
(ANSA-AFP) - SARAJEVO, MAR 6 - Bosnian Serb leader Milorad Dodik said Thursday he would ignore a summons from the country's central prosecutor who is investigating him for undermining the constitution. The refusal was all but certain to plunge Bosnia into greater uncertainty a week after Dodik was convicted for defying the envoy charged with overseeing its peace accords triggered a fresh political crisis. "The Prosecutor's Office of [Bosnia] has summoned me to give a statement tomorrow as a suspect for undermining the constitutional order," Dodik -- who is the president of Bosnia's Serb-dominated statelet Republika Srpska (RS) -- wrote on social media. "I will not go to their political court, because Serbs no longer submit to inquisitions!" he added. The comment came just hours after Dodik insisted that he was not a threat to Bosnia after signing laws Wednesday evening that banned the country's central police and judiciary from his statelet. The legislation has escalated tensions in the deeply divided Balkan country and is proving to be a key test for its fragile, post-war institutions. (ANSA-AFP).