Slovenia reports tense -Croatia.

Slovenian diplomacy chief Karl Erjavec said the ministry he heads has prepared everything necessary for the indictment against Croatia. Croatia, as he said, is not respecting the arbitrage decision on the European border and rights, for which the government will soon announce the European Commission. Erjavec explained that in [...]
Croatia, as he said, is not respecting the arbitrage decision on the European border and rights, for which the government will soon announce the European Commission.
Erjavec explained that in preparing the letter to the European Commission, with legal elements of the indictment against Croatia for disrespecting the arbitrage decision, his ministry collaborated with a French legal firm and with lawyer Alain Pele, who previously represented Slovenia in the arbitrage process.
The Arbitrazhi Court for the Croatian and Slovenian border dispute has issued a ruling in late June, and Croatia is particularly concerned about determining at sea.
The court ruled that three-quarters of the Pirana Bay belong to Slovenia, and that Slovenia through Croatian territorial waters wins access to the open sea through a two-and-a-half-mile nautical corridor.
The court also ruled that the border in Istria follows the Dragon River and ends in the middle of the Sv Canal. Odorika, which means Shkodel, Buzini and Melini-Scrile remain in Croatia.
Nor does Sveti Gera remain in Croatia, where there is the opposing military object of the former Yugoslav People's Army, which left in 1991, and was then taken by the Slovenian Army.
Croatia, unlike Slovenia, does not accept the decision because with the decision of the Parliament, it withdrew from arbitration in 2015, after it was found that Slovenian representative at the Court of Arbitrazhi Jerney Skolec and Slovenian Foreign Affairs Ministry Simona Drenik agreed to presenting Slovenian arguments and lobbiling with other arbitration judges.
Croatia believes the arbitration process has been irreversibly compromised and seeks bilateral resolution of the dispute, while Slovenia urges Croatia to respect the arbitrage court's decision.












