The Ministry of Communication and Traffic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serbo-Croatian: Ministarstvo komunikacija i prometa Bosne i Hercegovine / Министарство комуникација и саобраћајa Босне и Херцеговине) is the governmental department which oversees the communication and traffic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Ministarstvo komunikacija i prometa Bosne i Hercegovine Министарство комуникација и саобраћајa Босне и Херцеговине | |
Department overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 2002 |
Headquarters | Sarajevo |
Minister responsible | |
Website | http://www.mkt.gov.ba |
History
editAfter the end of the Bosnian War in 1995, the 1996 Bosnian general election and the formation of the first post-war government in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1997, the Ministry of Civil Affairs and Communication of Bosnia and Herzegovina began working with Spasoje Albijanić (SDS) at the head, which is the predecessor of today's Ministry of Communication and Traffic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Ministry of Civil Affairs of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
After the 2002 Bosnian general election and the formation of the new government of Bosnia and Herzegovina between the Party of Democratic Action (SDA), the Serbian Democratic Party (SDS) and the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina (HDZ BiH), headed by Adnan Terzić (SDA), the Ministry of Civil Affairs and Communications of Bosnia and Herzegovina was divided into the Ministry of Communication and Traffic of Bosnia and Herzegovina with Branko Dokić (PDP) becoming Minister and the Ministry of Civil Affairs of Bosnia and Herzegovina with Safet Halilović (SBiH) as Minister.[2]
Organization
editThe Ministry of Communications and Traffic of Bosnia and Herzegovina consists of four sectors, one inspectorate, one directorate and one regulatory board.
- Sector for Legal and Financial Affairs
- Traffic Sector
- Sector for traffic infrastructure, project preparation and implementation
- Inspectorate
- Directorate of Civil Aviation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Regulatory Board of Rail transport in Bosnia and Herzegovina
List of ministers
editMinisters of Civil Affairs and Communication (1997–2002)
editPolitical parties:
Serb Democratic Party (SDS)
Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD)
Socialist Party (SP)
No. | Portrait | Minister of Civil Affairs and Communication | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Spasoje Albijanić | 3 January 1997 | 3 February 1999 | 2 years, 31 days | SDS | |
2 | Marko Ašanin (1955–2011) | 3 February 1999 | 22 June 2000 | 1 year, 140 days | SNSD | |
3 | Tihomir Gligorić | 22 June 2000 | 22 February 2001 | 245 days | SP | |
4 | Svetozar Mihajlović (born 1949) | 22 February 2001 | 23 December 2002 | 1 year, 304 days | SP |
Ministers of Communication and Traffic (2002–present)
editPolitical parties:
Party of Democratic Progress (PDP)
Croatian Democratic Union 1990 (HDZ 1990)
Social Democratic Party (SDP BiH)
Democratic Front (DF)
Union for a Better Future of BiH (SBB BiH)
Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD)
Our Party (NS)
No. | Portrait | Minister of Communication and Traffic | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Branko Dokić (born 1949) | 23 December 2002 | 11 January 2007 | 4 years, 19 days | PDP | |
2 | Božo Ljubić (born 1949) | 11 January 2007 | 23 June 2009 | 2 years, 232 days | HDZ 1990 | |
3 | Rudo Vidović (born 1958) | 23 June 2009 | 12 January 2012 | 2 years, 203 days | HDZ 1990 | |
4 | Damir Hadžić (born 1976) | 12 January 2012 | 31 March 2015 | 3 years, 78 days | SDP BiH | |
5 | Slavko Matanović (born 1958) | 31 March 2015 | 11 May 2016 | 1 year, 41 days | DF | |
6 | Ismir Jusko (born 1971) | 11 May 2016 | 26 December 2018 | 2 years, 229 days | SBB | |
7 | Vojin Mitrović (born 1961) | 23 December 2019 | 23 December 2022 | 3 years, 0 days | SNSD | |
8 | Edin Forto (born 1972) | 25 January 2023 | Incumbent | 1 year, 282 days | NS |
References
edit- ^ N.V. (25 January 2023). "BiH dobila novo Vijeće ministara, državnu vlast sada čini SNSD, HDZ, SDP, NiP, NS, DNS..." (in Bosnian). Klix.ba. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
- ^ "Sazivi vijeća ministara" (in Bosnian). Vijeće ministara Bosne i Hercegovine. Retrieved 11 September 2016.