About Balkan Witness                        Contact Balkan Witness
 

Balkan
Witness
Home


BALKAN WITNESS

PETER LIPPMAN - Reports from Kosovo and Bosnia
 

Search
Balkan
Witness

 

Bosnia journals 2024, Introduction:
Meeting the environmental activists of Bosnia-Herzegovina

2024 Journal index

Introduction: Meeting the environmental activists
Journal 1:  Ozren is Not for Sale
Journal 2Pecka and vicinity: biologists on front line; scandal of coal
Journal 3: The Pliva River, from the headwaters to the Jajce waterfalls
Journal 4:  Coal in Ugljevik; Lithium on Mt. Majevica
Journal 5:  With Hajrija Čobo at Mehorić; Visiting Robert Oroz in Fojnica

Previous journals and articles

To contact Peter in response to these reports or any of his articles, click here.


What follows is a series of five informal journals about my recent visit to Bosnia. In the spring of 2024, I published an essay discussing Bosnian grassroots activism against international mining companies:  "International Companies Wreak Havoc on the Environment: Is Bosnia-Herzegovina Becoming One Big European Mine?" I suggest taking a look at that essay, as it's good background and will make the content of these journals clearer.

I wrote that essay from home, with much help from consultants in Bosnia, and a couple of long-distance telephone interviews. But there's always more to learn; I felt the need to meet the activists in person and to become more familiar with the terrain—the beautiful land that is under dire threat.

I focused on two of many environmental threats that are ongoing. I spoke with
Zoran Poljašević, who lives in the Republika Srpska on Mt. Ozren, where residents are fighting the threat of destructive mining activity by Lykos Metals. And I spoke with Hajrija Čobo, a leader from the central Bosnian town of Kakanj. The water of that town has already been polluted by the runoff from a mine near Vareš, operated by Adriatic Metals.

During my October 2024 visit, I went to meet both Zoran and Hajrija in person, and to get an update about environmental activism in their communities. I also traveled to the area between Mrkonjić Grad, Šipovo, Jezero, and Jajce, home to the headwaters of the beautiful Pliva and Sana rivers. There, I became acquainted with additional threats of mining—for coal, lithium, gold, and other minerals, as well as the damage done by wanton construction of mini-hydroelectric dams.

Moving back to northeastern Bosnia, I met the activist Andrijana Pekić in Ugljevik, and she took me to Lopare on Mt. Majevica, ground zero for lithium prospecting in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

At least a half-dozen times, activists spent a day or more showing me around their lovely hills and rivers, explaining the danger of mining and dams—in some cases already underway—and describing what they and their communities were doing to protect their homes and lands. I have always found doors to be open in Bosnia, but during this visit—partly in response to the essay I had written—people were particularly eager to show me their love for their land and their determination to protect it. I felt a strong interest on the part of local residents in having the world abroad learn about their struggles.

*

After nearly thirty years of covering postwar activism in Bosnia-Herzegovina, I find new inspiration in meeting the environmentalists. From the late 1990s on, I focused on grassroots campaigns, principally the movement for refugee return. That naturally led to the struggle for "truth and justice," as people often called it, which included the apprehension and trial of the war criminals; the location and identification of the missing; combating discrimination against returnees and newly constructed minorities; and the campaign for memorialization.

All these struggles are ongoing, as is the crucial fight against atrocity denial and historical revisionism (see my brother Roger's
Balkan Witness web site). However, in recent years, as I've maintained my Bosnia blog, I have often felt that nothing really new happens. Young people leave the country by the thousands (and the not-so-young along with them); corruption is the air people breathe; and international officials and entrenched profiteer/politicians, buoyed by the rotten Dayton system, collaborate to plunder the land.

In this context I find the vibrant, nearly ubiquitous fights against international corporate ransacking of Bosnia's natural resources and accompanying environmental destruction refreshing. The problem is everywhere: in the cities, in the hills, in the rivers, and on the land. There's a local saying, "You don't kill the ox for a kilo of meat." But that is, metaphorically, what local officials are nearly unanimously working to do: to enable Swiss, British, Australian, Chinese, and other corporations to violate the land. The local leaders are integral to the dynamic of plunder, and they are the only Bosnians who profit.

The mass emigration of the population is something that helps this plunder take place, because local communities poised to resist the damage become smaller and weaker. The fragile rule of law is another part of the problem. Many are the rules on the books that should prevent unauthorized clear-cutting of forests, illegal dumping of hazardous wastes, and poorly planned, badly located mini-dams, but the laws are ignored. A third damaging factor assisting the corporate exploitation is the Dayton political infrastructure, which ensures that people are artificially divided into ethnic "corrals," leaving their near-immortal "leaders" free to thrive in corruption.

On the other side, activists leading the environmental campaigns have an advantage in that there are many who are young and thus less burdened by the memories of the war. In my recent visit I witnessed many instances of people with all kinds of ethnic backgrounds working together to protect their country.

There is thus, in these environmental campaigns and the widespread resistance that they manifest, a chance for people to "move forward," as we carefully say. Not to forget recent history, but to work together across the boundaries against a common threat.

But I hesitate to call this a "movement" yet. The question I can't answer is to what extent people not only share a common vision, and a common understanding of the threat, but also how much they can develop a common program of action. There is at least some amount of organizational competition, and some residue of inflated, unhelpful ethnic pride. I have not seen these things hamper cooperation, however, and I hope they will not. The hope is for people to grow together in their fight—and I see signs of this happening. Enduring victories will only be accomplished with the creation of a sustainable movement.

Scene from Mt. Ozren

There's something I've asked myself for many years: What is to be the role of Bosnia-Herzegovina in Europe? Here I refer to Bosnia's political and economic role, rather than its cultural role, because Bosnia is and has long been part of Europe. Its educational system is European; its citizens look and feel European; and its diversity is European. But there has been an economic separation since Ottoman times and before and, for a long time, Westerners thought of the Balkans as a separate category, akin to the "Near East" (see Rebecca West, for example). Since the development of the European Union as a political and economic entity, Bosnia and its neighbors have been all the more separated.

In the postwar period, joining the EU—that is, "going to Europe"—nearly had the cachet of "going to heaven." That turned out to be not only a false promise, but a foil concealing the perpetuation of the divisive Dayton infrastructure by the very people—the international officials—who regularly decry the corruption and stagnation that thrives in the environment fostered by that infrastructure.

Thus the inertia that works for the Bosnian profiteers works for the their international partners as well. The representatives of the international corporations—who, as I wrote in my essay, are sometimes called "Ambassadors"—are satisfied to leave things the way they are. Illustrations of this dynamic could fill a book.

The critical raw materials that the European Union needs for its "green transition" are the reward for this partnership in profiteering—but for the people and the land in Bosnia-Herzegovina, that transition is anything but green.

Examining this dynamic of exploitation points with clarity to the answer to my question. Bosnia is a weak state with a succession of useless international governors in the Office of the High Representative. Its function in relation to the European Union is to be a provider of inexpensive and well-educated labor, along with natural resources. These resources, such as lithium, also exist under the ground in places like Germany and Portugal. But the Germans and the Portuguese have something that the Bosnians don't: rule of law. So at least to some extent, they can protect themselves against the poisoning of the atmosphere.

In Bosnia-Herzegovina, not so.

 

 


Balkan Witness Home Page

Articles index
 


LETTERS from KOSOVO and BOSNIA, by PETER LIPPMAN

Articles by Roger Lippman

VIDEO      BOOKS      MAPS

RELATED INFORMATIONAL SITES

SEARCH BALKAN WITNESS

Report broken links

About Balkan Witness          Contact Balkan Witness
 

The

Ukraine War