
The trial comes after being briefly postponed earlier this month following an appeal by Dodik’s legal team to move the proceedings to Banja Luka – the capital of Bosnia’s Serbia entity, Republika Srpska (RS).
The request was turned down by court.
Dodik’s trial marks a potential tipping point for post-war Bosnia, testing the weak central government’s ability to hold a leading politician to account after openly flouting the country’s peace accords and court system.
The resumption of the unprecedented court case in the capital Sarajevo follows months of mounting tensions after Dodik signed controversial legislation that refused to recognise decisions made by Bosnia’s international high representative Christian Schmidt and the constitutional court.
The high representative is charged with overseeing the enforcement of the Dayton Agreement that succeeded in ending the country’s bloody civil war in the 1990s.
In July, Schmidt struck down both laws passed by Dodik in the RS parliament, which the Bosnian leader went on to sign in defiance.
The trial marks the first time a political leader in Bosnia has been tried for failing to comply with decisions handed down by the country’s international envoy.
Dodik faces up to five years in prison and a ban on participating in politics if convicted.
However, questions remain over whether Dodik will recognise an eventual verdict made by the court or if the international envoy would be willing to take a harder line against the Bosnian Serb leader for failing to recognise the ruling.
The international envoy holds vast powers under the country’s peace agreements, including the ability to effectively fire a political leader and strip them of power.
The 64-year-old president of Bosnia’s Serb entity has repeatedly batted away accusations of wrongdoing in the case, denouncing the allegations as political persecution.
Dodik has also refused to recognise Schmidt’s authority, since the position lost the backing of the United Nations due to intervention by Russia and Beijing.
Bosnia has been governed by the dysfunctional administrative system created under the Dayton pact by being divided into two bodies: a Muslim-Croat federation and RS which are connected by a weak central government.
The two entities are guaranteed a large degree of autonomy.
Dodik – a Kremlin ally under US sanctions – has held enormous sway over RS for years and has frequently stoked ethnic tensions and threatened to secede.