Three decades after peace deal, Bosnia still struggles with division

A photo in the town of Foca in eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina shows supporters of the SNSD party (Alliance of Independent Social Democrats) attending a pre-election rally. (AFP)
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Updated 21 November 2025
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Three decades after peace deal, Bosnia still struggles with division

  • A tripartite presidency presides but has little actual power

SARAJEVO/BRCKO: Franjo Sola remembers November 21, 1995, as the best day of his life, when a US-brokered peace deal ended war in Bosnia and allowed him to leave the army and return to his studies at Sarajevo University.
“I swore to myself that I will celebrate it as my second birthday,” Sola said this week as the Balkan country marks the 30th anniversary of the Dayton peace accord that halted an ethnic conflict between Serbs, Croats and Bosniaks that killed some 100,000 people after Bosnia declared independence from Yugoslavia.
Since then, however, Sola’s optimism has faded. While the deal has maintained peace, Bosnia and Herzegovina remains divided along ethnic lines, its two regions barely held together by a weak umbrella government. Peace has failed to bring prosperity, and hundreds of thousands of young people — including Sola’s son — are estimated to have left in search of better prospects abroad.
“Dayton was good to stop the war but...it was not good for the development of the country,” said Sola, who works as a technical expert for EUFOR, the EU peacekeeping mission that remains in the country to oversee the implementation of the peace deal.
“It should be revised, the country cannot function like this anymore.”

CORRUPTION AND DIVISION HOLD BOSNIA BACK
The Dayton accords, named after the city in Ohio where they were ratified, split Bosnia into two autonomous regions, the Orthodox Serb-dominated Serb Republic and the Federation shared by Catholic Croats and Muslim Bosniaks. A tripartite presidency presides but has little actual power.
The agreement has kept the peace, and Bosnia is now being considered for EU membership — an unthinkable prospect in the 1990s when much of the country’s infrastructure had been destroyed by war.
The economy saw some strong post-war gains, bolstered by aid that poured in for reconstruction, and annual growth today is above 2 percent. Yet development is hamstrung by corruption and slow decision-making.
According to unofficial reports, at least 600,000 people have left the country in the last 12 years, although no-one has an exact figure because the country has not completed a census since 2013.
Bosnia remains politically divided. Until a state court banned him from public office in February, Milorad Dodik, the former head of the Serb Republic, had long sought to secede from Bosnia and join Serbia.
In the Croat village of Donja Skakava in northern Bosnia, many people have left. Most Bosnian Croats have been able to get Croatian passports, allowing them to move freely around the EU.
“The people have no economic stability whatsoever. The situation has worsened, not improved, after Dayton,” resident Anto Maticic said, standing in front of the remains of houses destroyed in the war. He reckons that at least 80 percent of Croats from the northern Posavina region, bordering Croatia, have moved out.
“Many of them rebuilt their houses but they remain empty,” he said.


Somalia warns millions face acute hunger due to drought

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Somalia warns millions face acute hunger due to drought

MOGADISHU: About 6.5 million people in Somalia ‌face acute hunger due to drought, the government and the United Nations said on Tuesday, sounding the alarm days after the UN’s food agency warned ​that food aid could grind to a halt by April without new funding.
Somalia declared a national drought emergency in November after years of failed rains, and other countries in the region have also been hit.
More than a third of those facing acute malnutrition are children, Somalia’s government and the United Nations Somalia said in a joint statement. The crisis has forced tens of thousands of ‌people to ‌flee their homes, with many crowding ​into camps ‌in ⁠Mogadishu and ​other ⁠cities.
“The drought ... has deepened alarmingly, with soaring water prices, limited food supplies, dying livestock, and very little humanitarian funding,” George Conway, the UN’s Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, said in a statement.
Hawo Abdi said she lost two children to illness after the drought laid waste to her homeland in Somalia’s Bay region.
“When I saw that the suffering ⁠was getting worse, I fled my home and ‌came to ... Mogadishu,” she told Reuters ‌from her shelter on the outskirts of ​the capital.
Last week, the UN ‌World Food Programme put the number of those facing acute hunger ‌at 4.4 million, and said it had already cut back its assistance to just over 600,000 people from 2.2 million earlier this year.
It was not clear whether the new figure reflected a sharp increase in those ‌at risk or different counting methods.
The government and United Nations figures tally with those also released on ⁠Tuesday by ⁠the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), which sets the global standard for determining the severity of a food crisis.
While rainfall in the April to June season could offer some relief, some 5.5 million people were expected to remain in the crisis level or worse, with 1.6 million people in the emergency level, the statement said.
Abdiyo Ali was forced to abandon her farm in the Lower Shabelle region.
“Our farms were destroyed, our livestock died, and water sources became too far away. We have nothing left to bring ​with us,” Ali told Reuters ​last week while preparing her food in a displaced people’s camp outside Mogadishu.