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It's a dysfunctional system that must be simplified if Bosnia wants to achieve its goal of joining the 27-nation European Union. Brussels insists Bosnia must be more centralized but that goes against Serbs' desire to maintain their autonomy. Croats insist on their own little ministate instead of sharing one with the Bosniaks and the Bosniaks want a unified country. In fact, everybody wants what they wanted back in 1992. So Bosnia today is not at war but certainly not at peace. Bogdan Vukadin was one of those Serb soldiers firing from the mountains on Sarajevo during the war. "We did not fight this war for nothing," he says. "We have our Serb Republic, we have our government, we have our president, we have our own institutions." Ethnic mistrust or economic differences between the ministates are keeping the groups in Bosnia separated. Children in school are learning three different version of history, calling their common language by three different names
-- Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian -- and are growing isolated from each other in monoethnic enclaves. Foreign investors -- the only hope for the country's economy -- are avoiding Bosnia for its political instability and its enormous bureaucracy. The pressure to join the EU has united some of the country's institutions. Bosnia now has a common currency, a central bank, its two ministate police forces are run by a joint ministry. There is a state court, border police on state level and even a joint army
-- melded from the three that once fought each other. Now those same soldiers from all three armies are united, protesting together over a lack of retirement pay and jobs in the same central Sarajevo square. Dressed in old uniforms, exhausted and unshaved, Serbs, Bosniaks and Croats sleep and eat at this doomed square, occasionally shouting up to nearby government offices "Thieves, thieves!" The former soldiers say they are here to defend Bosnia from lying politicians. Many of them were only 17 in 1992 when the ethnically mixed crowd gathered to demand peace but was cheated. "We will be here together till the end, demanding our rights," said Milomir Saric, a Bosnian Serb veteran.
[Associated
Press;
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