CONSTITUTION
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MOSTAR, Sept 5 (Hina) - Bosnian Croat and Moslem (Bosniak)
representatives in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton assembly, on Friday
failed to bring into accord their views on a text of an amendment to the
cantonal constitution.
Moslems proposed that the draft amendment, agreed upon at the
Forum of the Croat-Moslem Federation on June 6 should be adopted,
whereas Croats refused this text of the amendment for the fourth time in the
past two months claiming that the Forum of the Federation could not
propose constitutional amendments for this canton under the cantonal
constitution.
Following a one-hour-long discussion, 17 present Moslem members
of the assembly left the session and remaining 26 members unanimously
refused the proposal of Moslem deputies.
The cantonal assembly consists of 50 members, and 28 of them are
Croats and 22 are Moslems.
Croat deputies have three major objections to the draft amendment,
agreed upon at the Forum of the Federation on 6 June.
The first objection refers to the treatment of the central city zone in
Mostar as the seventh municipality in this southern city. Croats warn that it +
is
not in line with the Dayton accords.
The head of the regional office of the international High
Representative to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Martin Garrod, who was on Friday's
session, admitted that the central city district was not part of the Dayton
agreement, but he stressed that it was provided by the Rome agreement,
signed by the then President of the Federation, Kresimir Zubak, and the
Vice President, Ejup Ganic.
The second objection is that the draft amendment introduces the
same number of 'other' aldermen as there are Croat and Moslem members
in the city council of Mostar. In this way 'others' become a constitutive
people in Mostar, according to Croats' objection.
Garrod replied that the same number of Croat, Moslem and other
members of the city council was in line with the Mostar annex to the Dayton
agreement.
The third objection refers to a proposal that the head of Herzegovina-
Neretva Canton and the mayor of Mostar should be from different peoples.
The British diplomat said that on August 6, 1996, representatives of
the Croat people, Srecko Vucina, Boro Puljic and Mile Puljic, signed an
agreement under which the head of that canton and Mostar's mayor would
be from different peoples.
After the session Garrod portrayed it as yet another disappointing
meeting. He added that according to the conclusions made by the Forum of
the Federation, political and economic sanctions would be imposed on
those who failed to respect the Forum's agreements.
On the other hand, a member of the assembly, Mile Puljic, said that
the Croat party was expecting "a prise for what has happened as the
constitution and the Dayton agreement have been protected."
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