Milorad Dodik, the Serb member of Bosnia's tripartite Presidency, spoke again about the idea of 'peaceful dissolution' in Bosnia and Herzegovina, a day after the international envoy Valentin Inzko warned in his report for the UN Security Council that such ideas pose a threat to the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity thus to peace and stability.
“We object such Bosnia and Herzegovina and we should meet in a civilised manner and talk about how to carry out a peaceful dissolution,” Dodik told Serbian media.
Speaking in K1's ‘Uranak’ show, the Presidency member said it is only Bosnia's three constituent peoples – the Serbs, Bosniaks, and Croats, as well as its two semi-autonomous entities – Serb-majority Republika Srpska and Bosniak-Croat shared Federation – who can discuss Bosnia and Herzegovina.
He slammed High Representative Valentin Inzko over the report on the situation in BiH he presented on Tuesday to the UN Security Council, noting that “what he said only confirmed he is no longer needed.”
The High Representative, who oversees the peace implementation in the country following the 1992-95 war, is according to Dodik presenting things in a bad way only he can stay a bit longer in BiH and get a high salary.
Inzko warned in his latest report on the situation in BiH that Republika Srpska's calls for peaceful dissolution and for the withdrawal of the international military presence in BiH pose a threat to the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity as well as to peace and stability.
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