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The representatives of BiH’s main political parties will meet today to
continue the talks that began so promisingly at Vlasic two weeks ago. If these
talks succeed, then one of the handful of remaining obstacles will be removed
and BiH – as early as this month! – could receive the green light to begin
Stabilization and Association Agreement negotiations with the European Union.
This would be a momentous step forward in this country’s progress towards full
EU membership.
Now, I have always been clear about the purpose of police restructuring. It
is not first and foremost about satisfying EU entry criteria. It’s about making
BiH a safer place to live. It’s about putting criminals behind bars. It’s about
ending the nightmare ascendancy of corruption and crime in this country. It’s
about paying police throughout the country a decent wage and giving them the
resources they need to do their jobs properly.
It’s about taking politics out of policing and putting professionalism
into policing.
But the importance of the secondary objective – meeting the EU criteria –
simply cannot be overstated.
If the talks that begin inSarajevo today fail, then the
politicians of this country will have dealt a terrible blow to the hopes – the
justified hopes – of every man woman and child in BiH. They will have closed the
door to Europe.
Through that door lies a future for the citizens of this country that is
already being enjoyed by the citizens of
Slovenia
. It is
a future that will deliver real and substantial benefits to citizens, in terms
of standard of living, in terms of security, in terms of freedom of travel, in
terms of investment in jobs and industry.
In 1994
Slovenia’s GDP
per inhabitant was 10,670 Euros; this figure was projected to grow to 19,090
Euros this year. This nearly doubling of the amount of real money in
people’s pockets can be traced directly to the reforms that go with joining the
European Union and to the huge advantages in terms of trade and investment that
come from full membership. Slovenian and Czech GDP per head have now overtaken
that of
Greece
in terms of purchasing power.
In the history of EU enlargement, economies that have been relatively
backward , for example those of
Ireland
,
Greece
,
Spain
and
Portugal
, have
caught up fastest.
Ireland
went
from being one of
Europe’s poorest countries to being one
of its richest in the space of just 15 years. BiH can get on this fast track to
prosperity; it can change its national reality from one of poverty, crime and
political failure to one of prosperity, security and political success.
For that to happen the talks that begin in
Sarajevo today must
succeed.
What do the politicians have to do in order to succeed?
They need to look beyond short-term political gains. None of the politicians
meeting in Sarajevo today has the
right to deprive the people of BiH of the future that they desperately want and
that they truly deserve – a prosperous future inside
Europe.
They have to reach agreement on a police service where aall legislative and
budgetary competencies are vested at State Level, where police areas are drawn
up on the grounds of functionality, and where there is no political interference
in operational policing.
It’s not just the European Union that wants these things, by the way – most
BiH citizens do too.
The agreement they must reach will be complex but it is by no means beyond
their political or administrative capacity. Now is the time for careful,
sensible and disciplined negotiation. It is not the time for grandstanding.
I come from a small EU member state that has a complex and devolved system of
government; I have worked for almost a year on the nuts and bolts of creating a
just and efficient solution to the issue of modern European-standard policing in
BiH.
I know that an agreement is possible.
I will be the first to extend the hand of appreciation and congratulations to
the political leaders when they resolve remaining differences and in so doing
remove a huge obstacle to BiH’s European future. The people of BiH will not
quickly forgive them if they fail.
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