WASHINGTON – In a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry, Helsinki Commission Co-Chairman Senator Roger Wicker urged the U.S. Administration to address the issue of worsening corruption in Bosnia and Herzegovina involving regulatory institutions and high-level political officials.
“This kind of corruption is inhibiting Bosnia and Herzegovina’s economy, stealing a more prosperous future from its citizens, paralyzing its progress toward European integration, and putting foreign investment at risk, including investment from the United States,” wrote Co-Chairman Wicker.
The letter encourages the Obama Administration to devote additional resources to uncovering and documenting corrupt conduct in Bosnia and Herzegovina and to take concrete steps – such as the potential denial of U.S. visas and seizure of U.S. assets – to hold Bosnian officials accountable for engaging in corrupt activities.
In November 2015, Co-Chairman Wicker and Commissioner Senator Jeanne Shaheen introduced legislation in the Senate that would establish an enterprise fund modeled after U.S. programs that supported Central and Eastern European economies after the fall of the Berlin Wall with approximately $10 billion in public and private funding. Specifically, the legislation would promote the private sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina by authorizing the fund to use up to $30 million over 15 years to bring American investors into the Bosnian and Herzegovinian economy.
The full text of the letter is below.
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February 2, 2016
The Honorable John Kerry
Secretary of State
Department of State
Washington, DC 20520
Dear Secretary Kerry,
As co-chairman of the Commission for Security and Cooperation in Europe, I write regarding the issue of corruption and the worsening investment climate in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
I have been a longtime supporter of assistance to Bosnia and Herzegovina during my tenure in Congress. Last year, my colleague Senator Shaheen and I introduced legislation that would establish an enterprise fund for providing assistance to private sector development and foreign investment in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Twenty years after the Dayton Accords, I believe that Bosnia and Herzegovina’s transition remains incomplete, and that the United States continues to have a strategic interest in ensuring a stable and prosperous Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Unfortunately, I am concerned to learn of indications of worsening corruption in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including corruption in vital regulatory institutions and among high-level political officials. I am troubled that responsible political authorities in Sarajevo tolerate the subversion of the rule of law by entrenched local interests. This kind of corruption is inhibiting Bosnia and Herzegovina’s economy, stealing a more prosperous future from its citizens, paralyzing its progress toward European integration, and putting foreign investment at risk, including investment from the United States.
I strongly urge you to take concrete steps that will show that U.S. patience with such behavior is at an end. Bosnian officials should be held accountable if they engage in corrupt activities or tolerate corrupt conduct by those in their ranks. In particular, I hope that you will consider devoting additional U.S. resources to uncovering and documenting corrupt conduct in Bosnia and Herzegovina so that Bosnian officials and leaders can be publicly exposed and held to account.
The United States should also consider a wide range of policy responses to corruption in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including the potential denial of U.S. visas and potential seizure of assets in the United States. Evidence of corruption should also be shared with our European partners, giving the European Union the chance to take similar actions as well. Coordinated international efforts against corruption in Albania might serve as a useful example in this regard.
Thank you for your consideration. I look forward to continuing my work with you to enhance security, stability, and economic prosperity throughout Southeast Europe.
Sincerely,
Roger F. Wicker
Co-Chairman
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe