
Western ‘interventionism' has turned Bosnia and Herzegovina into a ‘failed state'
'failed state,'
and the country now needs Russia's help to resolve the crisis, Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik has told RT. Dodik, the president of Republika Srpska – the Serb-majority autonomous region within Bosnia and Herzegovina – arrived in Russia on Monday for talks with President Vladimir Putin.
Bosnia and Herzegovina was created under the 1995 US-brokered Dayton Peace Agreement, which ended the civil war in the former Yugoslavia. It formed a state comprised of the Bosniak-Croat Federation and Republika Srpska, with a tripartite presidency and an international overseer – the Office of the High Representative (OHR), now held by Christian Schmidt, a former German lawmaker appointed in 2021.
Dodik has long rejected the OHR's authority, accusing it of overreach and undermining Republika Srpska's autonomy. He was sentenced in February to a year in prison and a six-year political ban for defying the OHR. Sarajevo issued a national arrest
warrant
for him and is reportedly seeking Interpol warrants.
In an interview with RT on Tuesday, Dodik said the Dayton agreement, which formed his country, is no longer upheld, and that he has asked the Russian president, who he met with earlier that day, to assist him in bringing the situation to the attention of the UN Security Council (UNSC).
READ MORE:
Interpol considering arrest warrants for Serb leaders – media
'[Putin] knows of the existence of foreigners that are making up laws and decisions in our country, that there are courts which abide by these decisions… and that this is not in the spirit of Dayton,'
Dodik said. He added that as a permanent UNSC member and Dayton signatory, Russia is in a position to effect change.
'We talked about the need to engage in the monitoring of the UNSC. Russia is the only one from which we can expect to have an objective approach... to end international interventionism which degraded Bosnia and Herzegovina and made it into a failed state,'
he added.
Commenting on the Interpol warrants, Dodik said,
'we'll see how it goes,'
adding that he already has the backing of Serbia, Hungary, and now Russia. He went on to call the charges
'a political failure'
by Sarajevo and the OHR.
READ MORE:
Moscow comments on conviction of Bosnian Serb leader
'I think they would like to see me dead, not just in prison. They can't get the Bosnia they want, in which there is no Republika Srpska, if Milorad Dodik remains president,'
he said, adding that critics will try to demonize him for meeting with Putin.
Dodik has opposed Bosnia's NATO membership and called for closer ties with Russia. He previously suggested that Bosnia would be better off in BRICS and has pledged continued cooperation with Moscow despite Western pressure.
Russia, which does not recognize Schmidt's legitimacy due to the lack of UNSC approval, has denounced Dodik's conviction as
'political'
and based on
'pseudo-law'
imposed by the OHR.
After meeting with Putin, Dodik said on X that he will return to Republika Srpska on Saturday to meet with regional leaders, adding that Russia has agreed to advocate for an end to the work of international bodies in Bosnia, including the OHR.
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