Last modified: 2023-06-03 by zachary harden
Keywords: international organization | sava | international sava river basin commission | european river commissions |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
image by Željko Heimer, 21 December 2013
See also:
Since the break-up of Yugoslavia, the Sava river, which was the largest
national river in Yugoslavia, became an international river, passing though
Slovenia, Croatia, B&H and Serbia (at the time of still the FRY). To regulate
the international navigation and to ensure the protection of the environment,
the International Sava River Basin Commission (ISRBC) was established in 2003.
Since 2005 the seat of this international organization is in Zagreb, following
the agreement between Croatia and the organization, thus getting diplomatic
status usual for such subject of international law. The organization is based on
following the similar organization on Danube, and taking into account of its
heritage (since the DC "responsibility" is on the whole Danube basin, so also
includes Sava).
Although the cachement of Sava river and thus the river basin reaches partially
into Montenegro and with small area in Albania in the south and also very
minorly in Austria in the north, these parts are not navigable and thus
apparently not members of the organization.
It seems that Serbia only inherited the agreement rights and obligations from
FRY, and not Montenegro.
According to the Framework Agreementon the Sava River Basin, the basic
document of the organization
http://www.savacommission.org/dms/docs/dokumenti/documents_publications/basic_documents/fasrb.pdf
the Commission is established by the Article 15 of the document, fully named
International Sava River Basin Commission, and with the short name Sava
Commission.
The Article 8 of the Statute of ISRBC which is Annex I of the Framework
agreement, the official languages of its bodies are determined to be "the
official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian),
Croatian, Serbian and Slovenian" while "The Sava Commission may use other
languages if necessary."
The Framework Agreement in the official languages may also be found on the web
site, where the names are stated so:
Slovenian: Mednarodna komisija za Savski bazen (Savska komisija)
Croatian: Meðunarodna komisija za sliv rijeke Save (Savska komisija)
B&H (Bosnian): Meðunarodna komisija za sliv rijeke Save (Savska komisija)
B&H (Serbian): Међународна комисија за слив ријеке Саве (Савска комисија)
B&H (Croatian): Meðunarodna komisija za sliv rijeke Save (Savska komisija)
Serbian: Међународна комисија за слив реке Саве (Савска комисија)
Željko Heimer, 13 January 2010
The emblem of the organization is a wavy line crossing four squares along its
path, two behind and two infront of it
I was unable of finding any mention or reference to flag of the organization on
its web site at
http://www.savacommission.org/
Željko Heimer, 13 January 2010
I thought I had seen this elsewhere - see this document (2005 Rules of Procedure): http://archive.rec.org/REC/Programs/sava/pdf/rules_of_procedure.pdf
Article 12
Flag, Seal, Emblem and Logo
1) The Sava Commission shall have its flag, seal, emblem and logo.
2) The Sava Commission shall adopt a decision on design and use of its flag, seal, emblem and logo.
Jan Mertens, 13 January 2010
Somehow I missed this (trusting the search engine on the site, instead of
using google...). The document, amended somewhat, but not in this issue here:
http://www.savacommission.org/dms/docs/dokumenti/documents_publications/basic_documents/rules_of_procedure_amended_on_08-04-2008_consolidated_text.pdf
The ROP is available on line in all the official languages (except I haven't
found the Slovenian one), where in each language the flag is translated, of
course, as "zastava" (Serbian using Cyrillic script). This is not unusual at all,
but just for the record.
Željko Heimer, 14 January 2010
Now I found some visual proof of its flag.
Image of flag (bottom of page 4
in PDF), and desk flag version.
Zoltan Horvath, 20 December 2013
I believe (but the photos really do not show it clearly) that the text is the
commission name, probably English under the logo and Croatian above (since the
seat of the Commission is in Zagreb). However, for the big flag in the PDF you
sent link of, I am not quite sure if it really does include the inscriptions -
maybe it is just the logo without text...
Željko Heimer, 21 December 2013