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U.S. ASSISTANCE TO CROATIA IN 2005 TOTALS 20 MILLION

WASHINGTON, March 4 (Hina) - In 2005 the United States will provide aid worth 20 million to Croatia within a programme of assistance to foreign countries in the next year.
WASHINGTON, March 4 (Hina) - In 2005 the United States will provide aid worth 20 million to Croatia within a programme of assistance to foreign countries in the next year.#L# The programme of assistance to South-East European democracies (SEED) envisages funds for Croatia totalling 20 million, to be used for the strengthening of democratic institutions and the rule of law, including cooperation with the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague, reads the draft document of the State Department, which was on the agenda of the Senate's committee on foreign affairs on Tuesday. The document states that Croatia will not be given aid from funds for the financing of foreign military forces and their training in 2005 because it has not signed an agreement on the non-extradition of US citizens to the International Criminal Court. The document nevertheless envisages aid for military training amounting to 50,000 dollars if Croatia signs the agreement. The SEED programme is oriented towards providing technical assistance to bodies of local administration, political parties, trade unions, media and NGOs. It will also continue providing aid for the promotion of competitiveness in the private sector through the strengthening of small businesses and creation of jobs in the agriculture sector, reads the document. Assistance to Croatia in 2005 will be reduced by five million dollars in relation to 2004 and by 10 million in relation to 2003. After 2006, the State Department will stop providing such assistance to Croatia because it believes that by that time Croatia will be a stable democracy no longer in need of such help. Speaking about the draft programme on foreign aid, Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Elizabeth Jones said that assistance to Central and East European countries and the former Soviet Union had resulted in multiple benefits for the United States. Those countries support the priorities of the foreign policy of the United States and are important partners in the global fight against terrorism, she said. Jones said that 24 of the 27 transition countries which had received US assistance actively supported the US operation in Iraq and/or Afghanistan, including Croatia. The United States has also secured 690,000 of aid for Croatia for export and border control training to prevent the spreading of weapons of mass destruction. (Hina) rml

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