The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) has issued a central arrest warrant for the President of Republika Srpska (RS) Milorad Dodik, the Speaker of the RS National Assembly Nenad Stevandić, and the entity's Prime Minister Radovan Višković.
The central arrest warrant was issued by the BiH Border Police, upon order of the Court of BiH, after Dodik, Stevanadić and Višković failed to respond to a summons to be heard by the BiH Prosecutor's Office, which suspects them of "attacking the constitutional order of BiH", for which the court automatically ordered their detention.
After the central arrest warrant was issued, all police agencies in BiH were notified and, according to the law, they are obliged to detain Dodik, Višković and Stevandić.
Some Sarajevo media outlets announced that after issuing a central arrest warrant, the BiH Prosecutor's Office could issue international arrest warrants for them in the coming days, which would inform Interpol, which means that they would be arrested in any foreign country in which they might appear.
Last week, RS President Milorad Dodik announced that he would travel to Moscow on March 18, and RS National Assembly President Nenad Stevandić, as he himself announced on social media, has been staying in Belgrade since last Friday, while the RS Prime Minister, according to the latest information, is in RS.
Two days ago, Stevandić announced on the social network Iks that he would hold a press conference on Friday, March 21, at the National Assembly in Banja Luka, stating that he would then answer "all possible questions."
"I ask the curious to come and not spin untruths and dilemmas," Stevandić wrote in a post under which he published a text from a portal titled "Stevandić in Belgrade, did he buy a one-way ticket?"
Dodik, Stevandić and Višković are charged with committing the criminal offense of "attack on the constitutional order" because they proposed the adoption of laws in the RS National Assembly that would prohibit the work of some judicial and police state agencies on the territory of the RS.
The Constitutional Court of BiH has invalidated these laws.
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