Username: Password: Remember:


Latest Blog

Love Hurts

05 February 2010 |

Simon Cottrell It's a shame that the internet is a virtual medium, because there are a lot of people out there that I'd like to express my deep feelings of friendship to, and having spent the last two years here in Serbia, I'd like to do it in a truly Serbian way.


Feith: 'New Beginning' for Mitrovica
05 February 2010 | Lawrence Marzouk

The International Civilian Representative in Kosovo, Pieter Feith, has said the appointment of a team to create a new Serb-majority municipality in the divided city of Mitrovica could herald a 'new beginning'.

Georgieva, Ciolos Approved with New Commission
09 February 2010 |

The European Parliament has approved the new European Commission at its session in Strasbourg. Kristalina Georgieva and Dacian Ciolos are the new commissioners from Bulgaria and Romania, respectively.

Koricanske stijene: Awareness of Security
09 February 2010 |

A member of the Intelligence-Security Agency of Bosnia and Herzegovina says he spoke to Milorad Skrbic while investigating the murder at Koricanske stijene and "determined that he did not have any operational data about this event".



Bosnian Serbs Called Off from NATO Drill

Banja Luka | 08 May 2009 | Srecko Latal
 
Milorad Dodik
Milorad Dodik
Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik caused a new diplomatic and political scandal, by calling off ethnic Serb soldiers from NATO exercises in Georgia, local media reported on Friday.

“Bosnia and Herzegovina has no reason to participate in this (exercise),” Dodik, who is Premier of the Serb-dominated Bosnian entity of Republika Srpska, said on Thursday afternoon in Banja Luka.

He then called upon Bosnian Serb soldiers, who were supposed to travel to Georgia as a part of 17-member Bosnian Army team which was invited to participate in the event, to boycott the invitation. It is still unknown how many Bosnian Serbs were within this team and whether they have or will obey Dodik’s call, although entity authorities have no power over the country’s defense which is set up at the state level.

Dodik’s statement is also believed to be related to historically close political links between Serbs in the Balkans and Russia, which has been strongly opposing NATO’s decision to hold exercise in its neighboring Georgia from 6 May to 1 June.

Infuriated by Dodik’s move, Bosnian Croat member of Bosnian tripartite presidency, Zeljko Komsic, called upon the Bosnian State Prosecutor as well as Bosnia’s High Representative Valentin Inzko, to sack Dodik from his position and then press charges against him for enticing for insubordination.

Dodik was quick to reply. By Thursday night, his spokeswoman Biljana Bokic also asked Inzko to use his broad governing powers to dismiss Komsic from office, because of his statements “which offend intelligence of average citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina.”

She added that Dodik had all the right to express his political opinions.

Dodik’s call and the following heated exchange reflect tensions and animosities which have been running high on Bosnia’s political scene for the past three years. These tensions, initially instigated by Dodik and Bosniak (Bosnian Muslim) leader Haris Silajdzic, spread to other politicians and triggered the worst political crisis in Bosnia since the end of its 1992-5 war.



Main News Page

Comments:
Mad man
2009-05-08 19:21:50
determined to destroy the country and cause unrest. Determined. Sabotaging at every corner.

Dodik against NATO
2009-05-09 01:58:28
Right on Dodik. No Serb should participate in these exercises and betray their brothers. Next they will be asked to go into Serbia and kill their brothers if anything goes wrong in the Balkans again. How about Bosnian Croats send Croats to defend Slovenian side of the border from Croatia? I wonder if this would go down well with the Croatian big mouth in the Bosnian government.

nasko@hotmail.com
2009-05-09 02:17:30
As you see, even in Bosnia, Serbs are making trouble in every decision. If they continue doing this in the future, it could start another war in Bosnia.

to Naser
2009-05-09 11:42:52
Please don't wish for this as this time you will lose big time. Croats now know that they don't want to be in union with you and they will turn against you as well.

so...
2009-05-09 13:12:25
...because they don't want to participate in a NATO exercise serbs are corrupt, evil and they are trying to start another war in bosnia? You sir, are full of hate towards the serbian people.

The center of the Bosnian problem
2009-05-10 03:36:38
is the Serb nationalist Milorad Dodik. Even in Serbia itself politicians like him are on the wane. Day by day, the people of Belgrade forgets the Milosevic era, while in Banja Luka the old church-militarist-criminal power structures, with the support of minority Serbian nationalists of Serbia and the millionary support of Russia, work on their scheme to create a second “Abkhazia” in the heart of the Balkans…

right on Dodik?
2009-05-10 07:55:29
Komsic is Bosnian and does not meddle in Croatian affairs. Why would Bosnian Croats defend Croatia or Slovenia, as they are Bosnian? Dodik is just trying to win political points to stay in power and keep growing his wealth at the expense of regular citizens. Free speech is a joke in areas under his control if you oppose him. Maybe that's why he likes Russia?

Dodik
2009-05-11 23:01:37
Ed, Croats in Bosnia don't consider themselves Bosnian any more than the Serbs do. I know about the petition which was being signed by the Croats in Bosnia to secede from Bosnia. I know about animosity which exists between Croats and Bosniaks. The only reason Croatians in Bosnian government support Bosnia is because they don't have any other choice now. They entered into the alliance during the war and now they are stuck. They weren't as brave as the Serbs to declare publically that they don't want to be in any alliance. Ordinary Croats in Bosnia will never say they are Bosnian. I know many who only say they are Croatian and if you took a poll most over there will as well.

Please read Terms and Conditions first
 

Your name:

Subject:

Comment:

Type in this code (used to prevent spam):

 
 

Whether it’s the Lotto, betting shops or gambling dens, Serbians are up for a gamble in increasing numbers and despite, or perhaps because of, the economic crisis, business is better than ever.


Albania’s parliament has extended the country’s moratorium on the use of speedboats along its coast for another three years. The moratorium is part of an effort to thwart illegal smuggling.


An international competition to manage Arena Zagreb has attracted only one local company.



Trencherman checks out this Celebrity Haunt.


Tim Judah, the Economist's Balkan's Correspondent, and regular Balkan Insight contributor, has fully updated one of the seminal works on the modern history of Serbia, bringing the narrative through to the present day.


Slobodan Trkulja is one of  Serbia’s hottest export items and his compositions and arrangements of traditional Serbian music have been widely praised.