Bosnia issues international arrest warrant for Serb leader Dodik
Bosnia issued an international arrest warrant Thursday for Milorad Dodik, the leader of the deeply divided country's Serb statelet who is accused of flouting the constitution.
Dodik, who for years has led a campaign chipping away at the Balkan country's weak central institutions, denounced the warrant as an "abuse of the justice system for political ends" while on a visit to Israel.
A similar arrest warrant was issued for the speaker of the Serb entity Republika Srpska's (RS) assembly, Nenad Stevandic, who returned to Bosnia and Herzegovina on March 18 after a visit to Serbia.
Since the end of the 1992-1995 war, Bosnia has been split into two semi-autonomous halves -- the Republika Srpska and a Muslim-Croat federation. Both have their own governments and parliaments and share weak central institutions.
The prosecutor's office said warrants were issued for Dodik and Stevandic for "using their high-ranking positions in the Republika Srpska entity" to go abroad "while evading legally prescribed border control procedures".
After travelling to Israel on Tuesday to attend an international conference on combating anti-Semitism attended by European far-right figures, Dodik said he was "relaxed" about the warrant.
"Nothing surprising. The abuse of the justice system for political ends continues," he said from Jerusalem on Wednesday, alleging that the purpose of the warrant was "to isolate me".
Without giving details on his coming schedule, Dodik hinted that he had "some very important activities" planned in the coming days.
The RS leader, who is an ally of the Kremlin, had postponed a trip to Moscow last week.
"We will do all that and return to the RS in a calm manner next week," Dodik said.
- 'Grounds for action' -
Dodik has threatened to secede the Serb entity from Bosnia and barred central police and judicial officials from working there -- an order that was suspended by the constitutional court.
Dodik, Stevandic and RS Prime Minister Radovan Viskovic are accused of attacking the constitutional order, and an arrest warrant was issued within Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Dodik and Stevandic then defied this by travelling abroad.
"All of this suggests that both individuals could be abroad at any given moment, which provides grounds for action," the State Court said in a statement, adding that it had issued an international arrest order and the matter was now in Interpol's hands.
Stevandic was seen in the Serbian capital Belgrade on March 15.
Tensions have soared in Bosnia since Dodik was sentenced last month to a year in prison and handed a six-year ban from public office for defying Christian Schmidt, the international envoy charged with overseeing the peace deal that ended Bosnia's inter-ethnic war in the 1990s.
Bosnia's divided politics and fragile post-war institutions have faced increasing uncertainty amid the unfolding political crisis.
rus-oz/sbk/js

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
MAHA adviser: Report's citation errors ‘great disservice' to Trump, RFK Jr.
Calley Means, a top adviser to Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and proponent of Kennedy's 'Make America Healthy Again' movement, said Monday that flaws in a recent MAHA report were a 'disservice' to the Trump administration. Despite the issues, including false citations, Means defended the documents findings. 'Just to be super direct on the report, it was a great disservice to President Trump and Bobby Kennedy that that report had some errors in its citations,' Means told NewsNation's 'On Balance' host Leland Vittert. 'I think the reason it's primetime is because of the content of the report.' 'There was not one word of the MAHA report that was factually corrected — a couple footnote errors,' he added. The HHS report, focused primarily on digging into the root causes of chronic diseases in children, was heralded as a 'milestone' for Kennedy and the Trump administration's health care endeavors when it was released May 22. It cited hundreds of studies to highlighted four main factors as contributors to poor health: ultraprocessed foods, environmental chemicals, digital behavior and 'overmedicalization.' But the administration's celebration of its release quickly unraveled after the news outlet NOTUS found some of the studies cited did not exist or did not back up the report's conclusions. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt downplayed the citation problems last week and reaffirmed the administration's 'complete confidence' in Kennedy. 'I understand there were some formatting issues with the MAHA report that are being addressed, and the report will be updated,' Leavitt told reporters Thursday. 'But it does not negate the substance of the report, which, as you know, is one of the most transformative health reports that has ever been released by the federal government.' Means similarly sought to highlight the report's findings despite the multitude of errors that it cited to reach its conclusions. 'The content of the report really explained that every major government piece of public health advice over the past 30 years has been fake in a real substantial way,' said Means, the brother of Trump's surgeon general nominee Casey Means. The health adviser, hired as a special employee to HHS earlier this year, told Vittert that he's currently working on a 'budgetary analysis' for the White House. 'We right now have double the rates of obesity and diabetes as Europe,' he said. 'If you take the rates of obesity and diabetes in the United States to European levels, we save trillions in cost.' A major focus will be on stopping the government from 'subsidizing' ultraprocessed foods, including through changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly referred to as food stamps. 'We have a fundamental, unmistakable, blaring problem with ultraprocessed food consumption,' Means said. 'And that's not because of personal choice, it's not because of free will, it's not the free market; we subsidize ultraprocessed food with free lunch subsidies, with agriculture subsidies, with our SNAP.' 'We are not only recommending ultra processed food with the dietary guidelines — which we're going to fix them, they still do — but subsidizing,' he said. The Means siblings have been prominent figures in the MAHA effort with both being quickly tapped for roles in Kennedy's HHS — but they have also drawn rebuke from the health chief's former vice presidential running mate Nicole Shanahan and others. Shanahan wrote in a post on social platform X last month that she was 'promised' neither would be appointed to federal posts if she supported Kennedy's confirmation. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Record number of Russians support peace talks, end of war in Ukraine, poll shows
The number of Russian citizens who support peace talks and an end to the war in Ukraine has reached a record high since the start of the full-scale invasion, according to a poll by the independent Russian pollster Levada Center published on June 2. Some 64% of the respondents favored peace talks, representing a 6% increase since March. Meanwhile, the number of people who supported the war's continuation decreased from 34% in March to 28% in May. Compared to previous survey results, in May 2023, 48% of respondents believed that the war should continue. In May 2024, this figure dropped to 43%. The news comes after the second round of direct peace talks between Ukraine and Russia occurred in Istanbul. The parties agreed on a new prisoner exchange, as well as the repatriation of 6,000 bodies of fallen Ukrainian soldiers. No agreement on a ceasefire was reached. The share of supporters of peaceful negotiations is higher among women (73%), people under 24 (77%), residents of villages and towns with populations under 100,000 (67% each), as well as those who believe that the country is going in the wrong direction (76%) and those who disapprove of Russian President Vladimir Putin's presidential performance (77%). The share of those who support continuing the war is higher among men (39%), respondents aged 55 and older (35%), residents of Moscow (40%), those who believe that things in the country are going in the right direction (32%), and those who approve of the activities of the current president (30%). A majority of respondents (73%) believe that Russia and Ukraine should address the hostilities' root causes and only then agree on a ceasefire. On the contrary, some 18% think that the parties will first reach a truce and ceasefire and then resolve all other issues. Only 3% of Russians believe Russia is an obstacle to peace. At the same time, 14% of respondents believe that the U.S. is to blame, while 36% each see Ukraine and European countries as major obstacles in peace negotiations. The center conducted the survey from May 22 to 28, involving 1,613 people aged 18 and older in 50 regions of Russia. Read also: Growing up under missiles — Ukrainian childhoods shaped by war (Photos) We've been working hard to bring you independent, locally-sourced news from Ukraine. Consider supporting the Kyiv Independent.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
NATO seeks to boost air defence forces in Europe to prepare for Russian aggression
The North Atlantic Alliance is urging European member states to significantly increase their number of ground-based air defence systems in order to prepare for potential Russian aggression. Source: Bloomberg, citing informed sources, as reported by European Pravda Details: Bloomberg sources state that the Alliance has set an overall target for European members to increase their ground-based air defence capabilities fivefold. Individual targets will be set for each country, though no deadlines have been established yet. The issue of ground-based air defence systems is expected to be discussed at the meeting of NATO defence ministers in Brussels on Thursday, Bloomberg's sources added. A senior European military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Bloomberg that NATO members are in urgent need of expanding their ground-based air defence systems. Over the past three decades, the Alliance reduced the number of such systems in its acquisition as its focus shifted from Cold War threats to those in the Middle East and North Africa, the official said. This expansion of armaments is part of NATO's broader ambition to raise defence spending. Under pressure from US President Donald Trump, the Alliance is expected to approve a target of 5% of GDP for defence-related spending, with 3.5% allocated directly to defence, and an additional 1.5% to areas such as infrastructure, cybersecurity and civil defence. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!