BiH - diplomacy
12/27/2025
14:31

SARAJEVO, December 27 /SRNA/ – Council of Ministers Deputy Chair Staša Košarac says that BiH Ambassador to the UN Zlatko Lagumdžija has always been an extension of “Alija’s policy” directed against Republika Srpska, and that he now wants to undermine the political will of the Serb people.
After Lagumdžija told federal media that Milorad Dodik, Dragan Čović, and Bakir Izetbegović should be removed from the politicalarena in BiH for the country to move forward, Košarac asked who Lagumdžija is and on what grounds he believes he has the right to determine what is best for Republika Srpska and the Serb people.
“We do not interfere in the elections of the Bosniak people. They should stay out of the elections of Srpska and the Serb people,” Košarac said.
He stated that it was not enough for Lagumdžija that he had been complicit in the majorization of Croats and the undermining of their legitimate political will, so he now wants to do the same to the Serb people by invoking some kind of “Komšić” in Srpska.
“A poser, a conformist, and a proven political narcissist, whose view reaches from Baščaršija to Marijin Dvor. No millimeter further,” Košarac said.
According to him, the worst figures for BiH are precisely Lagumdžija, Denis Bećirović, and others like them, who under the guise of social democracy and a false civic state persistently violate the Constitution and the Dayton framework of BiH.
“They are classic converts and fake leftists, but in essence fundamentalists and advocates of a centralized Muslim state in which there is no place for Serbs and Croats. They enjoy abusing Serbs and Croats loyal to them, while those people still fail to gain political awareness,” Košarac said.
He stressed that Republika Srpska and the Serb people do not renounce the nationally responsible policy of Milorad Dodik, because it is a policy that preserves Srpska and Serbs’ national interests.
“That policy bothers Zlatko and others, but that is exclusively their problem. They will have to live with that fact,” Košarac posted on Instagram.
They are accustomed, he added, to producing “fake” and falsified positions, which they then immediately begin to believe themselves. “It is sad that this has been going on since the 1990s,” he said.
Now, Košarac notes, they want to create a narrative about what is best for Serbs and Croats.
“On what authority do they claim the right to determine that? We are fed up with the worn-out Sarajevo pattern according to which they believe only their views are credible, factual, and important,” Košarac concluded.



