Bosniaks, together with some foreign mentors, will try to use the anti-Serb resolution on Srebrenica to rewrite the Dayton Peace Accords
And pointed out that Republika Srpska will not allow such intentions to be realized.
BANJA LUKA, APRIL 29 /SRNA/ - The President of the People's Party of Srpska /NPS/ Darko Banjac assessed that the statement of the American professor of international law Francis Boyle confirms that the Bosniaks, together with some foreign mentors, will try to use the anti-Serb resolution on Srebrenica to rewrite the Dayton Peace Accords and pointed out that Republika Srpska will not allow such intentions to be realized.
Banjac stated that on this plan, even if this resolution were to be adopted, it would not be binding, various legal and other mechanisms would be used, including the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which, among others, has three foreign judges. "It is more than clear that this is the direction and that is why the reactions from Republika Srpska are sharp, because the realization of the plans cannot be allowed. We must not wait to reach that moment," warned Banjac and added that the final goal of such efforts is expulsion of Serbs from this area.
Banjac noted that it is clear that the resolution on Srebrenica that should be before the UN General Assembly is directed against the Serbian people with the aim of definitively abolishing Republika Srpska as an entity within the state union of BiH and ultimately expelling the Serbs from these areas. "It is clear that this resolution is not binding even if it is adopted, but they would use it in the sense of redoing Dayton and abolishing Srpska, its competences and everything they want in terms of the unitization of Bosnia and Herzegovina," Banjac told SRNA, commenting on the statement of Boyle, who is also a former advisor to Bosniak leader Alija Izetbegović. Banjac reminded that the earlier attempt to label Serbs was in 2015 when Great Britain proposed resolutions in the Security Council, but it was foiled thanks to the Russian veto. Professor of international law from Harvard and the first agent of Bosnia and Herzegovina before the International Court of Justice in the Hague, Francis Boyle, said that the resolution on Srebrenica in the UN General Assembly should be used to "promote the interests of Bosnia and Herzegovina" and to get rid of Republika Srpska, which he called a "genocidal creation".
The independent international commission to investigate the suffering of all peoples in the Srebrenica region from 1992 to 1995 concluded that neither an individual crime of genocide nor genocide in general took place in Srebrenica. The commission of 10 world experts concluded that the Serbs never had such a plan either in Srebrenica or anywhere else. The leadership of Serbia and Republika Srpska strongly opposes the resolution on Srebrenica, which was proposed by the permanent representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the UN, Zlatko Lagumdžija, without the consent of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and which was supported by Germany and other major Western powers.