DHAKA: Protesters set fire to a section of the presidency building in the Bosnian capital city of Sarajevo, on the third day of unrest over unemployment and political intertia.
News agency reported that protesters had smashed windows and threw a flare into the building police efforts to disperse them with water cannons on Friday.
At least 150 people were injured in Friday`s clashes.
Earlier, police had fired rubber bullets and stun grenades to disperse hundreds of protesters the capital city, following Thursday`s violence which left more than 130 people injured.
Also on Friday, protesters set fire to a local government building in the northern town of Tuzla, the hotspot of violence that began on Tuesday. Authorities in Tuzla had ordered schools to cancel classes earlier in the day.
At least 6,000 people took to the streets in Tuzla, according to news agency, who also reported that protesters lobbed stones at police in Sarajevo.
Tuzla`s protests spread to other parts of the country on Thursday and have morphed into widespread discontent in an election year about unemployment and rampant corruption.
Police on Thursday fired teargas to drive back several thousand people throwing stones, eggs and flares at a local government building in Tuzla, once the industrial heart of Bosnia`s north which has been hit hard by factory closures in recent years.
A strong police contingent dispersed the crowd in the evening after protesters started rioting, smashing shop windows and setting garbage bins on fire, a Tuzla police spokesman said.
The town`s emergency service said it admitted 104 police officers who were seriously hurt and 30 civilians with lighter injuries.
Hundreds of people turned out in solidarity protests in the capital Sarajevo and the towns of Zenica, Bihac and Mostar. In Sarajevo, protesters clashed with police who had blocked traffic in the city centre. Four officers were taken to hospital, officials said.
The prime minister of Bosnia`s autonomous Bosniak-Croat federation, where the protests took place, held an emergency meeting with regional security ministers and prosecutors.
The protests highlight public resentment over the political bickering that has stifled governance and economic development since the 1992-1995 war in the Balkan country.
The protesters were initially made up mainly of workers laid off when state-owned companies that were sold off collapsed under private ownership. They have been joined by thousands of jobless people and youths.
At 27.5 percent, Bosnia`s unemployment rate is the highest in the Balkans.
Source: aljazeera.com
BDST: 1014 HRS, FEB 08, 2014