The leader of the Party of Democratic Action (SDA), the biggest Bosniak party in Bosnia and Herzegovina, spoke with the party leadership in Herzegovina after meeting with Croatia’s Prime Minister Andrej Plenković in Dubrovnik on Monday, when they discussed the situation in BiH and the election reform in that country as well as preparations for a joint meeting of the two governments.
The current situation in relations between Croats and Bosniaks and Croatia and BiH is unnatural, said Izetbegović after meeting with SDA officials in Herzegovina.
“I will do everything for this unnatural state, where we have once again spoiled relations with Croats, we with Croats or Croatia with us, or we with Croatia, for that situation to be mended because it is very damaging for BiH as well as for Croatia,” underscored Izetbegović, who is the Deputy Speaker of the House of Peoples, the upper chamber of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s parliament.
Election law
Prime Minister Plenković is a “very good collocutor”, said Izetbegović and warned that Croatian President Zoran Milanović inappropriately calls Bosniaks “abusers of Croats in BiH”.
The talks in Dubrovnik focused on the need for election reform to relieve the tension between the two peoples seeing that Croats in BiH are constantly warning of being outvoted by the more numerous Bosniak people when electing the Croat member of the BiH Presidency and deputies to the House of Peoples.
Izetbegović believes that Croats in BiH are unhappy about one office, that of the Croat member of the BiH Presidency, underscoring that given their number, they are overrepresented in state institutions.
Croats in BiH are in at least a hundred leading positions in ministries, directorates, management boards and they hold more posts than the Constitution guarantees to them so allegations about their being threatened are not true, he said.
These things have not been presented and leaders in Croatia should be aware of that, he said.
Izetbegović advocates that the electoral reform to guarantee Croats the possibility of electing their legitimate political representatives should at the same time redefine the role of the House of Peoples which in that case would cease to be an equal parliamentary chamber and would decide only on matters that are of vital national interest.
Izetbegović is not optimistic that an agreement will be reached on the electoral reform over the next month as claimed by HDZ BiH leader Dragan Čović, who has announced that talks will be stepped up next week already with the mediation of the USA and EU.
Energy
Izetbegović said that during the talks with Plenković they agreed that it was necessary to react to the construction of the Upper Horizons energy project that authorities in the Republika Srpska entity are planning in eastern Herzegovina to redirect some tributaries of the Neretva River, which flows through Herzegovina and southern Croatia, to the Trebišnjica River.
“That would turn that part of Herzegovina into a desert,” Izetbegović said.
Sanctions against Milorad Dodik
Asked about the sanctions against the Serb member of the country’s presidency, Milorad Dodik, Izetbegović said that his conduct required resolute and efficient sanctions.
Izetbegović said that he also expected some European countries to introduce sanctions against Dodik, like Germany, the Netherlands, Italy and some Scandinavian countries, thus following the example of the USA.