Croatian President Zoran Milanovic said on Friday that the amending of the Dayton Peace Accords or any strategic decisions could not be made without the consent and agreement of all the three constituent peoples in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The Dayton Agreement is what it is, and I cannot see any possibility of amending it without violence, and I do not think of war when mentioning violence, I refer to mental violence and any other violence in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and everyone is aware that it could never pass in Bosnia and Herzegovina and it has always provoked larger-scale violence, Milanovic said in an interview for the HRT broadcaster commenting on the forthcoming 25th anniversary of the conclusion of the Dayton peace accords.
He said that the Dayton agreement framework could not be amended without the will of all the three constituent peoples.
No one should have illusions that any strategic decisions could be made if there was no consent of all the three constituent peoples, he said, arguing that this is not any medieval concept, but a prerequisite for any civic state.
“First use soap and then afterwards apply perfume,” he added.
He went on to says that in the last five years only “lower-ranking clerks” from the international community had discussed the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
“Those are people who are almost let loose, who are tailoring and keeping maps and pairs of compasses, sets squares, rulers in their hand, they are giving instructions on what something should look like, instead of getting their own house in order first.”
He went on to say that no matter what he thought of it, the Serb entity – the Republic of Srpska – in Bosnia and Herzegovina could not be annulled.
Milanovic underscored that it was no secret that of the three constituent peoples, the Croats were dissatisfied with the current situation.