Statement of Principles on Bosnia, International Conference on Former Yugoslavia (The London Conference)
- Country/entity
-
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Yugoslavia (former) - Region
-
Europe and Eurasia
- Agreement name
- Statement of Principles on Bosnia, International Conference on Former Yugoslavia (The London Conference)
- Date
- 27 Aug 1992
- Agreement status
- Multiparty signed/agreed
- Interim arrangement
- Yes
- Agreement/conflict level
- Interstate/intrastate conflict(s)
- Stage
- Pre-negotiation/process
- Conflict nature
- Government/territory
- Peace process
- Bosnia peace process
- Parties
- This was convened by Great Britain, which held the presidency of the EC at the time. The Participants were: The SFRY republics, the EC countries, the USA, China, Russia, Japan, Canada, The Republic of Czechoslovakia (as a state which held the presidency of CSCE – Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe) and the neighboring countries: Austria, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania
- Third parties
- -
- Description
- This short agreement contains principles for a political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including: cessation of hostilities; recognition of independence; rights for national minorities; assistance for return of those forcibly expelled; and grouping of all heavy weaponry under Bosnian Serb control.
- Agreement document
- BA_920827_Statement on Bosnia.pdf (opens in new tab) | Download PDF
Groups
- Children/youth
No specific mention.
- Disabled persons
No specific mention.
- Elderly/age
No specific mention.
- Migrant workers
No specific mention.
- Racial/ethnic/national group
- Groups→Racial/ethnic/national group→RhetoricalPage 1, Untitled preamble
The participants in the London Conference on the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia condemn the continuing violence in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the attempts to gain territory by the use of force. They reject as inhuman and illegal the expulsion of civilian communities from their homes in order to alter the ethnic character of any area.
Page 1,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...d) implementation of guarantees for the rights of persons belonging to all national communities and minorities in accordance with the UN Charter and CSCE provisions;
Page 1-2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions: ...f) democratic and legal structures which properly protect the rights of all in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including national communities and minorities; - Religious groups
No specific mention.
- Indigenous people
No specific mention.
- Other groups
No specific mention.
- Refugees/displaced persons
- Groups→Refugees/displaced persons→RhetoricalPage 1,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions: ...e) just and adequate arrangements for people who have been forcibly expelled from their homes including the right to return and compensation for their losses;
Page 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...e) the establishment of refugee and relief centres for those citizens of Bosnia-Herzegovina who have lost or been expelled from their homes, pending their return; - Social class
No specific mention.
Gender
- Women, girls and gender
No specific mention.
- Men and boys
No specific mention.
- LGBTI
No specific mention.
- Family
No specific mention.
State definition
- Nature of state (general)
No specific mention.
- State configuration
No specific mention.
- Self determination
No specific mention.
- Referendum
No specific mention.
- State symbols
No specific mention.
- Independence/secession
- Page 1,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...b) recognition of Bosnia-Herzegovina by all the former Yugoslav Republics; - Accession/unification
- Page 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:
a) a genuine and lasting end to the conflict throughout the Republic, and return of territory taken by force; - Border delimitation
- Page 1,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...c) respect for the integrity of present frontiers, unless changed by mutual agreement; - Cross-border provision
No specific mention.
Governance
- Political institutions (new or reformed)
No specific mention.
- Elections
No specific mention.
- Electoral commission
No specific mention.
- Political parties reform
No specific mention.
- Civil society
No specific mention.
- Traditional/religious leaders
No specific mention.
- Public administration
No specific mention.
- Constitution
- Governance→Constitution→Constitutional reform/makingPage 2,
Further urgent steps are now required to achieve a settlement. The participants in the London Conference urge all parties immediately and without preconditions to resume negotiations on future constitutional arrangements within the framework of the Conference. All parties involved must participate in these negotiations with a genuine will to secure peace and a respect for the interest of the other parties.
Power sharing
- Political power sharing
No specific mention.
- Territorial power sharing
No specific mention.
- Economic power sharing
No specific mention.
- Military power sharing
No specific mention.
Human rights and equality
- Human rights/RoL general
- Page 1, Untitled preamble
...They welcome the adoption by the United Nations Security Council of Resolution 771
and other Security Council Resolutions, and the Resolution of the UN Commission on Human Rights on the situation of human rights in the territory of the former Yugoslavia.
Page 1-2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...f) democratic and legal structures which properly protect the rights of all in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including national communities and minorities; - Bill of rights/similar
No specific mention.
- Treaty incorporation
- Page 1, Untitled preamble
...They undertake to collate substantiated information on violations of international humanitarian law and to make this information available to the United Nations. They reaffirm that persons who commit or order the commission of grave breaches of the Geneva
Conventions are individually responsible in respect of such breaches.
Page 1,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...d) implementation of guarantees for the rights of persons belonging to all national communities and minorities in accordance with the UN Charter and CSCE provisions;
Page 2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...h) respect for all international Treaties and Agreements; - Civil and political rights
No specific mention.
- Socio-economic rights
No specific mention.
Rights related issues
- Citizenship
- Rights related issues→Citizenship→Citizen, generalPage 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...e) the establishment of refugee and relief centres for those citizens of Bosnia-Herzegovina who have lost or been expelled from their homes, pending their return; - Democracy
- Page 1-2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...f) democratic and legal structures which properly protect the rights of all in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including national communities and minorities; - Detention procedures
No specific mention.
- Media and communication
No specific mention.
- Mobility/access
No specific mention.
- Protection measures
No specific mention.
- Other
No specific mention.
Rights institutions
- NHRI
No specific mention.
- Regional or international human rights institutions
No specific mention.
Justice sector reform
- Criminal justice and emergency law
No specific mention.
- State of emergency provisions
No specific mention.
- Judiciary and courts
No specific mention.
- Prisons and detention
No specific mention.
- Traditional Laws
No specific mention.
Socio-economic reconstruction
- Development or socio-economic reconstruction
- Socio-economic reconstruction→Development or socio-economic reconstruction→Humanitarian assistancePage 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...f) the extension of humanitarian relief to all areas of Bosnia-Herzegovina where supplies are needed, with the cooperation of local parties;
Page 2,
As and when parties are ready to reach a settlement on the above basis, the International Community will join with them in a major reconstruction programme to cope with humanitarian needs and to restore economic activity. - National economic plan
No specific mention.
- Natural resources
No specific mention.
- International funds
- Page 2,
As and when parties are ready to reach a settlement on the above basis, the International Community will join with them in a major reconstruction programme to cope with humanitarian needs and to restore economic activity. - Business
- Page 2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...i) restoration of trade and other links with neighbouring countries. - Taxation
No specific mention.
- Banks
No specific mention.
Land, property and environment
- Land reform/rights
No specific mention.
- Pastoralist/nomadism rights
No specific mention.
- Cultural heritage
No specific mention.
- Environment
No specific mention.
- Water or riparian rights or access
No specific mention.
Security sector
- Security Guarantees
No specific mention.
- Ceasefire
- Security sector→Ceasefire→General commitmentsPage 1,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
a) a full and permanent cessation of hostilities and an end of all violence and repression, including the expulsion of populations;
Page 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...g) an international peacekeeping force under UN auspices may be created by the UN Security Council to maintain the ceasefire, control military movements, and undertake other confidence building measures. - Police
No specific mention.
- Armed forces
- Page 2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...g) assurances of non-intervention by outside military forces whether formed units or irregulars, except as provided for in relevant UN Security Council Resolutions;
Page 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...g) an international peacekeeping force under UN auspices may be created by the UN Security Council to maintain the ceasefire, control military movements, and undertake other confidence building measures. - DDR
- Security sector→DDR→Demilitarisation provisionsPage 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...c) the grouping of heavy weaponry under international control; d) the demilitarisaion of major towns and the monitoring of them by international observers;
Page 2-3,
At a meeting with FCO Minister of State Douglas Hoqq, Drs Karadzic and Koljevic representing the Bosnian Serbs signified their agreement to the following: i. That the Bosnian Serb side would notify to the UN within 96 hours the positions of all heavy weaponry to be grouped around the 4 towns of Sarajevo, Bihac, Goradze and Jajce, this grouping to be completed within a period of 7 days. The weaponry once grouped would be put under the continuous supervision of permanent UN observers. The Bosnian Serb side would expect the Bosnian Government to take reciprocal action, but would not impose this as a precondition for their own action, which would be unilateral. The Bosnian Serb side further undertook with immediate effect not to initiate fire from any of this heavy weaponry. - Intelligence services
No specific mention.
- Parastatal/rebel and opposition group forces
- Page 2,
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
...g) assurances of non-intervention by outside military forces whether formed units or irregulars, except as provided for in relevant UN Security Council Resolutions;
Page 2-3,
At a meeting with FCO Minister of State Douglas Hoqq, Drs Karadzic and Koljevic representing the Bosnian Serbs signified their agreement to the following:
i. That the Bosnian Serb side would notify to the UN within 96 hours the positions of all heavy weaponry to be grouped around the 4 towns of Sarajevo, Bihac, Goradze and Jajce, this grouping to be completed within a period of 7 days. The weaponry once grouped would be put under the continuous supervision of permanent UN observers. The Bosnian Serb side would expect the Bosnian Government to take reciprocal action, but would not impose this as a precondition for their own action, which would be unilateral. The Bosnian Serb side further undertook with immediate effect not to initiate fire from any of this heavy weaponry.
ii. That the Bosnian Serb side recognised that in negotiations between the three Bosnian parties, they would agree to withdraw from a substantial portion of the territory now under control of their forces. - Withdrawal of foreign forces
- Page 2,
...The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...b) the cessation of all outside interference, in terms of personnel or material support, in the present conflict; - Corruption
No specific mention.
- Crime/organised crime
No specific mention.
- Drugs
No specific mention.
- Terrorism
No specific mention.
Transitional justice
- Transitional justice general
No specific mention.
- Amnesty/pardon
No specific mention.
- Courts
No specific mention.
- Mechanism
No specific mention.
- Prisoner release
No specific mention.
- Vetting
No specific mention.
- Victims
No specific mention.
- Missing persons
No specific mention.
- Reparations
No specific mention.
- Reconciliation
No specific mention.
Implementation
- UN signatory
- UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali was the co-chairman of the International Conference on Former Yugoslavia
- Other international signatory
- This was convened by Great Britain, which held the presidency of the EC at the time. The Participants were: The SFRY republics, the EC countries, the USA, China, Russia, Japan, Canada, The Republic of Czechoslovakia (as a state which held the presidency of CSCE – Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe) and the neighboring countries: Austria, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania
- Referendum for agreement
No specific mention.
- International mission/force/similar
- Page 2,
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:...c) the grouping of heavy weaponry under international control; d) the demilitarisation of major towns and the monitoring of them by international observers;...g) an international peacekeeping force under UN auspices may be created by the UN Security Council to maintain the ceasefire, control military movements, and undertake other confidence building measures.
Page 2-3,
At a meeting with FCO Minister of State Douglas Hogg, Drs Karadzic and Koljevic representing the Bosnian Serbs signified their agreement to the following: i. That the Bosnian Serb side would notify to the UN within 96 hours the positions of all heavy weaponry to be grouped around the 4 towns of Sarajevo, Bihac, Goradze and Jajce, this grouping to be completed within a period of 7 days. The weaponry once grouped would be put under the continuous supervision of permanent UN observers. The Bosnian Serb side would expect the Bosnian Government to take reciprocal action, but would not impose this as a precondition for their own action, which would be unilateral. The Bosnian Serb side further undertook with immediate effect not to initiate fire from any of this heavy weaponry. - Enforcement mechanism
No specific mention.
- Related cases
No specific mention.
- Source
- 'International Conference the Former Yugoslavia: Documents Adopted at the London Conference, International Legal Materials, Vol. 31, No. 6 (NOVEMBER 1992), pp. 1537-39
The London Conference
STATEMENT ON BOSNIA
LC/CS (FINAL)
27 August 1992
The participants in the London Conference on the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia condemn the continuing violence in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the attempts to gain territory by the use of force.
They reject as inhuman and illegal the expulsion of civilian communities from their homes in order to alter the ethnic character of any area.
They welcome the adoption by the United Nations Security Council of Resolution 771
and other Security Council Resolutions.,
and the Resolution of the UN Com.mission on Human Rights on the situation of human rights in the territory of the former Yugoslavia.
They undertake to collate substantiated information on violations of international humanitarian law and to make this infor:
mation available to the United Nations.
They reaffirm that persons who commit or order the commission of grave breaches of the Geneva
Conventions are individually responsible in respect of such breaches.
A political settlement in Bosnia and Herzegovina must include the following provisions:
a) a full and permanent cessation of hostilities and an end of all violence and repression, including the expulsion of populations;
b) recognition of Bosnia-Herzegovina by all the former Yugoslav Republics;
c) respect for the integrity of present frontiers, unless changed by mutual agreement;
d) implementation of guarantees for the rights of persons belonging to all national communities and minorities in accordance with the UN Charter and CSCE provisions;
e) just and adequate arrangements for people who have been forcibly expelled from their homes including the right to return and compensation for their losses
f) democratic and legal structures which properly protect the rights of all in Bosnia and Herzegovina, including national communities and minorities;
g) assurances of non-intervention by outside military forces whether formed units or irregulars, except as provided for in relevant UN Security Council Resolutions;
h) respect for all international Treaties and Agreements;
i) restoration of trade and other links with neighbouring countries.
Further urgent steps are now required to achieve a settlement.
The participants in the London Conference urge all parties immediately and without preconditions to resume negotiations on future constitutional arrangements within the framework of the Conference.
All parties involved must participate in these negotiations with a genuine will to secure peace and a respect for the interest of the other parties.
The negotiations will also need to cover the following arrangements:
a) a genuine and lasting end to the conflict throughout the Republic, and return of territory taken by force;
b) the cessation of all outside interference, in termss of personnel or material support, in the present conflict;
c) the grouping of heavy weaponry under international control;
d) the demilitarisaion of major towns and the monitoring of them by international observers;
e) the establishment of refugee and relief centres for those citizens of Bosnia-Herzegovina who have lost or been expelled from their homes, pending their return;
f) the extension of humanitarian relief to all areas of Bosnia-Herzegovian where supplies are needed, with the cooperation of local parties;
g) an international peacekeeping force under UN auspices may be created by the UN Security Council to maintain the ceasefire, control military movements, and undertake other confidence building measures.
As and when parties are ready to reach a settlement on the above basis, the International Community will join with them in a major reconstruction programme to cope with humanitarian needs and to restore economic activity.
At a meeting with FCO Minister of State Douglas Hogg, Drs Karadzic and Koljevic representing the Bosnian Serbs signified their agreement to the following:
i That the Bosnian Serb side would notify to the UN within 96 hours the positions of all heavy weaponry to be grouped around the 4 towns of Sarajevo, Bihac, Goradze and Jajce, this grouping to be completed within a period of 7 days.
The weaponry once grouped would be put under the continuous supervision of permanent UN observers.
The Bosnian Serb side would expect the Bosnian Government to take reciprocal action, but would not impose this as a precondition for their own action, which would be unilateral.
The Bosnian Serb side further undertook with immediate effect not to initiate fire from any of this heavy weaponry.
ii That the Bosnian Serb side recognised that in negotiations between the three Bosnian parties, they would agree to withdraw from a substantial portion of territory now under the control of their forces.