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Next week inBrussels I will have meetings with
the European Union and NATO and address the European Parliament. In the
aftermath of last Sunday’s elections Bosnia and Herzegovina is entering a new
political landscape, and during my Brussels visit I want to make sure that the
possibilities of this landscape are properly understood by this country’s EU and
NATO partners. Such meetings may not sound very enthralling, but I can assure
you from my long experience in politics, that some of the least exciting
meetings can be about the most interesting issues and have the most significant
consequences.
I will argue that the new alignment of political forces in
Bosnia and Herzegovina
is not anti-Europe or anti-reform. I will reassure European
and NATO policymakers that they must keep the door open to
Bosnia and Herzegovina
. I will do my part – now the politicians that you have
elected must do their part.
We have a lot to do before we can go through the door to
Europe; the parties understand this; the citizens of
Bosnia and Herzegovina understand this. Next week I will
make every effort to ensure that those in Brussels understand that the
politicians and people here have the will and the capability to re-start – and
successfully complete – the reform process that was stalled in the middle of
this year. But they will not just be listening to me, they will be watching the
actions of those in Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
All the parties have expressed a commitment to carry
Bosnia and Herzegovina
further along the road to Euro-Atlantic integration. They
must now do that for real.
I will stress to
Brussels
that
Sunday’s poll, conducted in an orderly and transparent way, is further evidence
that
Bosnia and Herzegovina
is becoming a functioning democracy and its citizens and
their leaders understand that they are bound by the ballot box.
My message in
Brussels
will also
be that the new governments and the new parliaments understand the need to act
constructively. But if this message is to be credible, then BiH politicians must
get down to business. It is less important who gets what ministry than that the
ministry in question does what it is supposed to be doing.
Southeast
Europe has a place in the European Union and
in NATO. But each country must implement the necessary reforms to take that
place. Let us be frank – until now, other countries have shown themselves more
adept at doing this than Bosnia
and Herzegovina.
Clearly, some reforms have to wait for parliaments to be constituted and
governments to be formed. But we cannot afford to delay any more than is
absolutely necessary.
Europe and NATO will not have
patience – and the people of
Bosnia and Herzegovina
will not have patience – if newly
elected politicians dither and prevaricate.
Police reform is one area where progress can be made quickly, through the
Police Restructuring Directorate. The EU has made clear that it expects the
Directorate to accelerate its work. So here is a reform where the politicians
can demonstrate that they are serious about getting into
Europe – I call on them to create the conditions in which
an agreed report can be delivered by police experts.
I am glad to hear party leaders speaking already about the importance of
constitutional reform and the necessity of working together in order to build
common ground to take this issue forward. They must agree to take the first step
on this road as soon as possible.
I am optimistic and I sense already a willingness on all sides to make
positive strides forward. Politicians may be tempted to revert to politics as
usual, yet it is not unreasonable to hope that the faith that voters showed in
turning out to vote last week will inspire this country’s leaders to keep faith
with the electorate – and move forward rather than sideways, backwards or stand
still.
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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