According to Anadolu Agency’s data, in the period from 2013 to 2023, more than 70 women were murdered in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 2024, 13 women were murdered by their male relatives or partners. In such a small country, these stats are a punch to the gut. Especially since there is no singular source for these statistics, so some of these violent crimes may have gone under the media radar.
A particularly brutal murder in 2023, where the murderer, Nermin Sulejmanović, killed his wife, Nizama Hećimović, on a livestream, incited national outrage. All of this motivated “Glas Žene” (A Woman’s Voice), an organization dedicated to helping women, alongside their partner organisations, to petition for a law regarding femicide. That is how their campaign “We will not die in silence” started.
Finally, on the 28th of May 2025, one chamber of the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina – the House of Representatives in the Bosnia’s Federation entity, amended the criminal code to recognise gender-based murder as a specific, distinct crime in this entity. With this new law, killing a woman is considered aggravated murder, punishable by a minimum of 10 years in prison, with even harsher penalties in situations where the victim was previously abused.
On the 16th of June 2025, the House of Peoples, the other chamber, with 45 votes adopted this amendment.
Since Bosnia and Herzegovina has one of the most complex political systems, this amendment will have to be finally agreed upon at a Parliamentary Assembly where representatives from both chambers will be present.
via Unsplash
Even though Bosnia and Herzegovina ratified the Istanbul Convention, a human rights treaty opposing violence against women, in 2013, it did not recognise gender-based murder as a separate crime. It used to be treated as murder, punishable up to 20 years in prison, or as “aggravated murder” with sentences of 20 to 45 years.
However, the reality of these punishments was much different. These sentences were often much shorter, which did not deter perpetrators from committing such violent acts further.