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13/12/2002
Security
Council Voices Appreciation For Successful End To UN's Bosnia Mission
The
Security Council this week expressed its deep appreciation for the
cooperative efforts that brought about the successful conclusion
of the United Nations Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina (UNMIBH),
the mandate of which expires on 31 December.
Ambassador
Alfonso Valdivieso of Colombia, which currently holds the Council's
rotating Presidency, read out a statement at an open meeting in
which the 15-nation body welcomed the European Union's decision
to send a Police Mission from 1 January, as part of a broader rule
of law approach, as well as the close coordination being taken with
UNMIBH to ensure a seamless transition of responsibilities.
The
statement also reiterated that the authorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina
had primary responsibility for the further implementation of the
General Framework Agreement for Peace. It stressed that the continued
willingness of the international community and major donors to assume
further burdens of implementation and reconstruction would be determined
by the compliance and active participation by all the authorities
in the country in implementing the Peace Agreement and reforms needed
to rebuild a civil society.
Speaking
at the outset of the Council's meeting, Secretary-General Kofi Annan
said UNMIBH had completed successfully the most extensive police
reform and restructuring project ever undertaken by the UN and that
the country had now a police "fit for Europe."
He
added that, with the end of two missions, UNMIBH and the UN Mission
of Observers in Prevlaka (UNMOP), an era of UN involvement in the
former Yugoslavia had come to an end. "This era has seen some
of peacekeeping's bitterest moments, which have left a lasting impression
on the Organization, and on all of us who were personally involved,"
he said.
The
Secretary-General also noted that the two Missions had shown that,
with the right mandate, the cooperation of the parties and the strong
support of the Council and Member States in general, UN peacekeeping
operations "can make an important difference."
In
his statement, Jacques Paul Klein, the Secretary-General's Special
Representative for Bosnia, said the UN Mission was a success. "A
mandate has been implemented," he added. "And there are
visible signs that reform is at work."
Mr.
Klein said a platform now existed on which the people of the country
could build a society based on respect for the rule of law and functioning,
democratic institutions, although systemic challenges remained in
both the political and economic areas. He urged the country's leaders
to bring their bloated bureaucracies under greater fiscal discipline
and get the State the revenues it needed to prosper. The country,
he said, must also cooperate in full with the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
Meanwhile,
the Chair of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Mirko Sarovic,
told the Council that the end of UNMIBH was a new beginning for
the country, as it was fully committed to the implementation of
the provisions of all UN resolutions. The Presidency and the Council
of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina had confirmed its commitment
to full reform on its way towards the European and Euro-Atlantic
integration processes. After the general elections of October, the
newly elected three-member Presidency wanted to emphasize its determination
to continue reforms and to lead the country towards lasting peace
and a self-sustainable society.
©EuropaWorld 2002
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