I want to first extend my thanks to Christian
Poortman of the World Bank and Fabrizio Barbaso of the European
Commission for organizing this Conference and, more importantly,
for willingly taking on key leadership roles in the reconstruction
and recovery of Kosovo. The United Nations will draw heavily on
this and other assistance as it manages its mandate to restore
stability to this tortured part of the Balkans.
That stability will depend in large measure on
creating prosperity in Kosovo, prosperity which will not come
quickly or easily. Achieving this stability will require a
concerted effort on the part of the people of Kosovo - and their
rapid return home is a welcome sign of their commitment. We, as
donors, will have to provide generous and well-coordinated
assistance to enable all Kosovars to direct their energies to
rebuilding their lives.
Our task here today is to kick-start that
rebuilding. We need to pledge the necessary resources, divide the
tasks, organize and coordinate our work, and translate our good
intentions into action on the ground in Kosovo. Much has already
been accomplished in the past two months but we cannot lose the
sense of urgency or compassion which has brought us here.
Today's conference rightfully addresses urgent
needs for humanitarian support and immediate recovery. Unless
basic human needs are met between now and winter for the over one
million returning refugees and internally displaced persons, we
cannot expect to lay the groundwork for social stability or a
self-sustaining economy.
I would like to express my appreciation for the
central role the United Nations High Commission for Refugees has
played and will continue to play in this regard. The UNHCR has
confronted mammoth tasks since early last year, first in receiving
hundreds of thousands of refugees from Kosovo in the regional
states, and then in assisting their return to Kosovo all
within a very short time span. We must support and strengthen the
coordination role of the UNHCR by providing on a timely basis the
necessary financial support and making certain that our bilateral
grants to humanitarian NGOs are made in coordination with UNHCR.
These NGOs are equally deserving of our thanks for stepping up to
the challenge of helping to manage this unprecedented refugee
crisis and for returning rapidly to Kosovo to support the
rebuilding effort.
The U.S. is prepared to do its fair share.
Subject to a clear assessment of the need, and confirmation that
other donors will do their part, the United States will provide up
to $500 million in cash and commodities to provide relief and
rehabilitation assistance to address the immediate, continuing
needs of Kosovars. This contribution will be used to provide
emergency shelter, winterization supplies, food aid, health care,
clean water and agricultural assistance. It will also provide for
the clearance of land mines and unexploded ordnance. These funds
will largely be channeled through international organizations and
NGOs.
We have just begun to provide some of this new
assistance, including a $40 million contribution to UNHCR's appeal
last week, as well as the introduction of a Kosovo Women's
initiative. The Women's Initiative, which UNHCR has agreed to
implement, will provide trauma counseling, judicial assistance,
and other services to women who have been victims of atrocities.
Such psycho-social assistance represents a critical need in
Kosovo, and we expect that other donors will join us in
aggressively supporting similar initiatives
I would be remiss if I did not also single out
the efforts of Kosovo's neighbors - particularly those of Albania,
Macedonia and Montenegro - for the enormous service extended to
refugees seeking shelter from brutal ethnic cleansing. This
hospitality was given, in many cases, at the cost of extreme
strain to their economies, economies already severely disrupted by
the conflict.
The international community should not overlook
the costs borne by neighboring states. For its part, the United
States is providing $150 million to help compensate for the
negative financial impact suffered by these states due to the war
and the refugee crisis. We will continue to meet the needs of any
remaining refugees as well for those communities and individuals
that have welcomed them. We should also help these neighboring
states by instituting procurement procedures as donors and through
our implementing partners that ensure timely and effective
opportunities for regional firms to compete for reconstruction
work. Our assistance should be untied for this purpose.
Assistance is needed not only to meet the needs
of the day, but also to help rebuild the social order. UNSCR 1244
calls for establishment of "substantial autonomy and
meaningful self-administration for Kosovo." To achieve the
goals of a sound market economy, democratic governance, and a just
social order, the United States encourages the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General to draw upon the full
authority at his disposal to carry out the will of international
community. It is up to all of us to cooperate for maximum
advantage in this tremendous undertaking. Many nations and
organizations are involved, and the Secretary-General has designed
a program and a structure that bring together many international
organizations to play key roles in their areas of expertise. We
strongly support this integrated approach with a clear chain of
command under the SRSG.
The U.S. commends the work of the Interim
Special Representative, Sergio Vieira de Mello, in getting this
important undertaking started and through the first difficult
weeks. We look forward to close and productive cooperation with
his successor, Bernard Kouchner, in the unprecedented challenges
that the United Nations has been asked to assume in Kosovo.
For the moment, much of the burden rests with
KFOR, which has performed magnificently under the command of
General Sir Mike Jackson. The UN is making steady progress in
deploying civil administrators, civilian police and judicial
authorities to the field. But we aren't there yet.
To get where we need to be, the international
community must offer the Special Representative our unstinting
support in a number of ways. We need to respond to the UN's appeal
for highly capable and experienced civil administrators in many
fields. No need is more critical than support for police and the
judicial systems to ensure the rule of law and the administration
of justice. Towards this end the U.S. will provide an initial sum
of $41 million. We have offered a substantial contingent of 450
civilian police officers for the UN international police. We are
making a comparably large contribution to the process of police
training and the establishment of a police training academy under
the OSCE. We commend those states that have already pledged
police, and urge others likewise to commit well qualified officers
for this task.
As donors we also need to provide interim
funding to help cover recurrent costs for essential basic services
and for civil administration. We view this as an exceptional step
to provide bridge support while the fiscal system is developed, as
it must be. It is encouraging to hear that already the UN, with
the help of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, has
drawn up a provisional budget and a plan to partially fund that
budget through the early establishment of a customs administration
to collect customs and excise taxes. The U.S. will make an initial
contribution of $4 million for the purpose of interim funding.
Terrible crimes have been and continue to be
committed in Kosovo. Support for the establishment of a
functioning police and judicial system is necessary to ensure that
such crimes do not go unpunished. Senior officers and officials
responsible for ordering and implementing the war crimes and
crimes against humanity need to be dealt with by the International
Criminal Tribunal. To meet these urgent needs, the U.S. is
providing over $20 million for war crimes related assistance so
that individuals at all levels responsible for these acts face
justice. We call upon other donors to step forward as well, to
deter a repeat of such gross human rights violations.
In closing, let me just say that the
international community has unquestionably done the right thing in
using measured force to put an end to brutal ethnic cleansing in
Kosovo. And we are doing the right thing by cementing that peace
in yet another area of the Balkans struck by senseless
nationalism. The international community must summon the resources
and energy to stay engaged in this part of the world until all its
people enjoy the peace, prosperity and freedom which most of us in
this room take for granted. This Conference, and the meeting of
dozens of heads of state two days hence in Sarajevo, are tangible
evidence of the international resolve to do just that.