Handke Monument Reignites Nobel-Prize Controversy in Bosnia

Peter Handke, the Austrian author whose Nobel prize was denounced by victims of the war in Bosnia because of his pro-Serbian stance, and dismissal of the 1995 Srebrenica genocide, is to get a sculpture in Banja Luka, the main city in Bosnia's Serb-majority entity, Republika Srpska.

Artist Bojan Mikulic said he expected to finish the sculpture in September of the 77-year-old writer, notorious for having supported Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic and for denying that the 1995 massacre in Srebrenica was an act of genocide - as the UN war crimes tribunal for former Yugoslavia, the ICTY, had ruled.

Handke was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in December last year, drawing furious criticism from politicians, human rights activists, historians and other public figures in Bosnia and beyond.

As BIRN understands, the sculpture dedicated to Handke will not be placed in a public area in the city.

Banja Luka mayor Igor Radojicic said that the local council in Banja Luka had nothing to do with it. "Its construction has not been announced to the city authorities," he said.

Mikulic told BIRN in Bosnia and Herzegovina that he was not interested in the political disputes surrounding Handke, and the statue was his first larger project. "I have been working on this 220-cm high figure for a month. A nice [hotel] complex is being built across the street from the tobacco factory, where the sculpture will be placed," he said.

"Sculptures of Skender Kulenovic, Branko Copic and Ivo Andric will also be placed there. They will all be about the same size," Mikulic said, referring to the well-known Bosnian writers. Andric, like Handke, won a Nobel prize.

A hotel is being built across from the tobacco factory in Banja Luka, at the former site...

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