Bosnia Preparing for Ukraine-Style Situation

Daily Stormer
February 11, 2014

LOL Bosnia.
LOL Bosnia.

I haven’t had a chance to check into the details of what is going on with the race-traitor nation of Bosnia, but I am sure it is more – or, you know, less – than what it seems.

Here’s what the Jew York Times has to say about these happenings:

Bosnia’s most widespread antigovernment protests in almost two decades shut down the center of Sarajevo and affected five other cities on Monday, as demonstrators vented their anger at politicians whom they view as self-serving and corrupt.

Bosnia has struggled under the most cumbersome political system in Europe, created by the American-brokered Dayton peace accords that halted mass bloodshed in the country in the 1990s. Since then, the national government has proved unable to achieve public prosperity or anything more than tenuous peace.

Angry youths and recently laid-off workers rioted last week in Tuzla, a former industrial hub in northern Bosnia, setting off demonstrations across the ethnically mixed parts of Bosnia that are governed by the Muslim-Croat Federation. There has been far less unrest reported in the parts of the country run by the Serbian Republic, which in general has less freedom of expression.

About 1,000 protesters fanned out across downtown Sarajevo on Monday, chanting slogans against “criminals” in government and urging those in authority to “resign today.” The march drew a cross section of ages, with a few workers and many more middle-class students or unemployed graduates; it passed without any clashes, with the riot police guarding government buildings.

Several of the younger demonstrators said they were there because, as Sajida Tulic, a 27-year-old actress, put it: “This is not a way of living. We want our dignity back.”

Another demonstrator, Lejla Kusturica, said, “I think the biggest fear of our politicians is a united people.” Ms. Kusturica, 29, who later briefly addressed the ragtag crowd through a megaphone that was barely audible to most demonstrators, said she was not deterred by politicians denouncing the demonstrators as hooligans, because “we have no other chance.”

Police violence against demonstrators in Tuzla last week set off a protest on Friday in Sarajevo, where masked youths stormed two major government buildings, setting fires and smashing windows. Unrest was reported in at least a dozen other towns, although in some places the crowds were small.

“The best thing is that it is not just Sarajevo,” Jasmin Telalic, 21, an engineering student, said on Monday in the Bosnian capital. Local news media reported unrest in Mostar, a predominantly Croat city in the south, as well as in Tuzla and other locations.

Note that there is less trouble in Serb-controlled areas. The Serbs are clearly a very good folk – this was clear to me personally when I visited them, and it is clear to me politicially by the fact that the Jews, under Shabbos Clinton, bombed them to hell while accusing them of an invisible genocide.

On first glace, I would say these protests are aimed and further destabilization of these non-EU states, and are intent on dis-empowering the Serbs, who even as they go along with the program, are viewed as a threat in the same way Greeks and the Irish are – loose cannons.

But we will see, as things develop.