Published 13:05 IST, November 22nd 2020
Borrell urges Bosnia leaders to overcome differences
The European Union Foreign Policy Chief used the 25th anniversary of the peace agreement that ended the Bosnian War to urge Bosnia's political leaders to overcome their persistent ethnic divisions and prepare their nation to join the EU fold.
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The European Union Foreign Policy Chief used the 25th anniversary of the peace agreement that ended the Bosnian War to urge Bosnia's political leaders to overcome their persistent ethnic divisions and prepare their nation to join the EU fold.
Josep Borrell on Saturday visited the War Childhood Museum in Sarajevo and addressed Bosnia and Herzegovina citizens from the EU building in Sarajevo.
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The peace agreement, initialled at a U.S. Air Force base outside Dayton, Ohio on Nov. 21, 2015 and formally signed in Paris a few weeks later, ended the 44-month war in which Bosnia's three main ethnic factions — Muslim Bosniaks, Catholic Croats and Orthodox Christian Serbs — fought for control after the break-up of Yugoslavia.
Over 100,000 people were killed during the war, most of them Bosniaks, and upward of 2 million, or over half of Bosnia's population, were driven from their homes during the conflict.
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While it stopped the bloodshed, the peace agreement formalized the ethnic divisions in Bosnia by establishing a complicated and fragmented state structure linked by weak joint institutions.
Over the years, the country's complex administrative system has allowed its ethno-nationalist elites to take full control of all levers of government and plunder public coffers with impunity while engaging in the same arguments that led to the war.
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The European Union accepted Bosnia's membership application in 2016, but its government has failed to make the deep structural reforms required before the country can move forward with the process of joining the EU.
Updated 13:05 IST, November 22nd 2020