Po pitanju RS, najviše zabrinjava osovina Tadić-Dodik!
Ne zaboravite!
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sreda, 03 mart 2010 16:22
Skeptik
Svi ti "veliki" planovi i strategije za BiH i ostali deo Balkana zavise uglavnom od ekonomske situacije u tzv. evrozoni, a i šire,jer je očigledno dosta skupo baviti se nefunkcionalnim državama na Balkanu.
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sreda, 03 mart 2010 21:20
Mitar iz Bijeljine
Na žalost svih nas koji živimo u BiH, teško će se doći do dogovora u vezi bilo čega. Ni oko imovine. Popis je posebna priča. Očigledno je ovakav popis još jedan od pritisaka na vlasti Republike Srpske. Vjerovatno da će Viskoki predstavnik u BiH, koji je poznat kao pisac predgovora sabranim djelima Alije Izetbegovića to u nekom trenutku da iskoristi.
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četvrtak, 04 mart 2010 00:21
Mirko Grbić, Banjaluka
Svakog dana u svakom pogledu ja sam protiv BiH...i tikve ću saditi s onim s kojim se one ne sade...ako BiH to škodi !
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četvrtak, 04 mart 2010 15:08
pa sta kaze 'nova srpska politicka misao o ovome???'
The arrest of Ejup Ganic: Serbia's aggression against Bosnia continues By Marko Atilla Hoare
Blog: The Great Surbiton
Imagine if, fifteen years after the end of World War II, the Japanese
government had tried to have Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the US
during the war, extradited to face trial in Japan for the deaths of Japanese
soldiers during the Battle of Pearl Harbour. Imagine if the German
government after the war had tried to have survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising extradited from Israel to Germany to face trial for the killing of
German soldiers during the uprising.
On Monday, Ejup Ganic, the former *de facto* Bosnian vice-president during
the war of 1992-95, was arrested in London at the request of the Serbian
government, which seeks his extradition to face trial in Serbia for the
killing of Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) soldiers in Sarajevo on 3 May 1992.
This incident demonstrates that Serbia is still very far from showing
repentence for its aggression against Bosnia during the 1990s. On the
contrary, with the arrest of Ganic, Serbia is continuing this aggression, by
attempting to persecute Bosnians guilty only of trying to defend their
country from it.
The incident for which Ganic’s extradition is being sought by Belgrade
occurred at Dobrovoljacka ulica (Volunteers’ Street) in Sarajevo on 3 May
1992. At this time, the JNA forces in Sarajevo and in Bosnia as a whole were
*de jure* and *de facto* the forces of the neighbouring state, the
self-proclaimed ‘Federal Republic of Yugoslavia’ (i.e. Serbia and
Montenegro), which was then engaged in a full-scale war of conquest against
Bosnia-Hercegovina, involving the systematic massacre and expulsion of
non-Serbs from the areas that it occupied. In principle, the JNA should have
been the joint army of all the former Yugoslavia’s republics and peoples.
But...
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četvrtak, 04 mart 2010 16:59
Petar
Nije cudan stav Rusije po pitanju imovine i referenduma. Pa, dobili su na poklon Rafineriju, sto ni u snu nisu mogli sanjati dok je bilo Tita. Nema sada vise Rumunije, Bugarske, Madjarske i drugih satelita,od kojih su uzimali i possljednju kap vode i zrno hrane.Dodik ce sve pokloniti samo da ga podrzavaju u njegovom pohodu na narodnu imovinu.
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petak, 05 mart 2010 02:26
"srednje rešenje"
Da, sve će se vrteti oko potrage za nekim "srednjim rešenjem", ali problem je što je srpska stvar u BiH i uopšte u regionu već toliko represirana i sasečena da srpska strana naprosto nema više šta da žrtvuje u ime tog navodnog "kompromisa", a da ne ugrozi sam opstanak Republike Srpske i srpskog naroda u BiH. Zato je u ovom konkretnom slučaju pozivanje na kompromis i to da svaka strana malo odstupi i popusti zapravo veoma opasno i pogubno. Zato treba smoći snage da se kaže - ne ustavnim promenama. Ali to neće biti nimalo jednostavno.
Ne zaboravite!
Blog: The Great Surbiton
Imagine if, fifteen years after the end of World War II, the Japanese
government had tried to have Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the US
during the war, extradited to face trial in Japan for the deaths of Japanese
soldiers during the Battle of Pearl Harbour. Imagine if the German
government after the war had tried to have survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto
Uprising extradited from Israel to Germany to face trial for the killing of
German soldiers during the uprising.
On Monday, Ejup Ganic, the former *de facto* Bosnian vice-president during
the war of 1992-95, was arrested in London at the request of the Serbian
government, which seeks his extradition to face trial in Serbia for the
killing of Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) soldiers in Sarajevo on 3 May 1992.
This incident demonstrates that Serbia is still very far from showing
repentence for its aggression against Bosnia during the 1990s. On the
contrary, with the arrest of Ganic, Serbia is continuing this aggression, by
attempting to persecute Bosnians guilty only of trying to defend their
country from it.
The incident for which Ganic’s extradition is being sought by Belgrade
occurred at Dobrovoljacka ulica (Volunteers’ Street) in Sarajevo on 3 May
1992. At this time, the JNA forces in Sarajevo and in Bosnia as a whole were
*de jure* and *de facto* the forces of the neighbouring state, the
self-proclaimed ‘Federal Republic of Yugoslavia’ (i.e. Serbia and
Montenegro), which was then engaged in a full-scale war of conquest against
Bosnia-Hercegovina, involving the systematic massacre and expulsion of
non-Serbs from the areas that it occupied. In principle, the JNA should have
been the joint army of all the former Yugoslavia’s republics and peoples.
But...