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The Steering Board of the Peace Implementation
Council (PIC) met at the level of political directors in Sarajevo on
11th and 12th of June 2003 in Sarajevo. Representatives of
Bosnia and Herzegovina’s State and Entity governments also attended.
The Steering Board will be issuing a separate statement following their
meeting on Friday 13 June to discuss the BiH economy.
Europe
Following a presentation by Prime Minister Terzic, the Steering Board
discussed BiH’s progress with the European Union’s Stabilisation and Association
process. They reaffirmed that the road to EU membership offered the best
prospects for long-term prosperity and stability for BiH, but whether and when
BiH joined the EU depended on BiH and the pace of its reforms. It is up to
BiH, as for all potential candidates for EU membership, to meet the standards
required and to show that it shares the values upon which the Union is founded.
The faster it does so, the more rapidly it can make progress on the road to
Europe, as several of its neighbours have demonstrated already. The Thessaloniki
summit later in June will be an important opportunity for BiH to demonstrate to
the EU that it was determined to undertake the necessary reforms.
Education
Ministers Safet Halilovic, Gojko Savanovic and Zija Pasic updated the
Steering Board on their progress in implementing the Education targets agreed by
the BiH authorities and endorsed by the Steering Board in November. They
reported that significant progress had been made in several areas. They cited
the following developments in particular:
- The adoption of the draft state-level framework law
on primary and secondary education by the State House of Representatives last
week.
- Steps towards harmonising the three “ethnic” curricula into one BiH-wide
common core curriculum, for all subjects taught in primary and general
secondary schools.
The Steering Board congratulated the ministers, and SDHR Schrömbgens, on the
progress so far and urged the BiH authorities to implement these reforms in time
for the beginning of the new school year. Despite some progress in the
education of returnee children, the Steering Board were deeply concerned that
ethnic segregation still existed between schools in Republika Srpska, and within
52 schools in the Federation. Stating that no modern European democracy should
tolerate such ethnic segregation, and that the youth of this country are best
placed to promote reconciliation, the Steering Board called on the Federation
Minister of Education to ensure that these schools were unified before the next
school year and to inform OHR and OSCE of the concrete steps to be taken to
accomplish this goal by that date. The Steering Board recognised that the BiH
authorities would need to focus on higher education reform over the next six
months, and urged immediate action to recognize international higher education
qualifications.
Refugee Return
Mirsad Kebo, the Minister for Human Rights and Refugees, updated the Steering
Board on the implementation of the Annex VII (GFAP) Strategy agreed in January.
The Steering Board stressed that refugee return was central to BiH’s European
aspirations, acknowledged the progress made on many issues, including property
issues and called upon the BiH authorities to address issues where there had
been delays. The Steering Board focussed on four issues in particular:
- They strongly recommend that state and entity refugee
ministers be made ex-officio members of the State Commission for Refugees.
- They urged the BiH authorities to finalise the
unified Return Fund, established to promote returns through additional donor
contributions and subsidised loans.
- They hoped that BiH’s membership in the Council of
Europe’s Development Bank would also unlock new alternative
financing.
- They underlined the importance of finalising agreements to transfer CRPC
(Commission for Real Property Claims) property claims to local institutions
and establish an appeals process, while at the same time focusing on the
enforcement of CRPC decisions made as an integral part of the property law
implementation plan.
The Steering Board urged the BiH authorities to make every possible effort to
identify additional resources to bolster the Ministry’s capacity to assume RRTF
tasks, and to ensure that the returns that have already occurred are
sustainable. They welcomed the OHR’s and UNHCR’s efforts, as co-chairs of the
RRTF, as well as those of partner agencies, to support the Ministry for Human
Rights and Refugees’ initiatives facilitating the return process. The Steering
Board stressed the importance of economic reform in securing additional
resources for sustainable return.
Defence Reform
The Steering Board expressed its full support for the efforts of the Defense
Reform Commission (DRC) and its Chairman, Hon. James Locher III. They
called on the BiH authorities to support fully the Commission, and to adopt the
reforms necessary to achieve BiH’s stated goal of preparing the country for
membership in NATO’s Partnership for Peace by January of 2004. The
Steering Board also noted the responsibility of the BiH authorities to implement
on-going reforms, including the adoption of the "Book of Rules of the SCMM
Secretariat Staffing and Operations". They called on all authorities in
BiH to take the necessary steps to develop state level defense institutions, and
noted the efforts of the State Parliament to form a permanent Committee on
Security Policy for parliamentary oversight of defence and security issues,
which is a fundamental element of a functioning modern democracy. The
Steering Board stressed the importance of continuity in driving through defence
reform. They strongly agreed with the OHR that the recent decision of the
Presidency to rotate the position of the Secretary General of the SCMM is deeply
regrettable, and would need to be considered by the DRC.
Future Handling of War Crimes Prosecution in BiH
Recalling that full cooperation with the ICTY remains an obligation for the
BiH authorities, and that the arrest of indicted war criminals is a top
priority, the Steering Board examined ways to improve the domestic capacity for
war crimes prosecution in BiH. SDHR Bernard Fassier, supported by ICTY President
Ted Meron, briefed the Steering Board on the joint OHR/ICTY project to establish
a War Crimes Chamber within the Court of BiH, and a War Crimes Department within
the State Prosecutor’s Office. The Steering Board endorsed the approach
outlined, emphasized the importance of war crimes prosecution in BiH, and
decided the following:
- To task the OHR to establish and co-chair with the
relevant BiH authorities an Inter-Agency Implementation Task Force (ITF),
involving other relevant international organizations, to coordinate the
implementation of the project.
- To support the principle that the ITF should become a
Monitoring Task Force at the end of the OHR’s mandate, chaired by the BiH
Minister of Justice.
- To make realization of the project contingent upon the availability of
financial resources.
The Steering Board requested the OHR, at their next meeting in September, to
brief them on the measures taken to create the ITF, on the outcome of the
Donors’ Conference planned for mid September in The Hague and the planned joint
OHR/ICTY presentation to the UN Security Council, and on the implementation
timelines for 2004.
Future of BiH Human Rights Chamber
The Steering Board, reaffirming the importance of effective protection of
human rights in BiH according to European standards, considered the report
presented by SDHR Bernard Fassier on the future of the Human Rights Chamber
(HRC). They recalled that the HRC had been established under Annex VI of the
Dayton Peace Agreement at a time when BiH was not a member of the Council of
Europe and its judiciary was incapable of handling human rights cases. They
agreed that the mandate of HRC should be transferred to the institutions of BiH
as part of the process of strengthening and localizing human rights protection
in BiH, and that the HRC should cease accepting new cases in the near future,
with a target date of 31 July 2003.
While the modalities of the transfer require further discussion with relevant
institutions, they urged the HRC to take all appropriate measures to deal with
pending cases by 31 December 2003. The Steering Board stressed again that the
transfer plan must provide effective protection of human rights in BiH in
accordance with European standards.
Brcko
The Steering Board were briefed by Ambassador Clarke on the situation in
Brcko. The Steering Board welcomed the progress achieved, congratulated
Ambassador Clarke for his professional handling of Brcko's affairs, and thanked
him for his dedication and commitment to his mandate and to the citizens of
Brcko. The Steering Board expressed their full support for the
vigorous implementation of the final award of the international arbitration
tribunal for Brcko. The Steering Board called upon the Entities to respect
the self-governing status of the District within the institutions of BiH, and
their obligations to it.
The Steering Board commended the government of BiH, Croatia, Serbia and
Montenegro, and Slovenia, for their signature of the framework treaty on the
Sava river basin, and the Protocol on navigation, urging them to ratify these
documents and resolve the location of the seat of the Sava River Commission
expeditiously. The Steering Board welcomed the High Representative’s
report that he expected the Brcko-Gunja border crossing point to be opened
shortly.
Canton 7
The Steering Board were deeply concerned that a government had still not been
formed in Canton 7, a full eight months after the elections. The absence of a
functioning government was affecting basic public services in the Canton. This
situation undermined BiH’s ability to deliver effective, functional and
responsible government including at the local level, an essential requirement
for integration with the European Union. The Steering Board strongly endorsed
the OHR’s decision to impose progressive sanctions on the parties concerned
until they took their responsibilities to the citizens seriously and formed a
government.
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