The Prosecutor’s Office of Bosnia and Herzegovina previously established a case against High Representative Christian Schmidt. However, SIPA, which previously carried out checks in this case and based on whose request the case was established, did not submit any report on the commission of criminal acts.
A little less than a month ago, SIPA confirmed for Klix.ba that there are certain types of checks that they perform against the high representative in BiH, and after BiH Presidency member Željka Cvijanović and Security Minister Nenad Nešić requested it.
They were interested in how Schmidt entered Bosnia and Herzegovina, how many security personnel he has with him and what weapons they use, with the aim of establishing that he is not a high representative and that he is staying in Bosnia and Herzegovina illegally.
Nešić presented the information provided to him from the police and security agencies to the public, but on that occasion he mostly repeated the claims from the RS that were known from before.
The only news he said was that Schmidt illegally brought long-barreled weapons into BiH, but the question is how accurate this information is, especially when you take into account that the agencies did not submit any evidence or report to the Prosecutor’s Office of BiH that Schmidt had committed a criminal offense.
According to the Law on Criminal Procedure of Bosnia and Herzegovina, police agencies are obliged to submit a report on committed criminal acts.
Instead, they just submitted the document, which was assigned to the prosecutor through the CMS system.
For now, it is unclear what is written in that act and what the state prosecutor to whom the case has been assigned will work on, Klix.ba reports.