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Opinion

The country where Jews are not allowed to run for the presidency

Despite legal rulings, a de facto status of second-class citizenship exists

March 29, 2018 15:27
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2 min read

In Bosnia and Herzegovina, a Jew cannot be elected president.

The country’s election law requires each of the state’s three presidents, who serve concurrently, to be from each of the country’s three ‘constituent peoples’: Bosniak Muslims, Orthodox Christian Serbs and Catholic Croats.

This construct is the product of the vicious civil war in the 1990s that saw the three groups fight each other as Yugoslavia disintegrated. It came unstuck when a Jewish citizen of BiH, as the country is known, took his country’s government to the European Court of Human Rights.

Jews are not alone in facing this de facto status of second-class citizenship. The court ruled that effectively prohibiting Jews, Roma and others who do not identify as one of the three constituent peoples from standing for, and being elected, president was a breach of BiH’s commitments under European human rights law.