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CROATIA FAILS TO TAKE SIGNIFICANT STEPS TO FACILITATE REFUGEE RETURNS - HRW

WASHINGTON, May 14 (Hina) - The Croatian government has failed to take significant steps to facilitate the return of Serb refugees despite pledges by the new prime minister and calls by the European Union as part of accession talks, the US human rights organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Friday.
WASHINGTON, May 14 (Hina) - The Croatian government has failed to take significant steps to facilitate the return of Serb refugees despite pledges by the new prime minister and calls by the European Union as part of accession talks, the US human rights organisation Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Friday.#L# In a briefing paper assessing progress on the return of Serb refugees since September 2003, HRW said that Croatian authorities have made little progress towards the repossession of Serb-owned properties, but that virtually no progress had been made in providing alternative housing for Serbs who lost the right to use state-owned (so-called "socially-owned") apartments. The New York-based organisation further said that "flawed domestic war crimes trials marked by ethnic bias against Serbs also dissuade refugees from returning." "The new prime minister, Ivo Sanader, has made repeated calls for Serb refugees from Croatia to return to the country and pledged to make improvements for the Serb minority in various sectors of political and social life," the report said. "The Croatian government must take stronger measures to facilitate the return of Serb refugees," said Rachel Denber, acting executive director of the HRW Europe and Central Asia Division. "The new government's statements are welcome, but they must be matched by action," she added. "In positive contrast to slow progress on property repossession, the government has continued to reconstruct thousands of destroyed Serb houses," the report said. HRW said that on April 20 the European Commission recommended that negotiations for accession to the European Union be opened with Croatia, at the same asking Croatia to "accelerate efforts to facilitate the return of Serb refugees from Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina". Denber said that "tangible progress on returns must remain a precondition to EU membership for Croatia." The report said that around 300,000 Serbs had fled Croatia during 1991-1995 war and that there were no precise figures for those who had returned since. "The Croatian government has registered more than 108,000 returns, but after a short stay, many returnees depart again for Serbia or Bosnia." (Hina) vm

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