- At the invitation and under the chairmanship of the High Representative,
Ambassador Carlos Westendorp, the United States Presidential Envoy Ambassador
Robert Gelbard, and European Commission External Relations Principal Adviser
Mr. Herman de Lange, members of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina and
other senior government officials, members of the Peace Implementation Council
Steering Board, diplomatic and consular representative offices in Sarajevo,
the Special Envoy of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, other
representatives of the Reconstruction and Return Task Force and other key
international and local organisations and institutions, met in Sarajevo on 3
February 1998.
GENERAL PRINCIPLESThe participants agreed that the
following general principles must underpin Sarajevo's status both as the
capital of the Federation and of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and as a model of
co-existence and tolerance for the rest of the country:
- Sarajevo must be a truly multiethnic canton, open in itself and to the
outside, as envisaged in the Annex 7 of the
General Framework Agreement on Peace, and subsequent communiques.
- Sarajevo will guarantee equal treatment for all groups in every aspect of
civic and economic life. There must be full freedom of movement of persons,
goods and services within and between the Federation and the Republika Srpska.
The protection of the human rights of every individual in Sarajevo must be
guaranteed, and the provisions of the Sarajevo Protocol fully implemented in
accordance with the guidelines developed in co-operation with the Office of
the High Representative.
- Sarajevo should lead the country by example by taking the concrete steps
set forth in this Declaration to enable the return of at least 20,000 minority
pre-war residents in 1998, as proof of its determination to act as a model for
reconciliation, multiethnicity, freedom of movement and the unconditional
right to return throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- Just as displaced persons and refugees from Sarajevo must be able to
return, so people who have taken refuge in Sarajevo must be able to return to
their homes. The international community will redouble its efforts to promote
return to all other parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina - including Banja Luka,
Mostar, Central Bosnia and eastern Republika Srpska - and to neighboring
countries. Economic assistance will be linked throughout the region to
progress in the return of pre-war inhabitants to their homes of origin.
- The international community will lend its full support to the people of
Sarajevo in their efforts to promote returns and achieve a truly multiethnic
society. The international community will condition continuation of assistance
for Sarajevo on fulfillment of the benchmarks set out in this Declaration and
on adequate progress toward meeting the 1998 goal of at least 20,000 minority
returns.
The following concrete steps were agreed:
LEGISLATIVE ISSUES
- Housing and property legislation in the Federation continues to block
returns, including returns to Sarajevo. Despite the November 1997 commitment
of the Federation Forum to adopt laws in accordance with Annex 7, none of the three laws have been
adopted in accordance with the High Representative's proposals. Most
significantly, the Law on the Cessation of the Application of the Law on
Abandoned Apartments has not been considered by the government or submitted to
Parliament.
- This is unacceptable. International assistance programmes will be directly
affected if the following steps are not taken:
- The Law on the Cessation of the Application of the Law on Temporary
Abandoned Real Property Owned by Citizens must be finally adopted by 17
February 1998; and must include provisions for an oversight mechanism and
compliance with the European Convention on Human Rights in cases where
claims to reoccupy property are not fulfilled within 90 days.
- The Law on Taking Over the Law on Housing Relations must be finally
adopted no later than 17 February 1998; and
- The Law on the Cessation of the Application of the Law on Abandoned
Apartments must be presented to Parliament no later than 17 February 1998,
and must be adopted by 1 March 1998, in a form acceptable to the High
Representative.
If the Federation should fail to meet these
deadlines, non-compliance measures will be imposed.
- Federation authorities reiterated their undertaking not to apply the Law
on the Sale of Apartments with the Occupancy Right until the Federation's
property and housing laws are brought into compliance with Annex 7 of the
Peace Agreement.
- Recognising the significance of amnesty for the return process,
participants called on relevant authorities to take immediate steps through
mass media and other channels to ensure that returnees, and all citizens, are
made aware of the existence of the Federation Law on Amnesty and that this Law
is fully implemented and applied without discrimination. Participants also
noted that military conscription holds important implications for the
peaceful, phased, and orderly return of individuals to their pre-war homes,
and called upon the competent authorities to ensure that returnees shall be
exempted from military service for a minimum period of 5 years. In addition,
both Entities should adopt legislation on alternative service which is
consistent with international standards and, until such legislation is
implemented, should respond favourably to requests for exemption from military
service for persons who are in the minority where they live and for
conscientious objectors.
- The Sarajevo authorities will ensure free and fair access for all
residents to official public records, such as birth and death certificates,
citizenship, matriculation, employment, pension, and housing records. All
returnees shall be provided with necessary documentation for their full
re-integration into civil society and the labour market within one week of
registration. Returnees who do not receive their documents within this time
frame should notify UNHCR and UNHCR will take appropriate measures, including
requesting intervention by the Sarajevo Return Commission. All municipalities
in Sarajevo Canton will adopt standardised and simplified registration
procedures for returnees by 1 March 1998.
HOUSING ISSUES
- The Conference welcomed the establishment of the Sarajevo Housing
Committee (SHC). Participants pledged their full support for its efforts to
bring housing allocation decisions for all socially-owned apartments in
Sarajevo into compliance with Chapter 1 of Annex
7 of the Peace Agreement.
- The Conference welcomed initial efforts by the Sarajevo authorities to
catalogue and verify cases of multiple occupancy, through regular public
appeals and examination of existing official records, as well as their pledge
to intensify these efforts. The Cantonal Ministry for Spatial Planning will
provide the Sarajevo Housing Committee with the addresses and names of pre-war
residents of 2,000 such illegally occupied dwellings by 30 June 1998, with the
first 500 of these by 1 April 1998.
- All socially-owned apartments which are undergoing or planned for
reconstruction, vacant or illegally occupied must be allocated henceforth
through the SHC mechanism.
- The international community will intensify its efforts to raise funds for
reconstruction of vacant apartments in Sarajevo Canton, parallel with and tied
to progress in the implementation of the SHC mechanism.
- The Sarajevo authorities will take appropriate further measures to
facilitate the return of pre-war owners and lawful possessors of privately
owned housing in Sarajevo. To this end, the Sarajevo authorities will
strengthen their support to the implementation of binding decisions of the
Commission for Real Property Claims of Displaced Person and Refugees.
- The Reconstruction and Return Task Force will work with the competent
authorities to identify alternatives for those people potentially displaced as
a result of returns, as recommended by the November 1997 Federation Forum.
EDUCATION ISSUES
- Education is one of the basic elements in support of the sustainable
return of refugees and displaced persons to Sarajevo, the Federation and the
state of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The education system in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, the Federation, and in Sarajevo specifically, must ensure that
all children are educated in a manner that promotes tolerance and stability
between people of different ethnic groups and fosters understanding and
reconciliation. It should be in accordance with the European Convention on
Human Rights and other international and European standards. Education in
Sarajevo will serve as a model for education throughout Bosnia and
Herzegovina. The Sarajevo cantonal and city educational authorities will work
with the Federation Ministry of Education and with relevant international
organisations to develop the principles of an education programme that
addresses the needs of children of different ethnic and religious groups in a
non-discriminatory manner. These basic principles should be agreed upon by 30
June 1998 and the development of a programme incorporating these principles
should be initiated during the 1998/1999 school year.
- Sarajevo educational authorities will nominate for consideration
appropriate officials to participate in working groups at the Federation level
which will deal with the issues of curricular content (proposed UNESCO study)
and text book evaluation (proposed CIVITAS study), and will continue to
cooperate with the Council of Europe initiative to introduce democracy and
human rights teaching in schools. By 1 March 1998, Sarajevo educational
authorities will also establish a multi-ethnic Education Working Group (to
include representatives of the Sarajevo educational authorities, university
professors, members of the Sarajevo pedagogical academy and teachers faculty,
the teacher training institute, selected school directors, teachers,
representatives of relevant local and international organisations, and
parents) to develop projects which foster democracy and ethnic tolerance among
children.
- Sarajevo educational authorities, under the supervision of the Education
Working Group, shall list and review all textbooks currently in use or
anticipated for introduction for review by 30 June 1998. The Sarajevo
educational authorities will ensure that those texts judged to contribute to
ethnic hatred and intolerance are withdrawn from all schools as soon as
possible, and in any event no later than 1 September 1998.
- Sarajevo educational authorities, under the supervision of the Education
Working Group, shall review charges of discrimination against or harassment of
children in the school system. Any measures taken in the field of education
that have resulted in discrimination against children should be reversed and
remedied. The right of parents to choose the nature of the education their
children receive must be respected, and compelling children to attend
particular classes or schools in contravention of that right shall not be
allowed. Sarajevo educational authorities undertake to make all necessary
legislative changes and devote all necessary administrative and technical
resources to achieving these goals in advance of the new school year 1998/99.
This will include provisions to ensure non-discrimination in the recruitment
and training of teachers, and to promote the hiring of minority teachers in at
least equal proportion to the number of minority students.
- Sarajevo educational authorities shall use their best efforts to provide
basic furniture, equipment and educational materials for all students and to
ensure that all schools have sufficient trained and qualified teachers. This
process should be completed by the beginning of the 1998/99 school year. The
international community will do its utmost to support the authorities in this
endeavor. The development of youth and cultural centres should be also
encouraged, resources permitting. The Sarajevo educational authorities will
provide a transparent budget to the Education Working Group and work with it
to ensure that educational resources are distributed equitably throughout the
canton and city, regardless of the predominant ethnicity of municipalities and
school populations.
- Information for returnees about educational opportunities and
reintegration assistance shall be provided by the Sarajevo educational
authorities in cooperation with competent local and international
non-governmental organisations. Remedial assistance for returnee children and
validation of foreign and other educational qualifications will also be
addressed by these authorities.
- Sarajevo Canton education authorities should co-operate with entity
authorities in the sphere of higher education, particularly encouraging
enrollment of students from throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina and cooperating
with the entity authorities on the issue of financing and other issues. In
this field, they should ensure academic freedom and self-government of
institutions, promote the adequate graduation of trained professionals, and
encourage the role of universities as a locus of peaceful inter-group
dialogue.
EMPLOYMENT ISSUES
- A critical aspect of facilitating returns to Sarajevo is expanding
employment opportunities. Municipal, Cantonal and Federation officials must
work together to accelerate economic reform and to create an attractive
climate for foreign and domestic investment to allow for the creation of jobs.
To this end, the competent authorities will develop a comprehensive initiative
by March 1 to remove barriers to trade and investment in the Sarajevo area and
also;
- work to liberalise the business legal environment and reform the
business and employment tax structure to facilitate the development of a
market-based economy;
- work with donor agencies that offer programmes for business development
and retraining and employment services to promote employment creation for
all the residents of the Canton;
- work to facilitate the development of affirmative action programmes
which promote the concept of an open community, facilitate the return of
minorities, and the integration of the community;
- initiate small public infrastructure projects, such as beautification of
parks, refurbishment of neighborhoods and derelict sites, and general
municipal maintenance programmes to provide temporary employment for Canton
residents.
Bosnian leaders also commit to move quickly to meet the
remaining requirements of an IMF agreement so Bosnia and Herzegovina can
continue to access and, if possible, expand investment by the international
financial community.
- Recognising the importance of fair labour standards, the Federation
Ministry of Social Affairs, Displaced Persons and Refugees will work with
other relevant authorities and the International Community to expeditiously
put in place anti-discrimination laws and employment regulations, along with
the institutional capacity to enforce them. These will include a
legal-administrative infrastructure to deal with employment related rights,
such as discrimination on any basis (including national or ethnic origin,
religion, age, gender, political opinion, disability) and unfair termination.
- In addition, a Cantonal Employment and Return Commission will be
established by March 1, 1998, chaired by the Cantonal Minister of Labour,
Social Policy and Refugees, with suitable international representatives as
well as from the Federation Ombudsmens' Office and the Sarajevo City
Government, to accelerate progress towards integrating returnees into the
Sarajevo workforce and economy. The Commission will work in close cooperation
with relevant Federation authorities, with the objective of serving as a model
for a Federation-wide Commission.
- The Commission will:
- set up rules, policies and procedures to address discrimination in the
workplace and disseminate this information widely to the public;
- develop an anti-discrimination code of employment practice and promote
its adoption by local public and private enterprises;
- review the status of employment cases resulting from the 1996 transfer
of authority in the Sarajevo suburbs;
- monitor progress in meeting the employment goals set out in the Sarajevo
Protocol and other Federation agreements on minority employment with equal
opportunity for all nationalities in cantonal and city governments, as well
as in the cantonal police;
- work with relevant international organisations to enhance job creation,
promote business development, provide retraining and employment services
programmes in pursuit of sustainable reform.
PUBLIC ORDER AND SECURITY ISSUES
- Local police must guarantee the security of all citizens and give special
attention to returnees. They must work immediately to incorporate more ethnic
minorities into the police force and appoint officers responsible for
maintaining contact with the returnee population. Sarajevo police are
responsible for responding to threats to public order, ensuring the safety of
returnees, and enforcing duly authorised housing-related orders.
- The Sarajevo cantonal police, with advice from the IPTF, will develop a
detailed strategy by 1 March 1998, setting out how they will meet these
responsibilities and prepare cantonal police forces for enhanced
return-related security roles. The police will initiate public relations and
information campaigns to keep the public informed.
- The IPTF will monitor the implementation of the strategy and seek donor
support for the cantonal police with training and equipment, specifically for
dealing with return-related public disorder. IPTF will maintain close and
constant contact with the cantonal police and be informed of all problems and
proposed actions to solve housing and return-related issues.
- The Federation Mine Action Centre, with UN support, will develop by 15
March 1998, a detailed plan for accelerated de-mining in Sarajevo Canton, in
support of returns and in consultation with the Sarajevo Housing Committee.
The UN and the Sarajevo authorities will vigorously seek funds to implement
this plan.
- Free and responsible media is essential in the creation of the necessary
conditions for returns. The Federation, cantonal, city and municipal
authorities will accelerate their efforts to implement the confidence-building
spelled out in Annex 7 of the Peace
Agreement, and inform the Office of the High Representative of their plans to
develop an appropriate media plan to this effect.
RETURN IN SPECIFIC CASES
- Sarajevo Canton will resolve by 1 April 1998, outstanding return requests
which have been presented to the UNHCR, cantonal and municipal authorities.
Specifically, the remaining 4 cases of identified pre-war tenants prevented
from return to their UNHCR-reconstructed apartments, and the 96 pending return
requests lodged with the cantonal authorities since the summer of 1997, shall
be resolved by the Cantonal Ministry for Spatial Planning in co-operation with
the Cantonal Ministry for Labour, Social Policy, and Refugees by 1 April 1998.
Any expenses associated with the resolution of these cases will be borne by
the Canton, unless otherwise established by court proceeding.
- The Republika Srpska authorities will ensure full freedom of choice and
movement for displaced persons who wish to return from Brcko to Sarajevo and
vice versa, and publicise this commitment widely in the media. The Federation
authorities will give particular attention to the speedy reinstatement into
pre-war homes of returnees from the Brcko area.
- Responsible authorities will accelerate the process of returning to their
homes Jewish families whose cases are the subject of the November 1992
agreement between the Jewish community and Sarajevo authorities. The Cantonal
Ministry of Spatial Planning and the Cantonal Ministry for Labour, Social
Policy and Refugees, working with their city and municipal counterparts, shall
ensure that the 29 priority cases in which members of the Jewish community are
already waiting to reoccupy their pre-war homes are resolved by 1 April 1998.
The remaining 147 cases already agreed between the Jewish Community and the
Sarajevo authorities must be given urgent consideration; they should all be
resolved within 90 days of the date upon which the pre-war occupant/owner
gives notice to the Sarajevo Housing Committee of an intent to return.
IMPLEMENTATION
- The High Representative will establish, by 17 February 1998, a Sarajevo
Return Commission (SRC), responsible for implementing the provisions of this
Declaration. The SRC shall include relevant officials responsible for
displaced persons and refugees, housing, education, employment, and public
security as well as representatives of displaced Bosnian Serbs, Bosnian
Croats, and Bosniacs, Sarajevo civic leaders and key members of the
international community, including the UNHCR . The High Representative will
designate the Commission chair. The SRC shall supervise the work of the
Employment and Return Committee, the Education Working Group, and the Sarajevo
Housing Committee.
- The co-chairs of the Sarajevo Return Conference will periodically review
progress in achieving the specific benchmarks set out in this Declaration as
well as progress toward the goal of at least 20,000 minority returns in 1998.
- The Reconstruction and Return Task Force will assume responsibility for
supporting the Sarajevo Return Commission, for resource allocation guidance in
support of return and for co-ordinating implementation of the principle of
conditionality.
- International agencies involved in the implementation of this Declaration
are invited as well to refer documented cases of abuse and obstruction of Annex 7 implementation by specific local
officials to the SRC. The Commission will, collectively or drawing upon the
resources and competencies of individual members, take appropriate corrective
action.
ANNEX 1
The Sarajevo Conference was attended, among others, by the Co-Chairmen of the
Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Presidents Alija Izetbegovic and Kresimir
Zubak, Bosnia and Herzegovina Minister for Civil Affairs and Communications,
Spasoje Albijanic, Bosnia and Herzegovina Deputy Minister for Civil Affairs and
Communications Nudzeim Recica,. Bosnia and Herzegovina Deputy Minister for Civil
Affairs and Communications Milan Krizanovic, Federation President Ejup Ganic,
Federation Vice-President Vladimir Soljic, Republika Srpska Prime Minister
Milorad Dodik, Federation Prime Minister Edhem Bicakcic, Republika Srpska
Minister of Refugees Miladin Dragicevic, Federation Minister of Social Affairs,
Refugees, and Displaced Persons Rasim Kadic, Federation Deputy Minister of
Social Affairs, Refugees, and Displaced Persons, Damir Ljubic, Sarajevo Canton
Governor Midhat Haracic, Sarajevo Canton Deputy Governor Mladen Bevanda,
Sarajevo Canton Assembly President Mirsad Kebo, Sarajevo City Mayor Gacanovic,
Principal Deputy High Representative Ambassador Jacques Paul Klein, Deputy High
Representative Ambassador Andy Bearpark, United States Ambassador to Bosnia and
Herzegovina Richard Kauzlarich, United States Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State for Population, Refugees and Migration Marguerite Rivera-Houze, USAID
Director Bryan Atwood, European Commission Representative to Bosnia and
Herzegovina Ambassador Donato Chiarini, United Kingdom Secretary of State for
International Development Claire Short, Special Representative of the United
Nations Secretary General Elizabeth Rehn, United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees Special Envoy Carrol Faubert, COMSFOR General Erik Shinseki, and
Ambassador Robert Barry of the Organisation for Security and Co-Operation in
Europe
Office of the High Representative
Sarajevo, 3 February 1998
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