The talks focused on the coming meeting between Vilallonga and Croatian Prime Minister Ivo Sanader at which a reform of the OSCE Mission in Croatia will be presented.
The head of the Croatian delegation, Tonino Picula, said the OSCE's role in Croatia was important, adding that Croatia had relations with the organisation that were longer than those with the EU.
Vilallonga said the country was on the right track towards accomplishing what the OSCE Mission had been advocating over the past ten years.
He expressed satisfaction with changes in the Croatian media, stressing that they were more independent than the media in some EU member states. He said the police sector was also meeting the standards set by the OSCE, the statement said.
The OSCE Mission chief added that 28,000 nongovernmental associations in the country which had a population of 4.5 million had also made a special contribution to the overall situation.
However, he pointed to some unsolved problems, saying that they were the reason why the democratisation process had to continue.
The meeting also focused on a meeting of the 55 OSCE member states, to be held in Vienna in June. Vilallonga said the meeting was an opportunity to launch an exit strategy for the OSCE Mission in Croatia, planned for 2007, the statement said.