Speeches
03/03/2006
Remarks by the High Representative, Christian Schwarz-Schilling at the Award Presentations Following Igman International Ski Championship: “Tourism and Forestry Can Create More Jobs”
I’m particularly pleased to participate in this event because it brings together my home state in Germany, Hesse, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The Nordic skiing tournament that has just finished is also a marvelous advertisement for Alpine tourism, one of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s most promising – but as yet underdeveloped – economic sectors. [...]
02/24/2006
Speech by Principal Deputy HR Larry Butler at the Third Annual Ministerial Review Conference
You have over the course of the last two days examined a broad range of issues related to the development of an efficient and cost-effective border security system in the Western Balkans. Allow me to extend my appreciation for your accomplishments in the face of enormous physical, financial and political challenges. Every citizen in the region be [...]
02/15/2006
Speech by the Senior Deputy High Representative Ambassador Dr. Martin Ney at the European Union Presidency Seminar On Security Sector Reform in the Western Balkans
Last year, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) passed a significant milestone. For several years, the overarching goal of the international community has been to assist the country in equipping itself to take part in Euro-Atlantic integration and, in particular, to establish contractual relationships with the European Union and NATO. BiH not only fulfil [...]
01/31/2006
High Representative’s TV Address to Citizens of BiH
I am Christian Schwarz-Schilling. As most of you know, I have just succeeded Paddy Ashdown and I am now High Representative. I have visited Bosnia and Herzegovina many times since 1992, but from today I will live and work here together with you.
01/30/2006
High Representative’s Farewell Speech to the BiH House of Representatives
Mr. Speaker, first of all let me thank you for facilitating this address to your parliament today. This was the venue in which I laid out my priorities on my first day here, almost four years ago. So it is fitting that I should be here to address you again on this, the last full day of my mandate, in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
12/15/2005
HR’s remarks to the OSCE Permanent Council
I would like to thank you for asking me to contribute to today’s discussion, which is part of a rolling and – I’m please to note – constructive debate that has evolved through the series of conferences organised to mark the tenth anniversary of the end of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
12/07/2005
Remarks by the Principal Deputy HR, Lawrence Butler at a Conference to Mark the 10th Anniversary of the Dayton-Paris Peace Accords
The postwar settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and its implementation under international supervision, over the last decade, has changed fundamentally the way we understand peacemaking. It should also change the way we practice peacemaking.
12/07/2005
Remarks by the High Representative, Paddy Ashdown at the Opening of a Photo Exhibition Marking 10 Years of Refugee Return in BiH
In 1945, there were five million refugees and displaced persons across the continent of Europe. Almost none returned to their pre-World War II homes. In 1995 there were more than two million refugees and displaced persons as a result of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In the last ten years more than a million have gone back to their homes. Few p [...]
11/30/2005
Remarks by the High Representative, Paddy Ashdown on the Mostar Implementation Unit Closure
Today not intended to mark an endpoint, but rather a point of transition for the unification process in Mostar.
MIU is closing down after nearly 2 years. But its closure does not mean IC disengagement; it does not mean that the OHR will no longer continue to support and monitor the unification process. Most of the MIU expertise will be handed ove [...]
11/29/2005
Speech by the High Representative, Paddy Ashdown: “Ten After Dayton: Prospects for Cooperation and the Future of BiH”
I see many familiar faces around the room – some of them have become particularly familiar in recent weeks, as our paths have crisscrossed in the course of a remarkable series of conferences – in different cities, and indeed on different continents – devoted to the future of Bosnia and Herzegovina.