Politics of Republika Srpska

This article is about the politics of the Republika Srpska, one of the two entities that together comprise the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the other being the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Republika Srpska

Presidents of Republika Srpska

  • Radovan Karadžić (7 April 1992 – 19 July 1996) (SDS)
  • Biljana Plavšić (19 July 1996 – 4 November 1998) (SDS/SNS RS) (expelled from SDS in July 1997 and formed SNS RS)
  • Nikola Poplašen (4 November 1998 – 26 January 2000) (SRS RS) (removed by High Representative on 5 March 1999; removal enforced on 2 September 1999)
  • Mirko Šarović (26 January 2000 – 28 November 2002) (SDS) (not recognized as president by High Representative until 16 December 2000)
  • Dragan Čavić (28 November 2002 – 9 November 2006) (SDS)
  • Milan Jelić (9 November 2006 – 30 September 2007) (SNSD)
  • Igor Radojičić (acting President) (1 October 2007 – 9 December 2007) (SNSD)
  • Rajko Kuzmanović (9 December 2007 – 15 November 2010) (SNSD)
  • Milorad Dodik (15 November 2010 – 19 November 2018) (SNSD)
  • Željka Cvijanović (19 November 2018 – present) (SNSD)

National Assembly

The current National Assembly of the Republika Srpska (Народна Скупштина Републике Српске / Narodna Skupština Republike Srpske) is the ninth since the founding of the Republika Srpska.

  • First Assembly (24 October 1991 - 14 September 1996)
  • Second Assembly (19 October 1996 - 27 December 1997) (election of 4 September 1996)
  • Third Assembly (27 December 1997 - 19 October 1998) (election of 22–23 November 1997)
  • Fourth Assembly (19 October 1998 - 16 December 2000) (election of 13 September 1998)
  • Fifth Assembly (16 December 2000 - 28 November 2002) (election of 11 September 2000)
  • Sixth Assembly (28 November 2002 - 30 November 2006) (election of 5 October 2002)
  • Seventh Assembly (30 November 2006 - 15 November 2010) (election of 1 October 2006)
  • Eighth Assembly (15 November 2010 to 24 November 2014) (election of 3 October 2010)
  • Ninth Assembly (24 November 2014 to present) (election of 12 October 2014)

The political composition of the Seventh Convocation of the National Assembly of Republika Srpska (and the change in number of seats from the Sixth Convocation):

Cabinet

The cabinet is composed of the prime minister and the heads of the sixteen ministries. The National Assembly also selects two deputy prime ministers from among the ministers from different constituent peoples (Serbs, Croats, and Bosniaks) on the recommendation of the prime minister.

The law requires that eight ministers be elected from the Serb population, five from the Bosniak population, and three from the Croat population. The prime minister may also appoint one minister from among the "others" population (out of the largest constituent ethnic group).

Under the Law on Ministries adopted in October 2002, the "tasks of the administration" of Republika Srpska are carried out by ministries, republican administrative units, and republican administrative organizations.

Position Name Party Ethnicity
Prime Minister Radovan Višković SNSD Serb
Minister for Internal Affairs Dragan Lukač SNSD Serb
Minister for Finance Zora Vidović​ SNSD Serb
Minister for Justice Anton Kasipović SNSD Croat
Minister for Health and Social Welfare Alen Šeranić​ SNSD Bosniak
Minister for Education and Culture Natalija Trivić​ United Srpska Serb
Minister for Labour, Veterans and Disability Protection Duško Milunović Socialist Serb
Minister for Administration and Local Government Lejla Rešić DNS Bosniak
Minister for Industry, Energy and Mining Petar Đokić Socialist Serb
Minister for European Integration and International Cooperation Zlatan Klokić SNSD Bosniak
Minister for Spatial Planning, Civil Engineering and Ecology Srebrenka Golić SNSD Bosniak
Minister for Family, Youth and Sports Sonja Davidović Socialist Bosniak
Minister for Agriculture, Forestry and Water Management Boris Pašalić SNSD Serb
Minister for Transport and Communications Neđo Trninić DNS Serb
Minister for the Economy and Entrepreneurship Vjekoslav Petričević NDP Croat
Minister for Trade and Tourism Dragica Kovač DEMOS Croat
Minister for Science and Technology, Higher Education and Informatics Srđan Rajčević SNSD Serb

Prime Ministers of Republika Srpska

  • Branko Đerić (22 April 1992 – 20 January 1993) (SDS)
  • Vladimir Lukić (20 January 1993 – 18 August 1994) (SDS)
  • Dušan Kozić (18 August 1994 – 17 December 1995) (SDS)
  • Rajko Kasagić (17 December 1995 – 18 May 1996) (SDS)
  • Gojko Kličković (18 May 1996 – 18 January 1998) (SDS)
  • Milorad Dodik (18 January 1998 – 12 January 2001) (SNSD) (1st term)
  • Mladen Ivanić (12 January 2001 – 17 January 2003) (PDP)
  • Dragan Mikerević (17 January 2003 – 17 February 2005) (PDP)
  • Pero Bukejlović (17 February 2005 – 28 February 2006) (SDS)
  • Milorad Dodik (28 February 2006 – 15 November 2010) (SNSD) (2nd term)
  • Anton Kasipović (15 November 2010 – 29 December 2010) (Non-party)
  • Aleksandar Džombić (29 December 2010 – 25 February 2013) (SNSD)
  • Željka Cvijanović (12 March 2013 – 19 November 2018) (SNSD)
  • Radovan Višković (18 December 2019 – present) (SNSD)

Ministries

  • Ministry for Economy, Energy and Development
  • Ministry of Finance
  • Ministry of Education and Culture
  • Ministry of Justice
  • Ministry of Internal Affairs
  • Ministry of Administration and Local Self-Governance
  • Ministry of Health and Social Protection
  • Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Water Resources
  • Ministry of Transport and Communications
  • Ministry of Trade and Tourism
  • Ministry of Urban Planning, Civil Engineering and Ecology
  • Ministry of Labor and Soldiers and Invalid Protection
  • Ministry of Economic Relations and Coordination
  • Ministry of Refugees and Displaced Persons
  • Ministry of Science and Technology
  • Ministry without Portfolio

Administrative services

Administrative services in RS are administrative bodies within the ministries, and are established for the purpose of performing certain activities from within the sphere of activity of the administration, which, due to their nature, entirety and way of performing, require independence and special organization (administration, inspectorates, and other forms). Administrative services are under the direct supervision of the ministry to which they belong.

The following are the administrative units and the ministries to which they belong:

  • Administrative Service for Geodetic and Legal-Property Issues (responsible to the Government of Republika Srpska)
  • Administrative Service for the RS Customs (Ministry of Finance)
  • Revenue Service (Ministry of Finance)
  • Foreign Currency Inspectorate (Ministry of Finance)
  • Civil Defense Service(Ministry of Administration and Local Self-Governance)

Administrative organizations

Administrative organizations in the RS are established for the purpose of performing professional duties and duties of the republic's administration (institutions, directorates, secretariats, agencies, commissariats, funds, centers and other forms). Administrative organizations may have the attributes of a legal entity.

Current situation

Bosnian Serb nationalist politicians threaten to separate Republika Srpska from Bosnia and Herzegovina entirely.[1] The Prime Minister of Republika Srpska Milorad Dodik said a referendum on independence for RS was a fair solution and that 99 percent of Bosnian Serbs support secession from Bosnia-Herzegovina. Dodik stated that this referendum is "inevitable" and says that Bosnia and Herzegovina has no viable future.[2]

Bosniak politicians request for the suspension of Republika Srpska, saying that it was created on the backbone of genocide and war crimes. Haris Silajdžić, party leader of Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina, has repeatedly stated that he wishes to see the RS dismantled.[3][4]

Miroslav Lajčák, former High Representative of Bosnia-Herzegovina, has responded to this by saying that "Republika Srpska does not have the right to secede from BiH, at the same time no one can unilaterally abolish Republika Srpska."[5] President of Serbia Boris Tadić says that Serbia does not support a breakup of Bosnia and that, as a guarantor of the Dayton Accords that brought peace to Bosnia, supports Bosnia's territorial integrity.[6]

Serbia-Republika Srpska relations

In 1997, the Agreement on Special Parallel Relations was signed between the two on February 28, 1997. A council has been established to bolster relations, in which presidents and prime ministers participate. The Agreement was implemented December 15, 2010.[7] So far, four councils have been held.

On July 26, 2010, the Serbian Minister of Finance Diana Dragutinović and her Republika Srpska counterpart Aleksandar Džombić signed an Agreement on Cooperation in the Financial Sector, which will further develop mutual relations in the financial system. It will bolster the already good cooperation between the two, and help to maintain special parallel relations and enable exchange of experience, also discussing other sections. The working groups will convene at least twice a year.[8]

Kosovo's unilateral proclamation of independence

On July 31, 2011, President Milorad Dodik said that the concept of a multi-ethnic state in Kosovo has failed, and that the solving of the Kosovo question has not been dealt with, stressing that Republika Srpska does not accept Kosovo as an independent country. Dodik said "The peaceful solution is evidently not a possible solution [...] We support Belgrade." in relation to the Kosovo police operation trying to take control of border crossings located in North Kosovo on July 25.[9]

gollark: Probably. You'd have to have some way to train off past real-world flights too.
gollark: Humans are expensive, sensors are dirt-cheap.
gollark: It's obviously possible to stabilise helicopters because people can control helicopters.
gollark: Also, you could plausibly have a way to communicate telemetry and stuff to knowledgeable ground control people.
gollark: How common are ridiculously unplanned failure modes? And how much do the humans actually get them right?

References

  1. Rhetoric: Western Balkan recipe
  2. Link to reprint of article by Croatian newsagency Hina
  3. "Bosnian Sackings". BBC. 2004-07-13. Retrieved 2007-04-19.
  4. "Bosnian Elections". BBC News. 2006-10-13. Retrieved 2007-04-19.
  5. "Existence of Bosnia and Herzegovina cannot be questioned". EUSR / OHR. 2008-01-30. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
  6. Policy of peace
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-08-15. Retrieved 2011-02-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. Serbia, Republika Srpska improve relations in financial sector
  9. Dodik: Kosovsko pitanje nije rešeno
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