World, Europe

Bosnian Serb leader dismisses US sanctions

Republika Srpska's Milorad Dodik describes sanctions as 'personal revenge' by outgoing Obama administration figures

18.01.2017 - Update : 18.01.2017
Bosnian Serb leader dismisses US sanctions File photo

SARAJEVO, Bosnia and Herzegovina

The president of Bosnia’s Serb entity -- Republika Srpska -- dismissed on Wednesday American financial sanctions imposed on him, saying they were not being issued by the U.S. but by members of the outgoing Barack Obama administration.

Milorad Dodik also accused U.S. ambassador to Bosnia, Maureen Cormack, of being behind the move, describing her as an “enemy of Republika Srpska and Serbs”.

The U.S. Treasury Department sanctions came on Tuesday. Cormack posted an online message which accused Dodik of defying Bosnian’s top court and undermining the 1995 Dayton peace deal which ended the 1992-1995 Bosnian War.

More than a week ago, the Serb entity officially celebrated the creation of the small state for the second year in a row, defying a ruling from Bosnia's Constitutional Court.

During the celebrations, Dodik told a rally the entity had been created “as a response to the Serbian people's call for achieving freedom in this region."

Dodik remained defiant on Wednesday, telling reporters: "The decision is misplaced, because those who brought it know that I do not have any property, nor account in the United States or abroad, except in Serbia."

The Bosnian Serb leader said he had been under sanctions for 10 years by various actors belonging to the outgoing U.S. administration.

"This is a personal revenge of Mrs. Cormack and not officials in the U.S., which she falsely informed about the situation in Bosnia-Herzegovina," he added.

'Statehood' row

In late November 2015, Bosnia's Constitutional Court ruled that celebrating January’s Dan Republika Srpska [Republika Srpska Statehood Day] could be discriminatory to other ethnic groups in the country.

U.S. Acting Office of Foreign Assets Control Director John Smith said in a Tuesday statement that Dodik's actions posed a significant threat to the sovereignty as well as the territorial integrity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

"Today’s action underscores the U.S. commitment to the Dayton Accords and supports international efforts for the country’s continued European integration," he said.

As a result of Tuesday's designation, any property or interest in property of Dodik within U.S. jurisdiction is blocked.

Reporting by Sanela Crnovrsanin and Kayhan Gul; Writing by Esra Kaymak,Talha Ozturk

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