THE PRESIDENT
Thank you
very much, Mr Sanader, for your most interesting address and for
your kind words about the Council of Europe. Members of the Assembly
have expressed a wish to put questions to you. I remind them that
questions must be limited to thirty seconds and no more. Colleagues
should be asking questions and not making speeches. I will allow
supplementary questions only at the end and only if time permits.
The first question is from Mr van der Linden on behalf of
the Group of the European People’s Party.
Mr VAN DER LINDEN (Netherlands)
Mr Prime
Minister, can you explain a little more about how you see the relationship
between Croatia and its neighbours, especially Bosnia and Herzegovina,
in the future?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you for your question Mr van
der Linden. I can illustrate our relationship with our eastern neighbours,
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and Montenegro, by the fact of
the presence last week of Mr Walter Schwimmer, the Secretary General,
in Sarajevo. Until last week, Croatia was an observing member of
the SEECP – the South-East European Co-operation Process. A few
weeks ago, my government took the decision, which I presented at
the Sarajevo Summit, that Croatia be a full member of that association,
so we consider our relationship with Bosnia and Herzegovina and
Serbia and Montenegro of essential importance for our common future.
Let me stress again, as I mentioned in my speech, the positive opinion.
We do not perceive that positive opinion as essential only for Croatia
but for the whole region.
The sooner Croatia becomes a full member of the European Union
and Nato, the sooner Serbia and other countries will follow our
example. So I was very pleased to receive expressions of congratulations
during the meeting at Sarajevo on Wednesday last week. I therefore
believe that our bilateral relations both with Bosnia and Herzegovina
and with Serbia and Montenegro will be enhanced by the fact that
Croatia is now stepping towards the European Union. However, we
do not forget that we have to live in the region with our neighbours, and
we will share a common European future.
Let me conclude by saying that, if we translate such things
into the field of foreign policy, we have two priorities. The first
is to approach the European Union and Nato, and the second is to
enhance, strengthen and deepen our bilateral relations with Bosnia
and Herzegovina and with Serbia and Montenegro and other countries
in the region.
Ms DURRIEU (France) (translation)
Thank you for
coming, Mr Prime Minister. Your country has made enormous efforts to
promote reconstruction after the war, a task which it has had to
fund entirely on its own.
I would like to know what you intend to do to accelerate the
return of Serbian refugees.
Furthermore, you have mentioned the question of your co-operation
with the International Criminal Tribunal. How do you plan to proceed
with regard to the specific case of General Gotovina?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia (translation)
Thank you very much, Ms Durrieu.
(The speaker continued in English) First,
we have very successful co-operation with the representatives of
the Serbian minority in the Croatian Parliament. All in all, we
have eight out of 152 members of parliament representing national
minorities in Croatia. All of them support my government, and that
is a big achievement.
They have signed a special agreement with the representatives
of the Serbian minority – three out of the eight – who support the
government. We have signed an agreement on the return of refugees
and the repossession of properties. Let me also say that that created
a big sensation in Croatia, after the outcome of the elections on
23 November.
Croatia has been independent since 1992. To show the improvement
in the general climate of tolerance, co-existence and reconciliation
in Croatia, let me say that I am the first Prime Minister or head
of state to celebrate Christmas with the Orthodox community in Zagreb.
My delegation included the Minister for Foreign Affairs and the
Speaker of the Parliament. At the time, I did not even know that
I was the first Prime Minister or head of state to do that. That
changed the general atmosphere in Croatia enormously. It was a very
small step and a small civilised gesture, but it changed the general
atmosphere in Croatia very considerably.
I did something similar when I went to celebrate new year
with our Italian minority in Istra, and I spoke to them in Italian.
We have excellent relations with the Italian minority and we have
an agreement with Italy on the protection of minorities. Again,
that has contributed to an overall atmosphere of greater tolerance
and mutual respect. For that reason, let me say in answer to your
question, Ms Durrieu, that I am proud of what my government has
done in only four months to enhance the return of refugees and in
respect of the repossession of properties.
With regard to your question about the co-operation with the
ICTY, let me say that we committed ourselves to full co-operation
with the ICTY – and the chief prosecutor reported on the co-operation
with Croatia last week – before the commission produced the positive
opinion. That was one of the preconditions. Croatia, as with all other
countries, has to comply with the Copenhagen criteria and with the
acquis communautaire, but in addition to that we have three political
obligations, three political criteria: the return of refugees, co-operation
with the Hague tribunal and the reform of the judiciary. In all
three fields, we have made essential steps. That has been perceived
in that way in the opinion as well, otherwise the positive avis
would not have been produced. Thank you.
Mr MILOJEVIC (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Thank
you very much, Mr President. Mr Prime Minister, will Croatia give
fair compensation to displaced Serbs – pre-war tenancy right holders
– for the apartments that were sold to third parties? Does Croatia
intend to simplify the private property repossession procedure,
which is currently too complex? Thank you.
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
I cannot agree that the process
is too complex because we have made essential improvements to the
process in the past four months. The fact is that we have created
a special committee, which is in charge of realising and implementing
the agreement that I have signed on behalf of the government with
representatives of the Serbian minority in the Croatian Parliament.
That is the process, and we will do our utmost to facilitate the
return of all refugees and the repossession of all properties. We
have set a specific date for the return of those houses and apartments
that have been inhabited until now by the Croats who were expelled
from the Republika Srpska and Yugoslavia during the war.
The problem, as I should inform all parliamentarians here
in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, is that
the Croats who were expelled from Bosnia, Serbia and Montenegro
during the war are now in those houses. I, as the Prime Minister,
guarantee that all those places will be repossessed by the Serbian refugees
who are now returning. At the same time, no Croat will stay. We
would also like to encourage the Bosnian Government and the Serbian
Government to invite the Croats who left or were expelled at the
time to Croatia to return to Bosnia and Herzegovina and to Serbia
and Montenegro. However, if they do not do that, we will find new
solutions for the Croats who are unable to return to Bosnia and
to Serbia. No Serbian refugee will go without those repossessions.
Mr RAGUZ (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Congratulations,
Mr Sanader, on the impressive result that you and your country have
achieved. Croatia is a signatory to the Dayton Agreement. How do
you envisage the future of the peace accords in the context of the
uncertain European future of Bosnia and Herzegovina, especially
in view of the position of its three constituent peoples?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
The Dayton Agreement will be ten
years old next year in 2005. It was signed in 1995, when we all
knew that it was not an ideal agreement, but it was important because
it stopped the war. That is the greatest achievement of the Dayton
Agreement: no war activities continued after it. I should like to
thank the governments of the European Union countries and especially
the Government of the United States of America. Their work led to
the peaceful solution and the signing ceremony in Dayton and in
Paris.
Ten years have passed. In the past two weeks, I have met the
High Commissioner, Lord Paddy Ashdown, twice – in Sarajevo and Zagreb.
I also met representatives of the three constituent peoples in Bosnia
and Herzegovina. Among others, I met President Tihic, Mr Sehovic
and Minister Ivanic. If Paddy Ashdown, those in government and the
people in Bosnia and Herzegovina asked me to define our position,
my simple answer would be, first, that Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina
are friendly countries. We share the longest border in Europe. We
want Bosnia and Herzegovina to find a way of maintaining the quality
of life of all three constituent peoples – Serbs, Bosnians and Croats.
We are therefore prepared to contribute to all the international
community’s efforts to find a stable and prosperous solution after
ten years of the Dayton Agreement.
The agreement has been amended several times by previous high
commissioners. Again, I emphasise that although it was not ideal,
it was essential for stopping the war ten years ago. Now it is up
to the Bosnian citizens to treat its constituent peoples well and
to seek more co-operation with the international community. Croatia will
participate in those international efforts. We do not pursue an
individual approach to Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is in our interest
that Croats remain in that country. An unpleasant development occurred
in the past year and the Croats are leaving Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The international community should therefore find a way, with the
presidency and both entities, of retaining the Croats in Bosnia
and Herzegovina. We must find an approach that can satisfy the vital
interests of all three constituent peoples.
Mr MARKOWSKI (Poland)
Recent Serb- Albanian
clashes in Kosovo, in which twenty-eight people were killed and
more than 600 injured, appear to have initiated processes in Serbia’s
social and political life that might have far-reaching consequences
for the region. That tendency is highly dangerous because as the ethnic-political
conflict takes on a religious character, it might become regionalised,
or even perceived as a clash of civilisations. Both phenomena have
already been observed. In Bosnia, there were attacks on an Orthodox
church and a mosque. In the Sanjak province, Muslim activists attempted
to mobilise Muslims of Slavic origin living in Serbia, Montenegro
and Bosnia. How would you describe current Serb-Croat relations
in your country? Can the activity of a pan-Serb movement be observed
after the recent events in Kosovo?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you for your question. We
in Croatia are following the position in Kosovo with great interest
and anxiety. We have condemned the recent violent events and acted with
the international community to prevent escalation. Croatia considers
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244 as the basis for
finding a solution in respect of Kosovo. That framework, with the
activities and efforts of the international community, should lead
to developing stability in Kosovo. The future status of Kosovo should
be determined through joint efforts to create a stable and sustainable
environment, infrastructure and economy, which will result in the
overall strengthening of democratic institutions. I cannot provide
an instant solution, but I am sure that an international presence
is required and that a dialogue between Pristina and Belgrade is
needed now and in future.
Ms PETROVA-MITEVSKA ("The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”)
My question was partly answered at the beginning of our proceedings.
I welcome Croatia’s participation in the South-East European Co-operation
Process. The countries involved in that process, including my country,
the Republic of Macedonia, are interested in developing co-operation
among member states. What is your vision for regional co-operation
under the auspices of that process, especially in the context of
the integration of countries from south-east Europe?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you, Ms Petrova-Mitevska.
First, I congratulate your country on the first step in your application
for membership of the European Union. We are both participants in the
action plan for Nato membership. We believe that the Istanbul Summit
will mean a clear prospect of Nato membership for your country,
our country and Albania.
On the South-East European Co-operation Process, I thank you
for your congratulations on the decision. We believe that it means
that we can contribute to overall stability and co-operation in
our region. By accepting the positive opinion, all of us in Croatia
are convinced that we will do our utmost to reach the positive decision
in respect of the European Council about our status as a candidate
country and to set a clear and precise date for the start of negotiations.
Such a development would not mean that we would become fugitives
from the region. We will work with you and other countries. We consider
ourselves to be a bridge – even a leader. We are trying to show
that everything is doable, and that, if we take the necessary steps
in reform to achieve the highest European standards and values,
we can succeed.
In answering your question, I should like to take the opportunity
to extend my gratitude to the European Union for its decision in
Thessaloniki last year, when it opened the prospect of European
Union membership to all countries in our region. Croatia is the
first, and Macedonia and others will follow. In the process of achieving full
membership we should co-operate more. Our state secretary will visit
Belgrade to set an agenda for better relations. I had a good meeting
with your Prime Minister, and we will see whether he will achieve
his goal for the President, Mr Branko Crvenkovski. We have already
discussed my visit to Skopje. I am sure that with more co-operation
we will decrease this area of instability in Europe, which is of
concern not only to us but to the whole of Europe.
Ms ZAPFL-HELBLING (Switzerland) (translation)
Prime Minister,
thank you for your address. I should like to mention the fact that
you were re-elected chairman of your party last weekend by 99% of
the votes. I think this is a clear vote of confidence in the consistent
policy you have pursued for many years. You have thus enjoyed personal success
in your efforts to democratise and stabilise your country.
You have already answered many questions in your address,
but I should like to ask whether you can also commit yourself to
ensuring that new European Union candidates, such as Bosnia and
Herzegovina, are fully respected by you, your policies and your
fellow citizens.
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia (translation)
Ms Zapfl-Helbling, thank you for
your question and your words of congratulation. Last Saturday, I
was elected chairman of our party for the third time at our party
conference in Rijeka. I am pleased about the high percentage of
votes cast because although some political observers thought I was
a “good guy” and pro-European, the rank and file were of a different
opinion. By voting for me, the party’s rank and file – there were
over 2 500 delegates at the party conference – showed that the reform policy
I have been pursuing since I became party chairman four years ago
in April 2000 is also accepted and approved by those at grass-roots
level, the delegates and all the party’s organisations throughout
Croatia. So this means there is no rift between the party chairman
and the ordinary members.
Up to now, one issue that has been speculated on is whether
what the party chairman, Mr Sanader, says is true or whether the
Croatian Democratic Union is a different party after all. In the
first ten years, the Croatian Democratic Union was the party that
led Croatia to independence. Today, it is a reformed party. We have carried
out a number of reforms in the last four years. For example, we
have introduced the principle of subsidiarity into the party and
done a great deal more besides. We are open-minded towards other
centre and centre-right parties, and this has been recognised by
the European People’s Party. Mr van der Linden has spoken on behalf
of the EPP today. We have had observer status for two years now
and in two days we shall also become an associate member of the
European People’s Party.
The party therefore stands four-square behind me and all these
reforms. I spoke at our party conference in Rijeka on Saturday about
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro, the return of the
refugees and co-operation with The Hague Tribunal, and the delegates
not only applauded but also elected me by this very large majority.
So I view the future with great optimism. Croatia plans to go along
two political paths at the same time, firstly in the direction of
the European Union and Nato and secondly in the direction of relations
with its neighbours. We want good neighbourly relations with Serbia
and Montenegro. We are developing a joint co-operation agenda with
Serbia and Montenegro and Bosnia in particular. There are still
a few problems and open questions to be resolved, but the willingness
to co-operate is there.
Reconciliation calls for courage. Since the war, which will
be ten years behind us next year, it has been necessary to develop
a pan-European outlook and future for all peoples and for all the
states of the former Yugoslavia, and Croatia intends to make an
important contribution both to this and to reconciliation. I mentioned
a small step in my address and will repeat it here: I was surprised
at what a big impact the Prime Minister attending an Orthodox Christmas
festival had. For me, this was a small gesture. I went there with
my wife to make it clear that I was not only attending as Prime
Minister but also as an ordinary human being. The response in Croatia
was tremendous. The atmosphere in the country is now completely
different and we shall continue along our chosen path.
Mr JAKIC (Slovenia)
Prime Minister,
congratulations on your positive opinion. Slovenia fully supports
the Croatian aspiration and determination to participate in European
integration, which is important for further political and economic
stabilisation of the region. Mr Sanader, in your opinion, how and
in which fields can Slovenia support Croatia in the process of integration
in the European Union?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
First, Mr Jakic, I congratulate
you on your membership of Nato and the European Union on Saturday
1 May, which will be an historic day for your country. As a friendly neighbouring
country, we are with you in spirit and congratulate you on your
achievements in all fields. I am sure that Slovenia could be an
advocate for Croatia’s membership of the European Union and Nato.
Who knows better than Slovenia the situation in Croatia? For the
information of other parliamentarians, we have some ongoing issues,
but we have agreed that we would like to solve them bilaterally.
If not, we can go for international arbitration. However, none of
those issues can disturb our friendly relations, and I thank you
for your question. I am sure that the Slovenian Government, including
Prime Minister Rop and Foreign Minister Rupel, along with parliamentarians
in the Assembly, the European Parliament and Nato, will advocate membership
of Croatia, because they, like our friends and neighbours in Hungary
and Italy, know better than other Europeans the situation in Croatia.
My answer in concreto is that we would like the benefit of your experience.
Minister Zuzul has excellent relations with Minister Rupel, and
we agree that we can benefit from the expertise of your representatives
who negotiated with the European Union and Nato. We appreciate your experience
in achieving full membership of both associations.
Mr BUDIN (Italy) (translation)
I have two questions,
Prime Minister. The first concerns the disputed fishing and ecological zone
in the Adriatic. Do you agree on the need for multilateral management
in the Adriatic, and if so what form should it take?
My second question is the following. You mention reconciliation.
In addition to everything else, do you believe symbolic gestures
of reconciliation can have a moral value and help in the joint shouldering
of responsibility for the past?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia (translation)
Thank you for those two questions.
As for the first, I believe this decision on the Adriatic is consistent
with European practice.
In two or three meetings I have had with Prime Minister Berlusconi,
I have said that we in Croatia understand Italy’s interest in fishing,
so we need to ensure both that the law adopted by the Croatian Parliament
is respected, like any other law, and that a solution is found to
accommodate Italy’s position. Croatia’s fishing fleet lacks the
capacity to catch all the fish in the Adriatic anyway, so if, above
and beyond Croatia’s catch, there is room for our Italian friends,
why not?
We have raised the matter also with Commissioner Fischler,
who is prepared to assist in finding a solution. Besides, there
is a climate of goodwill and friendship between Croatia and Italy,
and we are hoping that Italy too will support us in our European
ambitions.
I am afraid that I did not quite hear your second question.
Would you be good enough to repeat it?
THE PRESIDENT
Yes Mr Budin,
would you repeat your second question?
Mr BUDIN (Italy) (translation)
Alongside all the
other measures you mentioned, do you also believe in symbolic gestures of
reconciliation, in particular with Serbia of course, thanks to which
each party can shoulder its responsibility for the past?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia (translation)
Yes. I believe reconciliation,
in terms not just of the last fifteen years, but of the entire period
of twentieth-century European history, should enable all parties...
I wanted to answer in Italian, but I cannot find the words. Anyway,
I agree with what you said. In Croatia, among our neighbours and
in the wider Europe there is a need to forget the past, without
necessarily erasing it. We need, in other words, to close this chapter
of the past and turn our minds to Europe’s future.
Ms AZEVEDO (Portugal) (translation)
Mr Prime Minister,
you have provided a clear, thorough summary of the situation in
Croatia. However, can you give us more information about the economic
situation, particularly the market economy, another very important
criterion that was defined in Copenhagen?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you for your question, Ms Azevedo.
Croatia’s economy is not as satisfactory as we might have hoped,
but we have had macro economic stability since 1993. Commissioner
Verheugen said in the European Parliament that “Croatia is a country
with a stable macro-economic environment and monetary system”, which
is much more advanced than some of the European Union accession
countries.
We have problems. We have high unemployment, a budget deficit
that is beyond the European Union limit and growing foreign debt,
which we are trying to address. In spite of those difficulties,
Croatia is on the best path not only to comply with the Copenhagen
criteria in a democratic sense with the acquis communautaire, but
to have economic certainty. In our negotiations with the European
Union, the preparation of the Croatian economy will show that we
will be competitive once we are within the European Union. I am
optimistic that we can compete with the most advanced economies
in the European Union and that we will prepare ourselves for that.
Mr BERISHA (Albania)
I congratulate
the Prime Minister of Croatia on his address and especially on what he
has achieved in four months. He has made concrete steps towards
establishing a reconciliatory process. Taking into account the fact
that Croatia has been subject to aggression, the Prime Minister
has taken some crucial steps.
My question is no longer necessary because it was about the
Dayton Agreement. Once again, I thank the Prime Minister for his
address.
Ms HADZIAHMETOVIC (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
I
take this opportunity to congratulate Prime Minister Sanader on
the speed and manner with which the Croatian Government has led
the country in the past few years. You talked about competition
in the region. How do you see relations there in the light of your
new commitments?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
The direct answer is that we will
pursue the European approach. By accepting this opinion and by enhancing
the status of the country, Croatia will advocate Bosnia and Herzegovina’s
membership of the European Union. Indeed, we will do that for all
our neighbours. We will also advocate Europe in our neighbourhood.
We believe that the European Union has sent a clear signal to all countries
in our region that every country can make similar progress towards
European Union membership, not only by implementing and fulfilling
the Copenhagen criteria, but by sharing European values. In the
light of the new positive development of this avis, we can advocate
European Union membership to our neighbours, Bosnia and Herzegovina
and Serbia and Montenegro, and also advocate our views in the European
Union.
Mr FIGEL’ (Slovakia)
Thank you, Mr President.
Congratulations, Prime Minister Sanader, not only on the avis, but
on the realities that are changing in your country, and especially
on the momentum, the climate and the consensus that are visible
in the country – I was there last week. You need to preserve that,
for domestic reforms, for external relations, and for European integration
– and you can count on Slovakia’s support and sympathy. My question
is to what extent that climate, momentum and consensus are shared
by all political parties, and especially by society.
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you, Jan, for that question.
Let me first congratulate you and your country on the historic achievement
of becoming a member of Nato and the European Union. I had the honour
of attending, together with your Prime Minister and the Prime Ministers
of seven of the Nato accession countries, the celebration party
in Washington. Before answering your question directly, let me first say
that Slovakia has shown how quickly and successfully one country
can join both those important associations. When journalists throughout
Europe ask me how quickly Croatia could finish negotiations with the
European Union, the answer is very simple for me: I always cite
the example of Jan Figel’ and Mikulas Dzurinda, who did a great
job for their country. Your question gives me the opportunity to
extend our congratulations to you once again.
The answer to your question is that in Croatia we have – thank
God – an overall consensus not only throughout all the political
parties from left to right, but throughout the Croatian public.
As you said, it is important to maintain that momentum. For instance,
the difference in public support for the European Union and for
Nato is about 30% – the European Union is supported by about 80%
of Croatian citizens, but Nato by only about 50%. That was probably
the case in other countries acceding to Nato, too, so we should
carry out more public awareness work with regard to Nato. We do
not need much of a public awareness programme for the European Union,
but we fully agree with you that we should keep the momentum going.
In the coming few months – six months, perhaps – we expect
the Council to set a date at the end of this year or the beginning
of 2005. We hope that we shall be able to follow your example and
negotiate all the chapters of the acquis communautaire in a few
years, while increasing public awareness and clarifying and promoting European
values and the reasons why Croatia should become a full member of
the European Union, even though we already have between 76% and
80% public support in all quarters.
Mr CEKUOLIS (Lithuania)
Dear Prime
Minister, the Lithuanian parliamentary delegation joins in all the congratulations
that you have heard today in the Hemicycle. My question is about
your domestic economic affairs. What is your government’s position
on the prospective speeding up of the privatisation process in Croatia?
Do you intend to privatise any of the infrastructure in the near
future?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you for your question and
for your congratulations. May I extend to you our congratulations
on your historic achievement of being a member of Nato and the European Union?
I also congratulate the other Baltic countries.
Privatisation is a process of major importance for me, for
my government and for the whole of Croatia. Because we lost some
years during the war, we are, unfortunately, in a different position
from that of other transition countries such as yours, Slovakia,
the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary and Slovenia. Because we had
the war, the terrible aggression and the occupation of Croatia,
we have lost five, six or even seven years – who knows how many?
– not only during the war, but afterwards, too, because we had a
lot of regions to reconstruct and recover. Now the process of privatisation
is going well. We are privatising some of the infrastructure companies,
and also, bearing in mind some similar cases in Ireland, the United
States and Finland, we are offering not only direct privatisation
but, in some fields, a public-private partnership. That means that
if anyone would like to join with the shares of the government in
the company now, in a few years – if the project is successful –
we would be able to privatise. Always, even in such cases, the final
goal is to privatise the company, but with the introduction of a
public- private partnership, we believe that we can achieve more successful
privatisation in a few years’ time.
Mr JARAB (Czech Republic)
Prime
Minister Sanader, let me, too, congratulate you on the positive
and successful course of development of your country, and offer
you our support on your way to joining the European Union. The autonomy
of universities is one of the major requirements of the Bologna
Magna Charta Universitatum, to which the University of Zagreb is
a signatory. Yet I understand from two visits to the university as
a member of an advisory expert team that, according to the legal
documents in force, the university’s autonomy is very weak because
the institution is split into some thirty autonomies of individual
faculties, which enjoy the status of legal entities and the right
to negotiate their budgets directly with the ministry. Is not that fragmentation
an unnecessary legal obstacle to your largest institution of higher
learning achieving its full potential?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
First, I thank you for your congratulations,
and I congratulate you on your achievements, as I have congratulated
other countries acceding to the European Union and Nato. In your
case, I am talking primarily about the European Union, as you have
been a member of Nato for a few years.
We are fully committed to the Bologna process, and there is
no reason to question that process. The University of Zagreb has
full autonomy, and there is no possibility of any government interfering
with its decisions. The university’s full autonomy has been granted,
and will be preserved.
Mr TOSHEV (Bulgaria)
Thank you, Mr President.
Mr Prime Minister, welcome to the Council of Europe Chamber, and
congratulations on your electoral success. I wish you a successful
mandate as Prime Minister of Croatia, and you enjoy our support
in the European development of your country. My question refers
to civil control over the security services. What are your achievements
until now, and what are your commitments in that respect?
Mr Sanader, Prime Minister of Croatia
Thank you for your congratulations
and for your support. We have very intensive and dynamic bilateral
relations. Yesterday, our two ministers for European integration signed
an agreement on our co-operation in Zagreb. Let me say clearly that
in Croatia a law on the security services has set up a committee
of private people who are outside parliament. Thus we have a parliamentary committee
which controls the whole security system, but also a committee of
citizens – outstanding personalities in Croatian public life – who
have control of the security system. That is transparent and in accordance
with the best European standards. The law was passed under the previous
government and some initiatives are now being taken to amend and
improve it; but we are fully committed to transparency in control of
civil society.
THE PRESIDENT
That brings
to an end the questions to Mr Sanader. I thank him most warmly on
behalf of the Assembly for his address and for the remarks he has
made in the course of questions. I thank the ministers and high
officials accompanying him. Thank you for coming and all the best
to you and to Croatia.