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OHR criticizes Bosnian Council of Ministers

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  • OHR criticizes Bosnian Council of Ministers

    OHR criticizes Bosnian Council of Ministers

    B92 (Belgrade, Serbia)
    28 July 2009
    Source: Tanjug

    SARAJEVO -- Acting High Representative Raffi Gregorian expressed his
    concern with a decision made last week by Bosnia's Council of
    Ministers (CoM).

    The council decided not to extend the mandates of international judges
    and prosecutors.

    The judges and prosecutors in question work on terrorism, organized
    crime, and corruption cases in the Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH) Court and
    prosecutors office.

    `By its decision the BiH Council of Ministers succumbed to political
    pressure to limit the effectiveness of the BiH judicial system,' said
    Gregorian in a statement issued by the Office of the High
    Representative (OHR).

    `The explanation that the cost of translation for people working on
    terrorism, organized crime, and corruption cases was too high was a
    mere contrivance, as such costs are borne by international donations;
    the public knows the real reason behind this decision,' he added.

    The OHR reminded that Transparency International announced last week
    that corruption is a bigger problem in Bosnia than in any other
    country in the region.

    Gregorian said that `Bosnia-Herzegovina must at least catch up with
    other countries in the region and adopt anti-corruption measures in
    order to be considered for visa liberalization", adding that `in this
    context the CoM response today is utterly illogical'.

    `BiH Court President Medžida Kreso, BiH Prosecutor Milorad
    BaraÅ¡in, and HJPC President Milorad NovkoviÄ? launched a
    joint appeal in 2007 calling for the mandates of international
    officers in the BiH Court and Prosecutors Office to be extended beyond
    the end of 2009," the statement said, and continued that the Ministry
    of Justice "only reluctantly drafted these partial amendments this
    summer after repeated urgings by local officials, the High
    Representative, and various international stakeholders."

    "The Council of Ministers proposal terminates the role of
    international officials who help investigate, prosecu rrorism,
    organized crime, and corruption cases by the end of this year. The
    consequences of this decision will seriously degrade efforts to build
    the rule of law in BiH,' Gregorian stated, adding that this will lead
    to an inevitable backlog of pending cases, which will cost a lot of
    money for international donators and could `harm individuals' rights
    such as those related to due process and a speedy trial'.


    http://www.b92.net/eng/news/region-artic le.php?yyyy09&mm=07&dd=28&nav_id=60792
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