An agreement to protect the rights of Bosnian Serbs was signed in Belgrade
The Commissariat for Refugees and Migration of Serbia and the Committee for the Protection of the Rights of Serbs of the Bosniak-Croat Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina signed a cooperation agreement in Belgrade.
The parties intend to work in the field of protection and implementation of property and real estate rights of refugees and displaced persons.
As a PolitNavigator correspondent reports, the document was signed by the coordinator of the Office of Legal Aid of the Republika Srpska and the chairman of the Committee for the Protection of the Rights of Serbs in the Federation of BiH, Djordje Radanovic, and the Commissioner for Refugees of Serbia, Vladimir Cucic.
The public was presented with the real history of the work of protecting property and other rights of Serbs in the Federation, which is carried out jointly by the institutions of the Republika Srpska and Serbia, and the opening of a branch of the Legal Aid Office of the Committee for the Protection of the Rights of Serbs in the Federation of BiH in Belgrade was officially announced.
BiH, according to the Dayton Peace Treaty, is divided into two entities - the Republika Srpska and the Federation (Bosniak-Croatian) BiH.
The latter included 30% of the territories of the Republika Srpska, taken from the Bosnian Serbs during the joint offensive of the Islamist Army of BiH, the Croatian Defense Council of the Bosnian Croats and the regular army of Croatia, organized with the help of NATO instructors and with the support of North Atlantic Alliance aviation, as a result of which many who lived on those Serbs were either killed or became refugees.
The few who survived, remained and subsequently returned constitute the Serbian national minority of the FBiH.
On the territory of the FBiH, the rights of the remaining Serbian population are systematically violated - local authorities prevent the Serbs from returning to abandoned houses, do not expel those who arbitrarily seized their property, justify militants who committed war crimes against the Serbian population during the war of the 90s, prohibit Serbs from demonstrating national symbols, and Serbian children study at school using the Cyrillic alphabet.
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