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Marchers demand reopening of Bosnia’s last steel mill

By Thomson Reuters May 1, 2026 | 9:58 AM

ZENICA, Bosnia, May 1 (Reuters) – Hundreds of workers marched through Bosnia’s central city of Zenica on Friday, protesting against the ​closure of the country’s last steel mill ‌which they said marked the end of an era of heavy industry.

Last week’s shutdown of the 130-year-old Zenica Steel Factory put thousands of jobs at risk ‌across ​the sector, protesters said, and ⁠followed on the ⁠heels of the closure of Lukavac coke factory in February.

“Zenica does not exist without the Zenica steel factory,” marcher Avdija Halilović told ​Reuters as demonstrators blew whistles, carried union flags and shouted slogans demanding the reopening ⁠of the plant.

Bosnia’s Pavgord ⁠Group, which bought the plant from ​ArcelorMittal last year, blamed the closure last month on ​logistical problems, cheaper imported steel and what ‌it said was the government’s failure to bring in measures to protect the industry.

It was not immediately available for more comment on ⁠Friday, the May Day public holiday.

Bosnia’s Bosniak-Croat federation prime minister, Nermin Niksic, said on Thursday the regional ⁠government was ‌interested in taking over ownership of ⁠the plant and helping it continue ​production, ‌the N1 news website reported.

Further pressure ​came this ⁠week when the Nova Ljubija iron ore mines, another key supplier to the steel mill, filed for bankruptcy, affecting nearly 600 workers.

(Reporting by Amel Emric; Writing by Ivana Sekularac; Editing by ​Andrew Heavens)