|
I am not much of a person for looking back. But sometimes it’s worth a
glance behind you in order to decide what still needs to be done ahead.
Anniversaries are a good time for such reflection. On the
27th of this month I will have been High Representative for two
years.
When I think about my time here, I always come back to the same
question: what have we and our BiH partners done in the last two years to
give the citizens of this country a better future?
The sound and fury of daily politics, the abstraction of complex technical
reforms: these often obscure the real reason why the International
Community is here. Yet our task today is the same as in 1995: to prevent
the horror of the early 1990s ever befalling this country again, to deal with
its terrible consequences, and to ensure this country is placed irreversibly on
the path of becoming a viable European state.
Bosnia and Herzegovina had already made great strides from war to sustainable
peace by the time I arrived here in 2002. The roadblocks a distant memory,
freedom of movement restored. A stable currency, something most Balkan
countries do not enjoy. A political system based on free and fair
elections. And most remarkably of all, a million or so refugees returning
to their homes, often many years after they were driven from them.
But nobody doubted that the country had many challenges still to face on its
road to irreversible peace and stability. The economy was stagnant,
generating neither jobs nor investment. Public services as a result were
still declining from standards achieved back in the 1980s. An unreformed
judiciary, at best grossly inefficient, at worst corrupt and ethnically
partial. A government of BiH had neither the authority nor the resources to
fulfill the basic duties of a modern European state. Criminal and
paramilitary gangs that had underpinned the ethnic war machines still present,
and controlling everything from corrupt politicians, to organised crime.
Politics was still dominated by post-conflict issues. Economic and
social issues were still far down most politicians’ agendas. While other
former socialist countries like Hungary and even Bulgaria were pushing through
the painful reforms that would transform their countries and in due course
create jobs and attract investment, BiH was still unable even to agree what sort
of state it was, or even whether it was a state at all.
In short, BiH lacked even the most basic political consensus about where its
future lay. And without that consensus, it was impossible for BiH’s
politicians to come together to discuss how to get there. Instead, the
international community was filling the gap, pursuing reforms that in and of
themselves usually made sense, but did not really add up to a strategy, or to a
project that commanded the support of the majority of the population.
Has anything changed since then?
Well, the economy is still failing to deliver jobs, prosperity, and the
revenues necessary to improve public services, but at least economic reform is
now underway. Ethnic parties, rather than civic parties, still dominate the
political scene and the jury is still out about whether they intend to translate
their new rhetoric into sustained reform. Organised crime still has a
strong hold on the political and economic life of the country, but some of the
top godfathers of crime and corruption are now, at last, having to face
justice.
The green shoots of change are visible.
BiH now has a State Court, and State Prosecutors, prepared to tackle even the
most dangerous and politically well-connected criminals. It has indicted a
former President, who is now detained awaiting trial. And it has tried and
convicted the most serious case of human trafficking ever to come to court in
the former Yugoslavia. More widely, the age-old links between politicians
and the judiciary are being broken, one by one, starting with the removal of
political immunity in 2003. Supported by the EU Police Mission, the police
in BiH are increasingly becoming part of the solution, not part of the
problem.
Economically, the pre-requisites for new jobs and new investment are finally
being put in place. The barriers to trade within BiH, and between BiH and
its neighours, are being taken down, though still too slowly. The ITA
reforms are unifying BiH’s customs system and replacing the inefficient sales
tax system with VAT. Double taxation is being eliminated. Public
procurement procedures are being cleaned up. The petty and contradictory
web of business regulations are being bulldozed away. These are all
technical and complex reforms that do not in themselves create employment – but
lay the foundation for new jobs and future economic prosperity.
The government of BiH too is at last assuming the responsibilities of a
modern European state. Reforms to the Council of Ministers have
strengthened the role of the prime minister and increased the number of state
ministries. Defence reforms have moved the civilian control of the armed
forces to the state level, creating a state defence ministry for the first
time. Security reforms underway have created a single state intelligence
service under the country’s Parliament and will create an executive police force
at the state level.
Bosnia and Herzegovina will always be a decentralized state. But the
outlines of a viable federal system are at last emerging, although there is a
long way to go yet.
Underpinning all this is perhaps the greatest change of all: the
translation of a widely held but vague political desire to join Europe and NATO,
into a practical programme of reform which will take us there.
One thing unites all the citizens of BiH, whatever their nationality: a
yearning for the prosperity and security summed up by the word
“Europe”. But until recently, this had never had a significant impact upon
BiH’s politics. The European Commission’s Feasibility Study and the real
possibility of membership of NATO’s Partnership for Peace has changed
that. Building on a process that began with application to the Council of
Europe, BiH now has a strategy for the future, an agreed destination.
It is difficult to overestimate the importance of that change. Each
reform now has a wider significance as part of an overall goal. That has
injected new focus and discipline not only to the work of the BiH authorities,
but to that of the international community as well. We have a common
blueprint. The BiH authorities have more incentive to take the difficult
political decisions necessary to transform this country into a viable state. And
along with the OHR’s Mission Implementation Plan, the international community
now has a strategy for transforming its role. For replacing the push of
Dayton with the pull of Brussels as the basis for our engagement in BiH.
Citizens can be forgiven for thinking that little in their lives has really
changed yet. And there is clearly a way to go before reform in BiH is
self-sustaining. But the prospects for BiH becoming a prosperous and stable
European state are now better than at any time in its post-war history.
How long it takes now depends, not on the International Community, but on the
politicians and people of BiH.
|