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This week marks three years since Paddy Ashdown took on
the mandate of the High Representative. On his first day as High Representative
Paddy Ashdown identified his primary aim as “putting BiH irreversibly on the
path to statehood and on the road to
Europe
.”
That has been the focus of the last three years. BiH has now moved decisively
away from the era of Datyon to the era of
Brussels .
EU integration is now the defining context of political debate in BiH - a far
cry from the arid nationalism that still prevailed three years ago.
The High Representative has said that his overriding aim for the rest of the
year is for BiH to adopt the reforms that are necessary to start negotiations
for an SAA agreement, and to secure a position for BiH in NATO’s PfP program.
That will require a political agreement on police reform, as well as significant
progress on defense reform. It will also mean continued cooperation with the
ICTY, including the transfer of Radovan Kardzic and Ratko Mladic to
The
Hague .
Another goal will be to begin to transfer some competencies currently
performed by the OHR to the BiH authorities.
But progress towards EU and NATO accession progress will depend upon the
readiness of politicians in BiH to adopt necessary reforms. Only by assuming
responsibility for driving through strategic reforms such as police and defense
reform will they succeed in taking BiH into the Euro Atlantic institutions.
Over the past three years, an institutional framework for a functioning
sovereign state has been extended. Key areas of reform are:
- Reform of the judiciary. The HJPC, Court of BiH,
Commercial Chambers are all operational. The War Crimes Chamber will also soon
be operational
- State level intelligence, border service and
information and protection agencies have been established and are operational.
- A state level tax collecting authority has been set
up.
- Mostar’s city administration has been unified.
- CoM expanded from six Ministries in 2002 to ten Ministeries today.
Defense Reform is also well advanced; Police Reform is likewise advanced,
pending resolution of political issues.
Clearly, none of the broad legislative agenda that has been enacted will have
any impact if the laws are not implemented.
Implementation lags well behind, which is why reforms have not yet translated
into tangible improvements in the standard of living.
But a huge amount of the groundwork has been done. The framework for
comprehensive and effective implementation is now in place.
Furthermore, the speed and the ability of BiH’s institutions to adopt and
implement reforms will also help determine the future shape and size of
international presence in the country. The sooner reforms are undertaken, the
sooner the international presence in the country will shift from being lead by
the HR to being lead by the EU.
The OHR will provide a detailed
chronology
of the development in peace implementation between 2002 and 2005
on its website.
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