Representatives of eight leading Bosnia-Herzegovina political parties departed Friday for Brussels, where they were expected to talk about possible constitutional changes in Bosnia as the country progresses towards European integration, dpa reported. The meeting, to be held over the weekend, comes on the eve of the tenth anniversary of the Dayton Peace Agreement that ended the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia-Herzegovina and which has been serving since then as the country's constitution. The talks, according to Bosnian media, were organized by the U.S. administration, the European Union and Bosnia-Herzegovina's political leaders. Leaders of Moslem and Croat parties, as well as most of the opposition leaders, said they would seek gradual dissolution of the ethnically-based political entities established by the Dayton peace accords and the introduction of stronger state institutions. The head of the leading Bosnian Serb party, the Serb Democratic Party (SDS), Dragan Cavic said his party would not accept such suggestions and would insist on solutions similar to the current situation. --SP 2329 Local Time 2029 GMT