OHR, Paddy Ashdown
US Embassy, Douglas L. McElhaney
EU Presidency, Matthew Rycroft
European Commission, Michael B.
Humphreys
OHR - High Representative, Paddy Ashdown
The purpose of this press conference is to deliver to
the
SDS led Government of the RS
a simple stark and united message from
Washington
, from
Brussels
, and from the international community. And the message
is simple. Think again – before it is too late.
Just over a week has passed since the RS Government, and the RSNA, blocked
police restructuring, and in so doing, dashed this country’s hopes. The only
future that this country can have.
We in the international community have left a little time for people to
reflect on the consequences of that decision for the
SDS, for the RS Government, for the citizens
of the RS and BiH as a whole. But it is now time to give the first stage of our
considered response.
There has been much speculation about what I will announce today and in the
coming weeks – some of it accurate, some of it less accurate.
I will not dwell on that aspect today.
If the SDS-led RS Government persists in
this path, it will face the consequences of its actions, as sure as night
follows day, and we will have, I regret, plenty of time to set out our response.
One cannot expect to wreck an entire country’s hopes with impunity, and if the
SDS-led RS Government insists on doing so, it
will suffer the consequences that come with isolation – but let us remember that
the people who will suffer most will be the people of the RS. For them the cost
of isolation will be fewer jobs, more poverty, no chance of visa free travel,
and no question of joining the rest of the region on the road to
Europe
There is no danger for the RS in police restructuring: there is a real danger
in opting for total isolation.
So I want to focus this morning on what the
SDS led RS Government’s decisions mean – not for the politicians,
but for the people of the RS, and the people of this country as a whole.
And we want to set out, once again, our complete determination – mine, the
EU’s, the United States’, the rest of the International Community - to see this
reform succeed, however difficult it may be, however much the RS may try to
block it, however long it may take.
The European Union has been very clear that it wants BiH, and the rest of
this region, to join the Union.
That offer remains on the table today just as it did a week ago. It will stay
on the table next week, next month, next year.
But if you want to join the club, you have to meet the standards it sets.
Police restructuring is one of the last requirements it has set for BiH. It
will remain one of the requirements – next week, next month, next year.
No police restructuring means no negotiations on an
SAA, and no progress towards
Europe – it means isolation. It’s as simple as that.
So the people of the RS need to be very clear about where their
SDS-led government is leading them.
Now, there is a wider issue that we may wish to return to.
Police reform is not the only area of obstruction from the
SDS-led RS Government. But police reform is
currently the central issue.
By blocking police restructuring, they are taking the RS into isolation.
When they could have chosen integration, they have instead chosen the
political equivalent of solitary confinement.
This makes BiH – and within it the RS – the only country in the whole of
Europe, apart from
Belarus, without
a contractual relationship with the EU. Do the people of the RS really want that
– to choose
Belarus over
Brussels?
It means that while Serbia and Montenegro gets ready to start SAA
negotiations in a few weeks’ time, BiH is stuck on the sidelines, friendless and
alone, as their neighbour overtakes them on the road to
Europe. Do the people of the RS really want that?
It means that all the benefits of joining Europe – jobs, freer travel, higher
living standards – the benefits that countries such as Hungary and Slovenia now
take for granted, will not to BiH but to BiH’s neighbours, but not here, because
of the obstinate intransigence of the RS Government. Is that what the people of
the RS really want?
That is not what we want, and that is not what anyone in BiH should
accept.
Police restructuring will have to happen if BiH – and the RS – want to join
the EU, and begin to enjoy the benefits of closer association with the EU even
before they join.
The question is not whether police restructuring will happen, but when: the
longer it takes for the RS Government to reach agreement, the more damage it
will inflict on the RS, and the people of this country as a whole.
So the RS Government now has an urgent choice to make – this is the eleventh
hour – police restructuring that meets EU principles; or to condemn their people
to isolation and to suffer the consequences.
The choice is theirs, and theirs alone. It needs to be made now. I hope they
make the right choice.
US Embassy - Ambassador Douglas L. McElhaney
This November is going to be the tenth anniversary of the signing of the
Dayton
peace agreement, and I think
that date’s a reminder to us here in
Bosnia
and to the entire world of exactly how far this
country has come. Since I arrived last summer I’ve seen myself the many
hurdles that Bosnia and
Herzegovina
has overcome in order to take its place as a
partner in Euro-Atlantic institutions. Once again this country has reached
a critical stage and a critical point in this journey. The promise offered
by an EU Stabilization and Association Agreement represents a qualitative leap
forward for Bosnia and
Herzegovina
’s future development and role in Euro-Atlantic
affairs.
As Paddy has pointed out, discussions on meeting the EU’S requirements on
police have been blocked by the unwillingness of the entity government, SDS, of
the Republika Srpska, to come to terms with the necessary reforms, and this is a
requirement for beginning SAA discussions. I don’t think that we should
forget what this agreement means as a promise of a better life for all of this
country’s citizens, all of this country’s citizens. But like all
great leaps forward, it will take a lot of effort. And as EU’s newest
members know, Hungary , Slovenia and others, difficult decisions are required of all
countries seeking to join the Union as full partners.
Let it be clear that we strongly support the EU on this issue and all those
in BiH who want to see this resolved. We, with our allies, are determined
to see this through. Many are asking what sanctions will be forthcoming
for the failure of the RS government to negotiate seriously on police
reform. Unfortunately, the greatest sanction at this point already lies
before the citizens of the RS and Bosnia-Herzegovina as a whole: indefinite
suspension of their hopes for getting on the path to joining Europe.
Immediately, we look to the leaders of Bosnia and Herzegovina, particularly
the leadership of Republika Srpska, and the SDS government, for progress in
three key areas: cooperation with ICTY, defense reform and the issue which we
are discussing today, police reform that is key to the beginning of these
important SAA negotiations.
The eyes of the world and my government will be on Bosnia and Herzegovina
weighing the progress that’s been made, the opportunities that have been
missed. I hope, for the welfare of this country and its courageous
citizens that a way will be found to achieve these goals. Thank
you.
EU Presidency - Ambassador Matthew
Rycroft
The international community is determined. Europe speaks with one voice. We
all want Bosnia and Herzegovina to integrate with Europe. But, as with all other
countries, only when all the conditions are met. In BiH's case, that means that
negotiations for a Stabilisation and Association Agreement, the first step
towards joining the EU, can only begin when there is an agreement on police
reform. And that in turn means a deal that respects the three EC principles.
European integration is not going to go away as our strategy. Police reform
is not going to go away as a precondition of EU integration. And the three
principles are not going to go away as our test of police reform.
So police reform will happen. The question is whether it happens quickly, and
leads to benefits. Or slowly. The slower it goes, the more negative measures
there will be against those who do not fulfil their obligations to implement
Dayton and make progress down the road to Europe.
As I have repeatedly said, there is no threat to the RS from doing police
reform. The threat to the RS comes from not doing policing reform.
At present, the RS government has taken the RS down the road to
obstructionism and isolation. It is not too late for them to change course.
There is one last chance to realise the consequences and make up for lost time.
Otherwise BiH will slip even further behind Serbia and Montenegro and others as
they progress towards Europe. For the sake of Europe, for the sake of BiH, for
the sake of the RS, it is time to change course.
European Commission - Ambassador Michael B.
Humphreys
I was in
Brussels
last week and
clearly felt that last Tuesday positive feelings about the future of
Bosnia
and Herzegovina
were dashed by the decision of RS not to move forward on
police reform.
An immediate diplomatic point was felt in
New York
where the European Union in the Troika format was due to
meet with the BiH Foreign Minister. This was disrupted; the EU Troika refused to
meet with Foreign Minister Ivanic as the EU does not talk to obstructionists.
As my colleagues have pointed out all of us are disappointed by the breakdown
of the negotiations on police reform.
We were clearly hoping that an agreement will be reached, fully in line with
the 3 principles for successful police reform.
I think that the principles have been repeated so many times that most people
in this country can recite them.
But, just in case there is any doubt what are the 3 principles – I will
repeat them:
1) Securing the exclusive state-level competences on police,
2) Elimination of political interference from police and
3) Ensuring that police regions are determined on the basis of technical and
professional criteria.
Police reform clearly remains a condition for progress of this country
towards the EU. This will NOT change.
It is not because we are stubborn, but because this is clearly the most
efficient way to organise police forces in this country.
Good, politically independent and efficient police services are a backbone of
any democracy. And a fully functioning democracy is one of the basic
requirements for EU membership.
When the European Commission published the Feasibility Study in November 2003
we hoped that sufficient progress would be made within 2004 to move to the next
stage. Start of the Stabilisation and Association Agreement negotiations.
Good progress has been made during 2004. Many important pieces of
legislation were adopted, institutions established and this country made
progress on cooperation with ICTY.
A lot of time and effort has been invested by all the political parties, both
in government and in the opposition in order to make progress towards the
EU.
Therefore it is a waste not to take one more step. To complete this phase and
move on the next one.
If we look at our neighbours - we see Croatia on the verge of starting
accession negotiations; Serbia and Montenegro will start negotiations on
an SAA on 4 October; we will make a recommendation to the European Council
before the end of the year regarding Macedonia’s application for membership of
the European Union; Albania should complete its negotiations on a Stabilisation
and Association agreement in the coming months. Only Bosnia and Herzegovina
stands alone without any clear prospects on European integration. Is this
what the citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina want? Is this the desire of the
people of the Federation or of Republika Srpska? I doubt that it is.
The ball now is clearly in hands of RS politicians. It is up to them to
move
We cannot take this step on behalf of the politicians.
We can only say that we are ready to continue working on this issue whenever
they are ready.
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