Mladen

Ivanić

President of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Speech made to the Assembly

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Dear Madam President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, allow me to express my gratitude for the opportunity to address you today. I am actually accustomed to calling you my colleagues because, less than a year ago, I was a parliamentarian myself. I had the privilege to meet and befriend many of you – exchanging opinions, discussing current events and even sharing common fears. I will keep those friendships for the rest of my life. I had the honour to serve as one of the acting Vice-Presidents of the Assembly.

Today, I address you as the Chairman of the Presidency of a country that is chairing the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe for the first time in its history. You are directly elected representatives of 800 million citizens from across lands stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the North Sea to the Mediterranean. You have a position of prestige, but also of immense responsibility. We started our chairmanship a little over a month ago determined to perform our duties with the utmost responsibility and dedication. We cannot promise to be the best chairmanship ever, but we can promise to do the best we can.

Please allow me to tell you a few words about the current situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina. I will not read a written statement; I will tell you about it in my own words. The situation in the country is not ideal, and there is still a lot to be done, but the position is much better than it was 20 years ago at the end of the war. Compared with other difficult areas around the world, Bosnia represents some sort of success. The country is now at peace, it has not experienced ethnically caused problems for the past decade and it is slowly becoming a more or less normal country. It is far from ideal, and there are many challenges and differences, but we have slowly learned lessons and we know how to overcome those challenges. The new government and presidency decided to adopt the rule that they would speak in public only about compromises, not about differences. That has created a much more positive atmosphere.

“If we are part of something broader, we will immediate relax the whole political situation and the internal differences will be less relevant”

The approach of the international community has changed. Ten years ago, I witnessed key political figures in Europe send the clear message that after Croatia, there would be no more enlargement for years and years. Bosnia knew that the European Union was its only real hope and final destiny, so the knowledge that there was no chance of becoming a member State for decades halted internal reforms in Bosnia. To expect very sensitive issues, such as the case of Sejdic and Finci, to be solved was not realistic. Now, in the new geopolitical environment, we have a new European initiative. First, we will deal with the issues that are in the interest of all and implement economic reforms. After that, and before becoming a candidate country, we will deal with sensitive matters, such as constitutional issues and the Sejdic and Finci case.

I hope that during the next week, we will have agreement on the reform agenda in the country. We have decided to implement that agenda during the next nine months, after which we will solve the problem that we call the co-ordination mechanism, which will allow us to have a single statement within our complicated structure when we negotiate with the European Union. After that, we will apply to be a member State. We know very well that the answer will not be positive until we have solved the problem of Sejdic and Finci, and our plan is to deal with that in 2017, the year after the local elections. The difference now is that we have a realistic prospect of becoming a member State, which was not the case before. I hope that that will be enough motivation for all the political leaders to agree, finally, on a solution to the problem so that we can become a candidate country by the end of that year. That is the only hope for the country. If we remain isolated, our internal differences will be very relevant, but if we are part of something broader, we will immediately relax the whole political situation and the internal differences will be less relevant. That is the plan. I do not want to create too optimistic an impression. There will be a lot of challenges, but for the first time, I think that both the European Union and the leadership of Bosnia and Herzegovina are serious about doing something. I do not even want to think about the alternative, because stability in the country is still very fragile, as recent events show clearly.

The situation in the region is helpful. Croatia is part of the European Union, and Serbia is advancing strongly. Political relations in the region are much better than they used to be, which will help to support us. For Bosnia, good relations in the region are one of the most important preconditions of political stability in the country. I encourage all our friends from the international community to continue to support those positive developments. There are some possible difficulties. The region has not faced terrorist attacks in previous years, but last year and this year we have had some. That is now the main challenge for the region. I have spoken to colleagues from different countries, and we know that we must co-operate much better than we have done to deal with that problem. There are two preconditions for that. The first is that political leaders must strongly oppose radicalisation, especially that of their own people. If a Serb criticises the Bosnians or the Muslims, it will be counter-productive, but if that criticism comes from Bosnian political and religious leaders, it will have a positive effect. My duty is to criticise radicalisation within my population. We must all make such efforts to ensure that we have the political preconditions to fight against terrorism, and better co-operation between the intelligence services. I hope that we will continue to deal with that, because it is a common interest. The second issue is foreign fighters. The importance of citizens of countries of the region who have travelled to countries such as Syria and Libya to fight cannot be overstated. The fact that there are at least a few hundred of them there is a very dangerous development. It is a common problem, which we must tackle together.

As I have said, however, there have been a lot of positive developments in the region. Twenty years ago, one could hardly have imagined that Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia would simultaneously chair two of the most important European organisations in the field of security, human rights and the rule of law – the Council of Europe and the OSCE – but that is the reality today. Not only do Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia chair the Council of Europe and the OSCE, but they co-ordinate their activities closely and in a straightforward way to offer the best response to the emerging crises that our continent faces.

Some 60 years ago, the founders of the Council of Europe found the courage and wisdom to build the foundations of this Organisation here in Strasbourg, on the ruins of old Europe, to ensure that all would have peace, stability, human rights, democracy and the rule of law. Unfortunately, recent dramatic events – the terrorist attacks in the heart of Europe, the humanitarian disaster in the Mediterranean and the fragile trust in Ukraine – remind us that human rights, democracy and the rule of law cannot and should not be taken for granted. The principles on which the Council of Europe is built are confronted with a crisis of the utmost seriousness, which threatens to shatter peace and stability on our continent. The question is what to do and how to overcome the crisis. The most recent report by the Secretary General on the state of democratic security in Europe gives us part of the answer. We need the full commitment of the member States fully to respect the Convention and the values of this Organisation; the use of the exceptional know-how and soft power of the Council of Europe to intensify the struggle against hatred, intolerance and radicalism; and the full commitment of the member States to ensure that democracy, human rights and the rule of law become an integral part of the European security system.

With that in mind, I express my support for the Committee of Ministers’ recently adopted action plan to fight radicalism and terrorism as well as the adoption of the additional protocol to the Convention on the Prevention of Terrorism relating to foreign fighters. We are all concerned that many young Europeans, both men and women, are joining terrorist organisations, most notably in Syria and Iraq. It is disturbing to think that such people number in the thousands. I therefore use this opportunity to invite all member States to sign the additional protocol as soon as possible. I strongly believe that the protocol should be open for signature in the coming months. The problems that we face today transcend international borders, meaning that they cannot be solved by individual countries. Only by working together in close co-operation with the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the Committee of Ministers and the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe can member States successfully tackle such challenges.

The Assembly, a direct representative of 800 million citizens, has an important role to play. Your activity in the establishment of the alliance of parliamentarians against hate speech, recent debates on discrimination in Europe, radicalism and terrorism, cybercrime and the refugee crisis in the Mediterranean and the decision to establish the status of partner for democracy for parliamentary delegations from neighbouring regions confirm your political wisdom and sense of momentum to react in a timely fashion. Since its foundation, the Council of Europe has amassed a magnificent system of conventions covering all walks of life. With the European Court of Human Rights and the unique system monitoring the implementation of its judgments, the Organisation has positioned itself as a global reference point in the domain of human rights. I want the European Union to resolve its procedural difficulties soon in order to become a contracted party to the European Convention on Human Rights. The European Commission for Democracy through Law – the Venice Commission – is a renowned international authority in the domain of constitutional law and its recommendations are sought after and applied even outside of Council of Europe member States.

Over the past two decades, Europe has experienced huge political and institutional shifts. Despite those challenges, the Council of Europe, with its three main pillars of human rights, democracy and the rule of law, continues to have an important impact on the institutional architecture of our continent. It also regularly adapts itself to the circumstances and events of any given era and remains open to new ideas and co-operation with other European and international organisations. Today, 66 years after the inception of the Council of Europe, the threats to peace and stability may have taken on a different form, but the answer remains the same: human rights, democracy and the rule of law and respect for others and those who are different. Let us wisely use the capital that our predecessors have built up over the past seven decades in our best interests and those of future generations.