Saturday, October 10, 2009 

Pressure mounts on divided Bosnia to agree key reforms


DANIEL McLAUGHLIN 

EUROPEAN AND US officials threw down the gauntlet to the leaders of
ethnically divided Bosnia yesterday, telling them to agree on crucial
reforms or risk jeopardising future EU and Nato accession.

Bosnia has fallen behind its ex-Yugoslav neighbours in the push for greater
integration with the West, due to chronic disagreement between the
nationalist parties that run its constituent parts, a Muslim-Croat
Federation and a Serb-run region called Republika Srpska.

While the Muslims and Croats broadly support EU and US plans to break down
ethnic boundaries by strengthening Bosnia’s central institutions, the Serbs
have blocked such reforms over fears that they will irrevocably weaken
Republika Srpska.

The near paralysis of the federal government, the suspicion and hostility
between ethnic groups and a sharpening of nationalist rhetoric as next
year’s elections come into view have prompted warnings that Bosnia could
even return to violence unless the deadlock is broken.

“We want Bosnia to go forward, but it requires decisions from the Bosnian
political leaders. We are not going to hold the region hostage to Bosnia,”
said Carl Bildt, the Swedish foreign minister who co-hosted the talks with
US deputy secretary of state James Steinberg and EU Enlargement Commissioner
Olli Rehn.

Mr Steinberg said the talks at a base used by EU troops outside Sarajevo
allowed all sides to “understand each other’s positions” and to spell out
what was expected of Bosnia’s leaders ahead of another meeting scheduled for
October 20th.

“We hope to be able to achieve a real significant agreement at that time,”
he said.

Seven Bosnian leaders, including Bosnian Serb prime minister Milorad Dodik
and Muslim officials Haris Silajdzic and Sulejman Tihic, took part in talks
which lasted almost five hours.

In an open letter published before the talks, Mr Bildt and Mr Steinberg said
they planned to discuss “constitutional changes to achieve functionality and
efficiency in government structures” and “completion for the closure of the
Office of the High Representative (OHR)”.

The high representative is the senior international figure in Bosnia, and
has the power to impose laws and sack obstructive local officials. His
office, like the cumbersome political structure of Bosnia, was created by
the Dayton Accords that ended Bosnia’s 1992-5 war.

The OHR’s powers have been used most often against Serbs, and they want the
post abolished. But many Muslims and Croats, and some analysts, warn that
Bosnia could spiral towards violence if the OHR is wound down before Bosnia
is truly stable.

“We were promised that if we agree Bosnia could apply by the end of the year
for EU candidate status and be an approved visa-free regime starting on July
1st next year,” said Mr Tihic.

Mr Dodik added: “They said that we must speed up the pace towards the EU and
they expect us to reach an agreement . . . The details remain to be
discussed but we believe that the constitution should not be changed.”

This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times

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