SARAJEVO, Sept 16 (Hina) - Bosnia-Herzegovina will get an intelligence service at the state level by the end of the year, when the current intelligence services in the country's two entities -- the Croat-Muslim federation and the Serb
republic -- should cease existing, according to announcements made by the international community's High Representative, Paddy Ashdown, and a Hungarian diplomat, Kalman Kocsis, in Sarajevo on Tuesday.
SARAJEVO, Sept 16 (Hina) - Bosnia-Herzegovina will get an
intelligence service at the state level by the end of the year, when
the current intelligence services in the country's two entities --
the Croat-Muslim federation and the Serb republic -- should cease
existing, according to announcements made by the international
community's High Representative, Paddy Ashdown, and a Hungarian
diplomat, Kalman Kocsis, in Sarajevo on Tuesday. #L#
Kocsis, who was in charge of reorganising Hungarian secret
services, has been at the helm of a task force that has been
preparing the reorganisation of the said services in Bosnia in
recent months.
On Tuesday, he handed over a draft act on an Intelligence-Security
Agency (OSA) to the chairman of the Bosnian Council of Ministers,
Adnan Terzic. The draft act is to be forwarded into parliamentary
procedure and should be adopted by 1 January 2004 at the latest.
The task force, which has prepared the bill, consists of foreign and
Bosnian experts in this field.
Under the law, no political influence could be exerted on the new
intelligence service. The act provides for strict control over the
work of the OSA in order to prevent possible forms of abuse of
office. For instance, phone-tapping would be carried out only with
the previous approval of a court, namely the State Prosecutor's
Office.
The activities of the OSA range from the fight against
international terrorism, smuggling of narcotics and organised
crime to the collection of data on war crimes suspects.
Ashdown said the reorganisation of the intelligence services as
well as reforms in the defence sector and tax systems were the most
important tasks which Sarajevo should fulfil in order to come
closer to the European Union.
(hina) ms