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At their regular weekly meeting, which took place yesterday,
the Principals of the five main international organisations operating in Bosnia
and Herzegovina - Wolfgang Petritsch, the High Representative, General John
Sylvester, the SFOR Commander, Jacques Paul Klein, the Special Representative of
the U.N. Secretary General and Co-ordinator of U.N. Operations in BiH, Robert
Beecroft, Head of the OSCE Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Werner
Blatter, Chief of the UNHCR Mission to BiH - agreed that it would be advisable
for Sefer Halilovic not to re-assume his former position as Minister for Social
Affairs, Refugees and Displaced Persons in the Federation Government, before his
trial in the Hague takes place and his role in the 1992-1995 war in BiH is
clarified.
While there are no legal obstacles to such a move and Mr
Halilovic, by all accounts, carried out his tasks as minister to everybody's
satisfaction, it would not be in accordance with European standards if a person
indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal in the Hague held
a ministerial position. This might decrease the respect that the Federation
Government enjoys and put in question the attempts to exclude indicted war
criminals from public life.
The Federation Government, when deciding on this matter, should
also bear in mind that Mr Halilovic's reinstatement might be perceived
negatively by those who suffered from the war crimes of which Mr Halilovic is
accused and who are citizens of the Federation.
The position of a minister for refugees and social affairs requires that the
people for whom the minister is responsible have confidence in him, and an
indicted war criminal might not elicit such confidence, notwithstanding the fact
that he is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
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