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Thank you for coming.
As you know the subject of our press conference I need
hardly tell you is police reform. As you know the multi-party talks on
police restructuring failed last night. Before I say anything let me say
that this isn't the end, necessarily. The position is serious, but
recoverable. But it is the end for the moment and unless there is a change
of view, unless the RS politicians who finally couldn't bring themselves to
accept the European principles change that view, then it will be the end in a
more definitive form. But the position is, let me preface my remarks, still
recoverable and it's important that we should say that. The talks have
failed. It requires a change of circumstance before they could be
recommenced. But it is still possible that this thing can be pulled
around, it can even be pulled around in time. I want to explain for a
moment why they have failed, what that means for Bosnia and
Herzegovina
and where we go from
here.
But a word first of all if I may, about the context which BiH now finds
itself in.
Bosnia and Herzegovina
is, or until last night was, on the threshold
of what is arguably the most historic moment in the country's history since the
Dayton Agreement was passed. It was on the verge of being given the green
light to start negotiations on a stabilization and association process with the
European Union and therefore join the whole of the rest of the region on the
road to
Europe
. What is now certain is that that
immediate opportunity has been lost. Perhaps not forever, but certainly for
the moment. On Thursday as you all know a team of the European Commission
will arrive in
Sarajevo
to assess
whether BiH meets the conditions needed for that green light to be given.
The main outstanding issue indeed, as a result of the vote today on PBS,
probably the only outstanding issue that stands in the way of that green light
is the need to get an agreement on police restructuring. Such an agreement,
as we know, has to meet the three principles that the European Commission has
laid down. One of those requires that police areas should be drawn up on
the basis of what makes most sense for police, not what makes most sense for
politicians and political control. Till yesterday the signs were good,
actually the signs were very good. I said after the successful Vlašić
talks that if the spirit of Vlašić continued then I believe this could be
done. Unfortunately the spirit of Vlašić did not continue.
Nevertheless let us recall that for months now and especially in the weeks
since those constructive and disciplined talks on police reform took place at
Vlašić, the people of this country and myself had good reason to believe that
the Task Force's assessment of BiH's fulfillment of the Feasibility Study's
requirements would be positive. A positive decision, a positive assessment
given on Thursday, three weeks later, the formal decision, three or four weeks
later being given at the Council of Ministers, that's the formal decision.
But a positive assessment would have opened the door for the Commission to
recommend that the EU begin Stabilization and Association negotiations in BiH,
and BiH can embark on that historic road that leads to the European Union.
In other words BiH two days from now was scheduled to make that historic first
step towards Europe with all the material, practical and
political advantages for its citizens that that quantum leap would
bring. Well that is almost certain now not to happen. I spoke this
morning to Commissioner Olli Rehn, and I can say that that is now almost certain
not to happen. Now what does that mean? It means no prospect for
visa free access, it means no prospect of new investments, it means no end to
the hemorrhage of the talents of our young, it means no change to the
heavyweight international presence in this country, it means no secure future
for Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
I know some say that the RS would be threatened by the police reform, I say
the opposite. The truth is that the future of the RS is more threatened by
not agreeing to police reform and being a barrier on the road to
Europe . So now instead of joining Serbia and
Montenegro and even Albania, even Albania in negotiating its way to Europe, BiH
looks as though it will be left behind until its politicians decide whether they
are prepared to meet the standards that Europe sets. The questions are
these: Is that what the people of this country really want? Is that what
the citizens of the RS really want, 66 percent (%) of whom in a recent opinion
poll said that they wanted only one future and that was a future in the European
Union. Is that what the RSNA really wants?
Now I have little doubt, frankly, a bleak comment, but I have little doubt
that last night's failure will be applauded by some on the streets of
Banja Luka
today. But I have
little doubt as well that that failure will be cursed by hundreds of thousands
in this country, including in the RS who woke up this morning to discover that
their European future was stolen from them overnight. I hope in the coming
days and weeks their voices will be heard too.
So, what happens now? Answer: ask the RS? Because the ball is now
firmly in the RS's court, they could still turn this around if they wish in the
RSNA by giving their politicians the mandate to negotiate for success, not
failure. It's still possible to turn that around. I understand that
an RSNA session addressing that issue will be held on Monday. If they now
give their politicians a mandate to negotiate for success, we can still achieve
those targets. If not, we are locked where we are. The ball lies
with the RSNA.
So, how did we get here? Well the answer is simple. The police
restructuring talks broke down because RS politicians could not in the end
accept the European Commission’s three principles. They could not accept the
principle that policing regions must cross the entity borderline where
necessary, not everywhere, not on principle, but where necessary, in the
relatively small number of areas necessary to cross the IEBLin order to fulfill
that European Union requirement. And in doing so of course, they backed away
from, I could use a stronger word but I won’t, they backed away from the
agreements, which they made in Vlašić, I regret to have to say.
Now let me remind you what the EU’s three principles are:
- A police service with all the legislative and budgetary competencies
vested at the State Level - that was agreed largely at Vlašić,
- The police areas drawn up on the grounds of functionality, not of
political control, and
- No political interference in policing.
Those are the principles, and let me make it absolutely, abundantly, totally
clear – these principles are not going to change. The European Union is
not going to alter its rules so that little
Bosnia and Herzegovina
can join. Those principles will remain
the same. They will not be changed by demonstrations on the streets of
Banja Luka
, they will not be
changed by protests, they will not be changed by resignations. They will
be there for the RS and the RSNA to consider, the same conditions and the same
current requirements, one week from now, one month from now, one year from now,
one decade from now if that’s how long it must take. The simple truth is
BiH must apply these principles if it wants to integrate with the rest of
Europe . If it does it can, if it doesn’t it
can’t. It’s as simple as that.
So the question is – how long will your politicians make you wait?
Don’t ask me, ask the RS politicians. The ball lies now with the Republica
Srpska.
I’m not going to call more police reform talks. I’m not going to waste
more time. When the RS is ready to negotiate for success they can tell us
and we can continue. Until they are ready there is nothing further that
anybody can do.
So let me sum up. Serious damage, serious damage, including to the
dreams of hundreds of thousands of citizens of this country, was done last
night. But the situation can still be saved. It’s not about
political parties, it’s about the willingness of political parties to grasp
opportunities and lead this country to
Europe. A
small number of politicians can turn this severe setback for the people of BiH
into a step forward and they can do so very quickly. It cannot be now
other than a delayed victory, but it can be a victory nevertheless. But
this will only happen if those who claim to be on the side of reform, on the
side of the people, on the side of the future, act decisively, consistently and
soon. And that action now lies in one quarter and in one place, it lies in
the RS and in the RSNA. The ball is in their court and the world will be
watching how they now play it.
Your questions?
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