Tatjana Ljujić-Mijatović

Tatjana Ljujić-Mijatović (Serbian Cyrillic: Татјана Љујић-Мијатовић; born 1941), also called Tanja, is a Bosnian politician. By vocation, she is a horticulturist and landscape designer. During the Bosnian War, Ljujić-Mijatović served as a member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Early life and education

Ljujić-Mijatović was born on 11 May 1941 into a Serb family in Sarajevo.[1] Her father was a high-ranking commander in the Yugoslav Partisan resistance movement during the Second World War. She attended elementary school, high school, and university in Sarajevo.[2]

Having graduated from the University of Sarajevo as an agriculture engineer in 1964, she obtained a master's degree in landscape design at the University of Belgrade in 1982, followed by a doctoral degree in Sarajevo in 1986. She worked as a landscape designer in Vienna from 1969 until 1971 and in Sarajevo from 1971 to 1979, and became a university professor in Mostar and Sarajevo in 1982.[1]

Political career

Ljujić-Mijatović became politically active during Bosnia and Herzegovina's socialist era.[3] She became a delegate in the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1991.[1]

When the Bosnian War broke out in 1992, Ljujić-Mijatović rejected Serb nationalist politics, stayed in Sarajevo during the siege of the city by the Bosnian Serb army, and supported the preservation of a multiethnic Bosnia and Herzegovina.[3] When Nenad Kecmanović resigned his post as a Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina in July 1992, Ljujić-Mijatović was the Serb delegate with most votes in the 1990 election who was still residing in the government-controlled territory. Biljana Plavšić and Nikola Koljević had also resigned, and two delegates ahead of Ljujić-Mijatović left the country.[4] Ljujić-Mijatović duly took her seat in the Presidency, as the only woman among the seven members.[2] In 1993, she gave an interview in Vienna about the life in besieged Sarajevo, which prompted Alois Mock, Foreign Minister of Austria, to request that she be named Bosnian ambassador to the United Nations. During the Dayton negotiations, Ljujić-Mijatović resolutely opposed the division of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[2]

Following the war, Ljujić-Mijatović remained a member of the Social Democratic Party.[2] From 1999 to 2000, she was the vice-mayor of Sarajevo, and afterwards served in the city council. She is a member of the Serb Civic Council.[1]

Personal life

Ljujić-Mijatović is divorced. She has two daughters, including Dunja Mijatović (born in 1964).[2]

References

  1. Biografija: Tatjana Ljujić Mijatović, zamjenica predsjedavajućeg Gradskog vijeća Grada Sarajeva (in Serbo-Croatian), City of Sarajevo
  2. Hunt, Swanee (2004), This Was Not Our War: Bosnian Women Reclaiming the Peace, Duke University Press, p. 245, ISBN 0822386062
  3. Čuvalo, Ante (2010), The A to Z of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Scarecrow Press, p. 147, ISBN 1461671787
  4. Pejanović, Mirko (2004), Through Bosnian Eyes: The Political Memoir of a Bosnian Serb, Publisher, p. 147, ISBN 1557533598
Political offices
Preceded by
Nenad Kecmanović
Mirko Pejanović
Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina
1992–1996
With: Mirko Pejanović
Succeeded by
Momčilo Krajišnik
Preceded by
Muhamed Sacirbey
Permanent Representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the United Nations
1996–2000
Succeeded by
Mirza Kušljugić
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.