Bosnia charges two militants with planning attacks

Bosnian authorities said two suspected members of a militant movement have been charged for allegedly preparing “terrorist attacks”. (File photo: Reuters)
Updated 03 July 2018
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Bosnia charges two militants with planning attacks

  • Maksim Bozic and Edin Hastor are accused of “acquiring weapons and explosive devices"

SARAJEVO: Bosnian authorities said Tuesday two suspected members of a militant movement have been charged for allegedly preparing “terrorist attacks” on police and the intelligence agency.
Maksim Bozic and Edin Hastor are accused of “acquiring weapons and explosive devices and... preparing terrorist attacks on the building of the agency of investigation and protection (SIPA) and interior ministry premises,” the state prosecutor’s office said in a statement.
The two, born in Bosnia in 1990 and 1972 respectively, were arrested in April when police seized grenades, ammunition, automatic rifles, combat vests and flags looking like the Daesh insignia.
“During the investigation evidence were found about suspects’ illegal activities aimed at preparing and executing a terrorist act,” the statement added.
In November 2015 a man killed two members of Bosnia’s armed forces with automatic weapons near a barracks in Sarajevo before blowing himself up. Officials said the attacker was linked to Islamist circles and committed a terrorist act.
A year before a 24-year-old Bosnian Islamist killed a policeman and injured two others when he attacked a police station in the eastern city of Zvornik with a shotgun, before being shot.
About 1,000 people from the Balkans joined militant ranks to fight in Syria and Iraq since 2012, but the flow has dried up with more than 200 killed on the frontline.
Another 300 or so have returned to the Balkan region.
Muslims make up about 40 percent of Bosnia’s 3.8 million population while the rest of the Balkan country’s population is mostly Serbian Orthodox or Catholic.


Japanese women MPs want more seats, the porcelain kind

Updated 5 sec ago
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Japanese women MPs want more seats, the porcelain kind

TOKYO: Nearly 60 women lawmakers in Japan, including Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, have submitted a petition calling for more toilets in the parliament building to match their improved representation.
Although the number of women politicians rose at the last election — and despite Takaichi becoming the first female prime minister in October — Japanese politics remains massively male-dominated.
This is reflected by there being only one lavatory containing two cubicles for the lower house’s 73 women to use near the Diet’s main plenary session hall in central Tokyo.
“Before plenary sessions start, truly so many women lawmakers have to form long queues in front of the restroom,” said Yasuko Komiyama from the opposition Constitutional Democratic Party.
She was speaking after submitting the cross-party petition signed by 58 women to Yasukazu Hamada, the chair of the lower house committee on rules and administration, earlier this month.
The Diet building was finished in 1936, nearly a decade before women got the vote in December 1945 following Japan’s defeat in World War II.
The entire lower house building has 12 men’s toilets with 67 stalls and nine women’s facilities with a total of 22 cubicles, according to the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper.
Gender-rigid Japan ranked 118 out of 148 this year in the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report. Women are also grossly under-represented in business and the media.
In elections, women candidates say that they often have to deal with sexist jibes, including being told that they should be at home looking after children.
Currently, 72 of 465 lower house lawmakers are women, up from 45 in the previous parliament, as are 74 of the 248 upper house members.
The government’s stated target is to have women occupy at least 30 percent of the legislative seats.
Takaichi, an admirer of former British premier Margaret Thatcher, said before becoming premier that she wanted “Nordic” levels of gender balance in her cabinet.
But, in the end, she appointed just two other women to her 19-strong cabinet.
Takaichi, 64, has said she hopes to raise awareness about women’s health struggles and has spoken candidly about her own experience with menopause.
But she is still seen as socially conservative.
She opposes revising a 19th-century law requiring married couples to share the same surname, and wants the imperial family to retain male-only succession.
The increasing demand for female loos can be seen as a sign of progress for Japan although it also reflects the nation’s failure to achieve gender equality, Komiyama said.
“In a way, this symbolizes how the number of female lawmakers has increased,” Komiyama told reporters, according to her party’s website, adding that she hoped for more equality in other areas of life.