The report was presented in Sarajevo on Tuesday by Banja Luka Bishop Franjo Komarica, who is the commission's president.
Since the establishment of the independent Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992, no basic conditions have been created for the promotion of human rights and the political elites of the three constituent peoples "have neither the ability nor will to find any democratic compromise for the welfare of the citizens," the commission said in its document.
The document also criticises the international community for its failure in Bosnia as evidenced by "a failure of the project of the return of internally displaced people and refugees" given that a majority of 1,860,000 who left their homes in the war have never returned to their pre-war places of residence in Bosnia.
The report also read that the outcome of the general elections in October 2010 confirmed how much Bosnia and Herzegovina was a divided country with the strengthening of the national homogenisation.
The Justitia et Pax commission criticises the unprincipled coalitions between "incongruent political options", alluding to the formation of the new government in the Bosnian federation with the ruling coalition led by the Social Democratic Party. It also states that the alliance between the two Croat Democratic Union parties -- the HDZ BiH and the HDZ 1990 -- with Serb leader Milorad Dodik showcases "absolute political hypocrisy".
The election of Emil Vlajki as Bosnian Serb vice president representing the Croat people was also explicitly criticised with the document recalling that Vlajki was a man who advocated the policy of Slobodan Milosevic.
The commission says that the Croats are in the worst position and that others have a final say in choosing Croat representatives.