December 24, 2020

Russia to “return” icon gifted to Lavrov in Balkans amid signs it’s stolen Ukrainian heritage

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Russia announced on December 19 that it is returning a centuries-old Orthodox icon that was given to Foreign Affairs Minister Sergei Lavrov during a visit this week to the Balkans after revelations that it might have been a protected cultural treasure stolen from Ukraine.

The embarrassing episode began when Milorad Dodik, the Republika Srpska representative of Bosnia-Herzegovina’s tripartite presidency, presented Moscow’s top diplomat with the artwork on December 14.

“The icon will be returned to its donors for further clarification on its history via Interpol,” the Russian Foreign Ministry told journalists five days later.

A shared image of the artifact and its seal had suggested it might be from the Ukrainian city of Luhansk, which has been mostly controlled by Russia-backed separatists since 2014.

Its seal appeared to clearly state that it was Ukrainian “cultural heritage” under protection of authorities in the Odesa region.

The Ukrainian embassy in Sarajevo quickly sent a letter to the Bosnian Foreign Ministry demanding a “public, immediate, and unambiguous denial by the state leadership” of the reports that suggested it had possessed or transferred an important cultural, historic and religious artifact originating in Ukraine.

The Bosnian ministry redirected the Ukrainian request to the Bosnian presidency, which is a frequently awkward, ethnically based power-sharing arrangement stemming from the Dayton agreement to end the Bosnian War in 1995.

The Bosnian Serb leader Mr. Dodik has repeatedly threatened to try and secure independence for the Serb-dominated Republika Srpska, which along with the Bosnian and Croat federation composes Bosnia.

Mr. Lavrov’s visit this week proved problematic in other ways, too.

He cut out planned events after the Bosnian and Croat members of the Bosnian presidency declined to meet with him over his choice to begin his visit on December 14 at Mr. Dodik’s offices outside Sarajevo and because of Mr. Lavrov’s reported suggestion that the Dayton terms should remain in place. He also was said to have supported Mr. Dodik’s rejection of Bosnia’s NATO aspirations.

The statements were seen by joint presidents Sefik Dzaferovic and Zeljko Komsic as “disrespectful” toward Bosnia.

The Dayton agreement, which turned 25 last week, salvaged Bosnia’s statehood and saved many lives by ending bitter fighting between Bosnians, Croats and Serbs.

But its ethnically based divisions and decentralization of power parceled up authority normally vested in a central government.

Republika Srpska’s threats to secede from Bosnia and Serbia’s reluctance to recognize its former province of Kosovo as an independent country are two of the key issues hindering some Balkan countries’ ambitions to join the European Union and, in some cases, NATO, along with rampant corruption and threats to the rule of law.

 

Copyright 2020, RFE/RL Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington DC 20036; www.rferl.org (see https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-lavrov-bosnia-returns-icon-stolen-ukrainian-dodik/31009086.html)