U.S. Department of State
Bosnia and Herzegovina Country Report on Human Rights Practices for 1998
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor,
February 26, 1998
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
The 1995 Dayton Accords (formally known as the General Framework Agreement
for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina) provided for the continuity of Bosnia
and Herzegovina (BiH), previously one of the constituent republics of
Yugoslavia, as a single state, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Agreement also
provided for two multiethnic constituent entities within the state: The
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (the Federation) and the Republika
Srpska (RS). The Federation, which has a postwar Bosniak and Croat majority,
occupies 51 percent of the territory; the RS, populated after the war
mostly by Bosnian Serbs, occupies 49 percent. The Dayton Accords
established a Constitution for Bosnia and Herzegovina that includes a
central government with a bicameral legislature, a three-member presidency
(consisting of a Bosniak, a Serb, and a Croat), a council of ministers, a
constitutional court, and a central bank. The Accords also provided for the
Office of the High Representative (OHR) to oversee implementation of its
civilian provisions. The entities maintain separate armies, although
under the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, these are under
the ultimate control of the presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
In September Bosnia and Herzegovina held its most peaceful and pluralistic
elections since the 1995 Dayton Accords put an end to 3 years of war.
Multiethnic parties committed to building on the foundation established at
Dayton made some progress during the presidential and Assembly elections.
At the same time, the largest political parties, which won a majority of
Assembly seats, continued to be ethnically based. These were the Bosniak-
dominated Party of Democratic Action (SDA), the Croatian Democratic
Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina (HDZ), and the Serb Democratic Party-
Serb Radical Party coalition (SDS/SRS). Although formally independent,
the judiciary remains subject to influence by political parties and the
executive branch.
One of the two entities that make up Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Federation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina, was established in March 1994 and transformed
the government structure of the Bosnian territories under Bosniak and
Croatian control. It is a mixed system with a president and a parliament
that must approve the president's choice of a prime minister. Federation
structures have been implemented only gradually. Major steps were the
creation of provincial structures in the form of cantons, the unification
of Sarajevo under Federation control in spring 1996, and 1996 and 1998
elections to a federation parliament. However, divisions between Bosniaks
and Croats remain. For example, a continued lack of cooperation between
Bosniaks and Croats hindered the establishment of unified administration
in the bifurcated city of Mostar. This reflected mutual suspicion between
the two communities as well as separatist aims of hard-line Croats.
The Republika Srpska of Bosnia and Herzegovina (RS) is the other entity. In
line with decisions by the RS Parliament, which came into office in January,
most of the political and administrative agencies of the RS moved during
the year from Pale (near Sarajevo) to Banja Luka in the western RS. (Pale
is closely associated with the supporters of former Bosnian Serb leader and
indicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic.) The President and two Vice
Presidents were elected in September for 2-year terms. The length of
their terms is to increase to 4 years after the next elections.
The RS legislative branch, the National Assembly, is elected on
a proportional basis. With the November 1997 parliamentary elections,
the once unquestioned power of the SDS/SRS ultranationalist parties began
to erode. This process continued during the September elections. Although
ultranationalist Nikola Poplasen defeated the more moderate nationalist
incumbent Biljana Plavsic, Plavsic coalition ally Zivko Radisic defeated
the ultranationalist Momcilo Krajsnik for the Serb position in the
country's three-member joint presidency. In addition, the moderate "Sloga"
bloc (a coalition of Radisic's Socialist Party of the RS, Biljana Plavsic's
Serb Peoples' Alliance, and Milorad Dodik's Party of Independent
Social Democrats) gained additional seats in the RS National
Assembly and can control the Assembly with the support of Federation-
based parties.
The Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Annex 4 of the Dayton Accords)
makes the government of each entity responsible for operating its own law
enforcement agencies in accordance with internationally recognized
standards. Under the auspices of the International Police Task Force (IPTF)
established by the United Nations pursuant to Annex 11 of the Dayton
Accords, police in both entities are undergoing restructuring and training
on police procedures and human rights. Law enforcement bodies of both
entities have on occasion violated international standards, demonstrating
bias on political, religious, and ethnic grounds. However, confirmed
cases of this kind were fewer than in the previous 2 years. The IPTF has an
expanded mandate that allows it to investigate allegations of human rights
abuses. With the assistance of the international community, Federation
police formed internal affairs units to conduct internal checks on police
misconduct. The RS police were forming similar units. Multiethnic police
worked together in some cantons and across the interentity boundary line
(IEBL) to investigate crimes. In some instances, police demonstrated a
willingness to respond to crimes without regard to the ethnicity of
perpetrators or victims. Bosnian police continued to suffer from the
legacy of a Communist system, with "special" or secret police
operating in all areas. These forces were outside the normal police chain
of command, reporting directly to the senior political leadership. In
addition to locally recruited police forces, each entity also maintains an
army. Both regular and "special" police committed human rights abuses
throughout the country.
The Stabilization Force (SFOR) led by the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) continued its mission to implement the military aspects
of the Dayton Accords and create a secure environment for implementation of
the nonmilitary aspects of the settlement, such as civilian reconstruction,
the return of refugees and displaced persons, elections, and freedom of
movement of the civilian population.
There were signs of economic revival, particularly in the Federation, where
real gross domestic product (GDP) doubled since 1995. The World Bank
expected 20 percent GDP growth during the year in both the Federation and
the RS. In 3 years, unemployment dropped from 90 percent to an official
level of approximately 40 percent in each entity, and wages more than
quadrupled in the Federation, up to $175 (307 DM) per month. Nevertheless,
the country remains heavily dependent upon international donor assistance,
and the anticipated return of refugees from abroad was expected to
compound the problem of creating sufficient jobs as well as to reduce
remittances. International assistance, which is conditioned upon
compliance with the Dayton Accords, financed infrastructure reconstruction
and provided loans to the manufacturing sector.
The commitment to respect citizens' human rights and civil liberties
remains tenuous in the country, and the degree of respect for these rights
continues to vary among areas with Bosniak, Bosnian Croat, and Bosnian Serb
majorities. Serious human rights abuses continued in several
areas.
Isolated instances of political killings continued: two elderly Serbs were
killed in Drvar in April, and one Bosniak was killed in Capljina in
October. Killings due to bombings and booby traps also continued, mainly as
a result of majority attempts to prevent minority returns to majority
areas. Human rights abuses by the police during the year, but serious
problems persisted. Police continued to commit abuses throughout the
country, principally the physical abuse of detainees. Some police in the RS
used torture. Police in all areas also used excessive force, or did not
ensure security, to discourage minority resettlement in majority
areas. Members of the security forces abused and physically mistreated
other citizens. Prison conditions continued to be poor in both entities.
In the RS, criminal procedure legislation that was held over from the
prewar Yugoslav period granted police wide latitude to detain suspects for
long periods of time before filing charges. However, there were fewer cases
of arbitrary arrest and detention than in previous years. In July the
Federation legislature modified criminal procedure legislation held over
from the Yugoslav period and decreased the wide latitude of police to
detain suspects before filing formal charges. Confusion over the rules for
arrest and detention of suspects for The Hague-based International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) has led in some
instances to questionable detentions in both the Federation and the
RS. The arrest of Goran Vasic by Federation authorities in February
and the conviction of Veselin Cancar in January raise questions of
noncompliance with ICTY rules and procedures agreed upon in 1996. The RS
continues its de facto refusal to take action, either on its own or on
behalf of the ICTY, against any Serbs indicted by the ICTY.
The judiciary in both entities remained subject to coercive influence by
dominant political parties and by the executive branch. In many areas,
close ties exist between courts of law and the ruling parties, and those
judges who show independence are subject to intimidation by the
authorities. Even when independent decisions are rendered, local
authorities often refuse to carry them out. Authorities in all areas
infringed on citizens' right to privacy.
Authorities and dominant political parties in their respective areas of the
country exerted influence over the media, and freedom of speech and of the
press was limited to varying degrees in the different entities. The two
television networks, Federation State Television in the Federation and Serb
Radio-Television in the RS, were freed from direct party control and placed
under the supervision of international administrators. However, party
influence was not fully eliminated in either network; it was
particularly egregious in parts of the RS broadcast media. The Open
Broadcast Network, an international donor-funded television network,
expanded its broadcast range and improved its programming in order to
promote a broader mix of reporting. Academic freedom was restricted.
Authorities imposed some limits on freedom of assembly and association.
Party control of the media and fears about security in some areas
dampened full participation without intimidation by opposition groups
and ethnic minorities in the electoral process. Religious discrimination
remained a problem. Both governments and private groups continued to be
responsible for isolated incidents that restricted the open expression of
religious practices by minorities in majority areas. Although freedom of
movement continued to improve, some limits remained in practice.
Severe discrimination continues in areas dominated by one ethnic group,
particularly in the treatment of refugees and displaced persons. Local
authorities and mobs (in most cases believed to be organized or approved by
local authorities) harassed minority returnees and violently resisted their
return. The destruction of minority-owned houses continued, particularly in
Croat-controlled areas. RS and Bosnian Croat authorities encouraged members
of their own ethnic groups to remain or move to areas where their
group was in the majority, rather than stay in or return to their homes. In
addition to the lack of security, marginal economic conditions and limited
educational opportunities continued to act as a brake on the return of
internally displaced persons and refugees. The enactment by the Federation
of new property laws in April provided an improved legal framework for
potential return by creating legal mechanisms for reoccupation not only of
private property, but also of socially owned apartments. However,
implementation of even the preparatory elements for reoccupation was uneven
in the Federation and by late October, some areas still had not
established initial claim mechanisms. In early December, the RS finally
passed a long-awaited revision of its property law, but another
key piece of property rights legislation remained in draft form at year's
end. Some restrictions on freedom of movement continued, although the
introduction of uniform license plates greatly expanded interentity
movement. Ethnic discrimination remains a serious problem, and mob violence
continued.
During the year, there were increased efforts on the part of SFOR to
apprehend perpetrators of wartime atrocities. SFOR's more aggressive
approach of apprehending individuals indicted by the ICTY, which began in
the summer of 1997, resulted during the year in the apprehension of 12
indictees out of the 83 publicly indicted by the Tribunal. Eight of these
were detained forcibly, and four turned themselves in. This brought the
total number of indictees taken into custody since the Tribunal's inception
to 35. At year's end there were 23 persons in ICTY custody awaiting trial
or on trial. Two persons in custody died during the year, one as a result
of an aneurysm and one as a result of suicide. One indictee, Slobodan
Miljkovic, was killed in a barroom brawl in Kragujevac, Serbia in
August. There were 31 public indictees still at large at year's end.
ICTY trials during the year resulted in four convictions and one
acquittal. The arrests of Milorad Krnojelac and General Radislav Krstic
led to protests by Serbs, during which property was damaged and
mobs threatened international civilian observers.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom
From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
There were no reports of political killings by police.
However, a pattern of deliberate mob violence against Serbs who sought to
return to their prewar homes continued throughout the year in the Croat-
majority town of Drvar and erupted with particular virulence in April.
Tensions had grown since late 1997, with large-scale spontaneous returns
from the RS and Serbia-Montenegro of the municipality's prewar Serb
residents. In April two elderly Serbs were murdered in their home, which
was burned. The police detained 18 persons for suspected arson in November;
7 were juveniles between the ages of 9 and 12 and cannot under law be
detained or prosecuted. All of the remaining 11 were eventually released,
while at year's end investigation of the case by Federation police
continued. After the international community responded with the removal
of the Croat deputy mayor, under authority granted to the Office
of the High Representative by the Peace Implementation Council in Bonn in
December 1997, mob violence occurred, orchestrated by Croat hard-liners.
The Croats, including some displaced by the returning Serbs, set fire to
and otherwise vandalized Serb housing and the premises of international and
nongovernmental organizations (NGO's)(see Section 4). They physically
assaulted Serbs, including the mayor, and international organization
representatives. International monitors and Serbs claimed to have seen
nonuniformed Croat personnel from the Bosnian Federation Army in the
mobs. The response of Bosnian Croat police during the rioting was
deemed inadequate by the IPTF. Federation authorities acknowledged
that some Drvar police officers were involved and were under
investigation.
Several Croat returnees were killed in Bosniak-dominated Travnik in 1997.
Violence continued in only a slightly diminished form in the Travnik area
during the year. In April an explosive device seriously injured two Bosnian
Croats after they entered a home during a return-related assessment visit.
On July 31 a bomb exploded near a mosque, killing a Croat police officer in
Travnik. Subsequently Bosnian Croat police officers refused to return to
their Travnik station due to fear for their safety. The Croat police
officers demanded, among other conditions, the deportation of all
"Arabs" from the country before they returned to work. On August 3 a
Bosniak returnee was chased down and beaten to death by attackers in
Brcko. Police arrested four Bosnian Serb suspects, including two youths,
for the killing. A grenade attack in the Croat-majority town of Capljina in
October killed one Bosniak returnee and injured three others. The killing
occurred a day after Croats erected a roadblock near Capljina to protest
the Bosniak returns. The MSU (Multinational Specialized Unit)--a
specialized public security unit of the NATO-led SFOR--cleared the road
after local authorities failed to respond to the crisis (see Section 2.d.).
Croats retaliated the next day with the grenade attack, and there were also
several explosions and shootings. Local residents and international
observers witnessed the mayor of Capljina, Krunoslav Kordic, stirring up
crowds of Croat displaced persons on October 2, just before the
grenade attack.
Many, if not most, of the perpetrators of numerous killings and other
brutal acts committed in previous years remained unpunished, including
those responsible for the up to 7,000 persons missing and presumed killed
by the Bosnian Serb Army after the fall of Srebrenica and those responsible
for up to 13,000 others still missing and presumed killed as a result of
"ethnic cleansing" in Bosnia.
During the year, there were increased efforts on the part of SFOR to
apprehend perpetrators of wartime atrocities. SFOR's more aggressive
approach of apprehending individuals indicted by the ICTY, which began in
the summer of 1997, resulted during the year in the apprehension of 12
indictees out of the 83 publicly indicted by the Tribunal. The year began
with the arrest of Goran Jelic, Milan Simic, Miroslav Tadic, Simo Zaric,
Dragoljub Kunarac, Miroslav Kvocka, Mladen Radic, Zoran Zigic, Milojica Kos,
Milorad Krnojelac, Stevan Todorovic, and finally Radislav Krstic in
December. Eight of these were detained forcibly, and four turned themselves
in to NATO troops. This brought the total number of indictees taken into
custody since the Tribunal's inception to 35. Krstic, who was under sealed
indictment, was a current high-ranking general in the Bosnian Serb army and
one of the highest Bosnian Serb officials brought to The Hague.
At year's end there were 23 persons in ICTY custody awaiting
trial or on trial. Two persons in custody died during the year,
one as a result of an aneurysm and one as a result of suicide.
One indictee, Slobodan Miljkovic, was killed in a barroom brawl
in Kragujevac, Serbia in August. There were 31 public indictees
still at large at year's end. ICTY this year issued three convictions
(Zdravko Mucic, Hazim Delic, and Esad Landzo) and one acquittal (Zejnil
Delalic) in the Celibici trial for crimes committed against Bosnian Serbs,
and Anto Furundzija was also convicted in the second half of the year. This
brings the total number of convictions to five since ICTY's inception. The
arrests of Milorad Krnojelac and General Radislav Krstic led to protests by
Serbs, during which property was damaged and mobs threatened international
civilian observers.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances during the
year.
The OHR in late 1997 took the lead in forging an agreement among the
Bosniak, Bosnian Croat, and Bosnian Serb commissions for missing persons to
expedite cross-entity IEBL exhumations. By October over 1,300 bodies had
been found as a result. Cross-entity exhumations and those carried out by
authorities in their respective entities resulted in over 3,000 bodies
being recovered during the year.
In addition to those killed in Srebrenica and Zepa, the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) reported that since 1995 it received
requests from family members to trace 19,934 persons missing from the war
years: 1,882 of these persons were accounted for (243 of whom were found
alive). The ICRC noted that Serb, Croat, and Bosniak authorities were in a
position to provide more information in response to its inquiries,
particularly those concerning 432 persons, known to have been detained at
one time in connection with the war, who remained missing.
The International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) funds the
interentity exhumations process, provides support to families of the
missing, and puts political pressure on Bosnian officials to provide
information on missing persons.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
The Constitution provides for the right to freedom from torture and cruel
or inhuman treatment or punishment; however, in all areas of the country,
police and prison officials abused and physically mistreated persons at the
time of arrest and during detention. In the RS, police at times used
torture. Police in Sarajevo, Neretva, and Tuzla cantons investigated
allegations of police abuse or criminal activity and dismissed officers
found guilty.
The IPTF made some progress in attempts to investigate allegations of
police involvement in the abuse of suspects. In October IPTF investigators
concluded that RS police officers brutally tortured some of the seven
detainees who were arrested for the August 7 murder of Pale Public Security
Center Deputy Chief Srdjan Knezevic. RS police held 7 of 16 suspects
incommunicado, tortured them, and forced them to sign statements. The
police reportedly used pliers and stun guns in addition to beatings. IPTF
investigators were denied access to the detainees until 8 days after the
arrests. The IPTF team concluded that there was no physical evidence
to implicate any of the seven men in the murder and that there
were glaring contradictions, omissions, and rewrites in the official
police reports. At the request of the IPTF, in September the RS Interior
Minister removed his chief of uniformed police for involvement in this
torture. The RS Interior Ministry professional standards unit completed an
in-depth investigation into this torture. The unit's report recommended
bringing criminal charges against the former chief of uniformed police and
two police officers and taking disciplinary action against six
others.
On July 6 the RS Minister of Interior suspended 17 Teslic police officers,
including the chief of police and his deputy, pending an investigation by
an RS public prosecutor for human rights violations. In the previous 12
months the IPTF investigated three separate incidents involving citizens
who were physically abused while in the custody or care of the Teslic
police. Of the 17 officers suspended, 10 were being considered for criminal
prosecution.
On October 2, Croat police officers from Capljina stopped a police car
under IPTF escort on its way to Mostar, following an outbreak of violence
over Bosniak returnees in Capljina (see Sections 1.a. and 2.d.). The local
police officers beat the occupants of the vehicle, the president of the
Capljina board of the SDA and member of the Federation Parliament Omer
Cerva and two Bosniak police officers, in the presence of Police Chief
Stanislav Buntic. The three were detained for allegedly having hand
grenades in the police vehicle and were later released. IPTF monitors
witnessed the events but were unable to intervene. Police took the
three Bosniak men behind closed doors inside the police station
and denied the IPTF access. Police Chief Buntic attempted to
keep IPTF monitors from staying on the premises, but they remained.
IPTF Commissioner Richard Monk decertified Buntic, and IPTF human rights
officers were investigating the case (see Section 4).
Serb police continued to employ excessive force to prevent Bosniak former
residents from returning to, or staying in, RS territory. Similar patterns
of abuse occurred in Croat-majority areas. Police in Stolac proved
unwilling or unable to contain the numerous instances of arson designed to
intimidate returnees. Reacting to this situation and a refusal by
authorities to address similar crimes from 1996 and 1997, the IPTF replaced
the Stolac Chief of Police in February, and the OHR removed the mayor in
March. After the situation failed to improve, the cantonal interior
minister removed the replacement police chief in July. There also were
instances in which police did not act to halt mob violence. For example, in
April Bosnian Croat police reportedly were present when mobs beat and
terrorized Bosnian Serb returnees to Drvar.
Moreover, in addition to attacks on members of other ethnic groups
committed in both entities, Serbs in the RS threatened members of
international organizations. Upon entering Srebrenica on January 16 to
discuss the installation of a new municipal government, IPTF vehicles
containing officers and an vehicle containing staff from the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) were stoned by an angry mob
of Serbs blocking the road into the city (see Section 4).
On the night of December 3 in the eastern RS town of Vlasenica Serb
demonstrators destroyed one IPTF vehicle in protest of SFOR's arrest and
transport to The Hague of General Krstic. On December 4, a mob of
approximately 500 Serbs attacked a European Community Monitoring Mission
(ECMM) vehicle and harassed two ECMM monitors and their interpreter. The
vehicle reportedly was destroyed. In this instance, local Serb police
intervened to protect the ECMM group and escorted its members to safety in
the Zvornik police station. There were no reported injuries. The June 15
SFOR arrest of Milorad Krnojelac on charges of war crime activities
ignited an angry response by a crowd of Serbs in Foca. The crowd
threw rocks and other items at the Foca IPTF and OSCE offices and
burned an IPTF truck. OSCE personnel were evacuated temporarily.
At times some police officers impeded the enforcement of the law. An
October 8 attempted eviction of a Croat family in Gornji Vakuf underscored
the ongoing ethnic divide between Bosniak and Croat police in central
Bosnia. The town is equally divided between Bosniaks and Croats, as is the
police force. While Bosniak police officers were ready to evict Croat
occupants who were occupying a Bosniak house illegally, they were prevented
from doing so by 15 Croat police officers positioned at the apartment. No
Croat police officer would participate in the eviction. The Croat
commander of the police force refused to carry out the eviction order
of the Bosniak Chief of Police. Federation Deputy Minister of
Interior Fabijan Trbara, who is a Croat, also refused to take action.
As tensions mounted, the chief of police decided to call off
the eviction process. The IPTF local commander recommended to
his headquarters that the recalcitrant officers be decertified.
The IPTF made significant progress in its efforts to restructure and
professionalize the police. All Federation and RS police were being
provided with human dignity and basic skills training. The IPTF continued
its certification of Federation and RS police. This process involved
written and psychological examinations, as well as background checks. In
December the Federation Police Academy, guided by the IPTF, graduated its
first class, with 66 men and 31 women of representing different ethnic
backgrounds. The Federation police includes Croat, as well as Bosniak,
officers and generally reflects the appropriate ethnic mix within
each canton. However, the police forces throughout the country
generally do not reflect the higher standards of ethnic representation
required by various agreements. The IPTF has developed a minority
police return program in cooperation with the Refugee Return Task
Force as a means of recruiting minority police officers. The
current class of the Federation Police Academy is made up primarily
of officers who will serve in police forces where they will be
in the minority. Eight of 10 Federation cantons agreed to create
ethnically mixed police units. The Interior Ministry and most cantons
aggressively sought to increase their numbers of Serb police officers as
well. The IPTF also achieved full ethnic integration of the police force in
the internationally supervised city of Brcko.
Police restructuring moved more slowly in the RS. The IPTF completed
professional certification, background checks, and training of police in
the cities of Banja Luka, Trebinja, Doboj, Mrkonjic Grad, and Prijedor. The
chief of police in Serb-majority Banja Luka interviewed Bosniak candidates
to join his force. In December RS political leaders signed a framework
agreement with the IPTF on police restructuring, reform, and
democratization in the RS. This new agreement is intended to create a more
professional and ethnically mixed police force.
Individual and mob violence continued to be a widespread problem. According
to human rights NGO's, in May an elderly Serb woman was beaten in Kljuc
after a crowd of approximately 150 Bosniaks gathered to protest a visit of
more than 50 Bosnian Serbs to the town.
A large number of bombings caused injuries. In June a newly returned Croat
policeman was injured seriously when his personal vehicle was booby-
trapped. His Bosniak colleague who was riding with him in the vehicle was
also badly hurt. No one was arrested for the crime. Some 70 bombings took
place in the Croat-majority town of Stolac during the year. A November 7
bombing injured two Bosniaks. On November 11 a bombing in Poprati, near
Stolac, injured another Bosniak recent returnee. The bombings appeared to
be part of an organized campaign to obstruct Bosniak returns. Criminal
charges were brought in May against 5 persons for their role in a
bombing in Croat-dominated West Mostar in 1997 in which more than 50
persons were injured. All five were foreign residents of Middle
Eastern origin. One of the five was reportedly a fugitive at the
time the charges were brought. Although three of the five were
convicted (one in absentia), Bosnian Croats criticized the sentences
for being too light--only 5 to 7 years--for this massive car
bomb.
Conditions in Federation and RS prisons are well below minimum
international standards.
International community representatives were given widespread and for the
most part unhindered access to detention facilities and prisoners in the RS
as well as in the Federation.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
There were fewer cases of arbitrary arrest and detention in both the
Federation and the RS compared with 1997. In prior years, police in both
entities enjoyed great latitude based on Communist-era criminal procedure
laws that permitted them to detain persons for up to 6 months without
bringing formal charges against them. The Federation revised these laws,
removing this power from police, although not from investigative judges.
The detention laws remain in force in the RS.
In October Radio Free Europe part-time reporter Nikola Gurovic was arrested
at the Sarajevo airport on charges that he had not presented valid vouchers
to justify expenses he had claimed from Federation public television (RTV
BiH) in 1992. The Independent Union of Professional Journalists issued a
protest following the action. The Union demanded that judicial and police
authorities offer a public explanation of why Gurovic had been targeted
for prosecution, since many other individuals had left the country
in that period without having settled personal accounts. The Union
described his arrest as an attack on the freedom of journalists. Gurovic
was released after a day.
Human rights NGO's contend that there are cases in which persons who
ostensibly are detained on criminal charges actually are incarcerated for
political reasons. For example, Ibrahim Djedovic, a parliamentary deputy
for the Democratic National Union (DNZ), which the ruling Bosniak SDA views
as a renegade party due to its activities during the war, was arrested and
jailed in May 1997 for war crimes, after he arrived in Sarajevo to take up
his parliamentary seat. The ICTY investigated Djedovic and decided not to
arrest him for his alleged activities. Most local and international
observers believe that Djedovic was arrested due to his political
affiliation and not because of alleged war crimes. The Sarajevo cantonal
court convicted and sentenced Djedovic to 10 years in October. He
remained free at year's end pending appeal of his conviction to the
Federation Supreme Court and currently serves as a DNZ deputy in the
Federation House of Representatives.
There were no reports that forced exile generally was used as a legal
punishment. However, in some areas of the RS, Serb authorities and
civilians attempted to expel Bosniaks. For example, in Teslic Serb citizens
and members of the civil protection unit from nearby villages intimidated
or attempted to evict mostly Bosniak families. In July the RS Interior
Minister removed 12 officers from the Teslic police for their inaction in
stopping this incident and possible involvement in the violence.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
Both the Federation and RS constitutions provide for an independent
judiciary; however, holdover practices from the Communist and wartime eras,
during which the executive and the leading political parties exerted
influence over the judicial system, persisted in all areas. Party
affiliation and political connections weighed heavily in the appointment of
prosecutors and judges.
The existing judicial hierarchy in the Federation consists of municipal
courts, which have original jurisdiction in most civil and criminal cases,
cantonal courts, which have appellate jurisdiction over the canton's
municipalities, and three federal courts, (Constitutional, Supreme, and
Human Rights--although the third of these has not yet been established).
The Federation Constitution provides for the appointment of judges by the
President, with the concurrence of the Vice President and the approval of
the Assembly, to an initial term of 5 years. Judges may be reappointed
following this initial term to serve until the age of 70.
The RS judicial hierarchy includes a Supreme Court to provide for the
unified enforcement of the law and a Constitutional Court to assure
conformity of laws, regulations, and general enactments with the
Constitution. The RS has both municipal and district courts, with the
district courts having appellate jurisdiction. Judges are appointed and
recalled by the National Assembly and have life tenure. According to the
OHR, 32 percent of the RS judgeships were vacant as of October.
In July the Federation Parliament adopted legislation that revised the
Federation's Criminal Codes and procedures. The international community
began an intensive training program to familiarize judges, prosecutors, and
defense attorneys with the new codes. Similar legislation had not yet been
considered by the RS Parliament. Some NGO's expressed concern over the
judicial selection process in eight federation cantons, especially in
Sarajevo and Tuzla. Legal experts argued that the laws on judicial
selection in those two cantons were inconsistent with the canton and
Federation Constitutions.
Both the Federation and RS Constitutions provide for open and public trials
and give the accused the right to legal counsel.
In 1997 an RS municipal court in the town of Zvornik found seven Bosniaks
guilty of murdering four Serb civilians in May 1996 and of possessing
illegal weapons. Human rights groups found the court's proceedings deeply
flawed and called for a new trial. They pointed to the lack of evidence
against the defendants, apart from confessions apparently coerced through
torture, as well as the court's refusal to allow effective representation
by lawyers chosen by the defendants. Three of the defendants were sentenced
to 21 years each for murder; the other four men were given 1-year sentences
for illegal possession of firearms but freed because they had served 11
months in jail while awaiting trial. In January following the intervention
of the Human Rights Ombudsperson for Bosnia and Herzegovina,
the Bijeljina district court ordered a new trial, acknowledging
that the defendants had been deprived of their right to choose
their counsel. In late December the Bijeljina court found three of
the seven defendants guilty of murder and one guilty of attempted
murder. Human rights monitors judged this trial seriously procedurally
flawed, noting that there was no evidence presented to link the accused to
the crime scene, and that the case rested on confessions obtained under
torture. The defendants planned to appeal the Bijeljina district court's
verdict to the RS Supreme Court. The Office of the Human Rights
Ombudsperson had not issued a report on the new developments in the case by
year's end; such a report could recommend a new trial.
Human rights organizations reported that judicial institutions in both
entities were controlled or influenced by the ruling parties. As a result,
they were often reluctant or unwilling to try cases of human rights abuse
referred to them. A lack of resources and a huge backlog of unresolved
cases provided a convenient excuse for judicial inaction. Even when the
courts rendered a fair judgment, local officials often refused to implement
their decisions. This was especially the case for those who won decisions
mandating eviction of illegal occupants from their property. In addition,
organized crime elements sought to pressure judges, especially in central
Bosnia.
There were no reports of political prisoners.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina provides for the right to
"private and family life, home and correspondence," and the right to
protection of property. These rights generally were observed better in the
Federation than in the RS.
Despite real progress on property issues, authorities in many places
continued to use their control over "socially owned" and privately owned
housing occupied by displaced persons or other nonowners to slow down or
block minority returns. While the main problem continued to be the large
number of displaced persons in relation to available housing, all three
ethnic groups used the control of housing as a major instrument for
political influence peddling and enrichment. Even with the adoption of new
property laws in both the Federation and the RS, progress remained
slow due to sluggish implementation and obstruction by the authorities.
As in 1997, due to minimal numbers of returnees to the RS--because few
minorities dared to return there--the most frequent cases of intimidation
against returnees occurred in Bosnian Croat-controlled areas--particularly
in the Herzegovina region. Suspected Croat hard-liners mined or destroyed
returnees' houses in Drvar, Capljina, and Stolac. Following Croatia's
soccer victory against Germany in July in the World Cup tournament, a Croat
mob went on a rampage in Stolac, attacking and vandalizing the houses of
recent Bosniak returnees. Police did not respond.
With pressure by the OHR and a newly elected pro-Dayton Government in the
RS early in the year, telephone service and correspondence between the
Federation and the RS improved although the RS Government continued to
hinder some communication. After 100 badly needed telephone lines were
installed with international assistance, the RS still had not connected the
service by year's end.
Throughout the country, political party membership was considered the
surest way to obtain, retain, or regain employment, especially in the
management of socially owned enterprises. Membership was also influential
in obtaining or keeping housing.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech and the press; this right
was respected partially in the Federation and in the western RS, but less
so in the eastern RS. Within the Federation, press freedom was more
severely restricted in Croat-majority areas. Some progress was made in
establishing independent media in Federation cantons with a Bosniak
majority and in the RS, particularly in Banja Luka. The primary restraints
on press freedom are control of the principal media by governing political
parties and, in the case of newspapers, the unwillingness of Governments in
either entity to provide access to kiosk networks under their
control. Party-controlled media--particularly Croatian state radio
and television--are the dominant electronic media and information
source in Croat-majority areas of the Federation. While coverage of the
September elections by nationalistic media was improved from 1997, most
media continued to be strongly biased.
The Dnevni Avaz newspaper, distributed widely in the Federation, was
controlled largely by the ruling SDA party. Some opposition and independent
newspapers operate in the Bosniak-majority areas of the Federation and in
the RS, principally in Banja Luka. Oslobodjenje and Vecernje Novine are the
leading independent dailies, and Dani and Slobodna Bosna are the most
influential independent magazines in the Federation. One of the few
independent magazines in the RS was Reporter, a weekly published by a
former foreign correspondent of the Belgrade-based independent Vreme, while
Nezavisne Novine is an independent newspaper published in the western RS.
Also in the RS, the Social-Liberal Party published an opposition magazine,
Novi Prelom, and the Social Democratic Party published a daily newspaper.
Both of these publications take an independent line and are consistently
supportive of the Dayton Accords.
It was difficult for independent and opposition media in the RS to gain
access to the government-controlled kiosk distribution system. The same was
true of some areas of the Federation, particularly in Croat-controlled
regions. Some independent media in the two entities, for example, Dani and
Reporter, assist in the distribution of each other's publications in their
respective entities.
In order to better regulate all broadcast media, the OHR in June
established the Independent Media Commission (IMC), whose functions and
responsibilities include licensing all broadcasters; drawing up codes of
practice for broadcasters and other media; managing and assigning
frequencies for broadcasting purposes; and ensuring adherence to license
conditions.
Prior to 1998 the dominant nationalist political parties exercised strong
control over television and radio. Federation state television (RTV BiH)
faithfully served the interests of the SDA. The RTV BiH gave preferential
coverage to SDA leaders and greatly limited reports on the opposition.
However, in June joint Presidency members Alija Izetbegovic and Kresmir
Zubak signed an OHR-drafted Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for
restructuring the RTV BiH which, in effect, is to be the basis for a
Federation-wide television network independent of political party control.
The MOU also is designed to be the basis for a nationwide network later on.
The OHR in July appointed an 11-member interim Board of Governors,
which is to guide the network until the establishment of a public
corporation.
Croat-controlled areas in Bosnia-Herzegovina are covered by Croatian State
Television (HRT). The three HRT channels come into the country by means of
an over-the-border terrestrial broadcasting satellite, and an extensive
rebroadcasting operation managed by the Mostar-based, Zagreb-controlled
Erotel company. HRT's news programs and editorials frequently criticize the
Dayton Accords. A December decision by the IMC is intended to terminate the
direct rebroadcast of Croatian State Television by requiring that RTV BiH
and Croat television broadcasters establish a Federation television system
that meets the needs of all BiH citizens.
Until SFOR acted in 1997 on an OHR request to end offensive broadcasts by
RS government-run Serb Radio-Television (SRT), the SRT followed the line of
the then-ruling SDS Party, with frequently inaccurate and inflammatory
reporting. The SRT sought to undercut the Dayton Accords by covering events
in the Federation in the "international" portion of the news. Following
SFOR'S action, the OHR implemented a plan to restructure the SRT that
included the appointment of an international administrator to oversee
management of the station until the completion of restructuring. In the
interim, only the SRT station in Banja Luka was authorized to continue
broadcasting. Despite the presence of an OHR-appointed international
administrator at the helm of SRT, its restructuring has stalled.
The international donor-supported television Open Broadcast Network (OBN)--
which now has 13 affiliates located in both the Federation and the RS--
provides independent news and public affairs programming. The OBN was
launched by the international community to be a cross-entity broadcaster
and source of objective news. Thanks to an expanded area of coverage and
improved programming, OBN viewership rose during the year. By November OBN
could be seen by 80 percent of the population. The OBN still is working to
improve its broadcast range.
Other independent television outlets include TV Hayat, TV X, Studio 99, and
several small TV stations scattered around the country. These broadcasters
were originally municipal stations. They have not yet been fully privatized,
and their legal ownership status remains unclear.
Radio broadcasting in the Bosniak-majority areas of the Federation--
particularly in Sarajevo, Zenica, and Tuzla--is diverse. Opposition
viewpoints are reflected in the news programs of independent broadcasters.
Independent or opposition radio stations broadcast in the RS--particularly
in Banja Luka and Trebinje. Nezavisni Radio, Nezavisna Televizija, and
Radio Pegas report a wide variety of political opinions. Local radio
stations broadcast in Croat-majority areas, but they are usually highly
nationalistic. Local Croat authorities do not tolerate opposition
viewpoints.
While some foreign journalists who represent recognized media were able to
travel freely to most areas of the country, others encountered
difficulties. Local police and security officials in the RS and West Mostar
harassed journalists associated with opposition parties or minority ethnic
groups.
In September RS police and security officials detained three members of an
RTV BiH crew covering the elections in Banja Luka for alleged "rudeness and
aggressiveness." They were held at a facility where police claimed they
"voluntarily" erased some of their camera footage. The three were released
following intervention by the OSCE mission.
In October Radio Free Europe part-time reporter Nikola Gurovic was arrested
at the Sarajevo airport on charges that he had not presented valid vouchers
to justify expenses he had claimed from the RTV-BiH in 1992. The
Independent Union of Professional Journalists protested that Gurovic had
been singled out for arrest for a common offense. Gurovic was released
after a day (see Section 1.d.). In October in Capljina two journalists were
arrested because they had not first registered with the police.
Academic freedom was constrained. In the Federation, Serbs and Croats
complained that SDA party members receive special treatment in appointments
and promotions at the University of Sarajevo. The University of Banja Luka
limits its appointments to Serbs. All institutions suffer from a lack of
resources and staff, as well as the legacy of the Communist period.
Officials at the University of (West) Mostar endeavor to ensure that very
few non-Croats work or study there.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of peaceful assembly; however, there
were some limits imposed on this right in practice. In the period prior to
the September national elections, opposition political parties enjoyed
greater latitude in staging rallies and campaigning than they had during
the 1996 national elections. However, there were still instances in which
incumbents attempted to use their positions to hinder the activities of
opposition parties. In September the OSCE's election appeals subcommission
(under the authority of Dayton Annex 3) required the resignation of the
mayor of Milici, in the RS, for seeking to block an opposition rally in the
town.
The Constitution provides for freedom of association, and a wide range of
social, cultural, and political organizations functioned without
interference; however, indirect pressure constrained the activities of some
groups. Although political party membership was not forced, many viewed
membership in the leading party of any given area as the surest way for
residents to obtain and keep housing and high-level jobs in the state-owned
sector of the economy.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, including private and
public worship, and, in general, individuals enjoyed this right in their
religious majority areas. However, the efforts of individuals to worship in
areas in which they are an ethnic/religious minority were restricted,
sometimes by societal violence. Some incidents resulted in damage to
religious edifices and cemeteries (see Section 5).
In July local government authorities and Bosnian Serb protesters in Banja
Luka prevented the burial of the mufti of Banja Luka in a Muslim cemetery
in that city. Demonstrators broke into an Islamic community building and
harassed mourners. The body of the mufti subsequently was interred in
Sarajevo. In November the Human Rights Chamber (see Section 4) held a
public hearing in Banja Luka to hear the Islamic community's case against
RS authorities for impairing its ability to reconstruct mosques and other
community-owned buildings destroyed during the war in the Banja Luka
area.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and
Repatriation
The Constitution provides for "the right to liberty of movement and
residence" and freedom of movement, including across the IEBL, continued to
improve, with a notable increase in vehicular traffic. The IPTF and SFOR
completed the dismantling of all permanent fixed police checkpoints,
greatly enhancing freedom of movement. However, for most minorities
movement across the IEBL and into areas dominated by other ethnic groups
remained somewhat limited and cautious in practice. While there were
improvements in freedom of movement in most areas of the Federation and in
the western RS, and a growing acceptance of the right to return, the
eastern RS remained under hard-line control and unwelcoming to a
minority presence.
The most important development during the year to increase freedom of
movement was the June 1 introduction of universal license plates. By August
1 an estimated 75 percent of the drivers throughout the country had the new
plates which, unlike the previous ones, do not identify the vehicles as
being registered in predominantly Bosniak, Bosnian Serb, or Bosnian Croat
areas. The U.N. Mission in Bosnia-Herzegovina (UNMIBH) reported that in the
first week after the inauguration of the new plates, about 4,000
vehicles crossed the IEBL, and in the first week of July this number
increased to 8,000. By year's end, freedom of movement had noticeably
improved.
Statistics on refugee returns remained difficult to obtain. By midyear an
estimated 1.4 million Bosnian citizens still were displaced internally or
were refugees abroad. Most faced either relocation within the country or
"minority return," i.e., return to areas in which another ethnic group was
dominant politically or demographically.
In the first 5 months of the year, there were approximately 11,000
registered minority returns and over 60,000 total returns. In view of the
number of spontaneous unregistered returns, the number of actual minority
returns was probably higher. However, the goal of 50,000 minority returns
in 1998 was not met. At year's end, only between approximately 30,000 and
35,000 minority returns had been registered, all but about 1,000 to the
Federation. By midyear UNHCR field reporting also indicated that 30,000 to
40,000 minorities were engaged in the "implementation of return,
" meaning involvement in a concrete activity indicating genuine
intention to return, such as housing repair, planting of fields, or
spending the night at prewar homes.
Refugees from Europe, particularly from Germany, also returned to the
country. This movement began to grow during the summer, following the end
of the school year. Although by July there had been only an estimated 30,
000 returns from abroad, it was estimated that between 140,000 and 220,000
returned by the year's end as a result of pressure to depart from host
countries. Most of those returning from Europe were unable to return to
their prewar homes. Some deliberately were directed by hard-line political
authorities of their own ethnic group to areas where an effort at
repopulation was still underway, to consolidate the results of ethnic
cleansing.
The UNHCR "open cities" initiative, begun in 1997, linked economic
assistance to cooperation on minority return (positive conditionality) and
helped the UNHCR's effort to break down the influence of ethnic
separatists. However, in October the UNHCR rescinded the open city status
of Vogosca, a suburb of Sarajevo, due to its noncompliance with agreements
on minority returns. Of 228 minority families who were scheduled to return
there, only 24 were registered by mid-October.
Several factors prevented a larger number of returns, including canton
level control over allocation of socially owned property, and, in the
Federation, the lack of cooperation in hard-line areas in implementing
obligations set forth in cantonal return plans and new property
laws.
The February 1998 Sarajevo declaration was intended to showcase Sarajevo as
a model city in terms of tolerance. The declaration was to provide for
improvements in areas that hindered return: Legislation, housing, security
and public order, employment, and education, with a goal of 20,000 minority
returns for the canton during the year. However, of 2,186 minority families
registered to return, only 804 minority families returned to socially
owned apartments and 414 to privately owned houses in Sarajevo
canton. Of roughly 21,000 claims for return of property, only 7,000
decisions were issued. Due to a failure to meet most of the benchmarks
of the declaration, the international community temporarily froze
reconstruction funds for the canton in July.
During the year the Federation army unlawfully took control of 4,000 former
Yugoslav military (JNA) apartments that had been abandoned and repaired by
a Dutch company. Prewar residents continue to wait to return to these,
while authorities encourage occupants to start the purchasing process.
After inadequate action by local authorities, several of these cases were
brought before the Human Rights Chamber. No returns have taken place to
former JNA apartments. The military has attempted to evict legal
occupants.
The continued influence of ethnic separatists in positions of authority
also hindered minority returns. Much of Croat-controlled Herzegovina and
all of the eastern RS remained resistant to minority returns. Displaced
persons living in those areas, even those who privately indicated interest
in returning to their prewar homes, frequently were pressured to remain
displaced, while those who wished to return were discouraged, often through
the use of violence (see Sections 1.a. and 1.c.). The increased number of
ethnically integrated police forces helped improve the climate for return,
but security in general remained inadequate in many areas. The lack of an
ethnically neutral curriculum in public schools also discouraged
returns.
On October 1 in the municipality of Capljina, Croats erected a roadblock on
the main north-south road in the Federation to protest Bosniak returns.
According to the OHR, 100 Bosniaks were returning in a preannounced move to
villages near Capljina. SFOR sent in Italian troops to reestablish freedom
of movement when police did not take action. According to an OSCE
representative, Croats on the roadside pelted the MSU, a specialized
security unit of the NATO-led SFOR, with stones while they broke up the
roadblock. According to SFOR, three MSU troops were injured. The MSU
responded by breaking up the crowd of individuals throwing stones.
Police reported another 13 injuries among local citizens, but SFOR
contested this report. Croats reacted with violence on the night of
October 2, leaving one Bosniak returnee dead and two injured (see
Sections 1.a., 1.c., and 4).
The continued depressed state of the economy throughout the country and the
consequent lack of employment opportunity for returnees remained a serious
obstacle to a significant number of returns. As a result, most minority
returnees in the first half of the year were elderly. This presented a new
burden for receiving municipalities. Younger minority group members, who
depend on adequate wages from employment to support families, generally
remained displaced, especially in cases where they had managed over the
past 6 years to find work.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs officials held up the system for issuing new
passports, which restricted travel outside the country. However, new Bosnia
and Herzegovina passports were finally issued by each entity at midyear,
leading to new opportunities for freedom of movement and international
travel.
Officially, the Government grants asylum and refugee status in accordance
with international standards. At times the Government cooperated with the
UNHCR and other humanitarian organizations in assisting refugees. The
arrival of persons who fled the fighting in Kosovo raised the issue of the
provision of first asylum. The Council of Ministers adopted special
instructions that allowed the temporary protection of Kosovo refugees until
adequate legislation could be adopted. However, by the fall, the situation
in Kosovo had resulted in an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 Kosovar
refugees in the country, of whom 5,000 had registered with the UNHCR.
Federation and cantonal authorities obstructed the UNHCR'S efforts to
accommodate the refugees. There were no reports of the forced return of
persons to a place where they feared persecution.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change
Their Government
Even though a permanent election law is not yet in place, the Dayton
Accords commit the parties to "ensure that conditions exist for the
organization of free and fair elections, in particular a politically
neutral environment" and to ensure the right to "vote in secret without
fear or intimidation." These rights were respected in the national and
entity elections in September, which were the most fair and pluralistic
elections since the Dayton Accords were signed. Voter turnout was over
70 percent with over 83 political parties, independent candidates,
coalitions, and alliances competing for office.
However, at the same time, continued party control of the media and
security apparatus precluded full citizen participation without
intimidation, especially in Bosnian Croat areas and parts of the RS. To
varying degrees, all major parties seek to inhibit political activity by
other parties in the respective areas where they are in control. This was
especially true in areas controlled by SDS or HDZ hard-liners.
Implementation of the election went relatively well, with the exception of
President Poplasen's refusal to nominate a candidate for prime minister
with sufficient support in the RS Assembly to form a government and the
delay in the appointments to the Council of Ministers. However,
implementation at the national and entity levels is far less difficult than
implementation of municipal election results. Problems still are being
experienced in implementing the 1997 municipal elections; Srebrenica
remains without the municipal council mandated by the 1997 elections.
A framework agreement for the establishment of the council has been
accepted in principle by all parties, but local Serb intransigence
prevented its implementation. OSCE and OHR officials expected that the
framework agreement would be signed at the end of February 1999 and that
the first assembly session would be held in early March 1999.
Women generally were underrepresented in government and politics, although
a few women, such as the former President of the RS, have occupied
prominent positions. In the three legislatures, women are underrepresented
seriously. To address this concern, the OSCE election rules required
parties to include no fewer than 3 members of each gender among the top 10
names on their candidate lists. Women's representation in legislative
assemblies significantly increased from 2 percent in the 1996 RS National
Assembly to 23 percent in 1998, from 5 percent in the 1996 Federation House
of Representatives to 15 percent in 1998, and from 2 percent in
the BiH House of Representatives to 26 percent in 1998.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental
Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
The authorities generally permitted outside investigations of alleged human
rights violations. International and local NGO's involved in human rights
appear to operate fairly freely, with few reports of intimidation or
harassment. The OHR reports that foreign government and NGO human rights
monitors were able to travel without restriction in all areas of the
country. International community representatives were given widespread and
for the most part unhindered access to detention facilities and prisoners
in the RS as well as in the Federation.
While monitors enjoyed relative freedom to investigate human rights abuses,
they were rarely successful in persuading the authorities in all regions to
respond to their recommendations. Monitors' interventions often met with
delays or outright refusal.
The United Methodist Committee of Relief (UMCOR) reported that during the
riots in Drvar on April 24, its office was demolished during the violence.
Its computers, radios, and cellular telephones either were smashed or
stolen. An employee of the organization was beaten and threatened. Four
UMCOR vehicles also were burned during the riots, and a fifth vehicle was
stolen (see Section 1.a.).
Upon entering Srebrenica on January 16 to discuss the installation of a new
municipal government, IPTF vehicles containing officers and staff were
stoned by an angry mob of Serbs blocking the road into the city. The
coordinated movement of the crowd and the presence of loudspeakers
indicated that the violence was well organized. The RS police response was
passive.
The June 15 SFOR arrest of Milorad Krnojelac on charges of war crimes
activities triggered an angry response by Serbs in Foca, during which IPTF
and OSCE offices were damaged and an IPTF truck was burned. OSCE personnel
were temporarily evacuated.
On December 3-4 in Vlasenica, Serb demonstrators destroyed one IPTF vehicle
to protest SFOR's arrest and transport to The Hague of General Krstic,
attacked a European Community Monitoring Mission (ECCM) vehicle, harassed
two ECMM monitors and their interpreter, and destroyed their vehicle (see
Section 1.c).
The caseload of the Human Rights Chamber and the Office of Human Rights
Ombudsperson, two institutions created under Annex 6 of the Dayton Accords,
expanded during the year. The Chamber has published 19 final and binding
decisions involving 36 cases and ordered the respondent parties to take
specific actions in cases dealing with such issues as the death penalty,
housing rights of JNA veterans, arrest and detention, and nonenforcement of
judicial decisions. The Office of the Ombudsperson has published 35
final reports dealing with individual cases and 13 reports on more
general human rights issues. Applicants to the Chamber must first
have exhausted other effective domestic remedies before appealing
their case to this level. Decisions of the Chamber are final and
cannot be appealed to the Constitutional Court. The Chamber has
about 1,500 registered cases and has issued 19 final case decisions.
However, the authorities continued their lack of cooperation and
implemented only about 10 percent of the Chamber's recommendations. The OHR
was involved in monitoring authorities' responses and coordinating
intervention in cases in which the authorities failed to meet their
obligations to cooperate. The OHR's Coordination Center for Human Rights
asserted in November that RS authorities were impeding the activities of
the Human Rights Chamber by not allowing HRC judges to enter any territory
owned by the Banja Luka municipality before November. In addition, the RS
Government did not send its delegate to a hearing on November 9 in
Banja Luka before the Human Rights Chamber. The hearing was postponed
on two occasions.
Cooperation with the ICTY in The Hague is a key factor in the
implementation of the Dayton Accords and the establishment of respect for
human rights. In February Prime Minister Dodik altered the RS policy of
defiance of the Tribunal and the Dayton Accords by instructing his
officials to cooperate with the ICTY. He also offered office space in Banja
Luka to the ICTY. His actions helped to reduce the behind-the-scenes
political influence of former wartime RS President Radovan Karadzic and his
SDS allies.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion, Disability, Language,
or Social Status
The parties agreed in the Dayton Accords to reject discrimination on such
grounds as sex, race, color, language, religion, political or other opinion,
national or social origin, or association with a national minority. There
were nevertheless many cases of discrimination.
Women
Accurate statistics on violence against women, including spousal abuse and
rape, are not available. Throughout the country, rape and violent abuse are
considered criminal offenses. However, domestic violence usually was not
reported to the authorities, and a sense of shame reportedly prevents some
victims of rape from coming forward to complain to the authorities. There
are laws that prohibit rape in both the Federation and the RS. Spousal rape
and spousal abuse are also illegal in the Federation.
Trafficking in women from the former Soviet Union for purposes of
prostitution apparently is a problem.
There is little legal or social discrimination against women, and women
hold a few of the most responsible positions in society, serving as judges,
doctors, and professors. However, a male-dominated society prevails in both
entities, with few women in positions of real economic power. Anecdotal
evidence indicates that women and men receive equal pay at socially owned
enterprises but not necessarily at private businesses. Women are entitled
to 12 months' maternity leave and to work no more than 4 hours per day
until a child is 3 years old. A woman with underage children
cannot be forced to do shift work. Women were being integrated into
the police force at a rapid rate: The first graduating class of
the Federation Police Academy in December consisted of about one-
third women.
Children
The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child is incorporated by reference
in the Dayton Accords and has the effect of law in both entities. The end
of the fighting brought a major improvement in the human rights of
children. During the war nearly 17,000 children were killed, 35,000 wounded,
and over 1,800 permanently disabled.
Children suffer from an extreme paucity of social services, especially the
lack of adequate care for the mentally retarded.
In ethnic majority areas, children who are members of the minority group
must attend schools in which the educational content is skewed toward the
values, history, and religious traditions of the local majority. Education
is compulsory through the age of 15 in both the Federation and the
RS.
There was no societal pattern of abuse against children. Nonetheless, they
continue to suffer disproportionately from the societal stress of the
postwar era.
People With Disabilities
By law the Federation Government is required to assist disabled persons to
find employment and to protect them against discrimination. In the RS
discrimination against the disabled also is prohibited by law. In the
current situation there are few jobs available, and thousands of newly
disabled victims entered the job market after the war. The Government has
limited resources to address the special needs of the disabled. There are
no legal provisions mandating that buildings be made accessible to the
physically disabled. Several organizations representing disabled
persons staged a large demonstration in July in Sarajevo to urge the
Government to set aside funds to upgrade accessibility to public
places.
Religious Minorities
The Interfaith Council, established in 1997 and composed of the main
leaders of the country's four religious communities--Muslim, Serbian
Orthodox, Roman Catholic, and Jewish--continued its efforts to promote
national reconciliation. The OSCE and the OHR facilitated many interfaith
meetings at the local level as well.
However, throughout the country, religious minorities felt pressure and
were intimidated by the ethnic/religious majority.
There were instances of mob violence in the RS aimed at preventing
Catholics from worshiping. A bomb explosion severely damaged a Roman
Catholic Church in the central Bosnian town of Kakanj in July. On April 23
in Derventa (RS), mob violence prevented the holding of a Catholic ceremony
that had been approved by RS authorities. Bosnian Serb protesters set up
roadblocks to prevent the Bosnian Croat visitors, including Cardinal Puljic,
from reaching the church. The violence appeared to be a reaction to the
earlier murder of two Bosnian Serbs in Croat-controlled Drvar. Similarly,
another Bosnian Serb mob prevented Bosnian Croats displaced from
Slavonski Brod from attending mass at the Plehan monastery near
Derventa. This action followed a day of rioting against Bosnian Serb
returnees in Drvar.
In Croat-dominated areas of Herzegovina, Muslims felt pressure not to
practice their religion in public. Several incidents of vandalism occurred
against Muslim religious sites, including at a cemetery in Mostar.
None of the mosques in the RS destroyed during the war have been rebuilt or
repaired, despite requests from the Islamic community for reconstruction
(see Section 2.c.).
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Ethnic differences--based to a large degree on religious differences--were
at the heart of the war and remain a powerful social force in the country.
Although there have been positive moderating developments in both parties,
some leaders of the SDS and HDZ still support the concepts of a "Greater
Serbia" and a "Greater Croatia." These parties, and to a lesser extent the
primarily Bosniak SDA as well, sought to manipulate the movement of
persons and the access to housing and social services they control
to ensure that the ethnic groups with which they are associated
consolidate their position in their respective geographic regions. Some
hard-line local authorities in the eastern RS and in certain Croat-
controlled areas of the Federation sought to keep information regarding
the right to return and conditions in return sites from reaching
displaced persons in their areas, so as to dissuade them from
attempting to return to their former homes.
In a growing number of areas, including Sarajevo and Tuzla, mixed
communities exist peacefully. Nevertheless, harassment and discrimination
against minorities continue throughout the country. These include
desecration of graves, damage to houses of worship, throwing explosive
devices into residential areas, harassment, dismissal from work, threats,
assaults, and, in some cases, killings (see Sections 1.a. and
1.c.).
According to the 1997 report of the Federation Human Rights Ombudsmen
issued in April, "Equality before the law is not observed in the everyday
practice of state authorities that decide on the rights and obligations of
the citizens."
Incidents of ethnic discrimination often center on property disputes. An RS
law on abandoned property permitted the return of such property to the
original owner only if any subsequent occupant willingly departed, without
taking into account the lack of adequate alternative dwellings for the
subsequent occupants. In a number of areas, local authorities still use the
inability of local displaced communities to return to their own homes in
other parts of the country as a pretext for refusing to allow members of
other ethnic groups to return. In December the RS Assembly passed one piece
of revised property legislation that is an improvement, but that now
requires full and fair implementation, and will require amendment,
according to the OHR.
Some Bosnian Serb and Croat political leaders still discourage displaced
persons of their own ethnicity from returning to areas where they would be
in the minority and encourage new arrivals from their groups in areas where
they would be in the majority. The policy among hard-line Bosnian Croats of
not only discouraging Croat returns to central Bosnia but of actively
recruiting those still living there to resettle in Herzegovina, sparked an
open dispute among Bosnian Croats, with the Catholic Church hierarchy
denouncing the practice. Until 1998 the SDS Party, which had ruled the RS
throughout the war and immediately after it, manipulated information and
used its control over economic resources and the media to discourage
displaced Serbs from returning to the Federation. Although the new RS
Government is on the record as supporting the right to return, at year's
end it had yet to implement plans for facilitating minority returns. For
their part, Bosniak authorities appear tacitly to support some resettlement
efforts, including resettlement of returnees, in "strategic" areas of
the Federation, where Bosniaks are in the minority.
In some cases, opponents of refugee returns employed violence, including
sporadic house burnings, and orchestrated demonstrations in an effort to
intimidate returnees. For example, the UNMIBH reported that in the period
from March 26 to June 30 alone, 61 return-related incidents occurred in
Stolac and other municipalities of the Herzegovina-Neretva canton. In the
course of these incidents, 64 Bosniak houses were partly damaged by arson
or explosives, as well as some neighboring houses owned by Bosnian Croats
and Serbs, while two Bosniak men were beaten severely and another
one was injured slightly in an explosion (see Sections 1.a. and 1.c.). In
August local police in Drvar arrested a 17-year-old Bosnian Croat for
setting a building on fire near the Spasovina cemetery in the town. The
youth confessed to setting eight previous fires in the last year and stated
that he burned Serb-owned buildings because he did not want Serbs to return
to Drvar. The two largest companies in Croat-controlled territory, the SOKO
aircraft factory and the aluminum factory in Mostar, continue to
discriminate against former Bosniak employees seeking to return to their
prewar jobs. Croats in Ahmici blocked the reconstruction of the Bosniak
primary school and started their own illegal construction on the site,
which was halted in November, but the issue was not resolved by year's
end.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The Federation and RS Constitutions provide for the right of workers to
form and join labor unions. The largest union was the Confederation of
Independent Trade Unions of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the heir of the old
Yugoslav Communist trade union confederation. Unions have the right to
strike, but there were few strikes during the year because of the economic
devastation and joblessness caused by the war throughout much of the
Federation.
Coal miners from the Zenica region staged a strike in May to demand higher
wages. Observers reported that police used excessive force to break up a
march by some of the strikers on the Sarajevo highway. The Zenica canton
interior minister resigned as a result of the criticism.
Unions may affiliate internationally.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
There was little collective bargaining in labor-management negotiations
during the year. In both the RS and the Federation workers have the right
to collective bargaining, and the law prohibits antiunion discrimination.
There were no export processing zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The Constitution prohibits servitude or forced labor, including that
performed by children. Despite rumors that work camps exist in isolated
areas, investigations have not turned up any corroborating evidence. There
were no credible reports of child labor in either entity.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The minimum age for employment of children in the Federation and in the RS
was 16 years. Children sometimes assisted their families with farm work and
odd jobs. Children are covered under the Constitution's prohibition of
servitude or forced labor, and such practices are not known to occur (see
Section 6.c.).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The minimum monthly wage in the Federation was $73 (130 DM) until October
when it was raised to $112 (200 DM), and the minimum pension was $46 (80
DM). In the RS, the monthly minimum wage was $34 (60 DM). The minimum wages
were insufficient to provide for a decent standard of living for a worker
and family. Many workers still had claims outstanding for salaries earned
during the war but were being paid in full only for current work. Similarly,
many pensioners had outstanding claims. There are no legal limits
on the number of hours in the workweek. Overtime pay is not required
by law.
Occupational safety and health regulations were generally ignored because
of the demands and constraints imposed by an economy devastated by war.
Bosnia and Herzegovina is a signatory to a number of International Labor
Organization conventions, including those on labor conditions and labor
protection and health. However, neither entity has completed passage of new
laws to enforce the standards in these conventions.
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