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Viewing cable 07ZAGREB612, EMPLOYMENT ISSUE BIGGER THAN MINORITY ELECTIONS

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07ZAGREB612 2007-06-27 13:48 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Zagreb
VZCZCXRO7178
RR RUEHAG RUEHAST RUEHDA RUEHDBU RUEHDF RUEHFL RUEHIK RUEHKW RUEHLA
RUEHLN RUEHLZ RUEHPOD RUEHROV RUEHSR RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHVB #0612/01 1781348
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 271348Z JUN 07
FM AMEMBASSY ZAGREB
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 7853
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 ZAGREB 000612 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PREL PHUM HR MINORITIES
 
SUBJECT: EMPLOYMENT ISSUE BIGGER THAN MINORITY ELECTIONS 
 
REF: A) 06 Zagreb 1421 
 
B) 06 Zagreb 1333 
 
1. SUMMARY AND COMMENT: The Minority Council elections held June 17 
in 20 counties, 57 cities and 68 municipalities brought out only 
eight percent of eligible voters and did little to change the public 
impression that ethnic minority councils are largely symbolic. 
These bodies, created to advance minority  interests within local 
governments, have generally been unable to articulate a "clear 
vision" or reach agreement as to the precise role they are to 
perform, continuing to hamper the overall effectiveness of these 
largely perfunctory institutions. 
 
2. However, key to the status of minority groups is the 2002 
Constitutional Law on National Minorities (CLNM); a much more 
proactive tool for the future promotion of minority rights vis-a-vis 
employment opportunities in the public sector and political 
participation. While efforts to guarantee minority representation 
have had mixed results in the past, the GOC plans to designate 336 
new positions for minorities in public services in 2007. END SUMMARY 
AND COMMENT. 
 
ELECTIONS - PAST COUNCIL PROBLEMS LIKELY TO REPEAT 
--------------------------------------------- ----- 
 
3. Following the first Minority Council Elections in 2003, Minority 
Councils across the country were plagued with numerous problems 
undercutting their effectiveness.  With no obligation to fund them, 
many local governments have been accused of under-funding the 
councils, preventing them from acquiring office space, purchasing 
rudimentary office equipment, or even securing funds for basic 
operational capabilities.  This, when coupled with council members' 
continued inability to clearly articulate the role of Minority 
Councils, led to the overall ineffectiveness of these institutions. 
In many cases, aside from the initial meeting, many Minority 
Councils rarely even bothered to meet over the past four years. 
 
4. As relatively weak institutions with little or no mandate or 
vision, some Minority Councils were not even able to make a quorum 
as members lost enthusiasm in their new roles.  Viewed in many 
quarters of Croatian society as unnecessary institutions, four years 
after the passage of the 2002 Constitutional Law on National 
Minorities, Minority Councils largely remain weak and ineffective 
agents for promoting minority rights. 
 
5. The limited success of minority councils has largely been felt 
only in the area of cultural promotion; publishing of magazines, 
cultural fairs, and in reducing the overall climate of fear and 
intimidation minority members felt in previous years. A 
representative of one minority council in the Zadar area told 
PolOff, "Minority Councils have at least been successful in reducing 
the overall climate of ethnic tensions.  In 2003 we couldn't even 
find candidates to run, however this time around we have had no 
shortage of people willing to be placed on the lists.  At least that 
is some progress." 
 
6. While representatives of 14 national minorities, or nearly 
393,000 eligible voters were able to cast their ballots in the 
elections, voter turnout was poor, estimated to be as low as 8 
percent. 
 
MINORITY EMPLOYMENT - A RAY OF HOPE... 
------------------------------------- 
 
7. The CLNM contains a provision to ensure proportional minority 
employment in the public sector in places where a minority 
constitutes at least 15 percent of the population, though four years 
after passage authorities have not fully implemented it. While 
employment of minorities has been a problem in the judiciary, 
employment in the state administration has been a particularly acute 
problem. The largest ethnic Serb NGO, Serb Democratic Forum, 
published a survey in June 2006 covering 23 municipalities in five 
regions where Serbs constituted a prewar majority and remained a 
significant part of the population. In the towns of Glina, Petrinja, 
Topusko, and Vojnic in the central area of the country, the report 
found that Serbs made up 22 percent of the population but held only 
3 percent of public administration jobs. In Benkovac, Drnis, Knin, 
and Skradin in Dalmatia, Serbs made up 13 percent of the population 
but held only 4 percent of public sector jobs. 
 
8. Government efforts to remedy the significant under-representation 
of minorities in state administration and judiciary to date have 
been limited. In May, for the first time ever the Central State 
Administration Office publicly presented changes to the plan for 
employment in public services for 2007. GOC officials pledged that 
of the 3,981 people to be employed in Ministries, State Offices and 
institutes, 336 will come from national minority groups. 
 
9. Currently, excluding the Ministry of Interior, national 
minorities constitute approximately three percent of civil servants 
employed at the national level, contrasted with 7.5 per cent of the 
total pollution. At the county level, approximately six percent of 
 
ZAGREB 00000612  002 OF 002 
 
 
civil servants are national minorities. According to Minister of 
Interior Ivica Kirin, in the Ministry of Interior 24,976 individuals 
have been employed within the Police. Out of that number, 1,119 are 
members of national minorities, 857 police officers and 362 civil 
servants and employees. According to State Secretary for 
Administration Antun Palaric, the number of ethnic minorities 
employed in State Administration was increased by around 50 under 
the current administration. Media reports claim that 124 additional 
minority representatives are to be employed in the Justice Ministry, 
50 in the Interior Ministry and 34 in the Finance Ministry. 
Additional minority employment is also planned in the Ministries of 
Culture and Economy, the Foreign Ministry, the Ministry of 
Development and the Ministry of Agriculture as well. 
 
10. The GoC has responded to past complaints about understaffing of 
minorities in state administration with explanations of over-staffed 
bureaucracies, low attrition, and a lack of job openings.  While 
these are all real challenges to addressing the minority employment 
issue, the GoC finally seems to be developing a plan to confront 
them. 
 
BRADTKE