Interesting to note how media outlets like Al Al Jazeera portray Sejdo as a force for change and Croatians as right wingers or extremists.
The problem is that Sarajevo is itself corrupt, and it has installed someone that is Croatian on paper to represent the Croatian community. We have seen this elsewhere where people have been declaring themselves as Croatians (when it has been documented that they were not) and have been elected to represent Croatians in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The endgame is to outvote the Croatians and install people to "represent" Croatians in Bosnia and Herzegovina and eventually rubber stamp whatever Sarajevo wants in order to strip Croatians of their rights and then call it democracy.
They call it democracy when the same guy has been installed three times to represent Croatians in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Is it democracy when someone is installed to represent a community that clearly is not supported by the people he is supposed to represent? T
he answer is no.
Image source:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/9/3 ... l-electionSource:
https://kamenjar.com/redateljica-jasmil ... -za-krizu/Translation from Croatian is courtesy of Google...
Director Jasmila Žbanić: Voting for Komšić means voting for the crisis
Bosnia and Herzegovina director Jasmila Žbanić announced on Friday that she will not vote for Željko Komšić in the upcoming elections, although she did so earlier, saying that she now believes that his re-election to the BiH Presidency would be a big mistake that would only worsen the situation in the country.
"Choosing Komšić means choosing a crisis," Žbanić wrote in a post on her Facebook profile.
She confirmed that Komšić had previously won her vote when he was competing for the position of member of the BiH Presidency from among Croats, because at that time she believed that he was a man who could represent the concept of life in BiH in which it does not matter what one's name is and in which everyone has equal rights in a country of social democracy.
"I really never voted to harm someone, but I thought that the election of such a man brings the common good. This time I won't vote for Komšić because I don't think his election would bring anything good to Bosnia and Herzegovina - except for further crisis", stated Žbanić, who gained world fame by directing films with themes from the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, such as "Grbavice" and "Quo vadis, Aida". ".
Žbanić pointed out that it was incomprehensible to her that Komšić, during all the years he was in the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, never visited cities with a Croatian majority and asked how it was possible that he had no friends in such places.
"I feel like telling my Croat friends: Return the favor and vote for a Bosniak now, but I really wouldn't get into the electoral math," Žbanić wrote.
She added that she leaves it up to everyone to vote as they wish, but also said that she believes that the national determinant should not be the main element of such a declaration. She herself, she said, will always choose whoever she thinks is good for BiH, regardless of his nationality.