Establishing international
navigation on a former domestic waterway, and protecting the environment and
natural resources of the Sava River Basin has made a giant step forward. In the presence of Special Co-ordinator
Erhard Busek, the Foreign Ministers of the four riparian countries of the Sava
River Basin - Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and
Slovenia have signed a Framework Agreement in Kranjska Gora. A newly established Sava River Commission
will henceforth be in charge of preparing an integrated management plan for the
Sava River Basin and of co-ordinating activities such as navigation,
sustainable water management, hydro-electricity and environmental
protection. In a number of areas,
particularly to ensure safe navigation, the Commission will be empowered to
issue unified rules. This fully
integrated river management approach is one of the first worldwide, and could
serve as a model for other river basins in Southeast Europe.
Special Co-ordinator Busek
commended the efforts of the four countries and called is a milestone in a
regional process of co-operation. He
reiterated, at the symbolic location of the Sava’s source, that “today the Sava has become a unifying
force. The divisions of the past are
behind us. This is European
co-operation at its best. The reopening
of the Sava to commercial international navigation will further invigorate the
region economically. Thereby four
countries will be one region!”
The
Framework Agreement on the Sava River Basin signed by Minister of Civil Affairs
and Communications Svetozar Mihajlovic (Bosnia-Herzegovina), Foreign Minister
Tonino Picula (Croatia), Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel (Slovenia) and Foreign
Minister Goran Svilanović (Yugoslavia) affirms the commitment of the four
countries to co-operate in managing the Sava Basin and establishes a process to
achieve the following goals:
Establishing a international
navigation regime on the Sava river and its main tributaries in the form of the
Protocol signed today and in accordance with the international regime of the
Danube Commission
Promoting sustainable management of
the Sava Basin waters and related resources;
Fostering integrated economic
development while preserving the environment in the Sava Basin region and the
well being of its people; and
Establishing
the proper institutional framework to fulfil these objectives.
An International Sava River Basin Commission is established to implement
the Agreement, including the preparation of a Sava River Basin Management
Plan. The Agreement includes the
statute for the Commission, a process for resolving
disputes, and a protocol for the regime of navigation.
The
agreement is the culmination of intensive negotiations, which began by the
signing of a Letter of Intent in November 2001. Two Working Groups, one to draft the Framework Agreement and the
other to prepare an action plan for rehabilitation and development of the basin
were established. While the Framework
was successfully completed on 23 October, at a meeting at the UN Office of High
Representative in Brcko (Bosnia and Herzegovina), the Rehabilitation and
Development Working Group continues to work on an Action Plan for the Sava
Basin in the areas of navigation, integrated water management, environmental
protection, and economic development.
Priority needs and projects to
meet the objectives spelled out in the Framework Agreement include the
rehabilitation of critical infrastructure to foster economic development;
projects to improve water quality management; establishment of a joint warning
system for flood control and response to emergencies; and measures to reopen
the Sava to commercial navigation. The
Working Group is expected to complete the first Action Plan in early 2003.
See: s Framework Agreement on the
Sava River Basin
Annex 1 — Sava River
Commission
Annex 2 — Dispute
Settlement
s
Navigation Protocol
s
Statement by Special Co-ordinator
Erhard Busek