SARAJEVO, March 22 (Hina) - Representatives of international organisations operating in Bosnia last weekend strongly criticised the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia-Herzegovina (HDZ BiH) for statements that it will not support the
reform of the country's education system because it fears that it may result in the revoking of the right to education in the Croatian language.
SARAJEVO, March 22 (Hina) - Representatives of international
organisations operating in Bosnia last weekend strongly criticised the
Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia-Herzegovina (HDZ BiH) for
statements that it will not support the reform of the country's
education system because it fears that it may result in the revoking
of the right to education in the Croatian language.#L#
The country's minister of civil affairs, Safet Halilovic, accused the
HDZ also of trying to introduce segregation in the system of higher
education. In a statement for Sarajevo's Oslobodjenje daily of Monday,
Halilovic said HDZ leader Barisa Colak was trying to establish ethnic
universities, which was contrary to European standards.
Education ministers from Bosnia's five cantons with the Croat
majority, who are members of the HDZ, last week signed a declaration
urging protection for the constitutional right of every people to be
educated in their own language and attend ethnic schools, thus
rejecting a proposal for the reorganisation of the country's systems
of primary and higher education.
High Representative Paddy Ashdown, the head of the OSCE Mission to
Bosnia, Robert Beecroft, and the Council of Europe's representative in
Bosnia, Sonia Moser-Starrach, issued a joint statement condemning the
conduct of the HDZ ministers and warned that turning the unification
of the school system into a political and ethnic problem would harm
Bosnia's prospects of joining the EU.
They said that the strategy of reform of the education system
abolishing discrimination and parallel structures and providing for
more cost-efficient operation of schools had already been supported in
the country.
Beecroft said that the existing school system, which tolerates the
practice of students attending ethnically separated classes under the
same roof, should be made more economical, which he said would in no
way affect the curricula or languages used in the education process.
(Hina) rml