Croatian Foreign Minister Gordan Grlić Radman said on Tuesday he expected that, with the EU's help, Bosnia and Herzegovina will start accommodating migrants in camps along the border where they enter BiH, objecting to distributing them across the country.
"We are not for distributing migrants across BiH as that would additionally burden the state of BiH and its capacities. Croatia shares 1,000 kilometres of border with BiH and that also threatens Croatia's security," he said in Mostar, southern BiH.
The minister said Croatia had proposed that all EU funds be directed at strengthening BiH's institutional capacities. "Instead of the current camps, they should be built at the points of entry on the border, which would make it easier to manage the migrant crisis with the help of EU institutions."
Most migrants in BiH are staying in northwestern Una-Sana Canton which borders Croatia and in Sarajevo Canton. They are all trying to illegally cross the border into Croatia and go on to other EU countries.
Grlić Radman said Croatia presented its stand on changing the accommodation of migrants in BiH at the last meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council. The new approach to BiH would envisage signing an agreement with Frontex so that the migrant crisis is dealt with at the points of entry, along the country's eastern border, he said.
"The migrant crisis is undermining stability and functionality, and you know that Croatia cares about stability and functionality," he added.
Grlić Radman went on to say that he was surprised by Bosnian Foreign Minister Bisera Turković's official note in which she expressed her opposition to the declaration of Croatia's exclusive economic area in the Adriatic. He said Croatia would send a counter-note expressing the suspicion that Turković's view was not BiH's official view given that Presidency Chairman Milorad Dodik had objected to it.
In Mostar, Grlić Radman met with Bosnian Croat leaders, reiterating his support for changes to the BiH Electoral Law so that Croats could elect their government representatives without their being imposed by larger ethnic groups. “That is an important reform for the country to be granted the EU candidate status,” he said.
The minister also visited the University Clinical Hospital Mostar and toured the Croatian National Theatre, whose activities are supported by the Croatian Government.
Text: Hina/MFEA