerted pressure for establishing a third entity in the country.

Related Articles

EUs Sannino invites Bosnian leaders for conciliatory talks on March 22.

The European Commissions director general for enlargement Stefano Sannino has invited the leaders of Bosnias seven main political parties for consultations in Brussels on March 22 in an attempt ... more

Bosnias Serb Republic PPI, CPI inflation eases in Feb 2013.

Growth of consumer prices in Bosnias Serb Republic eased to 0.9% y/y in February from 1.5% y/y in January, as the annual decline of clothing and footwear prices widened, the entitys statistics ... more

Bosnias Federation fails to sell 67% of engineering company Hidrogradnja.

Bosnias Federation has failed to sell its 67% stake in engineering company Hidrogradnja due to lack of investor interest, the entitys privatisation agency said in a statement. The remaining 33% ... more

Dismiss