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Germany to redeploy troops to Bosnia as part of EU mission
by AFP Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) June 15, 2022

Germany will redeploy soldiers to Bosnia as part of an EU stabilisation mission after a decade-long hiatus, the government's spokesman said Wednesday, amid renewed tensions in the Balkan state.

Bosnians will head to the polls in October but fears are growing that Russia, which is waging war in Ukraine, is fanning the embers of separatism in the deeply divided Balkan nation.

Since the end of the war that claimed around 100,000 lives between 1992 and 1995, Bosnia has been split between a Muslim-Croat federation and a Serb entity -- known as Republika Srpska (RS).

Active since 2004, the EU's EUFOR Althea operation is the successor of NATO's peacekeeping missions in the country.

Comprising soldiers from more than 20 nations, the deployment last included German soldiers in 2012.

Germany will send a maximum of 50 soldiers back to the country, said government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit, adding that the mandate is limited to a year.

With Bosnia's Serb leader Milorad Dodik increasingly vocal about his secessionist aims, the EU has nearly doubled its military presence in Bosnia in what EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell calls a "precautionary measure".

The decision to boost the EU's deployment from 600 troops by 500 also came on February 24 -- the same day that Russia's invasion of Ukraine began.

Dodik has made no secret about his admiration and close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin and his action is widely believed to have the backing of the Kremlin.


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SUPERPOWERS
China vows support for Russia, drawing US ire
Beijing (AFP) June 15, 2022
President Xi Jinping on Wednesday assured Vladimir Putin of China's support on Russian "sovereignty and security" - leading Washington to warn Beijing it risked ending up "on the wrong side of history". China has refused to condemn Moscow's massive military assault on Ukraine and has been accused of providing diplomatic cover for Russia by blasting Western sanctions and arms sales to Kyiv. China is "willing to continue to offer mutual support (to Russia) on issues concerning core interests and ... read more

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