Polling stations in Bosnia and Herzegovina where Croatian citizens in our country could vote for members of the European Parliament from the Republic of Croatia were closed at 7 p.m.
All polling stations in the diplomatic and consular missions of the Republic of Croatia in Bosnia and Herzegovina are closed at 7 p.m., was confirmed to Fena news agency by the Consul General of the Republic of Croatia in Mostar, Marko Babić.
He added that everything passed without any incident and that the turnout was significantly lower than in the elections for the Croatian Parliament.
Croatian citizens in BiH could vote in seven locations: Franciscan International Student Center in Sarajevo, University Campus in Mostar, Consulate General of the Republic of Croatia in Banja Luka, Croatian Cultural Center “St. Franjo” in Tuzla, “Ivan Goran Kovačić” Elementary School in Livno, “Vitez” Elementary School in Vitez, and Fr. Martin Nedić School Center in Orašje.
The right to vote for the European Parliament was also exercised by the president of the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina (HDZ BiH), Dragan Čović, who voted in the School Center of Fr. To the House of Representatives of the PS BiH Darijana Filipović.
Today, Croatian voters voted for the fourth time in the European elections, electing 12 representatives who will represent them in the European Parliament for the next five years.
25 lists competed for 12 seats in the European Parliament in Croatia, 23 party lists and two independent lists, with a total of 300 candidates.
The first results of the elections for the European Parliament will be known tonight at 11 p.m., after the polling stations close in Italy, whose voters are the last to vote, Fena writes.