The Government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina boasted of the work in the first hundred days of operation. As the greatest success, the head of the Government cited the adoption of a set of energy laws, as well as the Law on Civilian Victims of War. It's a good idea that not much has been done well and clearly. As a reminder, the appointment of managers in public companies is still pending.
The Government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the first hundred days of work, held 10 regular and extraordinary sessions. During this period, more than 500 items on the agenda were adopted, unanimously. Analyst Zarko Papic believes that the new composition has a positive atmosphere, normalising the political situation in the Federation. There have been, he says, good but also bad moves within individual ministries.
"What is most important is the adoption of improved energy laws, which on the one hand creates conditions for the southern connection when it comes to the pipeline. I think that the distribution of grants was bad, I am talking about the Ministry of Culture and Sports, associations, very emphasized national affiliation, I think it was an insult to the goods of Croatian cultural society that found themselves together with those who are not," Papić believes.
It was more talked about than worked- professor Delić believes. He said there were no concrete moves.
"Of these, they sent only five laws and two amendments to the law to the parliamentary procedure. And of these five that they proposed are mostly regulations that were prepared in some earlier term. If we were to do some quantitative analysis, there are few concrete results," said Amel Delic from the FACULTY OF ADMINISTRATION OF UNSA.
Line ministers say it's working. Deputy Prime Minister Vojin Mijatovic announced faster dismissals of public company executives. The federal police minister also claims that the result in the ministry is very visible.
"It will go faster now than September, and from the moment we bring adequate people we will have better public companies, we will have a stronger pace of work in the Federation," says FBiH Minister of Development, Entrepreneurship of Crafts Vojin Mijatović.
"What I have done, and the team around me, means not only me, my predecessors have not been in the past hundred years, and if we continue at this pace, we will have a really regulated state," said FBiH Interior Minister Ramo Isak.
Promises, in turn, are not lacking. The Ministry, headed by Vojin Mijatović, a few days ago allocated 6.5 million KM of grant funds for the economy in the Federation, and these funds, as he says, should be increased by 3 to 4 times in the coming year.