2. Because of the Slovenian side’s position on the conditional connectedness between the sea border issues and other outstanding issues (Ljubljanska Banka’s debt payoff, nuclear power plant Krško, the presence of Slovenian soldiers on the Croatian national territory at St. Gera), these issues remained unsolved for years and burdened the mutual relations.
3. In the last 15 years, since gaining their independency, the two countries attempted to solve the interstate border issue through a series of bilateral negotiations and mediations. Negotiations failed to yield a solution. The MFAEI wishes to reiterate that there are no legal documents that would represent a supposed compromise concerning the sea border and support the baseless position that Slovenia has “retained” is territorial contiguity with the open sea. The proposition to reopen the negotiations based on the 2001 negotiations is objectively unrealistic. The Republic of Croatia remains firm in its position that this issue can be solved solely by obeying the international law, the UN Charter and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Wishing to open to way to further enhancement of mutual relations by solving the sea border issue, in October 2005 the Croatian Government officially proposed to the Slovenian side a joint and obliging submission of the interstate sea border issue before an international legal body. The MFAEI wishes to remind that the Slovenian side as early as April 2004 publicly accepted such a solutions, as was confirmed by Slovenian President Janez Drnovšek at the Central European Summit in Zagreb, October 2005.
4. The MFAEI rejects the claims about a one-sided approach and the attempts to prejudice a final solution of the land and sea border issues, which is, among other things, proven by the consistent adherence on the Croatian part to the Joint Statement on the Avoidance of Incidents, especially refraining from any moves or measures that would change the existing situation along the border.
5. The issue of Ljubljanska Bank – Zagreb main branch paying off its Croatian depositors is an issue of the private legal relations between Ljubljanska Bank and its depositors. The MFAEI, therefore, does not consider it to be an issue of the ex-Yugoslavia succession process. The matter is to be decided on by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.
6. The MFAEI wishes to suggest to the Slovenian side that the relevant Croatian and Slovenian bodies open preparation talks in order to reach an agreement on the joint and obliging appearance before an international legal body to solve the maritime interstate border. Both countries’ parliaments should oblige to accept that body’s ruling.