Nikola Koljević | |
Office: | Vice President of Republika Srpska |
Term Start: | December 1992 |
Term End: | 14 September 1996 |
President: | Radovan Karadžić Biljana Plavšić |
Predecessor: | Office established |
Successor: | Dragoljub Mirjanić |
Office1: | Serb Member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Term Start1: | 20 December 1990 |
Term End1: | 9 April 1992 |
Alongside1: | Biljana Plavšić |
Predecessor1: | Office established |
Successor1: | Mirko Pejanović |
Birth Date: | 9 June 1936 |
Birth Place: | Banja Luka, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
Death Place: | Belgrade, Serbia, FR Yugoslavia |
Occupation: | Professor, writer, and politician |
Nikola Koljević (Serbian Cyrillic: Никола Кољевић; 9 June 1936 – 25 January 1997) was a Bosnian Serb politician, university professor, translator and an essayist, one of the foremost Yugoslavian Shakespeare scholars. In 2016, he was posthumously declared by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia to have been part of a criminal enterprise aimed at expelling Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats from Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Bosnian War.
Koljević served as the Serb Member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina alongside Biljana Plavšić and was the Vice President of Republika Srpska during the Yugoslav Wars.
Koljević was born to a distinguished merchant family in Banja Luka, then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, (now Bosnia and Herzegovina). His elder brother, Svetozar (1930–2016), was a renowned scholar who has written extensively on Serbian epic poetry. At the first multi-party elections held in 1990, he was elected as a Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In April 1992 he left the Presidency, and during the Bosnian War occupied the post of a Vice-president of Republika Srpska. He received the highest-ranking ordain of Republika Srpska. Koljević was the sole person to sign the declaration on behalf of Republika Srpska approving the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina as set out in Annex 4 to the General Framework Agreement.
Koljević's son was killed in a skiing accident in 1975.
On 16 January 1997, he tried to commit suicide by shooting himself twice in the head, and died a week later in a Belgrade hospital.[1] [2]
In the 2016 verdict against Radovan Karadžić, the U.N.-backed International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) identified Koljević as part of a Joint criminal enterprise,[3] which included Karadžić. It described that Koljević was "particularly extreme in his view" and advocated for the expulsion of Bosnian Muslims in order to create homogeneity of territories, and said that it was "impossible for Serbs to live with anyone else":[4]
Having taught Shakespeare for many years at the University of Sarajevo, his later involvement in Serbian nationalist politics had taken aback his former Muslim students, with many of whom he had remained good friends after graduating, because he had never before shown the slightest trace of prejudice.