S/PV.2966 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
6
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
General statements and positions
Security Council deliberations
Diplomatic expressions and remarks
Arab political groupings
General debate rhetoric
UN membership and Cold War
I thank the representative
of Colombia for the kind words he addressed to me.
Mr, ALARCON de OQUESADA (Cuba) (interpretation from Spanish}: Although we
are in the midst of an apparently procedural discussion, I should like to discharge
the very pleasant duty of congratulating you, Sir, on your assumption of the
presidency of the Council for the month of December and of stating that we are sure
that under your leadership the Council will be able to act in keeping with the
goals and standards that should guide it.
I should also like to express our gratitude to Ambassador Pickering for the
way in which he conducted the Council's work last month,
I wish first to thank the represencative of the Soviet Union for having
brought to the Council's attention the existence of its provisional rules of
procedure. We all recall that for one month several members of the Council
attempted - in vain - to remind everyone that this document existed and that
the presidency of the Council should act in accordance with it. At one point we
even felt guilty that we had dared to refer to the document, which in these new
times would appear to have a somewhat subversive character. Therefore, we find it
a very healthy sign that the Security Council is now openly availing itself of the
norms and mechanisms that must be the sole guidance for its action - rather than
capriciousness or arbitrariness.
Having said that, I wish to point out that the proposal made by the
representative of the Soviet Union appears to be legitimate, for any member of the
Council has the right to put forward any motion in accordance with the established
rules. It is the same right that we four countries had when two weeks ago we asked
the President to convene a meeting - which indeed has not yet been convened - to
consider the draft resolution that is before us.
In any event, when the records of the Council are prepared, some minor
adjustments may have to be made in them. I think that when the motion was made we
had just adopted the agenda and, therefore, had just dealt with the first item -
Adoption of the agenda. Mr. President, I did not hear you state that we were about
to take up the second item - The situation in the occupied Arab territories.
Undoubtedly, had you done so - as will be seen from the notes prepared by the
Secretariat - you would have referred to the documentation that the Council has
before it; and you would have reminded us of previous decisions taken by the
Council to invite the representative of Palestine to take a place at the Council
table and various other representatives who are seated here to do what they usually
do at these meetings and have not had an opportunity to do now - that is, take a
place at the side of the Council Chamber.
That clarification having been made, my delegation agrees with what has been
said by the representatives of Malaysia and Colombia. Indeed, one need only glance
quickly at the text of the draft resolution to see that it is the result of a
lengthy process of consultations and negotiations. It would have the Council do
something in connection with what was openly stated a little more than two months
ago in this very Chamber - namely, take action promptly on the Secretary-General's
report.
The Council has not been excessively slow in taking rather dramatic decisions,
or decisions that could have very serious consequences for mankind. But with
regard to this issue it has worked at a leisurely pace that is in obvious contrast
to that other approach, so often praised in this Chamber.
I think it would be quite inaccurate to attempt in this meeting to give anyone
the idea that there had not in fact been an intensive process of consultations and
that a flexible stand had not been taken by the sponsors of the draft resolution.
The history of this document, its various wordings and the points of view expressed
by other delegations make it clear that such an attempt would be inaccurate. My
delegation feels that the Council should have acted some time ago. If we are here
on this Saturday, it is precisely because of our flexibility and our desire to meet
the wishes of other delegations.
My delegation will vote against the motion that has been made because, quite
frankly, we fear that at 3 p.m. on Monday we shall come face to face with a
situation that will be quite similar to the one we witnessed in our efforts
throughout November as well as this week - namely, resistance to having this body
discharge its duty vis-a-vis the Palestinian people in terms that are far from
excessive, indeed that are, if anything, too generous when compared to the problem
involved and that are not at all like the strong language and tone of other
resolutions of this very Council on the same subject.
But perhaps we shall have an opportunity to say more about this at some future
date - perhaps on Monday, if the Council adopts the motion put forward, or else
during this very complicated process of informal consultations which some would
wish to use in order to bury key issues that the Council should, on the contrary,
air in public.
I thank the representative
of Cuba for the kind words he addressed to me.
support the motion put forward by the representative of the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics. I am doing so because I regard this motion as not a motion
for delay but a motion for taking action. The purpose of setting a time for a
Council meeting on Monday is to allow the process of negotiation, which is under
way within the Council and which was broken off this afternoon, to continue and
come to a satisfactory conclusion.
It is on that basis that my delegation supports it, and I hope very much that
all members of the Council will co-operate in ensuring that we do not arrive, as
the representative of Cuba said we might, in the same state on Monday as we are
now. Frankly, any delegation which takes the responsibility for ensuring that we
arrive in the same state as we have now bears a heavy responsibility. My
delegation will wish to use the period between now and then to negotiate on a text
we can all support.
Mr. BAGBENT ADEITO NZENGEYA (Zaire) (interpretation from French):
Mr. President, although this is a procedural discussion, perhaps you will allow me,
Sir, to congratulate you on your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for the month of December. Aware of your talents, your diplomatic skills
and your knowledge of the United Nations system, and given that you have already
presided over the Council, we are quite sure that you will very ably discharge your
tasks and that the Council will reap the fruits of your experience.
I should also like to extend my thanks and appreciation to Ambassador
Thomas Pickering for the outstanding manner in which he presided over the work of
the Council in the month of November. I think that the ministerial debate we held
in the Council, which enabled us to take a historic decision on the invasion of
Kuwait, testifies to the competence and the determination with which he guided our
work during the month of November.
We are engaged in a discussion, although rule 33 of the provisional rules of
procedure states quite clearly that when a procedural motion is made the matter
will be decided without debate. Rule 33 is quite precise on this and perhaps I
might even read it out:
"The following motions shall have precedence in the order named over all
principal motions and draft resolutions relative to the subject before the
meeting",
and then, at the end, it says:
“Any motion for the suspension or for the simple adjournment of the
meeting shall be decided without debate".
Accordingly, my delegation expected that the proposal made by the
representative of the USSR would immediately be put to the vote. We are a little
surprised that a discussion is now being heid on this question.
Having said that, and since other delegations have had an opportunity to state
their views, I too would like to state that my delegation supports the proposal
made by the representative of the USSR that the meeting be deferred until Monday,
sO as to enable the continuation of the consultations which have begun -
consultations which have already enabled the parties involved to arrive at certain
compromises on certain points and in which some agreements have been arrived at.
Therefore, to the extent that such compromises may enable the Council to take a
decision in a spirit of unanimity, I believe that this is an opportunity being
given the Council to enable the parties involved to continue their consultations.
Since the day is Saturday and the meeting would not be held until Monday at 3 p.m.,
as proposed by the representative of the USSR, it would allow time for the various
parties to continue their consultations. Accordingly, my delegation supports the
proposal made by the representative of the USSR.
I thank the representative
of Zaire for the kind words he addressed to me.
Before calling on the next speaker on the list, I should like to explain that,
from the standpoint of procedure, we are speaking here of rule 33, point 3, which
reads as follows: "To adjourn the meeting to a certain day or hour". That is why
we can have a debate under this point 3. There could have been no discussion if a
motion had been made to suspend the meeting or adjourn it for an hour or two. This
is only to clarify the matter.
Mr. KIRSCH (Canada) (interpretation from French): Allow me on behalf of
my delegation to congratulate you, Sir, on your assumption of the presidency for
this month. Considering your personal qualities and experience, we are convinced,
as we have already seen, that the Council cannot but benefit from your guidance in
carrying out its work.
I should also like to congratulate Ambassador Pickering for the excellent
manner in which he presided over the Council last month.
My delegation is of the view that the Council would be seriously mistaken were
it to take a decision today on a draft resolution on which it is clear that
additional consultations are needed before a decision is taken by this Council in a
satisfactory manner. We believe that it is important to continue the negotiations
which have begun and to continue them in a constructive spirit without prejudging
their outcome.
We shall therefore support the motion presented by the representative of the
Soviet Union.
I thank the representative
of Canada for the kind words he addressed to me.
Are there any other speakers?
Since that is net the case, I shall now put to the vote the proposal to
adjourn the meeting until Monday at 3 p.m.
A_ vote was taken by show of hands.
in favour: Canada, Cote d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Finland, Romania, Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics, United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland, United States of America, Zaire
Against: Colombia, Cuba, Malaysia, Yemen
Abstaining: China, France
The result of the voting is
as follows: 9 votes in favour, 4 against and 2 abstentions. The proposal by the
USSR has been adopted.
Accordingly, the next meeting of the Security Council will be held on Monday
at 3 p.m.
Before adjourning the meeting I wish to make a short statement on behalf of my
delegation. We hope that the postponement that has been decided upon by the
Council will help the Council to reach agreement on the draft resolution by
unanimity, since the issue under consideration is extremely grave and important.
While the Council has been busy over the last four months with the Gulf crisis, it
has before it now this other crisis of which it has been seized for over 40 years.
Therefore, we Lope that the negotiations will lead to a consensus. I believe that
at this juncture, I have to explain, so that it will be clear to all, why my
delegation voted, in addition to the other members, against the proposal to
postpone the meeting.
Certain events took place on 8 October this year in Al-Quds which claimed the
lives of 20 Palestinians. The Secretary-General then presented his report on
31 October. On 8 November we had the first version of the draft resolution whose
last version we have before us now; on 26 November the first amended version was
put forward, and today the Council has before it the second amended version. The
Council will notice that there is a great difference between the final version and
the first one as a result of the spirit of co-operation and concession displayed by
the sponsors of the draft resolution.
We should not confuse this issue with any other issue under consideration. My
delegation has made clear right from the start that we cannot limit our
consideration to the single issue of the protection and safety of the Palestinians,
because if we go down that road we shall have made the occupation a permanent
fact, To undo part of the injustice done to the Palestinians by protecting them is
only a first step and a temporary measure towards resolving the Palestinian problem
and the Arab-Israeli conflict. Therefore, my delegation insisted in particular on
mentioning Security Council resolutions 242 (1967) and 338 (1973) in all the drafts
that have been put forward. My delegation also made a point of persistently
mentioning the occupation and the entire crisis in all its aspects.
We have no wish to link the one crisis, in the Gulf to the other, in the
Middle East. I want to stress that. What we want to do, however, is to link the
issue of protection to the issue of occupation, We do not accept the separation of
the issue of protection from the issue of occupation, because to freeze the issue
of occupation would only mean, as I said before, the entrenchment of the present
situation for many years to come. Furthermore, there is another linkage we wish to
make. We want to link Israel to the Security Council. The question that begs an
answer is: why is it that this State, of all the States of the world, is the one
that never acquiesces in, agrees to or complies with Security Council resolutions?
It did not even accept to receive one delegation from the Security Council.
In view of these considerations, we call upon - and demand of - the big
Powers, especially the United States of America and the Soviet Union, to work
towards a solution to this problem without considering any other problems.
In all modesty, we wish to state the following: we deal with two issues as
parallel issues and not as interlinked issues. We have to seek te achieve a
parallel solution. To speak of linkage in order to avoid addressing a chronic
problem, is indeed tantamount to freezing that chronic problem, and this is
unacceptable to us.
I now resume my functions as President,
Mr, ALARCON DE QUESADA (Cuba) (interpretation from Spanish): iI just want
to state for the record that the Council has decided to meet again on Monday at
3 p.m. Eastern Standard Time to consider what it had before it for consideration
today - that is, the draft resolution submitted by four States in connection with
the occupied territories. If, later on, someone wishes to create complications
regarding this text, it will have to be done here, publicly. My delegation cannot
accept the invention of new informal machinery, in an attempt to avoid what the
Council has just decided upon publicly and openly. We are all called upon-to meet
in this Chamber on Monday at 3 p.m.
Mr. TADESSE (Ethiopia): At the outset I should like to congratulate you,
Mr. President, on your assumption of your important office for this month. Given
your very wide diplomatic experience and skill in dealing with many of the issues
under consideration we are convinced that the work of the Council will be
successful.
I should also like to express the appreciation of my delegation to
Ambassador Pickering of the United States for the remarkable manner in which he
handled the work of the Council last month.
For the record I should like to state that my delegation views the proposal
initiated by the representative of the USSR, upon which we have just voted as only
a procedural motion. We have adopted it without prejudice to the outcome of the
negotiations and ‘the fate of any of the paragraphs and their content. It is the
conviction of my delegation that we can take this as an expression of added effort
to arrive at a unified position and to obtain much broader support for the text
under consideration. We believe this will further assist us in addressing not just
the short-term concerns but the ultimate interests of the Palestinian people.
Therefore, my delegation differs with any suggestion or implication that the vote
on adjournment reflects on the substance of the text and the positions of
delegations on the concerns it addresses.
I thank the representative
of Ethiopia for his kind words addressed to me.
Mr. PICKERING (United States of America): Mr. President, I understand
that we have decided to adjourn, and I should like to make two non-substantive
points, if I may, very briefly.
First, in the heat of the moment, and perhaps to avoid in any way at all
prejudicing your vote on the question, I failed to congratulate you, Sir, on your
assumption of the presidency, which I do now, whole-heartedly -~ the more so to make
up for my oversight.
Secondly, I understood that in our informal meeting we agreed that we would
hold another informal meeting following this formal meeting. Since I did not hear
you say that, I wonder if that is indeed the proposal.
Zhe PRESIDENT (interpretation from Arabic): I thank the representative
of the United States for the kind words he addressed to me.
I intended to say before we adjourned that we would meet again this evening in
the other room for informal consultations, as requested by the United Kingdom.
The meeting rose at 9.50 p.m.
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UN Project. “S/PV.2966.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/meeting/S-PV-2966/. Accessed .