Lawyer Toma Fila deemed the actions of the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina absurd and emphasized that the essence of everything is to limit Republika Srpska’s powers, to which it is entitled under the Dayton Agreement, and to restrict the rights of Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Fila, speaking to SRNA, stated that there was no other real reason for holding a session yesterday without the proper presence of Serb judges, making a decision regarding Republika Srpska, and all done during an online session, as three foreign judges could not come to Sarajevo due to bad weather.
“Constitutional Court rulings are never urgent, and there was no need to hold an online session. You wait for two or three days until the weather calms down, and then you come,” said Fila.
He emphasizes that the essence of everything being implemented in theory and practice, “from the false Schmidt to everything else,” is to “clip the wings” of the President of Republika Srpska, Milorad Dodik, and to curtail the powers to which Republika Srpska is entitled under the Dayton Agreement.
“However, in international law, the law of the stronger always prevails. This means that what America, Germany, and the like want, and how they see the Dayton Agreement, is how they apply it,” said Fila.
He reminds us that the rights of Serbs were already limited in Paris when the agreement was initialed, and every year they had fewer and fewer rights, with the ultimate goal being a centralized Bosnia and Herzegovina under the dominance of the Bosniak majority.
Fila points out that there should be no foreigners in the Constitutional Court of BiH because “these three” will vote as others tell them, not as they think.
“There is no justice for Serbs. This is the case for Kosovo and Metohija, Republika Srpska, and Montenegro,” concludes Fila.
Since January 3, the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovinahas had two Bosniak and one Croat judge, as well as an Albanian, a Swiss, and a German, appointed by the European Court of Human Rights.
At least six times in post-Dayton Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska proposed a law on the Constitutional Court and insisted that foreigners return to their countries.
Source: RTRS