WORLD
The shooting began over the course of weeks, but if Bosnia's war needs a beginning to mark, then it's April 6, 1992, twenty years ago this Friday.
The shooting began over the course of weeks, but if Bosnia's war needs a beginning to mark, then it's April 6, 1992, twenty years ago this Friday. That's the day the West recognised the Yugoslav republic as independent and Serb gunmen fired on peace demonstrators in Sarajevo, the opening salvo of a siege on the capital that would last for 43 months.
The war reached Dr Ilijaz Pilav 11 days later when men in uniform turned up at his clinic in the eastern town of Srebrenica.
He would escape from Srebrenica on foot through a forest on a summer day in 1995, hours before it was captured by Serb forces, who went on to massacre 8,000 Muslim men and boys there and bulldoze the bodies into pits. Seventeen of Pilav's relatives were among the victims. It is in their memory, he says, that he is now fighting in court to force Bosnia to rewrite a constitution that paid for peace by enshrining ethnic segregation into law. With 100,000 dead and two million displaced, the war was finally brought to an end by a peace deal signed in Dayton Ohio, which established a state divided among ethnic foes.
"Dayton brought peace, which is better than any kind of war. But Dayton saved the country in only the most basic form," said Pilav, now 48.
Today, Pilav stands behind one of two cases at the European Court of Human Rights challenging the fundamental premise of the 1995 peace deal. Under the constitution agreed at Dayton, a Serb must represent Bosnia's Serbs, a Croat the Croats, a Muslim the Muslims. Pilav, a Muslim, is suing for the right to stand for the post of the Serb territory's representative in the national presidency - a job that the law sets aside for a Serb. Dayton, he says, ended the bloodshed but left Bosnia in the grip of ethnic party chieftains.
"I simply want to believe that it is possible, not in 20 or 30 years, but that it should already have been possible, in my lifetime" to create a Bosnia where ethnicity is no longer the defining principle of the political system, he told Reuters. Pilav's case - and another brought by a Jew and a Roma who demanded the right to stand for posts reserved for Muslims, Croats or Serbs - are expected to force a transformation in Bosnia's constitution. They also reveal how far Bosnia has fallen behind other states of the former Yugoslavia in burying the legacy of war, and the hurdles it faces in joining the European mainstream.
On Friday, greying reporters who covered the war will gather at Sarajevo's Holiday Inn to recall the conflict that snapped the West out of its post-Cold War euphoria and saw Europe and the United States dither in the face of ethnic cleansing a few hours' drive from Vienna or a ferry crossing from Ancona. Unlike the other states that emerged when Yugoslavia broke apart, Bosnia was not dominated by a single ethnic group. Because of its diversity - like that of Yugoslavia itself - it has been described as Yugoslavia in a bottle. After those first shots twenty years ago, Serbs under Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic - both now standing trial for genocide in The Hague - took the big guns of the Yugoslav army and seized 70% of Bosnian territory, cleansing it of non-Serbs and pounding Sarajevo from the hilltops.
The Muslims, known as Bosniaks, and Croats fought back, and for a period against each other. For years, UN peacekeepers stood by helpless. Finally in 1995 NATO used force, bombing the Serbs to the negotiating table. Pilav recalls mediaeval conditions at a Srebrenica field hospital he manned throughout: "That war was an improvisation, going back several centuries - without medicine or sanitary supplies, surgery without anesthetic, without basic instruments. It's beyond the power of normal understanding." The Dayton deal silenced the guns, but to do so it created a country of Byzantine complexity, locking in place the wartime ethnic divisions. Bosnia was split into two parts, its government divvied up between the warring groups - Orthodox Serbs, Catholic Croats and Muslim Bosniaks - in a single state ruled by ethnic quotas and united by only the thinnest of threads. Dayton's architects say the structure was designed to evolve with time and reconciliation. The ethnic lines would blur. Instead, the divisions have deepened, breeding a new generation with little or no sense of shared national identity. Less than half the estimated 2 million people displaced by the war have returned to their homes. Despite hundreds of trials for war crimes held locally and abroad, each community nurtures a different narrative of what went on, who is to blame. "We needed to break the momentum of violence," said Christopher Hill, who served as deputy to the late US peace envoy Richard Holbrooke who brokered the Dayton talks.
"I think that was successful," Hill told Reuters, "but I'm also very mindful of the fact that many of the elements of Dayton were problematic and would in the fullness of time require adjustment."
Today's Bosnia has some 120 ministers and multiple layers of government. Public administration is the biggest single employer swallowing half the meagre state budget. Posts are given out as patronage, guaranteeing votes for the ruling parties. Bosnia has absorbed some nine billion euros ($11.99 billion) in foreign aid. An international overseer retains ultimate authority, but the West's influence has been waning for years.
The EU maintains a peace force of 1,250 troops. Nationalist rivalry has stifled development, deterred
investors and left Bosnia without a central government for the whole of 2011 before an impasse was resolved in February. Bosnians lament that just 40 km (25 miles) of highway have been built over the past 10 years. The country ranks 125 out of 183 on a World Bank ease-of-doing-business survey, below Kosovo and Swaziland. It has yet to create a united police force. A row over funds closed the doors of Bosnia's National Gallery. The National Library and 125-year-old National Museum are also under threat.
"We have our own gallery and museum," said Milorad Dodik, president of Bosnia's Serb Republic. Dodik and other politicians from the Serb region treat the central government with thinly-concealed contempt. "Bosnia-Herzegovina is unacceptable as a unitary and centralised country," Dodik told Reuters. "Bosnia-Herzegovina
was seen as a smaller version of Yugoslavia. If big Yugoslavia couldn't survive, how can little Yugoslavia?"
Those who are hopeful for Bosnia's future point out that Yugoslavia did survive, at peace, for half a century. Serbs, Croats and Bosniaks have coexisted peacefully for long stretches of history. At the war's start, 30% of marriages in the vibrant Bosnian capital were ethnically mixed. "At Midnight Mass, there weren't only Catholics in the cathedral. Everyone was there. And everyone was at Eid and at Orthodox Christmas. That kind of ambience today, when you talk about it as the reality of our recent past, seems unthinkable," said Bosnian Croat sociology professor Slavo Kukic. Today, he said, Bosnian youths "are filled from day one with the belief that the 'other' is the devil himself, that one should not drink coffee with him let alone love or marry him." The notion that the peoples of Bosnia could never live together was propagated by the leaders who tore them apart - and who now maintain their grip on power through the ethnic prerogatives enshrined at Dayton. "Bosnia-Herzegovina is not a multi-ethnic country," said Srecko Latal of the International Crisis Group think-tank.
"Bosnia-Herzegovina is a sum of mono-ethnic regions." The aims of the war have yet to be resolved: Serb leaders want the Bosnian state kept at the bare minimum, the Bosniaks want it strengthened, while the Croats - the smallest of the three - want a greater degree of autonomy.
Pilav's lawsuit - and that of Jewish Bosnian Jakob Finci and Roma Dervo Sejdic - have reframed the debate. The European Court ruled in 2009 in favour of Finci and Sejdic's demand to be allowed to stand for office. It is expected to rule in favour of Pilav too. Bosnia will have to change its constitution to reflect the rulings if it is to stand any chance of joining its ex-Yugoslav neighbours on the path to EU membership. "What's happening is that the very essence of the Dayton peace accord or the Dayton constitution is being challenged," said Latal.
"Either Bosnia-Herzegovina and its leaders will have to take a leap of faith and step outside of this comfort zone of the Dayton constitution, or they will remain where they are now and the country will be kept out of the EU for as long as it takes." The borders of the EU will extend to Bosnia when Croatia joins in July next year.
But in Bosnia, change will not come easy. Politicians, backed by fiercely divided media, have built careers and patronage networks based on nationalist rhetoric. Dodik, the Bosnian Serb leader, made clear he would resist reforms that turn Bosnia into a centralised state:
"We must exclude national exclusivity (as a result of the legal cases), and we are prepared to do that. But Sejdic-Finci is being used here as the opportunity for massive constitutional change."
Those seeking reform say that without it, Bosnia could slip back into war. "Sooner or later, if the country continues this way, it may finally touch the bottom, and then anything goes," said Latal. Pilav said ethnic bosses who thrive in the current system will not yield power easily. "This kind of political elite...can only secure its position based on division, fear and suppression of progress."
"In this kind of Bosnia, just as peace is possible, so is war. The line between the two is that thin."
What is GRAP Stage 3, action plan implemented in Delhi-NCR to combat air pollution?
Sri Lanka Elections 2024: President Anura Dissanayake's party wins majority in general election
Haryana govt has implemented sub classification of Scheduled Castes for job quota
New Zealand’s youngest MP performs ‘haka’, rips up copy of bill in parliament, watch viral video
Amid Champions Trophy row, India emerges top contender to host 2025 tournament if…
Amitabh Bachchan does amazing Taekwondo move on KBC 16 sets, fans wonder if he is really 82
Shillong Teer Results November 15, 2024: Check updates on winning numbers
Boxing legend Mike Tyson slaps YouTuber Jake Paul during final staredown, watch viral video
7 companies led by Mukesh Ambani, Nita Ambani's daughter Isha Ambani
Shahid Afridi's BIG appeal to BCCI amid Champions Trophy crisis, says. 'If countries once...'
Donald Trump picks anti-vaccine activist Robert F Kennedy Jr as US Health Secretary
Manipur violence: AFSPA reimposed in 6 police station areas including troubled Jiribam
Delhi Air Pollution: Delhi-NCR engulfed in thick smog, AQI in 'severe' category
Is Elon Musk buying McDonald's after Donald Trump's win? Here's what we know so far
Jake Paul vs Mike Tyson live streaming: When and where to watch much-anticipated fight
US takes immigration issue 'incredibly seriously': State Dept amid visa delays
Guru Nanak Jayanti 2024: Are banks closed or open today? Check state-wise list here
Beaver moon 2024 today: All you need to know about 2024's last supermoon
Anil Ambani's Reliance Infra posts Rs 4082 crore profit in 3 months, market cap climbs to Rs...
Meet Prerna Singh, daughter of autorickshaw driver, who cracked NEET-UG, her score was...
Meet woman, who cracked UPSC exam while doing full time job, secured AIR 3, now she is...
Viral video: Little girl wins heart with adorable dance to Janhvi Kapoor’s 'chuttamalle' song, watch
IND vs SA, 4th T20I Dream11 prediction: Fantasy cricket tips for India vs South Africa match
IND vs SA, 4th T20I: Predicted playing XIs, live streaming details, weather and pitch report
Delhi: All primary schools closed, classes shifted to online mode due to rising pollution levels
BIG trouble for Anil Ambani, criminal charges against his Rs 14422 crore company over...
Bhool Bhulaiyaa 3 producer calls Singham Again team 'unfair' after the box office win
From Play to Pay, Gaming Is Big Business And A Genuine Professional Prospect
Leasehold vs Freehold: Exploring Options for Expats and Investors in Dubai
Mukesh Ambani's Reliance, Disney complete Rs 70352 crore media merger, to be headed by...
Badshah lands in legal trouble, case registered against rapper for...
GRAP III imposed in Delhi: What is allowed, what is banned amid 'severe' air quality
'Throwing me in deep end': Ricky Ponting takes fresh dig at Gautam Gambhir over Virat Kohli remarks
Revolutionizing Inventory Management in the Cloud Era: Pradeep Kumar’s Strategic Innovations
Delhi: AAP's Mahesh Khichi elected mayor as party defeats BJP in MCD polls
Delhi Air Pollution: GRAP 3 to be imposed in national capital from Nov 15, strict ban on...
WATCH: Inside Rinku Singh's Rs 3.5 crore luxurious house with rooftop bar, private pool
NASA alert! Giant 'God Of Chaos' asteroid set for close approach to Earth, may trigger astroquakes
Renowned Yoga Guru Sharath Jois passes away at 53 after suffering heart attack
UPPSC protest BIG update: RO-ARO exam postponed, PCS prelims to be held in one day
This man earned more money than Mukesh Ambani and world's richest man Elon Musk in one day, he is...
'World's best....': Japan vlogger's reaction to Bengaluru airport goes viral
Sania Mirza named Sports Ambassador of THIS city, not Delhi, Hyderabad, Jaipur
Shloka Mehta turns heads in sleek white gown at Tira store launch, see pics
Amid Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai divorce rumours, Jaya Bachchan surprises everyone with...
IND vs SA: Arshdeep Singh goes past Bhuvneshwar Kumar to become Indian pacer with most....
Mukesh Ambani, Isha Ambani’s luxury retail chain opens new store at...
PM Modi to receive Dominica’s highest national award for...
Shraddha Kapoor says people with big foreheads are…
'Busy making...': Kanhaiya Kumar sparks row with remarks on Devendra Fadnavis' wife; BJP hits back
'Full baarati vibes': Vietnamese man's epic 'nagin dance' steals show at Mumbai event
Tilak Varma credits THIS player for his century against South Africa, says 'He gave me...'
UPSC IFS Mains Admit Card 2024 to be released today at upsc.gov.in, check direct link to download