Ambasador Murphy: Mladić and Karadžić are not war heroes, they are war criminals
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PRESIDENT OF SDA
Izetbegović says that he will stand in front of the people against those who commited genocide, SDA entered into a coalition with them wherever they could
Those who commited the genocide are probably the ones who, in addition to denying the genocide in Srebrenica, rule in RS and advocate peaceful separation on the basis of the so-called non paper Raport
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PRESIDENT OF SDA
Izetbegović says that he will stand in front of the people against those who commited genocide, SDA entered into a coalition with them wherever they could
Bakir Izetbegović
Foto: Raport
SDA President Bakir Izetbegović did not want to say today that there will be no war. He said that he could not say that because his previous experiences tell him otherwise, Raport writes.
“Even if
Quo Vadis, Aida? is a film about the past, I think it tells us a lot about our present, especially for my region,” Žbanić informs me, in early April, over Zoom from her home in Sarajevo. “So many things here are denied. Many people say this genocide never happened. But also, in the world, so many things are putting democracy in danger. I watched the riots in Congress in the US, and thought: this is how war in Bosnia started. There were people who didn’t agree with democratic decisions, and then, with violence, they took over certain institutions and made war.”
The Bosnian town of Srebrenica held a re-run of local elections on February 21, 2021 [File: Reuters/Dado Ruvic]
Quotas are an imperfect yet often necessary means for societies to rectify the deficiencies of democratic processes, especially in ethnically or culturally pluralist countries.
In Kosovo and Bosnia and Herzegovina, quotas and other protections have been implemented to ensure that certain communities that may face discrimination in a post-conflict environment are guaranteed political representation in legislative and executive bodies.
In Kosovo, 20 out of the parliament’s 120 seats are allocated to minorities, including 10 for the Serbs and the rest for the Bosniaks, Egyptians, Roma, Ashkali, Turks and Gorani. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, where all political activity has an ethnic character, there are rigid quotas that ensure its three main ethnic groups – the Bosniaks, the Croats and the Serbs – are equally represented at every level.
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