Nedà ¾ad Brankovià(born 28 December 1962) is a Bosnian politician who served as Prime Minister of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina from 2007 to 2009. He previously served as Federal Minister of Traffic and Communication from 2003 to 2007.
BrankoviÃÂ is a member of the Party of Democratic Action. Appointed Federal Prime Minister in March 2007, he resigned in May 2009.
Brankoviàwas born in Vià ¡egrad on 28 December 1962. He graduated in civil engineering from the University of Sarajevo in 1987, after which he worked for the Institute for Transport in Sarajevo. He served in the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina from 1992 to 1993 during the Bosnian War, being awarded the Golden Lily.
From 1993, BrankoviÃÂ served as director-general of the Railways of Bosnia and Herzegovina public company. In 1998, he was appointed general manager of Energoinvest. In 1999, he also obtained a master's degree from the Faculty of Transport and Communications of the University of Sarajevo. BrankoviÃÂ obtained his PhD from the University of Sarajevo in 2006, where he became a senior assistant lecturer.
A member of the Party of Democratic Action, Brankoviàwas appointed Federal Minister of Traffic and Communication in the government of Ahmet Hadà ¾ipaà ¡iàon 14 February 2003. He served until 30 March 2007. Brankoviàwould stay in government, becoming Federal Prime Minister on 30 March 2007. He was forced to resign on 27 May 2009, following a scandal concerning undue access to public housing.
Brankoviàwas also president of Sarajevo-based football club à ½eljezniÃÂar, as well as being a member of the Olympic Committee of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The Center for Investigative Reporting looked at how BrankoviÃÂ was able to earn a practically free apartment from the Bosnian government. They also chronicled his conflicts of interest in his ownership of a privatization fund management firm.
BrankoviÃÂ has also been condemned for selling debts owed to Bosnia and Herzegovina by the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the company FG Hemisphere. Bosnian police claimed BrankoviÃÂ acted illegally in selling the debt, which was owned by the country, but sold personally, and recommended he be charged. No charges were ever brought.