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Old Tuesday, February 5th, 2008
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Default Question about the political status of Croats in Bosnia

I also have a question, which I believe it can be fruitfully clustered with this topic.

Quote:
Republika Srpska (Serbian: Република Српска, Republika Srpska (listen (help·info)), also Српска, Srpska; Bosnian and Croatian: Republika Srpska; English: Republic of Srpska or Republika Srpska) is one of the two political entities which represent a lower level of governance in the present-day country of Bosnia and Herzegovina; the other entity is the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Although the de jure capital of Republika Srpska is Sarajevo, the de facto capital is Banja Luka.[5] The entity is home to three ethnic "constituent peoples": Serbs, Bosniaks and Croats.
Republika Srpska - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I read elsewhere in a topic here on Stirpes that Bosnian Croats don't have voting rights at all in Bosnia - instead their votes count in the Croatian political system. Why isn't there a Croatian political entity in Bosnia? Serbs and Muslims have their own political entities in Bosnia, so why shouldn't Croats have one? This appears to me to be a most appalling injustice in the prevalent order.
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