VOA标准英语2010年-Bosnia and Herzegovina Still Strugglin(在线收听) |
In The Hague, former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic has resumed his own defense in his war crimes trial for what he called Serbia’s “just and holy cause” against Muslim aggression during the war in Bosnia in the 1990s. Bosnian journalist Kemal Kurspahic, war-time editor of the Bosnian daily newspaper Oslobodjenje, says that in recent years Bosnia and Herzegovina has actually slid backwards in its efforts to join European institutions such as the European Union. “Over the last four years, we had paralyzing policies in place, and I think Bosnia was left behind [by] its neighbors, both Croatia and Serbia, in their efforts to join the European Union,” Kurspahic said. But Kurspahic is not so sure. “Dodik is on the record as stating that his goal is the weakening of the state and the strengthening of his entity,” Kurspahic notes. “He even talks about the dissolution of Bosnia in a few years and that is his ultimate goal.” However, the major international players – including NATO, the United States, and the European Union – have stated repeatedly over the past couple of months that they will never recognize any movement to a further partitioning of the country, according to Kurspahic. Bosnian Serb Sentiment in Conflict with Political Reality in Serbia Ljiljana Smajlovic, president of the Serbian Association of Journalists, suggests that whatever the Prime Minister of Republika Srpska may say publicly, Bosnia is unlikely to be dissolved. “The Prime Minister is saying that he wants to have a referendum on his interpretation of the Dayton Agreement,” Smajlovic said. According to Mr. Dodik, Smajlovic said the Dayton Agreement never intended to give the U.N. High Representative the powers he has reserved. Nonetheless, the critical factor is that Boris Tadic, the President of Serbia, believes that any attempt to upset the Dayton Agreement would be detrimental to Serbia, Smajlovic emphasizes. “It could threaten Serbia’s European perspective, which really is Serbia’s top priority.” Above all, President Tadic is trying to present himself as a regional leader who is indispensible to both Brussels and Washington, Smajlovic said. Economic Issues Ascendant Bosnia and Herzegovina has serious economic problems regarding its membership prospects in the European Union, Smajlovic notes. Democratic Institutions at Issue “The Muslim-Croat Federation has not recognized its potential for economic development, partly because of its disunity and partly because of its lack of central institutions,” said Balkan expert Daniel Nelson, author of many books on the region. He noted that, if an investor goes to Bosnia and Herzegovina, he doesn’t know whom to talk to. “But in Republika Srpska, decisions are easier because it’s a dictatorship,” Nelson said. “It’s not a democracy, and they [the Bosnian Serbs] are impeding the creation of a Bosnia and Herzegovina that would be unified; they are trying to torpedo it and destroy it.” Nelson said he agrees with Dennis Blair, the director of U.S. national intelligence, who recently warned that Bosnia is “Europe’s biggest security threat.” So, the international community needs to take a stronger role, Nelson argued. “If it does, there is a possibility that Bosnia-Herzegovina as a state could be that multiethnic example for the world. But, if it doesn’t, and if Bosnians want to go their separate ways, they are going to remain poor and conflict-ridden,” said Nelson.
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原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/3/94298.html |