This extensive agenda comes unexpectedly after months of blocked work in this House, primarily carried out by SNSD and HDH. Ademović's scheduling of the session represents his response to the request by Dragan Čović and Nikola Špirić to discuss the functionality of the House at a session of the Collegium of the House of Peoples of BiH.

Last week, Dragan Čović met with the High Representative in BiH, Christian Schmidt, and the focus of the discussion was on unblocking the work of the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH and EU integrations, for which the so-called "European laws" first need to be adopted in parliament.

After that meeting, Čović, together with Špirić, came up with an absurd idea: to request a session of the Collegium of the House of Peoples of BiH with a single agenda item: "Ensuring the uninterrupted work and functioning of the House of Peoples." This idea would be entirely natural if it did not come from members of parties that have been blocking the work of the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH for months by breaking the quorum in the House of Peoples.

Čović and Špirić requested that this Collegium session, which would also be attended by Kemal Ademović, be held on April 20. However, Ademović's response came in the form of scheduling a regular session with an extensive agenda, where delegates are expected to demonstrate their commitment to functionality. According to unofficial information from Klix.ba, Ademović did not consult the other two members of the Collegium before scheduling this session.

The session agenda contains 54 items, including more than 140 different types of reports and 17 draft laws, and it is also possible to propose additional agenda items at the beginning of the session itself.

Among the draft laws, some in first and some in second reading, are the so-called European laws: the Law on VSTV and amendments to the Law on the Court of BiH.

The current agenda does not include items that delegates have intensely disputed in the past, but these typically arise at the very beginning of the session. Therefore, it is hard to believe that the new session, scheduled for Monday, will be drastically different from previous ones and that delegates will this time participate in the work until the end of the agenda. On the other hand, the pressure from the international community for the House of Peoples of the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH to function is evident, so it will not be easy for delegates to continue the blockades.