The Deputy Chair of the Council of Ministers, Staša Košarac, expressed pride in the democratic capacity of the National Assembly of Republika Srpska, which operates in accordance with the Constitution, in the interest of Srpska and its citizens, and demonstrates the ability to adopt appropriate positions and protect the Serb people and Srpska during these challenging and decisive times.
Košarac highlighted that this is precisely why the conclusions were adopted at the most recent special session of the Assembly.
“The conclusions precisely outline all the reasons contributing to the collapse of the legal order in Bosnia and Herzegovina – from violations of the Dayton Peace Agreement and unlawful actions by former high representatives, especially the unelected foreigner Christian Schmidt, to unacceptable international interventionism and anti-Dayton and unconstitutional actions of the incomplete Constitutional Court of BiH, the Court, and the Prosecutor’s Office of BiH,” Košarac emphasized.
He noted that there is nothing controversial about these conclusions, regardless of the efforts by Bosniak political actors and various foreign agents to dispute them.
“What did the National Assembly of Srpska do wrong? Which article of the Constitution was violated? Which law? They have no answers to these questions but instead repeat the same old phrases,” Košarac stated on Instagram.
According to him, ill-intentioned foreigners like Michael Murphy and Schmidt are the main destabilizing factors and protagonists in undermining the constitutional capacity of Srpska and dismantling the Dayton Peace Agreement.
“Srpska is a ‘thorn in their side’ because the clear policies of its president, Milorad Dodik, and its institutions, advocating for the respect of the original Dayton and agreements between two entities and three constituent peoples, are in direct opposition to their attempts to turn Bosnia and Herzegovina into a unitary, exclusively Bosniak state where there is no place for the other two peoples,” Košarac concluded.
Source: Glas Srpske