Day_of_Republika_Srpska

Day of Republika Srpska

Day of Republika Srpska

Public holiday in Bosnia and Herzegovina


Day of Republika Srpska (Serbo-Croatian: Dan Republike Srpske / Дан Републике Српске) is a national holiday of the former Republika Srpska, which has been proclaimed unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The holiday is celebrated on 9 January, and its unofficial patron saint is Saint Archdeacon Stephen—historically being patron saint of medieval Kotromanić dynasty kings bearing their first name after him—which falls on the same day.[1][2]

Quick Facts Official name, Also called ...

9 January 1992

On 9 January 1992 in Sarajevo, the constitutional Assembly of the Serbian people in Bosnia and Herzegovina issued the Declaration of the proclamation of the Republic of Serbian people of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with a main goal of seceding from Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina which after the war continued its existence as Bosnia and Herzegovina. The republic has been proclaimed on the territories of Serb Autonomous Regions, including the areas where Serbs were constituting a relative majority.

After 2015 constitutional ban

2019 Day of Republika Srpska Honour Unit parade in Banja Luka

Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina declared the holiday unconstitutional on 26 November 2015[3] stating that the main issue for it being coinciding with a religious holiday.[citation needed] The ruling was ignored by the Republika Srpska government.

In 2016, a referendum was held on the holiday, the referendum was also proclaimed unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court.

As recently as 2021, participants took part in celebrating the disputed Day of Republika Srpska, ignoring condemnation from Bosniak leaders and a ban imposed by the country's Constitutional Court. Despite the court ruling that the holiday was unconstitutional, and fierce criticism by Bosniaks and part of the international community, celebrations took place throughout Republika Srpska, including parades and performances.[4]

See also


References

  1. "Zakon o praznicima Republike Srpske". Zakoni (in Serbian). People's Assembly of Republika Srpska. 27 July 2005. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2009.



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Day_of_Republika_Srpska, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.