Bosnian Serb Leader Dodik Sentenced, Moves to Restrict State Authority
Milorad Dodik faces a one-year prison term and political ban, prompting legislative actions to limit Bosnia's central government in the Serb Republic.
- Bosnian Serb President Milorad Dodik was sentenced to one year in prison and banned from politics for six years for defying an international peace envoy's rulings.
- Dodik rejected the verdict, claiming it was politically motivated, and is expected to appeal within two weeks, with the option to pay a fine instead of serving jail time.
- In response, Dodik initiated measures to bar Bosnia's state police, judiciary, and intelligence agency from operating in the Serb Republic, with parliamentary approval expected soon.
- Russia condemned the court's decision, calling it destabilizing for the Balkans and aligning with Dodik's stance against Bosnia's central institutions.
- The U.S. and EU criticized Dodik's actions as threats to Bosnia's sovereignty and stability, urging adherence to the Dayton peace accords that ended the 1990s war.