OSCE: Continue Hague cooperation, reforms

Serbia improved regional relations and economy, should commit to Hague cooperation and continue reforms, OSCE said.

Izvor: B92

Friday, 30.03.2007.

12:53

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BELGRADE Serbia improved regional relations and economy, should commit to Hague cooperation and continue reforms, OSCE said. The OSCE Mission to Serbia's annual report, presented Thursday by the Head of the Mission, Ambassador Hans Ola Urstad, describes Mission activities in the fields of rule of law and judicial reform, democratization and human rights, police reform, media, economy and environment since March 2006. OSCE: Continue Hague cooperation, reforms It also assesses Serbia's political developments over the past year, an OSCE press release read. "Since my last report a year ago, Serbia has made progress in many areas, but numerous challenges still lie ahead," Urstad said while presenting the report to the 56-country OSCE's Permanent Council. "The dissolution of the State Union with Montenegro, the adoption of a new Constitution, and Serbia's membership in NATO's Partnership for Peace program and the Central European Free Trade Agreement illustrate the specter of the changes. "Serbia now stands as a transition-phase democracy with an open-market economy. Still, full and unreserved co-operation with the ICTY, better implementation of laws, problems of refugees and internally displaced persons, reforms of the security and police sectors, media regulation and fight against environmental degradation are some of the issues we want to see solved,” Urstad concluded. You can find the full report here.

OSCE: Continue Hague cooperation, reforms

It also assesses Serbia's political developments over the past year, an OSCE press release read.

"Since my last report a year ago, Serbia has made progress in many areas, but numerous challenges still lie ahead," Urstad said while presenting the report to the 56-country OSCE's Permanent Council.

"The dissolution of the State Union with Montenegro, the adoption of a new Constitution, and Serbia's membership in NATO's Partnership for Peace program and the Central European Free Trade Agreement illustrate the specter of the changes.

"Serbia now stands as a transition-phase democracy with an open-market economy. Still, full and unreserved co-operation with the ICTY, better implementation of laws, problems of refugees and internally displaced persons, reforms of the security and police sectors, media regulation and fight against environmental degradation are some of the issues we want to see solved,” Urstad concluded.

You can find the full report here.

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