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Referendum law

February 11, 2010

The parliament of the semi-autonomous Bosnian Serb region has paved the way for a referendum on the 1995 Dayton peace accords, prompting criticism from opposition parties and foreign governments.

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Milorad Dodik
Dodik supports greater autonomy for the Serb regionImage: AP

In a move that could widen the rift in Bosnia's already divided society, the Bosnian Serb region has passed a law making it easier to hold public referendums on controversial issues.

This primarily includes the legitimacy of the Dayton peace accords, which ended the 1992-1995 war, and the work of international peace envoy Valentin Inzko.

Bosnian Serb Prime Minister Milorad Dodik said his government had no hidden agenda with the vote.

"We want to pass a law and then call a referendum about the support to the Dayton peace agreement and decisions disparaging it," he said.

Map of Bosnia
A weak central government links Bosnia's two autonomous regionsImage: DW

Post-war Bosnia comprises two largely autonomous regions: the Serb-run Republika Srpska and the Muslim-Croat-run Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, united under a weak federal government.

Previous laws allowed Muslim and Croat minorities in the Bosnian Serb parliament to block referendums with stalling tactics until a deadline passed, but the reform rids the laws of the time limits. While referendums held only in the Serb-governed region would have no legal standing in Bosnia, they could cause political and social upheaval in the country.

Greater autonomy

The referendum issue first came up last December after Inzko extended the mandate of foreign judges and prosecutors at the war crimes court.

Dodik, whom foreign prosecutors are currently investigating for corruption allegations, claims the national legal system can function without foreign interference.

Inzko has the power to impose laws and fire government officials in Bosnia, and many Bosnian Serbs see him as biased against them.

Criticism from within and abroad

Inzko has said any referendum questioning the validity of the Dayton accords would violate both Bosnia's constitution and the peace agreement itself.

Minority Muslims in the Bosnian Serb parliament walked out after the vote, saying it should first be clear in the law who can call for referendums and what they can cover.

Meanwhile the United States issued a statement through its embassy in Sarajevo, saying it would consider “provocative any referendum that threatens the stability, sovereignty or territorial integrity of Bosnia-Herzegovina."

acb/AFP/Reuters
Editor: Matthew Kang