Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnian Bosna i Hercegovina),
country in southeastern Europe, on the Balkan Peninsula. Formerly a constituent
republic of Yugoslavia, Bosnia and Herzegovina declared its independence in
March 1992. War then broke out among Bosniaks (Bosnian Muslims), Croats, and
Serbs in the country (see Wars of Yugoslav Succession). At the end of
the war, in 1995, Serbs controlled 49 percent of the country’s territory,
comprising an area known as the Serb Republic (Republika Srpska). The
remaining territory, officially known as the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina (Federacija Bosna i Hercegovina), was controlled by a
federation of Bosniaks and Croats. Today, the Bosniak-Croat federation and the
Serb Republic together constitute the country of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In
reality, since the war the country has remained divided three ways—among the
Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs—despite international attempts to unite it.
In the 14th century the principality of Bosnia
joined with a duchy to the south that would eventually be called Herzegovina as
part of a short-lived medieval kingdom. The modern-day country of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, often referred to simply as Bosnia, is still divided
geographically into a northern region of Bosnia and a southern region of
Herzegovina. The republic is bounded on the north and west by Croatia and on
the east by the republics of Serbia and Montenegro. Bosnia also has 20 km (12
mi) of coastline along the Adriatic Sea, wedged between Croatian territories.
The capital and largest city is Sarajevo.
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II
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LAND AND RESOURCES
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Bosnia has an area of 51,129 sq km (19,741 sq
mi). It is a mountainous country. In particular, extensions of the Dinaric
Alps, which form Bosnia’s western border with Croatia, traverse the western and
southern parts of the republic. The highest peak is Mount Maglič, measuring
2,387 m (7,831 ft), on the border with Montenegro. Much of the republic also
lies within the Karst, a barren limestone plateau broken by depressions and
ridges. The northern part of the republic is heavily forested, while the south
has flatter areas of fertile soil. Those flatter areas are used primarily as
farmland.
Bosnia’s principal rivers include the Bosna, the Sava,
which flows along the northern frontier, and the Sava’s tributaries, the Una,
Drina, and Vrbas. These rivers all flow north; only a few other rivers, notably
the Neretva, flow toward the Adriatic Sea. The valleys of the northern rivers
widen into the fertile Sava plain, which stretches across the northern third of
Bosnia.
A Mediterranean climate prevails in the south, with
sunny, warm summers and mild, rainy winters. A modified continental climate of
warm summers and cold winters dominates the northern inland territory. At
higher elevations, short, cool summers and long, severe winters with snow are
common. The average temperature for Sarajevo, in the continental zone, is -1°C
(30°F) in January and 20°C (68°F) in July.
Bosnia’s soils are predominantly brown earths.
Beech forests constitute the primary natural vegetation. Among the wildlife
found in the country are hares, lynxes, weasels, otters, foxes, wildcats,
wolves, gray bears, chamois, deer, eagles, vultures, mouflon (wild sheep), and
hawks. Lynxes, weasels, and otters have the status of endangered species.
Bosnia is rich in natural resources. These resources
include large tracts of arable land, extensive forests, and valuable deposits
of minerals such as salt, manganese, silver, lead, copper, iron ore, chromium,
and coal.
Air pollution from metallurgical plants, water
shortages, and poor or failing sanitation services are a few of the problems
facing the country, but the destruction of its infrastructure because of the
civil war that took place from 1992 to 1995 is the most pressing current issue.
Most activity since the war’s end has been concentrated on restoring basic
needs and services, rather than addressing environmental problems directly.
However, despite their preoccupation with rebuilding a war-torn infrastructure,
leaders in Bosnia and Herzegovina have not lost sight of environmental issues—the
country was an observer at the World Conservation Congress in Montréal in 1996.
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III
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THE PEOPLE OF BOSNIA AND
HERZEGOVINA
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In 1991, in the last census taken in
Yugoslavia, Bosnia had a population of 4,364,574. Bosnia’s population subsequently
decreased during the civil war, which left hundreds of thousands dead and
forced many thousands of others to flee. Casualty rates during the war were
approximately equal for the ethnic Muslims and Serbs (between 1992 and 1995,
7.4 percent of the prewar Muslim population and 7.1 percent of the prewar Serb
population were killed or listed as missing); the casualty rate for the ethnic
Croats was much lower. Of the Bosnians who fled, most went to the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (now the separate countries of Serbia and Montenegro),
Germany, Croatia, and Sweden.
In 2008, the population of Bosnia was estimated to
be 4,590,310, giving the country an average population density of 90 persons
per sq km (233 per sq mi). In 2005, 45 percent of the population lived in
cities and towns. The largest cities are Sarajevo, the capital and an important
cultural and commercial center; Zenica; Banja Luka; Mostar; and Tuzla.
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A
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Ethnic Groups, Religions,
and Languages
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Bosnia’s major ethnic groups are Bosnian Muslims, Serbs,
and Croats. Since 1994 Bosnian Muslims, long considered an ethnic group, have
officially been known as Bosniaks. A small number of Roma (Gypsies) also live
in Bosnia. In the 1991 census, prior to independence, Muslims represented 44
percent of the population, Serbs 31 percent, Croats 17 percent, Yugoslavs
(people of mixed Muslim, Serb, and Croat ancestry) 6 percent, and others 2
percent. The “Yugoslav' identity claimed in 1991 was abandoned when Yugoslavia
broke up. In 2003 the government estimated that Bosniaks constituted 73 percent
of the population, Croats 22 percent, and Serbs 4 percent.
The primary difference among the largest ethnic groups
is religious, the Serbs being traditionally Orthodox Christians and the Croats
Roman Catholics. The Bosniaks, descendants of Slavs who converted to Islam in
the 15th and 16th centuries, are generally Sunni Muslims (see Sunni
Islam). Bosnia also has a small number of Jews.
The people of Bosnia speak the Bosnian language.
However, according to the Bosnian government, the country officially has three
languages: Serbian, Bosnian (the language associated with Bosniaks), and
Croatian. In writing, the Serbs use the Cyrillic alphabet, while Bosniaks and
Croats use the Latin alphabet.
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B
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Ethnic Discord
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Before the war, the rural Bosnian population
lived largely in concentrations of each ethnic group, but the concentrations
were so interspersed as to resemble a leopard’s skin. The Muslim population was
concentrated mainly in central and eastern Bosnia (bordering Serbia) and in the
far west (bordering Croatia). Concentrations of Serbs separated those of the
Muslims. Croats were mainly concentrated on the northern and southwestern
borders with Croatia, with some Croat pockets in central Bosnia. Serb military
campaigns in 1992 and 1993 and Croat campaigns in 1993 and 1995 were aimed at
expelling others from areas claimed by these groups. By the end of the war
almost all non-Serbs had been expelled from Serb-claimed lands in eastern and
northern Bosnia, and non-Croats from Croat-claimed lands in southwestern
Bosnia. In turn, most non-Muslims had left land under Muslim control in
northwestern Bosnia.
The largest cities had mixed populations in 1991,
but the war and its aftermath made them almost homogenous. Banja Luka, 55
percent Serb in 1991, was almost 100 percent Serb by 1993. It is the capital of
the Serb Republic. Mostar, 34 percent Croat, 35 percent Bosniak, 19 percent
Serb, and 10 percent “others” (who registered no ethnic affiliation) in 1991,
had by 1995 been divided into an almost purely Croat western part and an almost
purely Bosniak eastern part, with very few Serbs or “others” left in either.
Under the terms of the 1995 Dayton peace accord, which ended the war, Sarajevo,
located in the Bosniak-Croat federation near the boundary of the Serb Republic,
is a united city under federal Bosnian control. However, the city’s population
changed from 49 percent Bosniak before the war to 90 percent by 1996, and the
Bosniak authorities have permitted few non-Bosniaks to return.
The return of refugees was mandated by the
international community at the time of the Dayton agreement, but had not
occurred in any great numbers by the end of 1998. This was especially true of
the return of people into areas where their group was in the minority after the
war. In April 1998 Croats in the western town of Drvar rioted against the
return of Serbs, attacking refugees and burning buildings used by the UN. In
June 1998 up to 820,000 people within Bosnia remained displaced from their
previous homes. In general, the political leaders of all groups have engaged in
cultural projects aimed at ensuring that the ethnic groups regard themselves as
inherently different from one another, with conflicting cultures and interests.
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C
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Education
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Education is compulsory and free for all children from
ages 7 through 15. Secondary education is also free. Wartime destruction or
damage to schools disrupted education for many children, although “war schools”
were created in other buildings. There are officially four universities in the
country, in Sarajevo, Banja Luka, Tuzla, and Mostar. The university in Mostar,
however, has split into two unrelated institutions, a Croat university in
western Mostar and an Islamic one in eastern Mostar.
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D
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Way of Life
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Until 1991 Bosnia had an urban population that
aspired to the standard of living of western Europe and was increasingly
intermingled ethnically by residence, occupation, friendship, and marriage. The
rural population remained more divided ethnically and less well-off. As a
result of the wars, religious identification and adherence to religious rules
has risen among Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs. Many Bosniak women have adopted
Islamic dress styles that had not been common, at least in cities, before the
war. The destruction of the economy has thrust many previously working women
into traditional female roles as housewives and mothers. Members of all groups
favor a diet that is heavy on roast meats and bread.
The People of Bosnia and Herzegovina section
of this article was contributed by Robert M. Hayden.
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IV
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CULTURE
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Bosnia’s diverse population has made the country’s
cultural life rich. Epic stories, a form of traditional oral literature, were
still sung throughout the country well into the 1950s. Bosnian urban love
songs, largely Muslim in origin, were popular throughout the former Yugoslavia.
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A
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Literature, Film, and
Music
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Ivo Andrić, a Serb who was raised Catholic in
Bosnia, won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1961. His novels include Na Drini
ćuprija (1945; The Bridge on the Drina, 1959), in which a
bridge from the Ottoman period symbolically united the peoples of Bosnia. The
novelist Meša Selimović was of Muslim origin but said that he wrote Serbian
literature. The film director Emir Kusturica, also of Muslim origin, made
internationally acclaimed films in Sarajevo. His film When Father was Away
on Business was a finalist for the Academy Award in the United States for
best foreign film in 1984. That film had a cast and crew that included Muslims,
Serbs, and Croats. Through 1991 the Bosnian rock group Bijelo Dugme was
extremely popular throughout Yugoslavia, playing music influenced by the
various traditions of Bosnia.
These ethnic and cultural mixtures have declined
since the war. The Bosniak authorities regard Andrić as having been
anti-Muslim, and they closed the museum devoted to him in his home town of
Travnik. Filmmaker Kusturica moved to Serbia in 1992. His internationally
acclaimed 1995 depiction of the war, Underground, was condemned in
Sarajevo. As of early 1999, he had not been able to return there.
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B
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Cultural Institutions
Destroyed
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The most important library in Bosnia was the
National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo. It was
intentionally destroyed by Serb shelling in 1992 and remained in ruins as of
early 1999. The world famous bridge in Mostar, built by Ottoman rulers in the
17th century, was intentionally destroyed by Croat shelling in 1994. Throughout
Bosnia, churches (Orthodox and Roman Catholic) and mosques were destroyed by
the armed forces of the other major ethnic groups. Among the most important
losses were two mosques in Banja Luka that were on the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) register of world
cultural monuments. These mosques were leveled by Serb authorities in 1992,
with even the stones removed from the sites.
The Culture section of this article was contributed
by Robert M. Hayden.
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V
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ECONOMY
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Bosnia was economically one of the least developed
republics of the former Yugoslavia. The republic’s economy was largely devoted
to mining, forestry, agriculture, and some sectors of light and heavy
manufacturing, notably of armaments. Although Bosnia exported specialty
agricultural products, such as fruit and tobacco, it had to import staples,
including more than half its food. The war shattered the newly independent
country’s economy, and recovery has been tentative.
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A
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Wartime Collapse
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In 1990, 48 percent of the labor force was
employed in industry and 11 percent in agriculture. Bosnia produced mineral
products, timber, manufactured goods such as furniture and domestic appliances,
and about 40 percent of Yugoslavia’s armaments. By the time war broke out in
1992, Bosnia’s inflation rate was already at 120 percent; during the war, it
rose to well over 1,000 percent. Unemployment was about 30 percent when war
broke out, and by 1995 it had risen to 75 percent. Prices of goods soared
during the war, and average living standards declined sharply. All sectors of
the economy were hit hard by the war. About 45 percent of industrial plants,
including about 75 percent of the republic’s oil refineries, were destroyed,
damaged, or plundered.
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B
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Tentative Recovery
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The Dayton accord allowed economic recovery to
begin. Bosnia’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew at 20 to 30 percent per year
from 1995 to 1998, although the recovery was driven almost entirely by
international aid. The GDP in 1998 was estimated to be about $6 billion.
Unemployment dropped from its wartime high of 75 percent to 42 percent in 1998.
Renewed economic growth has come mainly within the construction, trade, and
services sectors, with traditional light industries also showing some capacity
for recovery. But the big industrial conglomerates that dominated Bosnia’s
prewar economic life remain largely unrestructured and are operating at a
fraction of their production capacity. Corrupt political leaders apply
regulations and taxes arbitrarily, stymieing the development and growth of new
businesses. The black market remains a significant factor.
Behind this mixed pattern of recovery lie the
special problems of privatization of state-owned firms in Bosnia. When Bosnia
was part of Communist Yugoslavia, its economy was controlled by the state,
which effectively owned most enterprises. These enterprises did not have to be
profitable and often were managed inefficiently. Transferring firms to private
ownership so that they can prosper or, if unprofitable, fail and cease to be a
drag on the system, is a crucial step for the success of a free-market economy.
While 90 percent of Bosnia’s registered firms are in private hands, the big
conglomerates remain under state ownership. Comprehensive privatization
legislation is now in place, but the political obstacles to privatization
remain formidable.
The country’s mandated division into two autonomous
entities has proved a significant obstacle to economic recovery. The central
government has scored notable successes by establishing a single central bank
and adopting a unified customs fee schedule for imported and exported goods.
But in many essential areas of economic life the governments of the entities,
rather than the central government, make the decisions. The Serb Republic’s
territory includes much of Bosnia’s agricultural and mineral-rich land, while
the industrial zones remain largely within the Bosniak-Croat federation.
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C
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Energy
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Prior to the war, Bosnia drew electricity from
coal-burning and, to a lesser extent, hydroelectric power plants. As a result
of the war, Bosnia’s electricity-generating capacity declined by about 78
percent. Aid-financed reconstruction of the electric power grid has made
substantial strides, but the political divisions create serious obstacles to
the entire country being reconnected. In 2003 hydroelectric plants accounted
for 50 percent of Bosnia’s energy production, with coal-burning plants
producing the rest. With most of the hydroelectric plants located in the
Croat-controlled area of the Bosniak-Croat federation, cooperation across
Bosniak- and Serb-controlled territory is essential for the widespread
distribution of electricity. The cost of electricity varies enormously from region
to region. In the Serb Republic the government heavily subsidizes energy
producers, cutting the amount users must pay.
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D
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Foreign Trade
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In 1990 Bosnia’s imports totaled about $1.9 billion.
They consisted primarily of fuel, machinery, transportation equipment,
miscellaneous manufactured products, and chemicals. In the same year, exports
totaled about $2.1 billion. They consisted mainly of miscellaneous manufactured
products, machinery, and raw materials. The war severely disrupted Bosnia’s
trade, with both the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (now the separate countries
of Serbia and Montenegro) and Croatia imposing economic blockades on the
republic and supply routes being obstructed by the fighting. In 2004 imports
totaled $4.9 billion and exports $1,615 million. The huge trade deficit
reflects the degree of Bosnia’s dependence on foreign aid.
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E
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Currency and Banking
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In January 1998, after Bosnia’s Bosniak, Serb, and
Croat leaders failed to agree on a new national currency, the United Nations
introduced one, the konvertibilna marka, or just marka. Marka
banknotes entered circulation in June 1998 with a value equal to the German deutsche
mark (In June 1998 1.79 deutsche marks equaled U.S.$1). Yugoslav dinars
continue to circulate in the Serb Republic, and the Croatian kuna was
used in the Croat parts of the Bosniak-Croat federation. Inflation came down in
the federation following the introduction of the new currency. In the Serb
Republic, price trends were less clear. The Central Bank of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, established in 1997 under foreign administration, is the bank of
issue for the marka. The Serb Republic and the federation each oversee their
own banks.
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F
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Transportation and
Communications
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Much of Bosnia’s infrastructure, including its
highways, railroads, and telecommunications network, was devastated in the war.
In 1991 Bosnia had 21,168 km (13,154 mi) of highway, of which about half was
paved. During the war, about 35 percent of the country’s highways and 40
percent of its bridges were damaged or destroyed. The railroad system consisted
of around 1,000 km (600 mi) of track, of which three-quarters was electrified.
Damage to the railway system was estimated at about $1 billion. There is an
international airport at Sarajevo, which was also seriously damaged in the
fighting. From 1995 to 1998 more than $1 billion in foreign aid was provided to
rebuild Bosnia’s battered infrastructure. However, reconstruction of the road
and rail network also has been hampered by Bosnia’s divisions. More is being
done to reconnect the telecommunications network, with the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) coordinating national reconstruction and
providing a $20 million loan. The fourth donors’ conference for Bosnia and
Herzegovina, held in Brussels, Belgium, in May 1998, made improvement of
infrastructure a continued priority for future aid.
The Economy section of this article was contributed
by David Dyker.
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VI
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GOVERNMENT
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When Bosnia declared independence in 1992, it
operated under a modified version of the Yugoslav constitution, which provided
for a bicameral (two-chamber) legislature, a government headed by a prime minister,
and a collective presidency with one representative from each of the three
major ethnic groups. After the 1990 elections, in which most Bosnians voted
along ethnic lines, Bosniaks enjoyed a slight advantage in representation.
However, the Bosniak-dominated government was paralyzed during the war as the
Croats and the Serbs established governments of their own and rejected its
authority.
A new constitution was drafted as part of the
Dayton accord, providing for a national government structured much as it had
been under the previous constitution. There is a three-member presidency and a
bicameral legislature. The central government has very little authority within
the country, however, and for the most part its power extends only to foreign
trade and foreign affairs. The new constitution recognizes Bosnia as a state
officially composed of two entities, the Serb Republic and the Federation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina. All governmental functions not given expressly to the
central government belong to the entities.
The Bosniak-Croat federation has its own government. Its
constitution was drawn up by U.S. government lawyers in 1994. The federation’s
government is headed by a president and a bicameral legislature. However, this
government has no authority except over foreign affairs. In addition, the
legislature can easily be deadlocked when the deputies vote along ethnic lines.
In reality, the federation has never really functioned, and the
Croat-controlled areas of Bosnia remain free of control by the federation
authorities, being closely linked with Croatia instead. In 1992 the Croats
formed a breakaway state, the “Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia.”
Herzeg-Bosnia continues an unofficial existence. Its territory is integrated
into the Croatian telephone and electrical networks, and residents use Croatian
money and vote in Croatian elections. Like the Bosniak-Croat federation, the
Serb Republic has its own constitution (drafted by Serb leaders in 1992) and
complete governmental structure, including a president and unicameral
legislature, the People’s Assembly. The government of the Serb Republic wields
authority over domestic and foreign affairs.
In practice, the constitutional system of Bosnia
does not provide the structure for a workable state. From 1995 through 1998 the
only effective governmental decisions were those made by the High
Representative, the position established by the European Union and the U.S.
government to oversee implementation of the Dayton accord. By 1998 the High
Representative, Carlos Westendorp, was proclaiming laws when the national
legislature was deadlocked. The High Representative also removed elected
officials from the governments of the entities and disqualified candidates for
the 1998 elections on political grounds, primarily if he believed they could
jeopardize implementation of the Dayton accord. Westendorp selected the flag
for Bosnia when the presidency and central legislature could not agree on a
design. The major qualification for this new flag was that its elements had no
traditional political meaning to any of Bosnia’s ethnic groups. Bosnia is a
member of several international organizations, including the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the United Nations (UN).
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A
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Executive
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Bosnia’s three-member joint presidency comprises one Bosniak,
one Croat, and one Serb member. All members are formally equal, with
chairmanship of the collective body rotating every six months. The members of
the presidency are elected by direct popular vote from their respective
entities (two from the federation, one from the Serb Republic). Although the
first elections, in 1996, were for two-year terms, the members are to be
elected for four-year terms. The collective presidency is supposed to make decisions
by consensus, and a provision exists for nullification of a non-unanimous
decision by the presidency if so demanded by the entity whose representative
has been outvoted. The presidency, as head of state, has some powers related to
foreign policy and represents Bosnia internationally. The presidency also
nominates the government, composed of Bosniak and Serb co-prime ministers (with
a Croat deputy prime minister) and a cabinet known as the Council of Ministers.
No more than two-thirds of the members of this cabinet may be from the
Bosniak-Croat federation, and each minister must have deputy ministers from the
other two national groups. Ministers are confirmed by the central legislature.
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B
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Legislature
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The central legislature has two chambers, the House of
Peoples and the House of Representatives. The House of Peoples has 15 members,
5 Bosniaks, 5 Croats, and 5 Serbs, elected by the parliaments of the entities.
The House of Representatives has 42 directly elected members, two-thirds from
the federation and one-third from the Serb Republic. The central legislature is
charged with drafting laws that implement decisions made by the collective
presidency, determining a national budget, and ratifying international
treaties. Complicated procedures exist to try to ensure that no ethnic group is
outvoted on matters concerning its vital interests.
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C
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Judiciary
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Bosnia has no national court system, but rather
each entity has its own system of trial and appellate courts. At the national
level there is a Constitutional Court, which decides constitutional issues and
disputes between the entities. The Constitutional Court has nine members, four
elected by the parliament of the Bosniak-Croat federation, two elected by the
parliament of the Serb Republic, and three appointed by the president of the
European Court of Human Rights who must not be citizens of Bosnia or any
neighboring state. The first judges appointed hold five-year terms. Subsequent
appointments are supposed to last until the judge reaches age 70.
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D
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Political Parties
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In every relatively free and fair election in
Bosnia in the 20th century, starting in 1910, the population has voted along
ethnic lines. In 1945 Yugoslavia emerged from World War II controlled by the Communist
Party of Yugoslavia (name changed to the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, or
LCY, in 1952). The Communists, whose power extended throughout Yugoslav
government and society, were practically the only party in the country until
1990. The LCY chapters in each of the republics officially disbanded in 1990,
some taking other names. In Bosnia, nationalist parties for each of the three
largest ethnic groups formed that year. Since then the most important Bosniak
party has been the Party of Democratic Action (PDA). In 1998 the PDA became the
dominant party in a Bosniak coalition, the Coalition for a Whole and Democratic
Bosnia and Herzegovina. The most important Croat party is the Croatian
Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina (CDU-BH), a branch of the ruling
Croatian Democratic Union in Croatia. The CDU-BH answers to Croatian party
leaders.
For Bosnian Serbs, more than one party has
significant backing. The overwhelming winner in the elections in 1990 and 1996
was the Serbian Democratic Party (SDP). This nationalist party advocated either
that Bosnia remain in Yugoslavia (when it still could) or that lands inhabited
by Serbs in an independent Bosnia be united with Serbia. While this party was
still the largest Serb party in 1998, Sloga (Accord), a coalition of
other Serb parties less opposed to Bosnia’s ethnic reintegration, was also
created. The coalition received backing from Western Europe and the United
States for pledging to support the Dayton peace accord. The third major Serb
party was the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party, which staunchly advocated
a “Greater Serbia.” The Serbian Radical Party is a branch of the same party in
Serbia and is controlled from there.
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E
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Social Services
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Social services are supposed to be provided by the
entities, not the central government. Within the Bosniak-Croat federation,
services often are provided by Croat and Bosniak authorities (to their
respective populations), instead of by the federation government. In the 1990s
foreign non-governmental organizations actually provided the bulk of social
services. Before the war, health care in Bosnia was state-administered and
free.
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F
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Defense
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Separate Serb, Croat, and Bosniak military forces are
acknowledged in the national and Bosniak-Croat constitutions, with some
provisions for coordination but not for joint control. In 1998 the Bosniak army
(officially the Bosnian army) numbered about 40,000; the Croatian Defense
Council had some 16,000 troops in the country. The Serb Republic had up to
30,000 troops in its army. The military forces of one entity are prohibited
from entering the other.
The Government section of this article was contributed
by Robert M. Hayden.
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VII
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HISTORY
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The earliest known inhabitants of what is now
Bosnia, traceable to the Neolithic period, were the Illyrians, a people of
Indo-European stock who are considered ancestors of the modern Albanians. By ad 9, when Rome crushed the last
Illyrian resistance in present-day Bosnia, all of Illyria had become part of
the Roman Empire. Rome’s most enduring legacy in Bosnia was the division
between Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Christian faiths along the border
between the western and eastern Roman empires. That border, first drawn around
285, passed through Bosnia.
As Roman power declined, successive waves of
nomadic Goths, Alans, Huns, and Avars devastated the land before moving on. In
the 6th century Slavic tribes, probably swept along with the Avars,
settled in the area and soon absorbed the peoples, languages, and cultures that
were already there. A second wave of Slavic tribes, called Serbs and Croats,
arrived in the 7th century. The names Croat and Serb probably both derive from
the name of an Iranian or Sarmatian tribe that ruled and was absorbed by them
on the way.
Bosnia was first mentioned by that name in a
surviving document from 958. The area became a remote mountainous borderland
between successive competing empires and kingdoms that subjugated or claimed
all or parts of it during the early medieval period. Bosnia’s Slavs were
generally Christian, either Roman Catholic or Orthodox. In 1180 Ban
(“governor” or “viceroy” in Croatian and Hungarian) Kulin created the nucleus
of an independent Bosnian state, which was revived, consolidated, and expanded
by Ban Stephen Kotromanić (reigned 1322-1353). Kotromanić’s conquest of Hum
(later Herzegovina) in 1326 united Bosnia and Herzegovina for the first time.
Medieval Bosnia reached its height under Stephen Tvrtko (reigned 1353-1391),
who was crowned Tvrtko I, king of Serbia and Bosnia, in 1377. Under his rule,
Bosnia briefly became the most powerful and prosperous Slavic Balkan state.
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A
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Ottoman Rule
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Tvrtko’s kingdom gradually disintegrated after his
death. In 1448 Stephen Vukčić, lord of Hum, asserted his independence by giving
himself the title herceg (duke; from the German Herzog) of Hum,
and his land soon came to be called Hercegovina (Herzegovina; the
Duchy). The Ottomans quickly conquered most of Bosnia in 1463 and Herzegovina
in 1483. Ottoman rule, lasting more than 400 years, introduced two more
sizeable religious communities: Jews and Muslims. The Jews had been expelled
from Spain in 1492, and they became an important part of the cultural and
economic life in Sarajevo and other Balkan cities. Immigrants from the Ottoman
Empire were among the first Muslims to settle in Bosnia. Later, growing numbers
of local converts added to their number.
Bosnia, along with Albania, was the only part of
Ottoman Europe where large numbers of Christians converted to Islam. The most
persuasive explanation for this, advanced in recent scholarly studies, is that
all Christian faiths in this religious borderland were weak, with few churches
and clergy. Current scholars reject the theory that all or most of the Bosnian
Christians who embraced Islam had been members of an allegedly heretical
(“Bogomil”) Bosnian church. The Bosnian church, essentially Catholic in
doctrine, was nearly extinct by the 15th century. In an empire in which Muslims
were privileged and a ruling caste, converting to Islam offered advantages. The
result, unique in Ottoman Europe, was a landholding and military nobility of
native Muslim Slavs ruling over a mostly Christian peasantry.
By the 19th century the Muslim Slav nobility,
like the local ruling elite in several other Ottoman possessions, was virtually
independent of crumbling Ottoman central authority. The Bosnian nobility was
determined to prevent the Ottomans from reasserting authority and implementing
modernizing reforms, collectively known as the Tanzimat. The Tanzimat
threatened the Bosnian nobility’s power and exploitation of an increasingly
impoverished and rebellious peasantry. The last decades of Ottoman Bosnia were
marked by repeated rebellions of two kinds: by the Muslim elite against the
Ottoman authorities, and by the mostly Christian peasants against that elite.
|
B
|
Austro-Hungarian Rule
|
In 1875 a peasant uprising took root in Bosnia
and spread to Bulgaria in 1876, prompting a major international crisis. In 1877
Russia declared war on the Ottoman Empire. Russian armies advanced to the gates
of İstanbul, the Ottoman capital, in 1878. The Congress of Berlin, meeting that
year to resolve the crisis and prevent a wider war, decided that
Austria-Hungary should occupy and administer Bosnia. Austro-Hungarian
occupation met with serious armed resistance, primarily Muslim but also
Orthodox Christian; it took 82,000 troops and four months to subdue that
resistance. But Muslim fears for their religion and privileges, which led many
to emigrate to the Ottoman Empire, proved unwarranted. The Austro-Hungarian
regime did not interfere with existing social and landholding relations,
focusing instead, and with some success, on economic development.
In 1908 Austria-Hungary formally annexed Bosnia, partly
to end Serb nationalist dreams of eventually incorporating it into the Kingdom
of Serbia. The province had become a prime target of Croat as well as Serb
nationalist propaganda and schemes, with Croat nationalists agitating for its
union with Croatia, then a part of Hungary. Serbs claimed that the Bosnian
Muslims were Islamicized Serbs; Croats claimed that they were Muslim Croats.
The idea of a single nation whose people would be defined by their common
ethnicity, not their religion, was promoted by Benjamin Kállay, the
Austro-Hungarian official in charge of Bosnia from 1882 to 1903. He wanted to
counter both Serb and Croat ambitions, but his idea emerged too late to win any
except a few Muslim adherents. However, a group of Croats who in the 1830s
began advocating the union of all South Slavs, which included Serbs and Croats,
was more successful. According to the Yugoslav idea, the South Slavs were one
nation or kindred nations who should be unified within a single state of their
own (Yugoslavia means “Land of the South Slavs”). The Yugoslav idea appealed to
a number of primarily younger Bosnians from the ethnic Muslim, Croat, and Serb
communities.
On June 28, 1914, in Sarajevo, Gavrilo
Princip, a young Bosnian Serb who professed to be a “Yugoslav,” shot and killed
Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, and his
wife. Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia a month later, igniting World War
I. During the war, most Bosnian Serbs, Croats, and Muslims remained loyal to
Austria-Hungary.
|
C
|
Integration into
Yugoslavia
|
At the end of the war in 1918, the Austro-Hungarian
Empire disintegrated. Bosnia became part of the new Kingdom of the Serbs,
Croats, and Slovenes (renamed Yugoslavia in 1929). Serbia’s Karadjordjević
dynasty and a Serb-dominated government and administration ruled the new state.
The kingdom’s political parties, suppressed under a royal dictatorship from
1929 to 1934, were all ethnic nationalist parties except for a pan-Yugoslav
Communist Party, which was banned and went underground in 1921. The main
Bosnian Muslim party, supported by nearly all Muslims, was the Yugoslav Muslim
Organization (YMO), founded in February 1919 and led by Mehmet Spaho until his
death in 1939. Spaho skillfully maneuvered himself and the YMO into a balancing
position among other parties that ensured that the YMO and Muslim interests
would be represented in most Yugoslav governments and policies. Spaho died two
months before the Yugoslav government made a major concession to Croat national
aspirations and created an autonomous Banovina (Province) of
Croatia that included parts of Bosnia with large Croat populations.
When Nazi Germany and its Axis allies invaded and
dismembered Yugoslavia in April 1941, during World War II, Bosnia was divided
into German and Italian occupation zones. It was made part of the so-called Independent
State of Croatia (Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, or NDH in Bosnian). The NDH was an
Axis puppet state run by the Ustaše, a Croat fascist and terrorist organization
whose wartime attempt to exterminate the NDH’s nearly 2 million Serbs was
modeled on Hitler’s genocide of Europe’s Jews. Bosnian Serbs fled to the
forests to join two violently competing resistance movements. These were the
Serb royalist Četniks, under Draža Mihailović, and the Partisans, a
Communist-led multiethnic “Army of National Liberation” organized and headed by
Josip Broz Tito, the Croat head of the Yugoslav Communist Party.
Bosnia became the Partisans’ principal zone of
operations in two overlapping wars. In one war the Partisans battled the Axis
armies of occupation. In the other they fought a parallel civil war against
both the Četniks and the Ustaše. The fighting was particularly fierce between
the Partisans and the Četniks. The Četniks’ anti-Communism and determination to
restore a Serb-dominated monarchy led them to join first Italian and then
German operations against the Partisans. In November 1943 Tito convened a
Partisan congress in Jajce, a medieval Bosnian capital. The congress proclaimed
a new federal Yugoslavia of equal South Slav peoples, naming Tito marshal and
prime minister. The congress included the Muslims as one of the South Slav
peoples. Bosnian Muslims and Croats joined the Partisans in growing numbers.
|
D
|
Tito’s Yugoslavia
|
By the end of the war in Europe in May 1945,
the Partisans had won both of their wars and recreated Yugoslavia, under firm
Communist control, as a federal state of six republics. Five were to be
semi-autonomous 'homelands' for Yugoslavia’s Serbs, Croats, Slovenes,
Macedonians, and Montenegrins. The sixth, Bosnia, was to be the joint homeland
of its intermingled Serbs, Muslims, and Croats. When a new, totally Communist
government was installed in November 1945 after strictly controlled elections,
Tito headed the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (known after 1952 as the League
of Communists of Yugoslavia, or LCY), the government, and the armed forces.
For the next 45 years, Bosnia was part of
Tito’s Yugoslavia. That state was at first a faithful copy of the
authoritarian, rigidly Communist Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
under Joseph Stalin. After Tito’s break with Stalin in 1948, Yugoslavia
underwent a gradual process of relaxation and decentralization, in which
greater power was given to the republics, including Bosnia, and their own Communist
leaderships. Economic experiments with “market socialism” and “socialist
self-management” were introduced. The political changes included a strict
apportioning of party and state positions among Bosnia’s three constituent
peoples. Bosnia’s branch of the LCY continued to be more repressive and opposed
to reforms of the Communist system than party branches in most of the other
republics. In 1968 the Muslims were fully recognized as Yugoslavia’s sixth
official national group.
Tito’s death in 1980 coincided with the onset
of an enduring economic crisis in Yugoslavia, during which production levels
and living standards declined significantly. Tito’s successors, the leaders of
republics with conflicting economic interests and national aspirations, could
not agree on effective remedies. Acceptance of the institutions and eventually
even the structure of Tito’s Yugoslavia declined everywhere, especially in
Slovenia and Croatia. This trend accelerated among non-Serbs in reaction to Serbian
president Slobodan Milošević’s militant assertion of Serb nationalism and his
aggressive campaign to restore central party and state control under Serb
domination. Tensions and disputes among the republics and among the ethnic
groups in the republics multiplied.
The disintegration of the LCY in January 1990 paved the
way for multiparty parliamentary elections in all six republics by the end of
the year. The elections in all the republics produced absolute or relative
majorities for nationalist parties. In Bosnia’s elections, the three winning
nationalist parties, one for each of the major ethnic groups, garnered 76
percent of the popular vote and 202 of the parliament’s 240 seats. The
principal party of the Bosnian Muslims, the Party of Democratic Action (PDA),
led by Alija Izetbegović, won 87 seats, or 34 percent. The Serbian Democratic
Party (SDS), led by Radovan Karadžić, took 72 seats, or 30 percent. Forty-four
seats, or 18 percent, went to the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and
Herzegovina (CDU-BH), the Bosnian branch of the party that had won Croatia’s
elections in spring 1990. That party was led by Croatian president Franjo
Tudjman. Izetbegović became president of Bosnia’s seven-member trinational
presidency. By pre-electoral agreement, the three parties formed a fragile
coalition government. It fell apart as Yugoslavia disintegrated in 1991.
|
E
|
Independence
|
Negotiations among the post-Communist republic leaders
from January to early June 1991 failed to find a formula to preserve some kind
of Yugoslavia. (Izetbegović and President Kiro Gligorov of Macedonia kept
trying to the very end.) Slovenia and Croatia declared independence in June
1991. The Yugoslav army lost a token ten-day war in Slovenia against Slovenia’s
own police and military. In Croatia, a six-month Serb-Croat civil war ensued
that left 30 percent of Croatia under Serb control until 1995. Bosnia and
Macedonia, with large majorities unwilling to stay in a shrunken Serb-dominated
Yugoslavia, also began leaning toward independence.
Bosnia’s Serbs were determined not to become a
minority in an independent state, and its Croats would not stay in a
Muslim-majority state if the Serbs seceded. Milošević in Serbia and Tudjman in
Croatia had already discussed partitioning Bosnia between their two countries.
The Bosnian Serbs and Croats began creating “statelets” of their own in 1991.
Karadžić’s SDP established armed “Serb Autonomous Regions” and a
self-proclaimed Serb legislature. In November 1991 the Bosnian Serb legislature
held its own referendum in which Bosnian Serbs voted almost unanimously to
“remain in a common Yugoslav state” with the rest of the “Serb nation.” Later
that month Macedonia declared its independence from Yugoslavia (it was admitted
to the United Nations under the name the Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia). In January 1992 the Bosnian Serb legislature proclaimed
independence as the Serb Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In western Bosnia,
the Croat Community of Herzeg-Bosnia also was proclaimed in November 1991. It
was run by the Croat Defense Council (Hrvatsko Viječe Odbrane, or HVO), which
had the backing of the Croatian government and army.
Slovenia and Croatia gained international
recognition in January 1992. In March, the Bosnian government held a referendum
on independence demanded by the European Community (EC; now the European Union,
or EU) as a condition for recognition. Most Serbs boycotted the referendum, but
97 percent of the Muslims and Croats who participated voted to secede. Bosnia
proclaimed its independence that month, and the SDS formally proclaimed its
separate Serb Republic (Republika Srpska). The United States and the EC
recognized Bosnia’s independence on April 6, 1992.
|
F
|
Civil War
|
Full-scale civil war, with Serbs and Croats armed and
backed by Serbia and Croatia respectively, erupted the same week in April 1992
that Bosnia was recognized by the United States and the EC. Bosnian Muslims
fought alongside Croats against the Serbs. In May, Serbia and Montenegro
declared themselves the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY). By summer, Serb
forces, which included troops from the Serb-dominated army of the former
Yugoslavia, controlled about 70 percent of Bosnia. They laid siege to Sarajevo and
carried out brutal massacres and expulsions of non-Serbs in territories they
controlled, a process chillingly called “ethnic cleansing.” These atrocities
produced worldwide condemnation, but no effective international intervention
other than humanitarian aid under the protection of an otherwise ineffective
United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR).
The HVO consolidated Croat administration of
Herzeg-Bosnia, and the district was virtually joined to Croatia by mid-1992. In
May 1993 the Croats launched a war against their former Bosnian Muslim allies
for control of central Bosnia and the Muslim portion of Mostar, the capital of
the Herzegovina region. Muslim Mostar held out, and the Bosnian government’s
initially almost nonexistent army, consisting mostly of Bosnian Muslims, held
its own against the HVO in central Bosnia. Both the Croats and the Bosnian
Muslims also carried out bloody massacres and “ethnic cleansing” in contested
territories.
International efforts to achieve a ceasefire and resolution
of the conflict included conferences, sanctions, peace proposals, and charges
against suspected war criminals. Conferences attended by all the parties were
held in Lisbon, London, and Geneva in 1992 and 1993. The UN began imposing
economic sanctions on the FRY in 1993 and co-sponsored a series of peace plans
with the EC that one or more Bosnian factions in each case ultimately rejected.
The UN also established so-called “safe areas” for Bosnian Muslims (officially
known as Bosniaks since 1994). However, those areas were frequently violated,
most notoriously in Srebrenica. In July 1995 Bosnian Serb forces overpowered
the UN peacekeeping troops at Srebrenica. They systematically executed about
8,000 unarmed Bosniak men and boys and buried them in mass graves.
In May 1993 a UN war crimes
tribunal, the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY),
was established at The Hague, the Netherlands. By mid-2005 the ICTY had
publicly indicted more than 160 individuals, including Bosnian Serb leader
Karadžić, for war crimes and other serious violations of international
humanitarian law committed in the territory of the former Yugoslavia. See
also War Crimes Trials; Geneva Conventions.
Meanwhile, the international community negotiated brief
local or general ceasefires. Pressure from the United States put an end to the
Bosniak-Croat war, forcing the Croats to agree, on paper, to a Bosniak-Croat
federation in March 1994.
|
G
|
Postwar Bosnia
|
The war in Bosnia was finally ended in late
1995 by a combination of efforts. These efforts entailed vigorous diplomacy led
by U.S. assistant secretary of state Richard Holbrooke, a successful joint
Bosniak-Croat offensive in western Bosnia (the first serious Serb defeat in the
war), and a major air attack on Bosnian Serb positions by the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO). In November 1995 the warring parties initialed a
peace accord at a U.S. Air Force base near Dayton, Ohio, after three weeks of
intensive negotiations and pressure by the United States. Tudjman, Izetbegović,
and Milošević (who represented the Bosnian Serbs with their reluctant
agreement) signed the Dayton peace accord in Paris in December. The war had
claimed an estimated 100,000 lives.
In addition to dictating a new constitution for
Bosnia and providing for internationally organized elections, the accord
established a formally united Bosnia made up of two entities, the Bosniak-Croat
federation and the Serb Republic. It included provisions for the unhindered
return of refugees to their places of origin. The UNPROFOR was later replaced
with a multinational but primarily NATO Implementation Force (IFOR) of 60,000
troops, initially for one year but soon extended indefinitely, to keep the
peace and oversee the agreement’s military and civilian security provisions. In
1997 the IFOR became the Stabilization Force (SFOR) and was reduced to 31,000
troops. The number of troops was gradually decreased to 7,000 by the time NATO
concluded its military mission in Bosnia in December 2004. At that time an
EU-led stabilization force called EUFOR, also 7,000 strong, replaced the SFOR.
The Dayton provisions put the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) in charge of the return and reintegration of war refugees and
internally displaced persons. The UNHCR estimated that the war had displaced
about half the population of Bosnia and Herzegovina, or about 2.3 million
people out of the prewar population of 4.4 million. The UNHCR reported that by
mid-2005 some 440,000 refugees had been repatriated to Bosnia and Herzegovina,
and more than 500,000 internally displaced persons had been returned to their
homes.
Following the war, ethnic divisions remained strong
between the Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs. They remained divided on the cause of
the war and its outcomes, leaving open social wounds that impeded the recovery
process and further entrenched ethnic tensions. The leaders of each ethnic
group continued to oppose one another, and there was little free movement and
provision of services between their communities. The United Nation’s High
Representative for Bosnia, Carlos Westendorp, had to dictate such things as a
common flag, vehicle license plates, and the form of currency. Westendorp also
dismissed some nationalistic mayors and police chiefs and many observers
asserted that he was turning Bosnia into a NATO-EU protectorate.
|
H
|
Recent Developments
|
Elections under the supervision of the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) were held in September 1996 for
national offices and in September 1997 for local governments. The winners, each
capturing about 80 percent of its ethnic constituency in 1996, were again the
nationalist parties, the PDA, SDP, and CDU-BH. The republic and its entities remained
in the hands of the parties and most of the people who had run the war.
But in 1997, Biljana Plavšić, the president of
the Serb Republic, abandoned much of the Serbs’ nationalist rhetoric and became
a NATO and U.S. favorite. A close Karadžić ally, Plavšić replaced Karadžić as
Bosnian Serb president when he resigned under outside pressure after his
indictment. After taking office, she promised to uphold the Dayton peace accord
and clashed with Karadžić’s supporters in the Serb Republic’s People’s Assembly.
She and the assembly dismissed each other, initiating a crisis that was not
resolved by a special legislative election in November. In that election the
SDP won 24 seats but lost its majority. Plavšić’s new Serb People’s Alliance
and the extreme nationalist Serbian Radical Party (SRP) of Vojislav Šešelj, now
vice prime minister of Serbia, each won 15 seats. The deadlock virtually split
the Serb Republic into two entities, with a Plavšić administration based in the
western city of Banja Luka and Karadžić’s supporters still in control of the
east from the village of Pale.
Elections for central and entity offices in September
1998 were contested throughout Bosnia by the Coalition for a Whole and
Democratic Bosnia and Herzegovina, dominated by the PDA. In the Serb Republic,
the coalition called Sloga (Accord), organized by Plavšić, was a force. Still,
the results were mixed and contradictory.
For Bosnia’s House of Representatives, both the
Bosniak PDA’s coalition and the Serb SDP and SRS lost votes to nonnationalist
opposition parties. Svetozar Mihajlović, of the moderate Sloga coalition, was
elected co-prime minister from the Serb Republic; Haris Silajdžić of the
moderate Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina, was named co-prime minister from the
Bosniak-Croat federation. A Serb moderate defeated the nationalist incumbent as
the Serb member of Bosnia’s collective presidency. Alija Izetbegović, of the
PDA, and Ante Jelavić, of the CDU-BH, took the other seats in the presidency.
In the Bosniak-Croat federation nonnationalist
parties also gained votes, but the Coalition for a Whole and Democratic Bosnia
and Herzegovina and the CDU-BH dominated elections for the federation’s two
houses. In the Serb Republic, Plavšić was defeated by an extreme Serb
nationalist, Nikola Poplasen, for the Serb Republic’s presidency. Moderates won
a significant number of seats in the People’s Assembly, and Milorad Dodik, a
Plavšić ally appointed prime minister in January 1998, kept his position at the
head of a caretaker government. Poplasen nominated others to replace Dodik, but
the assembly confirmed none of them. In March 1999 High Representative
Westendorp removed Poplasen from office for obstructing political
reconciliation. Westendorp asserted that Poplasen’s attempts to unseat Dodik constituted
a violation of the Dayton accord.
Also in March a UN arbitrator designated
Brčko, a city in northeastern Bosnia at the Serb Republic’s narrowest point, to
be placed under the joint administration of Serbs, Croats, and Bosniaks. The
Serbs had held the strategic city, which had formerly been inhabited mainly by
Bosniaks and Croats, since 1992.
The November 2000 elections for central and entity
offices, like the preceding elections in 1998, produced mixed results. Support
for nationalist parties remained strong, and in the Serb Republic the SDP
emerged as the largest party. Nevertheless, the SDP failed to gain an absolute
parliamentary majority and was compelled under international pressure to take a
back seat in the governing coalition to the moderate Party of Democratic
Progress (PDP). At the level of the central government, and in the
Bosniak-Croat federation, nonnationalist parties fared much better. A coalition
of nearly a dozen mostly nonnationalist parties, under Western tutelage and led
by the center-left Social Democratic Party, formed governments in both
entities.
Elections in October 2002 were a setback for
nonnationalist moderates. The three largest nationalist parties—the CDU-BH,
PDA, and SDP—won the most votes for nearly every post in the country, including
seats in the central parliament, the assemblies in the Serb Republic and the
Bosniak-Croat federation, and for the tripartite state presidency. The three
parties united to form a coalition government in the central parliament, with support
from two smaller, more moderate, parties. The PDA, the clear victor among
Bosniak voters, emerged as the leading party in the central parliament and in
the Bosniak-Croat federation, and it entered into a coalition with the SDS in
the Serb Republic.
Also in October, former Bosnian Serb president
Biljana Plavšić pled guilty to one charge of crimes against humanity before the
UN International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY). Plavšić,
who succeeded Radovan Karadžić as president of the Bosnian Serb republic in
1996 (and who had earlier served as the republic’s vice president during the
1992-1995 war in Bosnia and Herzegovina), was the first high-ranking Bosnian
politician and the only woman to plead guilty to war crimes. Plavšić admitted
her involvement in the commission of atrocities against Bosnian Muslims and
Croats during the war. In February 2003 the ICTY sentenced Plavšić to 11 years
in prison.
In April 2004 the ICTY conclusively ruled that
the massacre of about 8,000 Bosniak males at Srebrenica in July 1995 was an act
of genocide. The events at Srebrenica were recognized as the worst mass
killings in Europe since World War II (1939-1945). In June the Serb Republic
authorities for the first time publicly acknowledged that Bosnian Serb forces
were responsible for the Srebrenica massacre. The ICTY indicted the alleged
perpetrators, wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadžić and his military
commander, Ratko Mladic, on charges of genocide. However, both men remained at
large as war crimes fugitives.



