Bosnia state police fail in attempted arrest of Serb leader Dodik
SARAJEVO (Reuters) - Bosnia's state police, SIPA, on Wednesday tried to arrest Serb separatist leader Milorad Dodik who is wanted for attacking the constitutional order but were stopped by his armed police forces, a SIPA spokeswoman said.
The state court issued an arrest warrant for Dodik, the president of Bosnia's autonomous Serb Republic, and two of his close allies after they ignored a summons in the investigation of the separatist legislation they initiated and which has been suspended by the constitutional court.
Despite the arrest warrant, Dodik continued with his activities and traveled across the Serb-dominated region protected by heavily armed members of the region's police antiterrorist forces.
On Wednesday, he arrived in the town of East Sarajevo, bordering the capital Sarajevo, where the State Investigation and Protection Agency headquarters are located.
"The SIPA officers today tried to execute the court's order and arrest Republika Srpska (RS) President Milorad Dodik in East Sarajevo," spokeswoman Jelena Miovcic told Reuters. "They talked to the members of the RS police who warned them they will use the force and so prevented them from executing the orders."
A Reuters reporter did not see any SIPA officers in front of a government office in East Sarajevo, where Dodik arrived with his entourage, only the members of the Serb Republic police.
Dodik initiated Bosnia's biggest political crisis since the end of the country's war in the 1990s after he was sentenced in February to one year in prison and banned from politics for six years over defying rulings by the international envoy, whose role is to prevent multi-ethnic Bosnia from slipping back into conflict.
The dispute pits Dodik and his allies Russia and Serbia against the United States and the European Union.
Last month, the court ordered an international arrest warrant to be issued for Dodik and his aide after they went abroad in defiance of an internal arrest warrant, but Interpol declined its "red notice" request.
A long-time advocate of secession from Bosnia, Dodik had initiated legislation barring the state judiciary and police from operating in the Serb region, but Bosnia's constitutional court temporarily suspended that.
The United States and the United Kingdom sanctioned Dodik for violating the terms of a peace deal that ended the country's 1992-1995 war.
Earlier this month, Germany and Austria announced they will bar Dodik and his two aides from their territories, accusing him of threatening the security of his fragile country and the region.
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CNN
2 minutes ago
- CNN
Protests expected as Trump arrives in Scotland for five-day visit
Donald Trump UKFacebookTweetLink Follow Protesters in Scotland say they will mount a wave of resistance as US President Donald Trump prepares to travel to the country on Friday for a five-day private visit. Trump is traveling to his golf resort in the small village of Turnberry, on the west coast, where he will meet UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday, before going to his other resort near Aberdeen, on the other side of Scotland, and open an 18-hole course dedicated to his Scottish-born mother Mary. Several protest groups, ranging from trade unions and climate justice campaigners to sections of the American diaspora and Palestinian and Ukrainian advocacy groups, are planning to demonstrate against the US president under the umbrella of the 'Stop Trump Coalition.' Protests are scheduled for Saturday in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dumfries. Police Scotland are expected to deploy thousands of officers during Trump's visit, according to PA Media. Assistant Chief Constable Emma Bond told CNN in a statement that the visit 'will require a significant police operation using local, national and specialist resources from across Police Scotland, supported by colleagues from other UK police forces.' Trump himself is expected to stay at his golf resorts, away from the public. Scotland, ruled for decades by a left-of-center devolved government, has a long history of protesting against Trump. When he visited his Scottish golf courses during his first presidential term, police estimated that 5,000 people marched through Edinburgh in protest. On Tuesday, Scottish pro-independence newspaper The National printed a front page with the headline 'Convicted US felon to arrive in Scotland.' 'I don't think many Scottish people would feel he's welcome,' one Scottish resident Anna Acquroff told Reuters in Glasgow. 'I think it's an embarrassment that he is coming here at all. Personally.' Not everyone is so opposed to the Trump visit, however. Another Glaswegian, Keith Bean, told Reuters he thought Trump was 'welcome to come' because 'talking is always good. To divide and keep people separate from one another without discussing, it tends to create more problems than conversation.' While in Scotland, Trump will also meet its First Minister John Swinney, who said he will 'raise global and humanitarian issues of significant importance, including the unimaginable suffering we are witnessing in Gaza, and ensure Scotland's voice is heard at the highest levels of government across the world,' according to PA. This visit to Scotland marks a distraction from Trump's current domestic political troubles over his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein – an accused sex trafficker and disgraced financier who died by suicide in 2019. Already, however, that ongoing turmoil has seeped into Trump's visit. The White House removed the Wall Street Journal from the trip's press pool after the publication ran a story which described a collection of letters gifted to Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003, including a note bearing Trump's name and an outline of a naked woman. Trump filed a lawsuit the next day claiming defamation 'because no authentic letter or drawing exists.' Trump will return to the UK in September for an 'unprecedented' second state visit at the invitation of King Charles, which is unlikely to have any public-facing events. Typically, second-term US presidents are not invited for a second state visit. In keeping with tradition, former presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush were offered lunch or tea with the monarch during their second administrations.


CNN
20 minutes ago
- CNN
Protests expected as Trump arrives in Scotland for five-day visit
Protesters in Scotland say they will mount a wave of resistance as US President Donald Trump prepares to travel to the country on Friday for a five-day private visit. Trump is traveling to his golf resort in the small village of Turnberry, on the west coast, where he will meet UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday, before going to his other resort near Aberdeen, on the other side of Scotland, and open an 18-hole course dedicated to his Scottish-born mother Mary. Several protest groups, ranging from trade unions and climate justice campaigners to sections of the American diaspora and Palestinian and Ukrainian advocacy groups, are planning to demonstrate against the US president under the umbrella of the 'Stop Trump Coalition.' Protests are scheduled for Saturday in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dumfries. Police Scotland are expected to deploy thousands of officers during Trump's visit, according to PA Media. Assistant Chief Constable Emma Bond told CNN in a statement that the visit 'will require a significant police operation using local, national and specialist resources from across Police Scotland, supported by colleagues from other UK police forces.' Trump himself is expected to stay at his golf resorts, away from the public. Scotland, ruled for decades by a left-of-center devolved government, has a long history of protesting against Trump. When he visited his Scottish golf courses during his first presidential term, police estimated that 5,000 people marched through Edinburgh in protest. On Tuesday, Scottish pro-independence newspaper The National printed a front page with the headline 'Convicted US felon to arrive in Scotland.' 'I don't think many Scottish people would feel he's welcome,' one Scottish resident Anna Acquroff told Reuters in Glasgow. 'I think it's an embarrassment that he is coming here at all. Personally.' Not everyone is so opposed to the Trump visit, however. Another Glaswegian, Keith Bean, told Reuters he thought Trump was 'welcome to come' because 'talking is always good. To divide and keep people separate from one another without discussing, it tends to create more problems than conversation.' While in Scotland, Trump will also meet its First Minister John Swinney, who said he will 'raise global and humanitarian issues of significant importance, including the unimaginable suffering we are witnessing in Gaza, and ensure Scotland's voice is heard at the highest levels of government across the world,' according to PA. This visit to Scotland marks a distraction from Trump's current domestic political troubles over his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein – an accused sex trafficker and disgraced financier who died by suicide in 2019. Already, however, that ongoing turmoil has seeped into Trump's visit. The White House removed the Wall Street Journal from the trip's press pool after the publication ran a story which described a collection of letters gifted to Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003, including a note bearing Trump's name and an outline of a naked woman. Trump filed a lawsuit the next day claiming defamation 'because no authentic letter or drawing exists.' Trump will return to the UK in September for an 'unprecedented' second state visit at the invitation of King Charles, which is unlikely to have any public-facing events. Typically, second-term US presidents are not invited for a second state visit. In keeping with tradition, former presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush were offered lunch or tea with the monarch during their second administrations.

USA Today
30 minutes ago
- USA Today
Thailand, Cambodia exchange heavy artillery as fighting expands for second day
SURIN, Thailand, July 25 (Reuters) - Thailand and Cambodia exchanged heavy artillery fire for a second day on Friday as their worst fighting in over a decade intensified and spread to new areas, despite international calls for a ceasefire. At least 16 people have been killed and tens of thousands displaced in the escalating border battle. Both sides have blamed each other for starting the conflict and on Friday ratcheted up the rhetoric, with Thailand accusing Cambodia of deliberately targeting civilians and Cambodia alleging Thailand was using cluster munitions, a controversial and widely condemned ordnance. Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai said Cambodia had launched attacks on multiple fronts and Thailand was defending its territory. "The current situation involves acts of intrusion and aggression that are causing harm to the people's lives. The situation has intensified and could escalate into a state of war. At present, it's a confrontation involving heavy weapons," he told reporters. Fighting re-erupted before dawn, with clashes reported in 12 locations, up from six on Thursday, according to Thailand's military, which accused Cambodia of using artillery and Russian-made BM-21 rocket systems to target areas that included schools and hospitals. "These barbaric acts have senselessly claimed lives and inflicted injuries upon numerous innocent civilians," the Thai military said in a statement. More: Thailand F-16 jet bombs Cambodian targets as border clash escalates It described Cambodia's bombardment as "appalling attacks", putting the blame squarely on the Phnom Penh government, which it said was being led by Hun Sen, the influential former premier of nearly four decades and father of current Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet. "The deliberate targeting of civilians is a war crime, and those responsible must be brought to justice," the Thai military added. LOUD EXPLOSIONS The fighting started early on Thursday, quickly escalating from small arms fire to heavy shelling in multiple areas 210 km (130 miles) apart along a frontier where sovereignty has been disputed for more than a century. The trigger was Thailand's recalling of its ambassador to Phnom Penh and expulsion of Cambodia's envoy on Wednesday, in response to a second Thai soldier losing a limb to a landmine that Bangkok alleged had been laid recently by rival troops. Cambodia has dismissed that as baseless. Cambodia's defence ministry and its government's landmine authority condemned what they said was Thailand's use of a large amount of cluster munitions, calling it a violation of international law. The foreign ministry of Thailand, which is not among the more than 100 signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Reuters journalists in Thailand's Surin province saw a Thai military convoy that included about a dozen trucks, armoured vehicles and tanks cut across provincial roads ringed by paddy fields as it moved toward the border. Intermittent bursts of explosions could be heard amid a heavy presence of armed troops. Soldiers marshalled traffic on a rural road along which artillery guns were being loaded and fired in succession, emitting orange flashes followed by loud explosions and grey smoke. More than 130,000 people have been evacuated from conflict areas in Thailand, where the death toll rose to 15 as of early Friday, 14 of those civilians, according to the health ministry. It said 46 people were wounded, including 15 soldiers. 'WE WERE SO SCARED' More evacuees arrived at shelters in Surin province, fleeing their homes after hearing the booms of shelling. "We heard very loud explosions, so we came here. We were so scared," said Aung Ying Yong, 67, wiping away her tears with a towel. "So many people are in trouble because of this war … we are very sad that we have to live like this." Cambodia's national government has provided no details on casualties or evacuations and did not respond to requests for comment on Friday. An official from Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province said one civilian had been killed and five wounded, with 1,500 families evacuated. Thailand had on Thursday mobilised an F-16 fighter jet in a rare combat deployment, which carried out an air strike on a Cambodian military target, among measures Cambodia called "reckless and brutal military aggression" in its appeal for the United Nations Security Council to address the issue. Thailand's use of an F-16 underlines its military advantage over Cambodia, which has no fighter aircraft and significantly less defence hardware and personnel. The United States, a long-time treaty ally of Thailand, called for an immediate cessation of hostilities, as did Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, the chair of the regional bloc ASEAN, who said he had spoken to leaders of both countries and urged them to find a peaceful way out. "I welcome the positive signals and willingness shown by both Bangkok and Phnom Penh to consider this path forward," he said on social media. But Thailand's foreign ministry said on Friday it has rejected mediation efforts from third countries after offers to facilitate dialogue from the United States, China and Malaysia, "We stand by our position that bilateral mechanism is the best way out," foreign ministry spokesperson Nikorndej Balankura told Reuters in an interview. (Reporting by Shoon Naing and Artorn Pookasook in Surin, Thailand, Panarat Thepgumpanat, Panu Wongcha-um and Devjyot Ghoshal in Bangkok, Francesco Guarascio in Hanoi and Rozanna Latiff in Kuala Lumpur; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)