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Sarajevo is not your city, Mr Karadzic, but mine

02 March 2010 | By Nidzara Ahmetasevic

Radovan Karadzic Radovan Karadzic, Sarajevo is not your city, and you have no right to say that it is, just as you do not have the right to say in public, even if it’s in court, that someone has dug up bones around Bosnia and brought them to Srebrenica to make a fake graveyard. This is insulting.


Feith: ICJ Opinion May Ease Tensions
09 March 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

Pieter Feith, the head of the International Civilian Office in Kosovo, said that the opinion of the International Court of Justice on the legality of Kosovo's declaration of independence could help alleviate tense relations between Belgrade and Pristina.

Athens-Skopje Talks “Focus on Name Alone”
15 March 2010 | Sinisa-Jakov Marusic

The Athens-Skopje name talks are focused only on finding a mutually acceptable name, Greek Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas told Macedonian media on Sunday.

Hodzic et al: Custody Debate
12 March 2010 |

The State Prosecution asks the Court to extend custody of three former members of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina, who are charged with crimes committed in Trusina village, Konjic municipality, in April 1993.



Bosnia, IMF Agree €1.2 Bln Stand-by Deal

Sarajevo | 06 May 2009 | By Srecko Latal
 
Bosnian and IMF officials during their May negotiations
Bosnian and IMF officials during their May negotiations
The International Monetary Fund, IMF, has agreed to support Bosnia’s struggling budgets with €1.2 ($1.61) over the next three years, as long as the country reins in its public spending.

“Consideration by the (IMF’s Executive) Board will follow the implementation of a number of measures mainly on the fiscal front over the next several weeks,” media on Wednesday quoted a statement from IMF’s Deputy Managing Director Murilo Portugal.

The deal was finalised on Tuesday afternoon, after lengthy tough negotiations. But experts and analysts expressed concerns over the capacity of local leaders – especially in the troubled Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim)-Croat Federation – to implement the required reforms and to the survive social unrest such reforms would certainly trigger.

“The federal government does not have the capacity and integrity to implement this,” a leading Bosnian economists, Fikret Causevic, told the Balkan Insight.

Pending successful implementation of agreed fiscal reforms, the IMF’s funds will be disbursed in three tranches over the next three years. This could happen as early as August, officials said.

Two-thirds of the agreed resources will go to Bosnia’s Bosniak -Croat Federation, while the remaining third will go to the other Bosnian entity of Republika Srpska.

In order to get these funds, the Bosniak-Croat federation will have to make the biggest reduction and curb its budget by €207 million, Republika Srpska will have to reduce its spending by  €73 million, while budgets of the state and Brcko district will have be shaved by €20 and €5 million respectively.

The agreed reforms should not be problematic for all but the Federation, which has been facing growing social unrest over the perceived ineffectiveness of its government and parliament in mitigating the negative effects of the current economic crisis.


 
 



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Belgrade Alternative Guide is a project set up by 10 young Serbians who see it as their responsibility to show visitors the true Belgrade.


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