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Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina

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Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Vijeće ministara Bosne i Hercegovine
Савјет министара Босне и Херцеговине
Overview
Established3 January 1997; 27 years ago (1997-01-03)
StateBosnia and Herzegovina
LeaderChairman of the Council of Ministers
Main organParliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ministries9 (2020)
HeadquartersTRG BiH 1, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Websitevijeceministara.gov.ba

The Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnian/Croatian: Vijeće ministara Bosne i Hercegovine, Serbian: Савјет министара Босне и Херцеговине), often called Bosnian Government (Template:Lang-bs, Serbian: Влада Босне и Херцеговине) is the executive branch of the government of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is also called the Cabinet.

According to the Article V, Section 4 of the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Chairman of the Council of Ministers is nominated by the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina and confirmed by the National House of Representatives. The Chairman then appoints other ministers.

Decision of the Constitutional Court

On 11 February 1999, Mirko Banjac, at the time Deputy Chair of the House of Representatives of Bosnia and Herzegovina, instituted a request for, among other issues, the evaluation of the constitutionality of the Law on the Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Ministries of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Official Gazette of Bosnia and Herzegovina, No. 4/97) which foresaw the existence of two Co-Chairs and a Vice-Chair of the Council of Ministers. In its decision the Court had, among other things, stated the following:

Article V.4 of the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina defines the Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which is composed of the Chair of the Council of Ministers and a certain number of ministers as may be appropriate, who are responsible for the implementation of the policy and the decisions of Bosnia and Herzegovina from within the competencies of the institutions of Bosnia and Herzegovina; the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina appoints the Chair of the Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina, who assumes the office upon the approval by the House of Representatives of the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina; the Chair of the Council of Ministers appoints the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Minister of Foreign Trade and other ministers as may be appropriate (no more than two thirds of the ministers may be appointed from the territory of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina), who assume the office upon the approval by the House of Representatives; also, the Chair appoints deputy ministers (who may not be from the same constituent people as their ministers), who assume the office upon the approval by the House of Representatives. It follows from what has been stated above that the challenged provisions of the law defining the Co-Chairs and the Vice-Chair of the Council of Ministers are not in accordance with the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, since the Constitution clearly establishes the traditional function of a Prime Minister designate who also appoints the ministers according to Article V.4 of the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[1]

The Court gave the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina a three-month period from the date of publication of its decision on this matter in the "Official Gazette of Bosnia and Herzegovina" to bring the contested provisions of the Law in conformity with the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina. After the Parliamentary Assembly failed to do that, the Court, acting upon the request of the applicant and pursuant to its decision of 14 August 1999 and the legal standpoint exemplified in the reasons of the decision, established that certain provisions of the Law on Ministers and Ministries shall cease to be valid.[2]

Responsibilities

The Council is responsible for carrying out the policies and decisions in the fields of:

Standing Bodies of Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • General Secretariat
  • Economic Directorate
  • Internal Politics Directorate
  • Directorate for European Integration of Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Bureau for Legal Matters

Current Cabinet

# Name
(Born)
Portrait Function Party
style="background-color:Template:Alliance of Independent Social Democrats/meta/color" | Zoran Tegeltija
(b. 1961)
Chairman of the Council of Ministers SNSD
style="background:Template:Party of Democratic Action/meta/color; color:white;" | Bisera Turković
(b. 1954)
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Vice Chairwoman of the Council of Ministers
SDA
style="background:Template:Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina/meta/color" | Vjekoslav Bevanda
(b. 1956)
Minister of Finance and Treasury
Vice Chairman of the Council of Ministers
HDZ BiH
style="background:Template:Alliance of Independent Social Democrats/meta/color; color:white;" | Staša Košarac
(b. 1975)
File:Сташа Кошарац.jpg Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations SNSD
style="background:Template:Democratic Front (Bosnia and Herzegovina)/meta/color" | Sifet Podžić
(b. 1959)
Minister of Defence DF
style="background:Template:Party of Democratic Action/meta/color; color:white;" | Selmo Cikotić
(b. 1964)
Minister of Security SDA
style="background:Template:Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina/meta/color;" | Josip Grubeša
(b. 1978)
Minister of Justice HDZ BiH
style="background-color:Template:Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina/meta/color" | Ankica Gudeljević
(b. 1964)
Minister of Civil Affairs HDZ BiH
style="background:Template:Alliance of Independent Social Democrats/meta/color; color:white;" | Vojin Mitrović
(b. 1961)
Minister of Communication and Traffic SNSD
style="background-color:Template:Democratic People's Alliance/meta/color" | Miloš Lučić
(b. 1986)
Minister of Human Rights and Refugees DNS

See also

References

  1. ^ Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, U-1/99 Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, para. 4 and 5, Sarajevo, 14 August 1999
  2. ^ Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, U-1/99 Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, Sarajevo, 29 January 2000