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Too many people in Bosnia and Herzegovina live in fear that they or their
families will be attacked, that their homes will be burgled or that their cars
will be stolen.
The sooner police reform is agreed and implemented, the sooner the
authorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina can tackle crime effectively.
This fact has been lost in the recent controversy over the failure of the
government of Republika Srpska to cooperate in bringing the work of the Police
Directorate to a successful conclusion.
The point of police restructuring is to give citizens better policing. It is
as simple as that. And the current process under way within the Directorate is
about police professionals proposing the best technical solutions for police
reform.
Let us review the facts.
In October 2005, the parliaments of both entities as well as of Bosnia and
Herzegovina endorsed a Police Reform Agreement committing them to restructuring
the police in line with three principles laid down by the European Union. These
are the following: that all legislative and budgetary competencies for police
matters must be vested at the state level; that there should be no political
interference with operational policing; and that functional local police areas
should be determined by technical policing criteria, where operational command
is exercised at the local level.
The text of the Police Reform Agreement was proposed by Milorad Dodik and
Dragan Cavic; and it was accepted by Federation-based parties, the international
community and the European Union. The National Assembly of Republika Srpska, the
Federation Parliament and the Parliament of Bosnia and Herzegovina all endorsed
it.
In the Agreement, the authorities of Bosnia and Herzegovina and both entities
also committed themselves to supporting the work of a Police Directorate, which
would prepare an expert proposal on an implementation plan for restructuring the
police system.
The Directorate was duly established by a vote of the Council of Ministers
last December. In this way, it was also endorsed by Serb Ministers nominated by
the leading political parties in Republika Srpska.
After the Directorate finished its proposed implementation plan, the entity
and state governments and parliaments would need to make any necessary changes
and then to endorse the result.
That plan still stands. It was that plan that the European Union agreed
to.
That is why Javier Solana was obliged to remind this
country’s political establishment last week that the European Union only agreed
to launch talks on a Stabilisation and Association Agreement (
SAA) after it had been assured through the
Police Reform Agreement, that the authorities of Bosnia and Herzegovina were
serious about tackling crime.
By putting this plan in doubt, the authorities of Republika Srpska are
risking delaying finalisation of the SAA,
thereby setting back Bosnia
and Herzegovina’s progress on the road to
Europe.
Police reform will re-enter the arena of political discussion after the
Directorate finishes its work. Governments and parliaments will then adopt the
final reform. This is the process laid out in the Political Agreement.
But this discussion will be based on the document produced by the
Directorate. By reducing its presence in the Directorate, Republika Srpska is
only undermining its own ability to shape the reform.
The Police Reform Agreement was a huge advance for Bosnia and Herzegovina,
because it charted the way forward. It pointed to a clear path away from the
chronic crime and corruption, which has become a scourge of daily life in
Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
Police professionals, politicians, the European Union and, most importantly,
Bosnia and
Herzegovina
's citizens agree that this country must fight crime more
effectively.
Ignoring the process designed to get Bosnia and Herzegovina to more efficient
and effective policing benefits nobody. Worse still, it is undermining efforts –
including mine – to achieve a more liberal visa regime for citizens of this
country in the European Union.
Although I choose not to intervene in issues that should be dealt with by
domestic authorities, I am monitoring closely how the institutions of the
country operate and, in particular, how politicians behave on the key issues for
the future of this country.
One thing is clear. It is in everyone’s interest to see the work of the
Police Directorate through. Police reform will help make Bosnia and Herzegovina
safer and it will make life in Bosnia and Herzegovina better.
Christian Schwarz-Schilling is the international community’s High
Representative and the European Union’s Special Representative in Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
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