|
Opinion, May 2003, Al-Jazeerah.info |
|||||||||||||
|
Human Price of the Israeli Occupation of Palestine Israeli daily aggression on the Palestinian people Mission and meaning of Al-Jazeerah Cities, localities, and tourist attractions
|
Changing Balkans, Bosnia and Kosovo attract little interest these day; there are too many
other hotspots attracting international attention. But things are changing
there — at least in Bosnia. Eleven years after civil war erupted there,
the present tortured chapter in its history may be about to come to an
end. That is not because the inhabitants of Bosnia have finally decided
they want to live in a multicultural, multiethnic society. Nor is it
because international pressure for reconciliation is finally working. It
is because the rest of former Yugoslavia has moved on and is busy trying
to do three things — stimulate local economic growth, join the EU and
NATO, and rebuild old relationships. In Croatia and in Serbia — the two
countries which did so much to poison ethnic divides within Bosnia — its
divisions and problems are no longer of any interest. Things are happening in the Balkans which would have been unimaginable
even just a year ago. Last week in the Austrian city of Salzburg during a
summit of Central and East European states, the leaders of Croatia, Serbia
and Montenegro and the current Bosnian president, at a separate meeting to
discuss cooperation, decided to ease visa regulations between their
countries. Since then, ministers from all the Balkan states have been in
Macedonia to discuss regional security. Meanwhile, Macedonia and Albania
are working on a free-trade agreement; Montenegro and Serbia say that
plans to harmonize their economies have been fulfilled and so are ready to
sign a stabilization and association agreement with the EU; the
Hague-based international war crimes tribunal’s chief prosecutor has
hailed a new era of cooperation with Serbian and Montenegrin authorities;
and the international community’s high representative to Bosnia, Paddy
Ashdown, has spoken of growing cooperation between the Serb statelet in
Bosnia, the Republika Srpska, and Bosnian state institutions. It is all
very encouraging. Strongest evidence of winds of change blowing through the Balkans is
the persistent rumor in Belgrade that the Serbian government is prepared
to agree to the dissolution of the Republika Srpska if Bosnia withdraws
charges of aggression and genocide at the International Court of Justice
and agrees to an out-of-court settlement. An end to the Republika Srpska
would change everything in Bosnia. Certainly as long as it remains in
existence, beyond the norms of international law and a refuge for indicted
war criminals, there will be no healing of Bosnia’s wounds; justice will
remain undone. Nor is there any hope of turning Bosnia into a stable,
functioning state while it is made up of two, in reality three,
independent elements. The 1995 Dayton Agreement will have to go. The
country could be partitioned, but that would create a non-viable Muslim
state. Much better that it is reinforced by getting rid of the division
between Serb and Muslim-Croat halves and going back to the UN’s 1992
plan for a united but decentralized Bosnia with several provincial,
non-ethnically based governments. That way it would have a future and
Bosnians could finally be their own masters. The fact that Belgrade now appears willing to agree that Republika
Srpska be integrated into Bosnia says much about how changed Serbia is.
Maybe, eleven years on, the UN plan’s time is about to arrive.
|
|
|
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's. editor@aljazeerah.info |