1994 Republika Srpska Contact Group partition plan referendum|
|
|
Choice
|
Votes
|
%
|
Yes
|
32,429
|
3.35%
|
No
|
936,934
|
96.65%
|
Valid votes
|
969,363
|
99.45%
|
Invalid or blank votes
|
5,349
|
0.55%
|
Total votes
|
974,712
|
100.00%
|
Registered voters/turnout
|
1,068,469
|
91.23%
| |
A referendum on the Contact Group plan was held in Republika Srpska on 28 August 1994, after the National Assembly had rejected the plan on 8 August.[1][2] The plan would give 49% of Bosnia and Herzegovina to Serbs, around a third less than they held at the time.[3] It was rejected by 97% of voters.[1] Following the referendum, Bosnian Serb President Radovan Karadžić said "We will ask for another map... We expect a new conference, new peace efforts."[3] However, the Contact Group (the United States, Russia, Britain, France and Germany) claimed the referendum was a sham.[3]
Results
Choice
|
Votes
|
%
|
For |
32,429 |
3.35
|
Against |
936,934 |
96.65
|
Invalid/blank votes |
5,349 |
–
|
Total |
974,712 |
100
|
Registered voters/turnout |
1,068,469 |
91.23
|
Source: Direct Democracy
|
References