SARAJEVO, Feb 19 (Hina) - German Defence Minister Petar Struck has said that his country will continue participating in the maintenance of peace in Bosnia-Herzegovina and that German soldiers will assist in operations aimed at the
arrest of the two most wanted fugitives, war criminals Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic.
SARAJEVO, Feb 19 (Hina) - German Defence Minister Petar Struck has said
that his country will continue participating in the maintenance of
peace in Bosnia-Herzegovina and that German soldiers will assist in
operations aimed at the arrest of the two most wanted fugitives, war
criminals Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic.#L#
For Bosnia's admission to the (NATO) Partnership for Peace Programme,
it is very important that authorities of this country do their best to
arrest Karadzic and Mladic. US and German troops are willing to help
them in those bids, Minister Struck told reporters in Sarajevo after
he held talks with all the three members of Bosnia's collective
presidency.
The German official reiterated that there were currently 1,800 German
soldiers deployed within the NATO-led Stabilisation Force (SFOR) to
which credit should go for full stability and maintenance of peace
achieved in Bosnia over the past years.
Struck said that after the completion of the current mandate of SFOR
and upon the take-over of the mission by the European Union, NATO,
including US troops, would remain in Bosnia.
The German government will support Bosnia's bids to come closer to
NATO and the European Union, and expects from local authorities to do
all they can so as to offer assurances to Bosnian citizens that they
have a future in their homeland, particularly through creating more
jobs.
The current chairman of the Bosnian three-man presidency, Dragan
Covic, said that everybody in his country was aware that it was bad to
obstruct foreign investments, and he admitted that German investors
faced some problems when they wanted to invest in Bosnia. Covic said
this referring to the recent cases of the car-manufacturing plant in
Sarajevo in which Volkswagen recently discontinued production and is
now waiting for tariff benefits, or Daimler-Chrysler in the aluminium
plant in Mostar in which there were problems about delivery of power
supplies.
(Hina) ms