S/PV.3499Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
42
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Peace processes and negotiations
Security Council deliberations
Southern Africa and apartheid
Diplomatic expressions and remarks
Peacekeeping support and operations
Global economic relations
Africa
The President: The next speaker is the representative
of Zimbabwe. I invite him to take a place at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mumbengegwi (Zimbabwe): We warmly
welcome you, Mr. Minister, and congratulate you on your
assumption of the presidency of the Security Council during
these very important deliberations. Although this is only
Botswana's second month on the Council, your
Ambassador's celebrated successes in peace-keeping,
peacemaking, mediation and reconciliation in Namibia and
South Africa, and his vast experience in the field of
diplomacy, give us all immense confidence that the Council
is destined for a very productive month. In the same vein,
allow me to pay tribute to your predecessor, Ambassador
Emilio Cardenas of Argentina, for his particularly able and
diligent stewardship of the Council during the month of
January.
Allow me also to extend a warm welcome to the
Foreign Ministers of States members of the Organization of
African Unity (OAU) and to the Secretary-General of that
organization. Their presence here clearly demonstrates and
underlines Africa's ardent desire for the speedy resolution
of the conflict in Angola. Their presence, participation and
wise contributions to these deliberations constitute a most
important and significant boost to the peace process.
The Secretary-General, Mr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali,
must be congratulated for his tireless efforts to resolve
conflicts around the world. In that connection, he has
placed before the Council a clear and insightful report on
Angola with precise and constructive recommendations.
There can be no doubt that the signing of the Lusaka
Protocol on 20 November 1994 was a major step towards
the establishment of peace and stability in Angola. In this
respect, the Secretary-General is correct in his assessment
that the Lusaka Protocol was a clear manifestation of the
earnest desire of the people of Angola to resolve their
differences by political means. Let us pay tribute to
President Frederick Chiluba and to the Government and the
people of Zambia for successfully hosting the delicate
negotiations and for facilitating the peace process. At the
centre of this delicate process was the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General, Mr. Alioune
Blondin Beye, who deserves our special appreciation for the
great skill and admirable patience with which he conducted
the slow, arduous and difficult negotiations.
There can be no doubt that the success of the peace
process in Angola ultimately depends on the people of
Angola themselves. The important statement made by the
Foreign Minister of Angola before the Council this
morning bore eloquent testimony to this. However,
assistance from the international community is essential.
The report of the Secretary-General before the Council
states that the cease-fire that came into force in
November 1994 has been holding. The parties to the
conflict have thereby demonstrated their firm commitment
to peace. In so doing, they have satisfied the requirements
set by previous Security Council resolutions. The time has
now come for the Security Council to honour its
commitments and immediately deploy the required force,
in full, to oversee and verify the implementation of the
agreements reached by the parties.
In his report the Secretary-General is very clear as
to what needs to be done. He observes that both the
Government of Angola and UNITA are respecting the
cease-fire, have shown commitment to ensuring the safety
and security of United Nations personnel and have
committed themselves to the Lusaka Protocol and national
reconciliation. In the light of these observations, the
Secretary-General, in paragraph 60 of his report,
recommends that a new United Nations operation in
Angola, the third United Nations Angola Verification
Mission (UNAVEM. III) immediately take over from
UNAVEM. II, that it have the mandate and strength
described in the report and that it be initially established
for a period of 12 months.
The message from the Secretary-General is loud and
clear. The parties have shown their commitment to peace.
It would be a serious mistake to continue to test their
patience any further. The Security Council should
therefore deploy UNAVEM. III without undue delay.
We take heart at indications in the Secretary-
General's report that the request for troops for UNAVEM
III is fully subscribed. This is both an auspicious
development and a clear vote of confidence in the
Angolan peace process. The Security Council should
therefore seize the moment and avoid mistakes of the past
which could well derail the delicate peace process.
The President: I thank the representative of
Zimbabwe for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Senegal. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Cisse (Senegal) (interpretation from French): I
must first offer my regrets for not arriving in the Chamber
earlier. I was in consultation along with the other members
of the African delegation.
I should like to take this opportunity to congratulate
Mr. Legwaila on his assumption of the presidency of the
Security Council and to thank him for his efforts in
conducting the Council's affairs this month.
Allow me also to express my delegation's appreciation
to His Excellency Mr. Emilio Cardenas, Ambassador and
Permanent Representative of Argentina, for the talent and
devotion he displayed in presiding over the Council's work
in the month of January.
The international community welcomed the signing of
the Lusaka Protocol, on 20 November 1994, by the
Angolan Government and UNITA. That agreement, which
was the culmination of a long and complicated negotiating
process, was a crucial turning point in the fratricidal
conflict that has ravaged Angola for so long.
I wish to pay tribute to the efforts made throughout
this process by the Secretary-General's Special
Representative, His Excellency Maitre Alioune Blondin
Beye, by the three observer States - the United States of
America, Portugal and the Russian Federation - and by
the countries of the region, particularly Zambia and its
leaders, that made an invaluable contribution to the
successful outcome of the Lusaka talks. It is now up to the
Angolan leaders to break with the past and resolutely set
out on the road to peace, national reconciliation and the
construction of a better future for all the sons and daughters
of Angola.
In this regard, the statement made this morning before
the Council by His Excellency Mr. Venancio de Moura,
Minister of External Relations of Angola, shed some light
on the situation prevailing in his country since the
establishment of the cease-fire and gives us grounds for
optimism. By the same token, the Secretary-General, in his
report of 1 February 1995, notes encouraging and revealing
signs of the parties' will to respect the cease-fire and carry
the Lusaka peace process to a successful conclusion.
It has always been our view that frank and sincere
dialogue - based on respect for commitments entered into
in the framework of the Bicesse Accords, for the choice
made by the Angolan electorate in the September 1992
elections and for the recent Lusaka Protocol - is the best
way to guarantee the establishment of the peace to which
the Angolan people so deeply aspire. The example of
Mozambique is proof that, with a genuine desire to forge
ahead, there is no obstacle to peace and national
reconciliation that cannot be surmounted.
Taking advantage of the impetus created by the
signing of the Lusaka Protocol, the Council of Ministers
of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), meeting in
Addis Ababa from 23 to 27 January 1995, decided to
send a ministerial delegation to attend this meeting of the
Security Council and reaffirm full support of the Council
of Ministers for the peace process in Angola, based on
the "Acordos de Paz", the relevant resolutions of the
Security Council and the results of the first multi-party
elections.
On behalf of His Excellency Mr. Moustapha Niasse,
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Senegal - whom I have
the honour to represent in the OAU delegation - I
should like to associate myself with the statement made
by His Excellency Mr. E. C. I. Bwanali, the Minister of
External Affairs of Malawi, as chairman of the OAU
delegation.
We believe that deploying the third phase of the
United Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM III), as provided for in the draft resolution now before the
Council, will contribute to helping the parties re-establish
peace and achieve national reconciliation in Angola. None
the less, the will and renewed commitment of the
international community will not in themselves be enough
to restore peace in Angola. It is essential that the Angolan
leaders demonstrate their unwavering desire to settle the
conflict and restore peace in their country by peaceful
means.
Alongside the efforts at the political and military
levels, it is just as urgent for the necessary conditions to
be created for launching the new United Nations
humanitarian programme, which must be put into effect
if peace in that country is to be consolidated.
Allow me to take this opportunity to appeal to the
international community to contribute generously to the
inter-agency programme for Angola that has been set up
by the Secretariat's Department of Humanitarian Affairs.
For its part, my country will spare no effort to
continue participating in the restoration of civil peace and
national harmony in Angola.
In conclusion, I should like to pay a well-deserved
tribute to the courageous and dedicated United Nations
personnel, particularly those in the Unit for Coordination of
Humanitarian Assistance, who risk their lives every day in
the course of the tremendous efforts they make to carry out
their mission.
The President: I thank the representative of Senegal
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of the United
Republic of Tanzania. I invite him to take a place at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mwakawago (United Republic of Tanzania): I
am most grateful for the opportunity to address the Security
Council. Let me begin, Sir, by extending to your country
my delegation's sincere congratulations on Botswana's
assumption this month of the presidency of a Council that
is about to take a very important decision on the situation
in Angola. Tanzania is confident that under your and your
Ambassador's able leadership the Council will succeed in
discharging its onerous responsibilities for international
peace and security. I should also like to extend our
appreciation to your Ambassador's predecessor, Ambassador
Emilio Cardenas of Argentina, for the fine work he did
during January.
For more than 30 years, peace has eluded the people
of Angola. The devastating impact of the war on the
people's lives and on the country's economic and social
infrastructure has been immense, claiming the highest
casualty rate of any conflict in the world - 1,000 deaths
daily. As a result, hundreds of thousands have perished,
thousands have been crippled for life, and nearly
3.5 million people have been displaced, made refugees or
orphaned. At the same time, most of Angola's useful land
has been turned into a wide expanse of dangerous
minefields.
It is against this backdrop that the international
community has always applauded any move, especially
since the Bicesse Accords, that appeared to promise the
people of Angola some respite and an opportunity for
peace. Therefore, the signing of the Lusaka Protocol on
20 November 1994 must rightly be seen as the culmination
of the arduous and protracted efforts of the international
community in support of the negotiating process aimed at
bringing about a lasting peace in Angola.
The Security Council meets today to follow up on the
progress made since the adoption of Security Council
resolution 966 (1994) of last December, two months ago
today. Fortunately, unlike in the past, the current report of
the Secretary-General (S/1995/97 and Add.1) bears good
tidings on Angola. This is a refreshing departure from the
all-too-familiar gloomy political and military picture
painted of the Angolan situation. Even with a measure of
guarded optimism, it is the view of the Secretary-
General that there is - and I quote -
"improved cooperation on the ground with troops of
the Government of Angola and the Uniao Nacional
para la Independencia Total de Angola (UNITA)".
(S/1995/97, para. 3)
The Secretary-General's observations were
reaffirmed today by Mr. Venancio de Moura, External
Relations Minister of Angola, when he made his
important statement in this Chamber. It is clear that the
people of Angola are tired of war and very much want to
give the Lusaka Protocol a chance so that they can at last
live in peace and engage in national reconciliation and the
reconstruction of their rich country.
In this connection, Tanzania commends most warmly
the Government of Angola for persistently seeking to
negotiate in good faith and for offering to contribute in
kind towards an expanded United Nations presence in
Angola. Indeed, we have come this far in the Angolan
peace process largely because Luanda has been very
accommodating. We equally welcome on board UNITA
forces which, like the Government, have indicated their
commitment to full respect for and implementation of the
Lusaka Protocol, the Bicesse Accords and the relevant
resolutions of the Security Council. We hope that there
will be no backtracking along this path.
The very presence in our midst of the Organization
of African Unity (OAU) ministerial delegation is a firm
demonstration of Africa's solidarity with the people of
Angola and of its desire to contribute to the peace
process. This is also an opportune moment to reaffirm
that the climate in Angola is inexorably headed towards
a lasting settlement and that Africa looks forward to
peace at last in southern Africa. The examples of South
Africa and, more recently, Mozambique should augur well
not only for Angola but also for all theatres of conflict in
the continent.
Tanzania could not agree more with the positive
thrust of the Secretary-Generals report, and particularly
with the last chapter, which describes the signing of the
Lusaka Protocol as
"a critical turning point in the Angolan peace
process." (5/1995/97, para. 54)
The Angolan parties on the ground are doing their utmost
to ensure that the cease-fire holds. The Heads of the
Angolan armed forces and the UNITA forces have since the
cease-fire regularized their contacts and are pledged to
cooperating with and assisting the third United Nations
Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. III). The long-
awaited meeting between President Eduardo dos Santos and
Jonas Savimbi should also go a long way towards assuring
the international community of the entire Angolan people's
resolve to pursue the peace process.
N ow that it is clear that everything is almost in place
in Angola - as is so eloquently stated in the Secretary-
General's report - the international community owes it to
itself and to the long-suffering people of Angola to
immediately take prompt and effective action to consolidate
the process. In this connection, my delegation would like to
express the hope that the Council will endorse the
recommendation of the Secretary-General that a new United
Nations operation in Angola - UNAVEM. III - should
take over from UNAVEM. II without any further delay and
with the commensurate mandate and strength, as well as the
necessary resources.
Allow me to conclude with a word of appreciation to
the Secretary-General, Mr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, and to
his indefatigable Special Representative, Mr. Alioune
Blondin Beye, for their perseverance in efforts to find a
workable solution to the long-standing question of Angola.
It is my delegation's hope that their efforts, along with
those of the entire United Nations system, will not diminish
as the international community mobilizes support for
UNAVEM. III, with its heavy political, military and
humanitarian responsibilities. The role of Zambia and the
observer States - Portugal, the Russian Federation and the
United States of America - in facilitating the Lusaka talks
also deserve our unalloyed commendation.
The President: I thank the representative of the
United Republic of Tanzania for his statement and for his
kind words addressed to the presidency of the Council.
The next speaker is the representative of Guinea-
Bissau. I invite him to take a place at the Council table and
to make his statement.
Mr. Toure (Guinea-Bissau) (interpretation from French): On behalf of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of
Guinea-Bissau, who was to be part of the ministerial
delegation of the Organization of African Unity (OAU)
but has been unable to attend this meeting, and on behalf
of the delegation of Guinea-Bissau, I should like to
express my warmest and most heartfelt congratulations to
Botswana on its assumption of the presidency of the
Security Council of the United Nations. We are familiar
with your Ambassador's talents as a negotiator and his
experience of international problems, as well as his
profound commitment to everything related to the
equilibrium of societies and to peace. We are therefore
convinced that, under his auspices, our work will be
crowned with success.
We express our deep gratitude to and admiration of
your predecessor for the work accomplished under his
presidency.
We also congratulate the Secretary-General, Mr.
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, on his exhaustive and clear report
on Angola and the deployment of the third United
Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. III). He
can count on our support.
Praise is also due to the members of the Security
Council for their resolute action to find solutions to
critical world problems which disturb us deeply, and for
the excellent initiatives they have taken to assure the
success of the work on Angola under way in the Security
Council.
The tragedy being played out in Angola has been
described at length in the Council Chamber in all its
political, economic and social dimensions. The countries
of Africa, rightly fearing the disastrous effects of this
tragedy on their already weakened economies, deem it
wise to make every effort to avoid further risks and to
bring an end to this tragedy, which has lasted too long.
Despite their efforts and sacrifice, the past years
have been a lost period for the development of their
country. The socio-economic situation has been
completely undermined by the effects of war and
especially by the continued fratricidal battles, which drain
financial resources and thereby stifle the economy and
destroy many human lives.
That is why the African countries, at their most
recent ministerial meeting, clearly expressed their
unfailing solidarity with the people of Angola in their just
struggle to safeguard their national independence and
territorial integrity, while supporting the achievements of
the Bicesse and Lusaka agreements. That meeting was
also an opportunity for the Ministers to reiterate their full
support for respect for the most fundamental rights of all
human beings and to promote the advent of an era of
democracy and reconciliation in Angola. All the States of
Africa pledged to make their contribution to the peace
process under way and to the strict implementation of the
agreements concluded for a lasting peace, which is the
reason for the welcome presence here of a ministerial
delegation composed of eminent sons of our continent.
The Republic of Guinea-Bissau welcomes the
measures taken by the Angolan Government and the
competent institutions of that country to achieve national
reconciliation, by, inter alia, the promulgation of a law of
amnesty for offences committed in the framework of the
post-electoral crisis and by agreeing to contribute
effectively to the success of the deployment of UNAVEM
III and provide the necessary assistance. We also commend
and encourage the Government of Angola and UNITA to
pursue their efforts to honour the commitments made in the
framework of the Lusaka Protocol. We are gratified by the
efforts made by the Secretary-General's Special
Representative, Mr. Blondin Beye, and by the three States
observers to the peace process in Angola, as well as by
certain neighbouring States, particularly Zambia, that
contributed to the success of the Lusaka peace talks.
As members of the Council are aware, the people of
Angola and of Guinea-Bissau have longstanding bonds of
history, culture and fraternal struggle. That is why my
Government and the people of Guinea-Bissau fully support
the peace process in that brotherly country.
Guinea-Bissau endorses the important resolutions of
the Security Council and the results of the multi-party
elections supervised by the international community, which
we consider to have been free and fair. My Government
firmly supports UNAVEM. III and is ready to provide,
within its means, whatever contingent may be requested of
it in order for that Mission successfully to fulfil its
mandate.
For the tireless and commendable efforts which it
unceasingly makes in the search for viable solutions to the
many conflicts in Africa, and especially the conflict in
Angola, the Organization of African Unity deserves our
gratitude, particularly for its initiatives to promote national
reconciliation and the establishment of peace in Angola.
Since its founding, it has constantly been the political
framework in which the historic commitment to the
maintenance of peace and the liberation of all Africa has
been affirmed. The Government and the people of Guinea-
Bissau are, and will remain, loyal to the philosophy of
their immortal leader, Amr'lcar Cabral, for a free,
independent, sovereign and peaceful Africa.
The President: I thank the representative of Guinea-
Bissau for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of
Mozambique. I invite him to take a place at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Afonso (Mozambique): At the outset, I wish to
extend to you, Sir, our warmest congratulations on your
assumption of the presidency of the Security Council for
the month of February. We are delighted to see you, Mr.
Minister, presiding over our deliberations. We have no
doubt that your country's presidency assures the
successful outcome of the Security Council's work this
month. Let me pledge my delegation's determination to
work closely with you in the discharge of your duties.
I should also like to pay special tribute to your
predecessor, Ambassador Emilio Cardenas of Argentina,
for the brilliant manner in which he presided over the
Council's business last month. I reiterate my
Government's deep gratitude for his leadership in the
convening of the highly successful meeting on the
situation in Mozambique in January.
I wish to seize this opportunity to express once again
our appreciation to the Secretary-General, His Excellency
Mr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, not only for his competent
leadership of the Organization, but also for his untiring
efforts and his dedication to the cause of international
peace and security. The Government and the people of
Mozambique, of course, remain indebted to him for the
constructive role he played in the successful completion
of the mission of the United Nations Operation in
Mozambique (ONUMOZ).
The Council is meeting once again to discharge its
responsibilities at an extraordinary time in the history of
the people of Angola, a time when peace and stability are
within their grasp. My delegation has carefully examined
both the report of the Secretary-General on the United
Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM) and the
draft resolution before the Council. We also listened with
keen attention and interest to the statements made today
by His Excellency Mr. Venancio de Moura, Minister for
External Affairs of Angola, and by His Excellency
Mr. E.C.I. Bwanali, Minister for External Affairs of
Malawi and Head of the ministerial delegation of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) to this meeting. We
thank the Ministers for giving us a vivid picture of the
situation prevailing in the sister country of Angola. Their
statements underscore the urgency and determination with
which the international community at large and the Council
in particular must address the issue before the Council
today: the establishment, as a matter of high priority, of a
peace-keeping operation for Angola.
In that regard, my delegation particularly wishes to
welcome and support the proposal made by the Secretary-
General in his report to the effect that
"a new United Nations operation in Angola,
UNAVEM. III, immediately take over from UNAVEM
II". (S/1995/97, para. 60)
As a matter of fact, my Minister of Foreign Affairs and
Cooperation, Mr. Leonardo Santos Simao, speaking before
the Council on 27 January 1995 , stressed the importance of
this issue, as follows:
"May I take this opportunity to underline the
importance we attach to the early deployment of the
third United Nations Angola Verification Mission
(UNAVEM. III). Our recent experience [with the
deployment of a United Nations force in our country]
has shown that the sooner such a verification
mechanism is established and deployed, the better for
the success of the peace process. I would therefore
urge the Council to look into this matter more
diligently and expeditiously." (S/PV.3494, p. 5)
The relevance and urgency of this action by the
Council can not be overestimated. The signing of the
Lusaka Protocol last November was the culmination of a
long and delicate process of negotiations to address the war
situation in Angola and to contribute to bringing about
peace and stability not only in that country but also in the
entire region of southern Africa. We strongly believe that
peace in Angola can no longer be delayed. More than ever,
the United Nations and the international community at large
are duty-bound to extend the hand of solidarity to the
people of Angola and their legitimate Government in their
quest for peace and stability. In assisting the Angolan
people, we attach utmost importance to the observance of
the principles and purposes of the Charter of the United
Nations as well as to the principles of sovereignty, and of
non-intervention and non-interference in the internal affairs
of the Republic of Angola, all in line with the "Acordos de
Paz" and the Lusaka Protocol. We are of the view that the
international community can assist States Members of the
United Nations while fully respecting those principles.
In this context, we cannot agree that the deployment
of any peace-keeping operation should have any strings
attached. We therefore express our support for the
Angolan delegation's view that some paragraphs of the
draft resolution ought to be revised in order to enjoy the
full agreement of the Government of Angola.
We are happy to note that the Council is considering
the establishment of a comprehensive, wise peace-keeping
operation in Angola, which would include not just
political and military aspects, but also humanitarian and
mine-clearance dimensions. In its endeavours to face the
challenges of humanitarian assistance, the Government of
Angola will no doubt need the support of the international
community. In particular, the role of the United Nations
will be of great importance in providing a proper
framework for the effective coordination of humanitarian
aid. We consider the mine-clearance programme to be
essential for the resettlement of returnees and displaced
persons. The success of the programme is crucial to
efforts to rehabilitate the infrastructure in the countryside
and promote agricultural production in rural areas.
Mozambique is linked to Angola by long and special
ties of brotherhood and friendship. We are united to
Angola not just by a common historical past and by a
common language; more than that, we are united to that
sister country because our peoples fought together for the
independence of their countries, because together we
forged our national identities and together we resisted
destabilization and aggression. Even in our search for
peace, the Angolan peace process and the Mozambican
peace process trod the same path; they experienced the
same hurdles; they faced the same uncertainties.
A few days ago, in this very Chamber, the Council
celebrated the successful conclusion of the mission of
ONUMOZ in my country. But so long as peace is not a
reality in Angola, the success achieved in Mozambique
can be considered neither complete nor solid. That is why
my delegation wishes to reaffirm its unconditional support
for and solidarity with the people and the Government of
Angola. We reiterate our readiness to do our best to assist
in the efforts for peace, harmony and national
reconciliation in that sister country. My delegation wishes
to urge every State Member of the United Nations to do
the same.
The President: I thank the representative of
Mozambique for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Sweden. I
invite him to take a place at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Osvald (Sweden): Mr. President, let me first of
all say that my delegation finds it particularly fitting that
you, as Foreign Minister of Botswana, should be presiding
over this important meeting. We are sure that under the
presidency of Botswana this month the Council will be in
good hands.
The participation today of an Organization of African
Unity (OAU) ministerial delegation, headed by the Foreign
Minister of Malawi, is also a telling sign of the importance
of the occasion and of the support for and commitment of
the OAU and its member States to the successful
conclusion of what we hope will be the final step towards
a lasting peace in Angola. I was very pleased to see the
Foreign Minister of Angola among us, and my delegation
appreciated his interesting statement.
Since the time of Angola's independence, Sweden has
been actively engaged in development cooperation and
other forms of support for development and peace in
Angola.
The people of Angola have for too long already
suffered the plight of a devastating civil war. We therefore
greeted the signing of the first peace accord, as well as that
of the Lusaka Protocol of November last year, with special
relief and satisfaction. That Protocol and the subsequent
cease-fire provide the necessary basis for a process leading
to a lasting peace. However, the situation remains
uncertain. As has been proved on many occasions, formal
undertakings by parties involved in a conflict are not
necessarily enough. Agreements must be respected by all
concerned and they must be implemented. The events of
1992, when UNITA resorted to arms after defeat in the
general elections, must not be allowed to happen again.
A successful peace process requires strong
determination and mutual trust between the parties. If this
is not the case, no United Nations mission, no matter how
well planned and equipped, can succeed in its task.
It is a good sign that the military commanders of both
sides have met, but it seems not to be enough. Direct talks
between President dos Santos and the UNITA leader, Jonas
Savimbi, are necessary for any real process towards
national reconciliation. Sweden therefore calls on both
parties to do their utmost to ensure that the peace process
moves forward.
In this connection, we would like to express our
thanks and admiration to the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, Mr. Blondin Beye, for his vigorous
efforts for the Lusaka process and its implementation, as
well as for his help in improving the political atmosphere
in Angola.
The Lusaka Protocol assigns a crucial role to the
United Nations. We therefore welcome the Secretary-
General's assessment that the respect for the cease-fire
shown by the Government of Angola and UNITA and
their commitment to ensuring the safety and security of
personnel have made it possible for him to recommend
that the third United Nations Angola Verification Mission
(UNAVEM. III) now take over from UNAVEM. II. It is
also encouraging to learn that many Member States, not
least neighbouring countries, have indicated a readiness to
contribute a significant number of units and observers to
the new operation.
Sweden participated with military and police
observers in UNAVEM. II. The Government has decided
to provide 20 military observers to UNAVEM. III.
The Swedish Government intends to continue to
support the peace process and the rebuilding of the
country in ways that are found most suitable.
Humanitarian relief programmes will continue, but
assistance will increasingly be directed towards basic
needs such as the strengthening of transport facilities,
logistics and so on.
The number of mines dispersed is a serious problem,
causing continuous suffering and death, as well as
preventing the return of normal life. A decision has
therefore been taken in cooperation with the Angolan
Government and the World Food Programme to begin
mine-clearance operations to be carried out by Swedish
military personnel.
The Swedish Government also takes a positive
attitude towards examining the possibility of sending
Swedish military experts to start up demobilizing centres
or, alternatively, to assist in demobilizing operations.
What we now hope for, and indeed expect, is the
full commitment of the parties to the process towards real
and lasting peace and security in Angola. Sweden, for its
part, is ready to make its contribution towards this goal.
The President: I thank the representative of Sweden
for the kind words he addressed to me.
It is my understanding that the Council is ready to
proceed to vote on the draft resolution before it. Unless I
hear any objection, I shall put the draft resolution to the
vote.
There being no objection, it is so decided.
I shall first call on those members of the Council who
wish to make statements before the voting.
Mr. Gambari (Nigeria): Let me begin by
congratulating the Permanent Representative of Botswana
on his assumption of the office of president of the Security
Council for the month of February. My delegation feels
sure that under the Presidency of Botswana, the affairs of
the Security Council are in very good hands. We also wish
to thank his predecessor, Mr. Cardenas, Permanent
Representative of Argentina, for his successful and efficient
conduct of the business of the Security Council during
January.
My delegation is delighted to welcome the high-
powered ministerial delegation from the Organization of
African Unity (OAU). Its presence with us today
underscores the importance which Africa attaches to the
acceleration of the peace process in Angola and to the full
implementation of the Lusaka Protocol, which was
informed and influenced by the conclusions reached in the
"Acordos de Paz".
We also welcome in particular the Honourable
Mr. E.C.I. Bwanali, the Foreign Minister of Malawi, who
is Chairman of the OAU ministerial delegation, and also the
Honourable Mr. Venancio de Moura, Foreign Minister of
Angola, whose Government has demonstrated its
commitment to the Lusaka Protocol and to the "Acordos de
Paz .
Clearly, there are indications on the ground to assure
us that the enterprise we are about to undertake in the
United Nations Verification Mission in Angola (UNAVEM III) portends a viable prospect. The first indication is the
fact that the cease-fire agreed to last November is generally
holding. Second, after the trauma of a long-drawn-out
conflict, the parties now seem determined to pursue the
cause of peace in the higher interest of national survival,
national reconciliation and national reconstruction.
Thirdly, under the veritable leadership of the
Secretary-Generals Special Representative, Ambassador
Blondin Beye, and with the efforts of the Chief Military
Observer, Major-General Chris Garba, the otherwise fluid
situation in Angola now shows a clear possibility of
stabilizing. Fourthly, there is the solid commitment of the
Government and people of Angola to the prompt
deployment of UNAVEM. III by offering to make a
substantial contribution in kind to the operational costs of
the new peace-keeping operation. We commend this
gesture and trust that it will induce similar cooperation
and willingness on the part of the international
community to assist the ongoing peace process in Angola.
My delegation is particularly grateful to the
Secretary-General for his excellent report (S/1995/97),
dated 1 February 1995, which has provided valuable
insights into the continuing problems in Angola in the
political, military, civil and humanitarian spheres. After
decades of internecine civil war, it is conceivable that the
people of Angola are now fully prepared to let go the war
psychosis in favour of the pursuit of peace. Such conflict
situations cannot but have deleterious consequences for
the country's basic infrastructure, civil society and
economic development. It is against this backdrop that our
current authorization of UNAVEM. III finds its form,
legitimacy and consistency.
Through the mandate of UNAVEM. III, the United
Nations seeks to provide a credible force level that can
contend with the enormity and complexity of the problem
on the ground within a time-frame that will not imply a
perpetual United Nations presence in Angola. At the same
time, UNAVEM. III is mandated to ensure that there is
constant monitoring of the state of play in Angola,
including the strict observance of the cease-fire as well as
progress in the implementation of the peace process. This
deliberate mix of obligations with responsibility, in the
View of my delegation, enables the international
community to be fully involved in all stages of the
UNAVEM. III operation.
At the core of the current mandate is the flexibility
that the Secretary-General must retain to determine the
course, content and timing of the deployment of military
forces and civilian personnel as the situation on the
ground in Angola may warrant. In our view, the
deployment must in no case commence any later than
31 March 1995. We do not expect the imposition of any
additional layer of requirements that could constrain the
Secretary-General in carrying out his responsibilities
under the mandate to be approved by the Security Council
for UNAVEM. III.
As for the duration of the mandate itself, our preferred
option is for an initial period of 12 months, in line with the
Secretary-General's objective recommendation and
consistent with the realities on the ground. We can,
however, agree to the six-month initial period proposed in
the current draft, but only on the understanding that the
United Nations is not about to terminate its presence in
Angola after only six months, rather, that it is prepared to
undertake additional periods of extension, based on actual
performance, to enable the political process to take root.
A critical element in this effort is the need to create a
conducive environment for the political process to
materialize. It is in this context that we welcome the call
for a meeting between the President of Angola and the
leader of UNITA as soon as possible. We are confident that
President dos Santos is ready for this meeting, and we urge
Mr. Savimbi to join him for it without further delay. Such
a high-level meeting would provide additional impetus to
the peace process and constitute an enabling and
confidence-building measure between the parties. In the
long term, since the issue in Angola appears to be largely
one of pure power-sharing, my delegation believes that the
objective should be that all Angolans, without exception,
should have equality of opportunity and equality of access
to decision-making within a political framework. That, in
essence, is the true value of democracy and the prerequisite
for a sustainable democratic process.
The magnitude of the social dislocation and disruption
that have occurred in Angola requires that all efforts be
made to salvage the situation and assist the Republic to
reconcile, rehabilitate and reconstruct itself. In this regard,
the international community has a continuing role to play.
We commend, meanwhile, the efforts of those States and
organizations that have so far assisted these efforts, and we
urge them to continue. We request those that have not yet
done so to make such contributions and urge them to
endeavour to do so on an assured and continuing basis.
In conclusion, my delegation expresses its full support
for the draft resolution before the Council. We are
particularly gratified that the resolution reaffirms the
Security Council's commitment to both the sovereignty and
the territorial integrity of Angola. In our view, there is no
paragraph in the draft resolution we are about to adopt that
derogates from the sovereign rights of the Angolan
Government - that is, in the maintenance of law and order
and the preservation of the territorial integrity of the
country - either before, during or after UNAVEM. III.
Finally, my delegation hopes that today's adoption of
this draft resolution will represent for the Council a
critical watershed and an important step towards the
establishment of a durable peace in Angola, a country
which, after all, has been at war with itself for far too
long and whose people deserve, now more than ever
before, the opportunity to resume normal, productive
lives.
The President: I thank the representative of Nigeria
for the kind words he addressed to the presidency.
Mr. Wang Xuexian (China) (interpretation from Chinese): The Chinese delegation sincerely welcomes His
Excellency the Foreign Minister of Botswana to the
United Nations to preside personally over this meeting
and congratulates him on his country's assumption of the
presidency of the Security Council for the month of
February. We wish you, Sir, complete success in carrying
out your noble duties.
I should also like to thank Ambassador Emilio
Cardenas of Argentina for the remarkable manner in
which he directed, with his trademark efficiency and
promptness, the work of the Council last month.
I also wish warmly to welcome to today's Council
meeting the Foreign Minister of Angola and the other
Foreign Ministers from the delegation of the Organization
of African Unity (OAU), and thank them for their
important statements.
The Angolan peace process is at a critical juncture.
The Lusaka Protocol, which was finally signed by the
Angolan Government and UNITA at the end of 1994 after
long and hard negotiations, and the entry into force of the
cease-fire agreement thereafter, have laid a favourable
foundation for that peace to which the Angolan people so
ardently aspire. The determination of the two Angolan
parties to engage in national reconciliation and end their
conflict by peaceful means has set an example for the
settlement of other conflicts and disputes in Africa. It is
our ardent hope that both Angolan parties will maintain
the cease-fire and unswervingly bring to fruition the grand
cause of national reconciliation in accordance with the
timetable set forth in the Lusaka Protocol, thus making
their contributions to peace and stability in Angola.
The establishment of the third United Nations Angola
Verification Mission (UNAVEM. III) is not only strongly
desired by the two parties and by the people of Angola, but
is also a concrete expression of the actions of the
international community to support and consolidate the
Angolan peace process. OAU's sending such a large, high-
level delegation to New York to participate in the
consideration of the Angolan question in the Security
Council has demonstrated the readiness of African countries
and OAU to contribute at least their share to the settlement
of conflicts in Africa. This is highly commendable. The
United Nations and the Security Council should attach great
importance to resolving African problems and to
strengthening cooperation with OAU so as to help Angola
set out along the road towards rebuilding peace at an early
date.
The post-cold-war world is far from tranquil. We
urgently need a peaceful and stable environment in order to
promote our common development and improve people's
standards of living. That need is all the more pressing and
actual in today's Africa, for without peace and stability in
Africa, world peace and stability will remain elusive.
Africa needs no external interference, but it does need
assistance and cooperation. The Chinese Government and
people have always set great store on strengthening
cooperation with the African countries. We have been
following closely, and supporting, the efforts of the
Angolan people towards an early end to the war and for a
lasting peace. We also sincerely support OAU in its efforts
to safeguard political stability in Africa and actively
participate in international affairs, particularly the political
settlement of African conflicts.
The Angolan people, which is now in the throes of a
critical transition, need continued strong support from the
international community. The draft resolution before us
reflects the objective situation and Angola's need. The
Chinese delegation will therefore vote in favour.
The President: I thank the representative of China for
the kind words he addressed to me.
Mr. Lavrov (Russian Federation) (interpretation from Russian): I am pleased to welcome you, Sir, as the
representative of the country that occupies the presidency
of the Security Council this month, and I am pleased to
wish you, as well as the Permanent Representative and the
delegation of Botswana, every success in the important
undertaking at hand.
We are grateful to the Permanent Representative of
Argentina for the large amount of work he did as
President of the Security Council last month. I am also
happy to welcome here the ministerial delegation of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), which includes
Ministers for Foreign Affairs, in particular, the Minister
of External Affairs of the Republic of Angola, Mr.
Venancio de Moura. The participation in this Security
Council meeting of such a representative delegation from
the African regional organization underlines the
importance, not only for Angola but for Africa as a
whole, of the issue before us today.
As one of the troika of observer States, Russia
supports the immediate transition from the second United
Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. II) to
the third (UNAVEM. III), which will have a broader
mandate for implementing the measures set out in the
Lusaka Protocol. The further consolidation of the still
very fragile peace in Angola requires the Security
Council's immediate approval of the mandate of
UNAVEM. III with a phased and effective deployment of
the peace-keeping operation. This should be done, of
course, as economically as possible with regard to
financial, material, human and other resources. This
decision by the Security Council will make it possible to
reinforce the cease-fire and the atmosphere of trust in
Angola and will give a new and powerful impetus to the
settlement process within Angola that should completely
transform it for the better.
The draft resolution agreed on in prior consultations
is realistic, balanced and fully in keeping with the goals
of strengthening peace and stability in Angola, and also
meets with the criteria for launching a new peace-keeping
operation. It is significant that the draft resolution has
been drawn up strictly in accordance with the timetable
agreed on by the Government of Angola and UNITA
within the framework of the Lusaka Protocol, that it
contains no preconditions and that it creates the necessary
basis for the most rapid possible phased deployment of
UNAVEM. III's basic force. Accordingly, the Russian
delegation will vote in favour of the draft resolution.
The success of the peace-keeping operation in
Angola will be critically dependent not only on the timely
deployment of adequate United Nations forces in Angola,
but also and especially on the Angolan parties' taking
consistent and constructive positions and on their resolve
to follow the timetable for implementation to the letter.
The Angolan parties, especially UNITA, must
demonstrate the necessary political will to fulfil the
obligations they have entered into in the interests of
strengthening the peace and achieving national
reconciliation so sorely needed by the Angolan people, who
have experienced the horrors and suffering of two decades
of fratricidal war. In this connection, we place our hopes in
the personal meeting between the President of Angola,
Mr. dos Santos, and the leader of UNITA, Mr. Savimbi;
that meeting, as the draft resolution notes, could build the
necessary political momentum for the successful
implementation of the Lusaka Protocol.
For its part, the Russian Federation, which has already
seconded military observers to the United Nations Mission
in Angola, will continue to do all it can, both bilaterally
and multilaterally, to promote the process of restoring peace
and stability in Angola, a country with which Russia has
strong ties of friendship and cooperation.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Russian Federation for the kind words he addressed to me.
Mr. Martinez Blanco (Honduras) (interpretation from Spanish): Sir, please accept my delegation's sincerest
congratulations on Botswana's assumption of the presidency
of the Council for this month. We are sure that with the
experience and diplomatic skills of Botswana's Permanent
Representative, we shall successfully complete our tasks.
My delegation wishes to assure him of its full support.
We also express our gratitude for the outstanding work
of Ambassador Emilio Cardenas of the Argentine Republic
last month.
My delegation also wishes to welcome the Ministers
of Foreign Affairs of the Organization of African Unity
(OAU), particularly His Excellency the Minister of External
Affairs of Angola, Mr. Venancio de Moura, who have come
to the Council to support and contribute to the peace
process in Angola. We believe that if we could rely on the
resolute support of regional organizations in the search for
solutions in those regions of the world where conflicts are
taking a considerable economic and human toll on the
countries involved, such conflicts would find no fertile
ground in which to grow. In this respect, we express our
deepest gratitude to OAU for its efforts in Angola and in
other regions of Africa where difficult situations stemming
from internal political conflicts persist. We call upon it to
do in the future, in other countries or regions of the
continent where conflicts persist, what is now being done
for Angola.
My delegation considers the signing of the Lusaka
Protocol of 20 November 1994 the culmination of the
conflict in Angola. In adopting it, the parties clearly
demonstrated their desire to resolve the conflict and
restore peace in their country by peaceful means. For that
reason, we appreciate the efforts both of the Government
of Angola and UNITA to uphold the agreed cease-fire.
Although the implementation of the Protocol has not been
perfect and has been delayed in certain aspects, the
overall outlook is rather positive and encouraging.
My delegation is grateful for the Secretary-General's
report on the second United Nations Angola Verification
Mission (UNAVEM. II), submitted to the Council in
accordance with paragraph 8 of resolution 966 (1994).
The report gives a wide-ranging and comprehensive
picture of the current situation in Angola, and we
therefore support both its content and its appeal for the
prompt provision of the humanitarian assistance Angola
needs.
In his report, the Secretary-General has
recommended that the United Nations mission in Angola
should continue following the progress achieved in the
political realm through the "Acordos de Paz", the signing
of the Lusaka Protocol and the commitment by the parties
to implement and abide by the Council's resolutions. My
delegation gives its broadest support to that
recommendation and therefore also supports the draft
resolution now under consideration, which establishes the
third United Nations Angola Verification Mission
(UNAVEM. III) peace-keeping operation, with an initial
mandate in force until 8 August 1995.
It is also the wish of my Government to see the
Lusaka Protocol implemented without further delay so
that the leaders of Angola can get their country moving
along the path of peace, democracy and development.
This, if properly fulfilled, would give justification for the
provisions of paragraph 10 of the draft resolution: the
intention to conclude the mandate of UNAVEM. III when
the objectives of the Lusaka Protocol have been achieved.
Thus, once the mandate of UNAVEM. III comes to a
close, the destiny of Angola will lie exclusively in the
hands of the Angolans themselves.
We therefore believe that the draft resolution should
be seen not only as an incentive but also as cause for
profound reflection so that the parties involved in the
conflict in Angola may act in all seriousness and looking
to the future of their country.
We appeal seriously to the leaders of Angola to come
to the firm conclusion that, once the mandate of UNAVEM
III is over, if they do not help themselves to resolve their
own internal political problems it will not be easy for the
international community to come to their aid. We trust that
those leaders will act with prudence, maturity and a high
sense of patriotism and that they will put Angola in its
rightful place in the international scene.
The President: I thank the representative of Honduras
for his kind words addressed to the presidency.
Mr. Merimee (France) (interpretation from French):
The French delegation is pleased to see you, Sir, presiding
over the Security Council on this important occasion for
Africa, and we are pleased also that the Council is in the
hands of your country's Ambassador during the month of
February.
At the same time, I should like to convey to the
Argentine delegation our great appreciation of the good
work done by Ambassador Cardenas during the month of
January.
France would also like to welcome the impressive
delegation from the Organization of African Unity (OAU),
which is honouring us by participating in this Council
meeting on Angola. The delegation's presence shows how
interested Africa as a whole is in the question of Angola.
For us, this is an additional guarantee that should make it
possible for the Angolans to put an end to a fratricidal war
and return to the path of democracy and progress. In this
connection, my Government welcomes the role that OAU
intends to continue to play in resolving the Angolan
conflict. The involvement of regional organizations in
solving crises is indeed a great advantage and vital to the
success of the United Nations.
The Security Council will shortly be adopting a draft
resolution establishing the third phase of the United Nations
Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. III). This
operation will include more than 7,000 personnelThe draft
resolution provides a full framework for United Nations
actions over the next two years. Indeed, UNAVEM. III, as
established, will have a clear mandate enabling it to
underpin the efforts of the Angolan Government and
UNITA to implement the Lusaka agreements signed on
15 November last until presidential elections are held and
the elected President of the Republic assumes office.
In the mandate, nothing has been overlooked.
UNAVEM. III will perform political, military, police,
humanitarian and electoral duties. We note also that
special attention is given to mine clearance operations -
which, inter alia, will make it easier for refugees to
return - and to supplying the Angolans with
information. My Government is also glad that the
Secretariat has learned from past experience and that a
United Nations radio station will soon be brought into
service in Angola.
In adopting this draft resolution, the Council is not,
however, giving carte blanche to the Angolan
Government and UNITA. In 1992, the electoral process,
monitored by the United Nations, was not enough to put
an end to the Angolan crisis. This failure must not be
repeated.
The United Nations involvement in Angola, having
gone on for more than three years, should now enjoy full
cooperation from the Angolan Government and UNITA.
This cooperation is a prerequisite for the deployment of
the infantry battalions that will be the mainstay of
UNAVEM. III. Moreover, the Security Council states that
it intends to review the United Nations role in Angola
should the Secretary-General report that the cooperation
required from the parties falls short or is slow in coming.
For my delegation, this provision is no mere formality.
The Angolan Government and UN ITA negotiated the
terms of the Lusaka agreement with a certain fierce
resolve. In this connection, we pay tribute to the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General, Mr. Alioune
Blondin Beye, who, with his patience and skill, was able
to bring the two parties together to sign the document.
We now hope that the Angolan Government and UN ITA
will show the same fierce resolve in fulfilling the
obligations that they have taken upon themselves.
The Security Council has been kept scrupulously
informed of the course of the negotiations. The draft
resolution provides that it should also be scrupulously
kept abreast of the details of their implementation.
Ten years ago Southern Africa was riven by every
conflict imaginable. Peace and democracy have gradually
triumphed in this part of the continent - first in
Namibia, then in South Africa, then in Mozambique. Now
only Angola is left. The Angolan people have shown
many a time and oft that they want peace and national
reconciliation. We hope that the opportunity they are now
being given to end the war will enable them finally to
turn over a new page in their history. My country, for its
part, will do its utmost to ensure that this is so.
The President: I thank the representative of France
for his kind words addressed to me and to my country's
Ambassador.
Mr. Fulci (Italy): I should like, first of all, to join
other representatives in expressing my warmest
congratulations to you, Sir, and my thanks for presiding
over our work today. Your authority, your prestige and
your experience are certainly helping to bring to a
successful conclusion a most important debate on an
African country - Angola.
I should like to take this opportunity also to express
my good wishes to our dear friend Ambassador Legwaila,
who is chairing the Security Council during the month of
February. We all know that, in view of all his professional
and human qualities, the work of the Council will be
greatly enhanced.
May I also express sincere thanks to the President of
the Security Council last month, the Ambassador of
Argentina, whose presidency was really exemplary to many
of us - not only because it was brilliant, but also because
it was most productive, and in a timely manner. That is
something that the Security Council greatly needs.
The draft resolution which the Security Council is
about to adopt authorizes full deployment of the United
Nations peace-keeping operation in Angola in support of
the agreement reached at Lusaka. This agreement ends the
civil war that has afflicted Angola in the 20 years following
its independence. Divisions and hatred became so deeply
rooted during this period that restoring mutual trust is
probably the most difficult challenge of the current phase.
Thus, in the view of my Government, the deployment of a
peace-keeping mission with broad dimensions and a
detailed mandate, as envisaged in the draft resolution, is
both necessary and fully justified.
A prerequisite to the operation's success, however, is
full adherence by the parties to their commitments. In this
sense, the exchange of letters between the President of
Angola, His Excellency Mr. Jose Eduardo dos Santos, and
the President of UNITA, Jonas Savimbi - which was
brought to the Council's attention yesterday - represents
an encouraging development indeed, since it marks the
opening of a direct dialogue at the highest political level.
We hope that a meeting between the two leaders can take
place soon so as to symbolize the beginning of a new era
in the life of Angola.
We believe that the time has come for the Angolan
parties to redirect their many resources towards fulfilling
the needs of the people. As the late President of the
Italian Republic, Sandro Pertini, said in his inaugural
speech several years ago,
"Now is the time to empty the arsenals and to
fill the granaries!" May I add that, with its latest
allocation, my country has committed a total of
about $60 million in humanitarian assistance to
Angola over the past three years alone, and it
intends to continue to do its part.
Among the most bitter fruits of long years of civil
war and hatred is the unprecedented proliferation of
land-mines in Angola. The figures given by the
Secretary-General in his report - 10 million mines
buried throughout the country - are simply appalling.
The Italian Government strongly supports the coordinated
and comprehensive programme outlined by the Secretary-
General with regard to the de-mining action. When one
considers that land-mines kill or maim some 500 people
every week in the world, one realizes that the need for
de-mining becomes even more urgent in order to save the
lives of thousands upon thousands of innocent civilians,
especially women and children.
In the final analysis, this is a problem with broad
regional implications - let us think of Mozambique -
and potential global repercussions. Beyond the initial
emergency phase, de-mining training will take on
enormous importance in giving countries afflicted by this
phenomenon autonomous means to combat it. The Italian
Government has consolidated experience in this sector
and has already intervened in various crisis areas.
Needless to say, our knowledge and expertise are at the
disposal of the Angolan people, as they were for the
people of Mozambique.
In his report, the Secretary-General foresees the
establishment of a de-mining school to be established by
the Central Mine Action Office. In time, this school could
acquire a regional dimension and become a point of
reference for countries in need. This proposal, we believe,
deserves careful consideration in the framework of the
numerous initiatives being examined by the United
Nations. I wish to repeat here that the Italian Government
and the Italian mission here in New York are at the full
disposal of the Foreign Minister of Angola, Mr. Venancio
de Moura, of the Permanent Representative of Angola,
Ambassador Van Dunem "Mbinda", and of course of the
Secretariat, in order to establish useful links to provide
more help and expertise.
Finally, among the confidence-building measures for
Angola, the Secretary-Generals proposal, which is taken up
in the draft resolution, to establish a radio transmitter within
the framework of UNAVEM. III seems particularly
important. Previous experience has taught us that radio
communications have a fundamental importance, both in the
negative sense, when they amplify distorted news and
provocations, and in the positive sense, when, under
responsible management, they help disseminate correct
information. We thus invite the Secretary-General to pursue
the direction indicated in his report.
To conclude, I would like to salute the African
Foreign Minsters who have been with us at the United
Nations yesterday and today. Their presence in New York
at this stage is physical proof not only of the unity of
African countries, but also of the fact that a consensus is
emerging on the need for a coordinated approach in which
the United Nations, the Organization of African Unity,
subregional organizations and national Governments all
have a crucial role to play in peace-keeping in Africa.
This said, I am glad to inform the Council that Italy
will vote in favour of the draft resolution before us.
The President: I thank the representative of Italy for
his kind words addressed to me and my countryman,
Ambassador Legwaila.
Mr. Graf zu Rantzau (Germany): I should like to
take this opportunity to congratulate you, Sir, on your
country's assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council. We are privileged indeed to have you preside over
the Council, on whose work the outstanding professional
and human qualities of Ambassador Legwaila have already
left their mark.
I should also like to thank Ambassador Cardenas for
the exemplary manner in which he and his delegation
conducted the proceedings of the Council. Furthermore, it
gives me great pleasure to welcome the ministerial
delegation of the Organization of African Unity, its
Secretary-General and, in particular, the Minister for
External Relations of Angola. I would like to thank them
for their substantial statements, which underline the
importance which the Organization of African Unity
attaches to the situation in Angola and to African solidarity.
The signing of the Lusaka Protocol on
20 November 1994 and the agreement on a cease-fire two
days later are encouraging events in the recent tragic
history of Angola. Since then, despite mutual accusations
by the Angolan Government and by UNITA of cease-fire
violations, the cease-fire has generally been observed.
The decision of the Security Council to restore
UNAVEM. II to its previous level certainly played an
important role in the consolidation of the cease-fire. But
another important factor was the cooperation between the
Government of Angola and UNITA. The meetings of
their Chiefs of Staff and the regular meetings of the Joint
Commission have been important confidence-building
measures. Yet there is one crucial confidence-building
measure still missing: a meeting between President dos
Santos and Mr. Savimbi. Such a meeting must take place
as soon as possible.
We have carefully studied the Secretary-General's
recommendation that the Council establish an enlarged
peace-keeping operation, UNAVEM. III, in Angola. In the
decision of the Council, two aspects have to be
considered. On the one hand, a sizeable United Nations
presence in Angola will certainly assist the peace process
and help to successfully implement the provisions of the
Lusaka Protocol. On the other hand, the situation in
Angola remains fragile. We cannot be absolutely sure
whether the parties will continue to demonstrate the
political determination to abide by the commitments they
undertook in Lusaka.
Another more practical but none the less substantial
aspect of the Council's decision is that, if peace-keepers
are to be deployed, there must be not only a peace to be
kept, but other conditions as well, to lend meaning to the
peace-keepers' task. The timetable agreed upon by the
parties in the Lusaka Protocol has already slipped
considerably. In this respect, the approach outlined in the
report of the Secretary-General and reflected in the draft
resolution to authorize UNAVEM. III immediately but to
deploy the infantry units only gradually seems to us to be
sensible.
I should also like to highlight two other important
elements of the draft resolution: the importance, given the
magnitude of this problem in Angola, of expeditiously
establishing a well coordinated and comprehensive mine-
clearance programme, and the importance of establishing
a United Nations radio station in consultation with the
Government of Angola.
As an element for future consideration I should like to
mention the necessity of finding a solution to the problem
of the financing of political parties. This is an important
matter. Experience in Mozambique, where the Government
originally undertook the obligation to provide financial and
other means to RENAMO, has shown this aspect to be
particularly relevant in a peace process.
Let me now return to the underlying question of
authorizing UNAVEM. III. Only the Government of Angola
and UNITA can make UNAVEM. III a success. Only their
willingness to achieve peace and their commitment to
making the Lusaka Protocol work can lead to long-lasting
peace for Angola. If the cooperation required of the
Angolan parties is not forthcoming, the Security Council
will have to reconsider the role of the United Nations in
Angola.
We have carefully considered the various arguments.
There are obvious risks if the international community gets
involved in a new peace-keeping operation in Angola. But
we think that the international community is right to incur
those risks to help achieve a real and lasting peace in
Angola. We shall therefore vote in favour of the draft
resolution.
The President: I thank the representative of Germany
for the kind words he addressed to me and to our
Permanent Representative to the United Nations,
Ambassador Legwaila.
Mr. Bakuramutsa (Rwanda) (interpretation from French): My delegation is delighted, Sir, to see you
presiding over this meeting of the Security Council. We
wish also to convey our sincere congratulations to
Ambassador Legwaila on his assumption of the presidency
of the Security Council for the month of February. We are
convinced that his wisdom and competence will ensure that
the work of the Council yields fruitful and positive results.
My delegation assures you of its full cooperation.
We wish also to congratulate the previous President,
the Ambassador of Argentina, on the way in which he
conducted the work of the Council in January.
The delegation of Rwanda pays tribute to the
Secretary-General for his excellent report dated
1 February 1995 on the United Nations Angola Verification
Mission (UNAVEM. II).
We also take this opportunity to pay a heartfelt tribute
to the Special Representative of the Secretary-General,
Maitre Blondin Beye, for his fine work in the quest for a
just, equitable and lasting peace in Angola.
We warmly welcome the Minister for Foreign
Affairs of Angola as the Council considers the question
of his country. The delegation of Rwanda also welcomes
the members of the ministerial delegation dispatched by
the Organization of African Unity (OAU) on this day,
8 February 1995. The Government of Rwanda knows the
importance of OAU involvement in the settlement of
regional conflicts in Africa. My Government appreciates
the key role of that organization in negotiations between
the various conflicting parties in Rwanda. That is why we
are convinced that, with adequate material and financial
support, the OAU can be an African tool with a role
complementing that of the organs of the United Nations.
In the historic record of cooperation between the
United Nations - in this case the Security Council -
and the Organization of African Unity, 8 February 1995
will stand as a memorable date for present and future
generations because of its special mark on the peace
process in Angola.
The historic content of the report before the Council
enables the delegation of Rwanda to feel the steady wind
of optimism wafting over Angola and over the Council's
work on this item since the adoption of resolution
966 (1994) on 8 December 1994. We note with pleasure
the international community's relief at the positive
outcome of the peace process, a process long hampered
by stumbling blocks that nearly discouraged the architects
of national reconciliation in Angola.
The brother African country of Angola, long the
victim of an unrelenting civil war and of enormously
lethal events, has just provided eloquent proof that it is
always possible to reconcile warring brothers who want
to bury the hatchet the better to work together to build a
peaceful, democratic and prosperous nation.
In that context, my delegation pays tribute to the
leaders of the Angolan Government and of UNITA for
their clear-sightedness, courage and ability to
compromise, which led to the "Acordos de Paz" and to
the signing of the Lusaka Protocol. The whole world now
sees the signing of the Lusaka Protocol as the keystone of
the Angolan peace process.
At a time when the international community has
taken regretful note of the fact that the majority of least-
developed countries and many of the world's conflicts are
to be found in Africa, the delegation of Rwanda welcomes
the positive developments in the political situation in
southern Africa: in Pretoria, Maputo and Luanda.
In the case of Angola, we welcome the prospect of a
meeting between President Jose Eduardo dos Santos and
Mr. Jonas Savimbi, a historic meeting that will affect the
future of peace in a country that had long been a victim of
the East-West conflict, conducted through African proxies.
That situation was confirmation of the African saying that
when elephants clash, it is the grass that suffers.
The rebuilding and the socio-economic development
of Angola can never succeed on territory said to hold the
world's greatest concentration of land-mines. The Rwandese
delegation therefore hopes for the very rapid deployment of
UNAVEM. III, which can hasten mine-clearance, and the
demobilization and socio-professional reintegration of
UNITA troops not retained in the national army.
Now that the hour of national reconstruction and of
the strengthening of democracy has come in Angola, the
delegation of Rwanda wishes to commend all those vital
forces that are writing a glorious page in the history of
modern Africa by putting an end to a 20-year-long
fratricidal war.
However late it was in emerging, the example of
Angola will remain memorable in the annals of African
history and of United Nations diplomatic history, much to
the joy and happiness of the Angolan people and of the
international community.
The immensity of the task of national reconstruction
for the socio-economic development of Angola requires the
mobilization of multifaceted assistance from the
international community for that country.
The delegation of Rwanda hopes that the arms
merchants who, from near or far, contributed to the
destruction of Angola will become builders of its
reconstruction and socio-economic development.
It is also to be hoped that the international community
will step up its humanitarian assistance, which will then
quickly become development assistance for the
socio-economic recovery of Angola.
In order to contribute to making irreversible the
coming of the era of peace, stability and democracy in
Angola, my delegation supported UNAVEM. II and on
8 December 1994 expressed a desire for the rapid
deployment of UNAVEM. III.
As regards the principal objectives and mandate of
UNAVEM. III, the delegation of Rwanda supports its
establishment in order to back the parties in their efforts
to restore peace and to achieve national reconciliation in
the country in the spirit of the "Acordos de Paz", of the
Lusaka Protocol and of the relevant resolutions of the
Security Council.
We deplore the delay in the implementation of the
Lusaka Protocol and hope that the remaining military and
police observers authorized in the framework of
UNAVEM. II will soon be deployed in order to help
monitor respect for the cease-fire.
My delegation, which is optimistic regarding the new
era of peace and political stability in southern Africa,
supports the idea of the rapid deployment of UNAVEM
III and will therefore vote in favour of the draft
resolution.
The President: I thank the representative of Rwanda
for the kind words he expressed to our Ambassador.
I shall now put draft resolution S/ 1995/ 117 to the
vote.
A vote was taken by show of hands.
In favour:
Argentina, Botswana, China, Czech Republic,
France, Germany, Honduras, Indonesia, Italy,
Nigeria, Oman, Russian Federation, Rwanda, United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland,
United States of America
The President: There were 15 votes in favour. The
draft resolution has been adopted unanimously as
resolution 976 (1995).
I shall now call on those members of the Council
who wish to make statements following the voting.
Mrs. Albright (United States of America): Mr.
Minister, we are honoured by the fact that you have
chosen to chair this important meeting. We congratulate
Botswana on its ascension to the presidency of the
Council and look forward to working closely with
Ambassador Legwaila as he wisely guides us through this
month's work.
We are also most appreciative of the outstanding
management of the Council by the Ambassador of
Argentina last month. His efficiency and humour were
invaluable to our work.
I should also like to welcome the Foreign Ministers of
the Organization of African Unity (OAU) to our
proceedings. We very much appreciate their presence and
support.
Finally, I should like to welcome our good friend, the
Foreign Minister of Angola, to these very important
proceedings.
Today the Council has taken an important step to
support peace in Angola and the tide of democracy
sweeping southern Africa.
The Lusaka Protocol, signed on 20 November 1994,
has, we hope, brought an end to the long civil strife that
has plagued Angola. It is an agreement that meets the
legitimate concerns of both Angolan parties. It provided
concrete guarantees of UNITA's political and physical
survival, through its participation in all sectors of the
Government, the military and the police. And it ensures that
UNITA will voluntarily relinquish its armed forces and
assume its legitimate role as an opposition political party.
The Lusaka Protocol and the efforts of the Angolan parties
to fulfil their commitments are vital and promising steps on
the road to a lasting peace in Angola. The third United
Nations Verification Mission in Angola (UNAVEM. III) will
form an integral part of that process.
However, there is disturbing news today that Mr.
Jonas Savimbi is casting doubt on the Lusaka Protocol. The
resolution, in its twelfth preambular paragraph, stresses the
need for President dos Santos and Mr. Savimbi
"to meet without delay with a view to building the
necessary political momentum for the successful
implementation of the Lusaka Protocol".
That meeting now becomes more critical in the light of
Mr. Savimbi's remarks. We strongly urge both leaders to
meet immediately.
My Government wishes to emphasize that any
deployment of infantry units in UNAVEM. III cannot
proceed without the Secretary-General's report that the
Lusaka Protocol is being effectively implemented.
Therefore, our message to all parties is very clear: do not
make a serious mistake at this crucial time. Do the right
thing for your people and for the future of your country.
This resolution represents the international community's
confidence in the Angolan people. We hope that in the
coming days it will not be undermined by any of their
leaders.
The mission of UNAVEM. III has clear objectives,
as described in the Lusaka Protocol: to monitor
disarmament and demobilization of combatants, to assist
military and police integration and to facilitate the
incorporation of UNITA into the Angolan Government.
When these objectives have been achieved, UNAVEM. III
will end its mandate. We have been clear in stating in the
resolution our expectation that all of this can be
accomplished within two years. We mean to hold the
Angolan parties to their commitment to complete the
process.
The people of Angola deserve our support in helping
to end the war. The Lusaka Protocol offers a genuine
opportunity to construct a lasting peace, and the
coordinated involvement of a United Nations peace-
keeping force is vital to its implementation. A return to
peace will help protect the impressive democratic
movement throughout southern Africa and provide an
opportunity for the Angolan people to realize the
economic potential of their rich land. Despite the war,
Angola provided major oil exports. Diamond mining and
excellent agricultural lands offer the hope of prosperity.
Peace will end the bloodshed and waste that Angola has
endured for more than 30 years.
But we have to be vigilant in providing this support.
The United Nations and UNAVEM. can assist the process
of political reconciliation, but it is up to the parties
themselves to demonstrate by their actions the political
will to fulfil the Lusaka Protocol. That is why we think
it important that the Secretary-General inform the Council
every month of progress in deploying UNAVEM. III and
in implementing the Lusaka Protocol, and why it is
important to express our intention to review the role of
the United Nations in Angola if the cooperation required
from the parties, upon which UNAVEM. III is based, is
substantially delayed or not forthcoming. It cannot be
stressed often enough that the parties must take action to
live up to their commitments. The Lusaka Protocol clearly
sets out a timetable, on which the parties have already
fallen more than a month behind. Both the Government
and UNITA must, to quote the Lusaka Protocol,
"furnish the United nations with details concerning
their respective forces to include number of men,
composition and type of force, type of equipment and
specific location." (S/1994/144], annex, p. 13, para. (c))
As the Protocol itself notes,
"This will allow the United Nations to install the
appropriate verification, monitoring or control
mechanisms." (ibid)
The Protocol signed by the parties themselves lays out
what they must do. But, as we have seen in the past, and in
Mr. Savimbi's remarks today, the parties are sometimes
reluctant to carry out their agreements. This recalcitrance
must end, for without the input and active cooperation of
the parties, the peace-keeping effort we are about to embark
upon can have no more success than past efforts, and it will
not be sustained by this body.
We also need to ensure that the support of the
international community is used effectively by the Angolan
parties and that the United Nations presence does not
become an excuse for failure to move forward. The initial
mandate of the operation will be for six months, and the
Council will be in a position to review progress before
reviewing the mandate. The peace process detailed in the
Lusaka Protocol is scheduled to be completed in May 1996.
We have in this resolution declared the Council's
expectation that UNAVEM. will conclude its operations by
February 1997 - that is giving the Angolans enough time
to hold elections scheduled to take place once the peace
process has been completed.
The Angolan Government has offered to help offset
the cost of UNAVEM. III, including by providing free or at-
cost petroleum, aircraft and buildings, in addition to the
usual waivers of customs duties and other fees. The
resolution we have adopted calls for active exploration with
both parties of substantial additional contributions to help
cover the costs of peace-keeping. It also requests the
Secretary-General to report information on such
contributions. It is fitting and fair that the rich natural
resources of Angola be made available to support
UNAVEM. III.
In closing, let me reiterate my Government's
determination to key our support for this operation in
Angola to the actions of the Angolans themselves. If
Angola's leaders are prepared to make peace by taking
concrete steps towards disarmament and demobilization of
troops, then the United States will support efforts to keep
that peace. If they are prepared to help offset the significant
costs of this operation, we will continue to support it. For
we have learned elsewhere that United Nations peace-
keeping can be effective only when the psychology of
war gives way to a commitment to peace. My
Government hopes that such a transformation has truly
taken hold in Angola.
Many have worked hard to mediate an end to
decades of civil war and to foster reconciliation in
Angola. Peace in Angola would end Africa's longest-
running conflict, one that has cost up to a million lives,
crippled 100,000 people and left 7 million refugees and
displaced persons. With our decision today we have
advanced substantially the prospect that the hope of the
Lusaka Protocol, and the promise of peace in Angola,
can be realized.
The President: I thank the representative of the
United States for the kind words she addressed to me.
Mr. Gomersall (United Kingdom): May I first
congratulate the delegation of Botswana on assuming the
presidency of the Security Council for the month of
February and warmly welcome you here today, Mr.
Minister, to preside over this important debate. Our
sincere thanks also go to Ambassador Cardenas of
Argentina and to his delegation for the excellent way in
which they presided over the Council's work in January.
May I also welcome the Minister of Foreign Affairs
of Angola and extend the British Government's
recognition and respect to the Ministers of Foreign Affairs
from the Organization of African Unity (OAU) Council
of Ministers, whose presence here reminds us how much
the hopes of Africa ride upon United Nations engagement
in the solution of African problems. May I also express
the British Government's support for the OAU's own
distinctive role, particularly in preventive conflict
resolution.
The Security Council's decision today substantially
to increase the United Nations operation in Angola
underlines its commitment to support the people of
Angola in their long search for peace and national
reconciliation. It represents the Council's trust that the
signing of the Lusaka Protocol on 20 November 1994 and
the coming into force two days later of a cease-fire were
a clear demonstration of the parties' commitment to a
peaceful solution to Angola's problems. It is encouraging
that the Secretary-General has now, three months later,
been able to report that the cease-fire is generally holding
and that the parties have reaffirmed their commitment to
the "Acordos de Paz", to the Council's resolutions and to
the Lusaka Protocol. We commend and thank the Secretary
General, and in particular his Special Representative, as
well as the personnel of UNAVEM. II, the Government of
Zambia and the three observer States to the Angolan peace
process for their persistence and patience, which have
brought us to today's new phase.
The Council has kept faith with the people of Angola
during the civil war that followed UNITA's rejection of the
results of the 1992 elections. But experience of Angola has
taught us to be cautious. As Council resolutions have said
repeatedly, the people of Angola are ultimately responsible
for the future of their country. The United Nations can help
them, but it cannot do so if they will not help themselves.
As many have said here today, peace cannot be imposed on
the people of Angola. Therefore, the Government of Angola
and UNITA must demonstrate, by their deeds as well as
words, that the international community has made the right
decision. An early meeting between President dos Santos
and Mr. Savimbi, following on from the successful
meetings of the Chiefs of Staff, would indeed send the right
signal in this regard.
The Secretary-General has stated in his report that he
will not be prepared to proceed with the deployment of the
main infantry components of UNAVEM. III unless he can
determine that the parties have implemented certain
essential tasks set out in the Lusaka Protocol. The Council
firmly agrees. As the resolution we have just adopted
makes clear, it is not prepared to countenance further
substantial delays or lack of cooperation from the parties,
and would, in those circumstances, review the role of the
United Nations in Angola. The Council also expects that
the mission of UNAVEM. III will be completed without
undue delay, in accordance with the schedule set out in the
Lusaka Protocol, and it believes, rightly in my
Government's View, that this can and should be done before
February 1997, two years from now.
We welcome the substantial improvement in the
humanitarian situation in Angola. We support the
Secretary-General's call for donors to respond generously to
meet the humanitarian needs of the Angolan people. My
Government has contributed around $36 million in
humanitarian aid since the United Nations launched its
major international appeal in 1993. We shall continue to do
what we can to help.
The situation in Angola is not the only one in Africa
on the agenda of the Security Council. Regrettably, war
afflicts several African countries. Paragraph 17 of the
present resolution encourages cooperation between the
United Nations and the Organization of African Unity and
recalls the contribution that regional organizations can
make to crisis management and conflict resolution. We
very much agree, and it was with this in mind that the
British Foreign Secretary launched an initiative in the
most recent General Assembly session to enhance the
capacity for preventive action and peace-keeping in
Africa. Since then, there have been fruitful discussions
with African countries, the OAU, the United Nations, and
some non-African countries, held in Accra, Cairo and
Harare, of practical proposals in the areas of conflict
prevention and support for African peace-keeping nations,
including greater cooperation in training and logistic
support.
My Government also sees this resolution as a
reaffirmation by the international community of its
commitment to United Nations mechanisms to resolve
conflicts that are beyond the means or ability of
individual nations to solve. But we cannot be oblivious to
the clouds that will hang over United Nations peace-
keeping as a whole if important donors cannot follow
through by financing the operations that they themselves
have played a leading role in establishing. We are well
aware of the powerful testimony that our colleague from
the United States has presented on the role which the
United Nations plays in furthering international security
and in shouldering missions and financial burdens that
would otherwise fall, in much worse form, upon
individual Governments. We can only hope that her
arguments will be heeded before we all have to draw very
painful conclusions for the type of operation which we
are unanimously supporting today.
Finally, the United Kingdom is very conscious of the
potential which a lasting peace in Angola could unlock,
not only in Angola itself, but in the region of southern
Africa as a whole. We hope to be able to play our own
part practically, as we have in the Council hitherto, in
helping the Government and people of Angola to realize
their commitments and their hopes for a better future. We
were glad to be able to contribute a contingent to the
United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda, and we
are currently considering a request from the United
Nations to contribute to UNAVEM. III in Angola.
The President: I thank the representative of the
United Kingdom for the kind words he addressed to me.
Mr. Wibisono (Indonesia): Let me begin, Sir, by
congratulating your Ambassador on his assumption of the
presidency of the Security Council for the month of
February and by expressing my delegation's deep
satisfaction at seeing you, Mr. Minister, presiding over the
Council today. We have every confidence that, given your
long experience, you will guide the work of the Council
most effectively.
I should also like to express to the Ambassador of
Argentina our appreciation for the skilful way in which he
conducted the work of the Council in the month of January.
His presidency last month marked an efficient beginning of
our work for 1995.
Furthermore, my delegation would like to welcome the
Foreign Ministers of the States members of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) to our meeting.
Indonesia commends His Excellency Mr. Venancio de
Moura, Minister of External Relations of the Republic of
Angola, for his valuable remarks this morning. The
presence here of all those Ministers emphasizes the need
for the immediate establishment and deployment of a
United Nations peace-keeping operation while the search
for peace in Angola is intensified.
With regard to the question under consideration, my
Government wishes to convey its thanks to the Secretary-
General, Mr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, for his comprehensive
and detailed report (S/1995/97) on the United Nations
Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. II). In particular,
we welcome the very good prospects and solid logistical
planning for the future work of UNAVEM. III, contained in
that document.
Furthermore, my delegation wishes to express its
appreciation to the Secretary-General's Special
Representative in Angola, Mr. Alioune Blondin Beye,
especially for his efforts to improve the political climate in
Angola and to prepare the way for a meeting between
President dos Santos and Mr. Jonas Savimbi.
We take note of the positive developments indicated
by the agreement of the Government of Angola and of
UNITA to meet, and also by the signing of the Lusaka
Protocol on 20 November 1994. We especially welcome
reports that the parties have been observing a cease-fire
which is generally holding. This encouraging process was
also reflected clearly in the insightful statement made by
His Excellency Mr. Venancio de Moura this morning.
Hence, we hope that the concrete evidence of the
acceptance of the Lusaka Protocol by the Government of
Angola and UNITA will soon be manifested in the full
implementation of the accord. We further hope that the
parties will take all the decisive and necessary steps to
assure the accord's implementation, for through such an
undertaking an atmosphere conducive to attaining peace
will be created, thus giving impetus to national
reconciliation.
In this regard, I should also like to bring to the
Council's attention the fact that certain constitutive
elements of the Lusaka Protocol, such as de-mining and
the quartering, disarming and demobilization of troops,
under UNAVEM. I and UNAVEM. II, have yet to be
implemented. This would seem to indicate that there is a
greater time lag in operations in the field than the report
on UNAVEM. II may suggest. This pertains to a recent
increase in the number of military observers, deployment
of United Nations military and police elements country-
wide and the setting up of outstations in some critical
areas.
Indonesia urges that those operations be carried out
immediately and that the Mission's pace be quickened. To
do so, it is imperative that the international community
lend its active support and enable such features of the
Mission to be successfully carried out in keeping with the
agreed timetable of the Lusaka Protocol.
We wish to stress that substantial additional funds
remain to be obtained from the donor community. In this
connection, my Government would like to thank the
Secretary-General for the addendum to his report,
containing cost estimates for the enlargement of the
United Nations operation in Angola, while we also
appreciate the continued support of the Government of
Angola for all elements of UNAVEM. II.
My delegation voted in favour of the resolution
establishing UNAVEM. III, expressly for the purpose of
keeping to the agreed timetable leading to long-lasting
peace and development in Angola. We support the
Secretary-General's proposal to establish a further
enlarged United Nations operation in Angola, because we
find it to be a practical tactical action which would assist
the parties in restoring peace, achieving national
reconciliation and beginning the restoration of the
economy and infrastructure.
Therefore, my Government would like to stress the
importance of the Secretary-General's recommendation
that UNAVEM. III should immediately take over from
UNAVEM. II. The speed with which UNAVEM. III is
deployed will be crucial for maintaining the momentum
towards peace in Angola. In this regard, the commitments
of both the Angolan Government and UNITA to implement
the "Acordos de Paz", the Lusaka Protocol and the relevant
Security Council resolutions are essential to that effort.
Although my Government is aware that
implementation has fallen behind schedule, this must not
allow any party even to hope to renew the conflict. We
were encouraged to hear the Honourable Mr. Bwanali,
Foreign Minister of Malawi, say this morning, as leader of
the OAU Council of Ministers delegation to this meeting,
"that the situation is different this time around and
that the Angolan people are tired of war."
(S/PV.3499, p. 6)
We therefore recommend that all the parties concerned
cooperate in expediting the electoral process which was
disrupted in 1992. The holding of the second round of
presidential elections, which will take place after the United
Nations has declared that the requisite conditions have been
met, ought to be seen as a cherished symbol of the
normalization of Angola's national life, a goal which can be
realized if the people of Angola so decide.
Mr. Al-Khussaiby (Oman): Allow me to welcome
you, Mr. Minister, to the Security Council and to
congratulate you most warme on your assumption of the
presidency for the month of February. We are fully
confident that you and your capable Permanent
Representative will conduct the work of the Council in an
effective and efficient manner.
I should also like to pay a well-deserved tribute to
Ambassador Cerdenas of Argentina and members of his
delegation for their excellent work last month.
It also gives me great honour and pleasure to welcome
the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs and the
Secretary-General of the Organization of African Unity
(OAU). Their presence in our midst today is indicative of
the importance of the issue before the Council. We deeply
appreciate their contributions to this debate and express the
hope that such a'e'marehes will be repeated in the future, in
other serious and more complicated conflicts in Africa, in
the interest of furthering the cause of peace and security in
Africa as a whole.
The signing of the Lusaka Protocol between the
Government of Angola and UNITA on 20 November 1994
and the cease-fire agreement between the two parties mark
the beginning of a new era in the history of the Angolan
conflict. I should like, through you, Mr. President, and
through the Foreign Minister of Angola, who is with us
today, to congratulate the Government and the people of
Angola, as well as UNITA, on this historic event. By
signing this important document the two parties have said
"Enough" to the destructive war which raged in their
countries for two decades and which claimed thousands
of lives and caused widespread destruction of their
infrastructure, State property.
In the past we have had the opportunity to welcome
this positive development, and today we should like to
welcome the fact that, two months after the signing of the
Lusaka Protocol, the cease-fire is still holding, without
major violations, and that the Joint Commission
established at Lusaka is continuing its work aimed at
creating an atmosphere of mutual trust and confidence
between the parties. We sincerely hope that the
anticipated meeting between President dos Santos and Mr.
Savimbi will soon take place with a view to building the
necessary political momentum for the successful
implementation of the Lusaka Protocol.
Although the status quo in Angola is a cause for
optimism that peace will be restored to that country, it is
vital that the two parties continue to demonstrate the
political will and the commitment necessary for the
achievement of peace and national reconciliation through
strict and timely compliance with the "Acordos de Paz",
the Lusaka Protocol and the relevant Security Council
resolutions, in the interests of durable peace, security and
economic and social development in their country.
The resolution that we have just adopted, which has
authorized the establishment of the third United Nations
Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. III) to assist the
parties in the implementation of the Lusaka Protocol,
demonstrates the resolve of the international community
to continue its support for the Angolan peace process.
But, in the meantime, this resolution must send to all the
parties the clear message that the international community
will not entertain any delay in the implementation of the
Lusaka Protocol. We deemed it appropriate that the draft
resolution should contain such a provision. We therefore
hope that all parties in Angola will take today's Security
Council message seriously and in the spirit of national
reconciliation, peace, brotherhood, coexistence and
harmony, in the interests of building a new democratic
Angola.
In conclusion, I should like to express my
delegation's appreciation to the Secretary-General, Mr.
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, to his Special Representative in
Angola, to the three observer States of the Angolan peace
process and to all the States of the Organization of African
Unity - in particular, Zambia, which hosted the peace
negotiations - for their invaluable and effective
contribution to finding a just, durable and lasting solution
to the conflict in Angola. We are pleased to note that their
concerted efforts have borne fruit.
The President: I thank the representative of Oman for
his kind words addressed to me.
Mrs. Cafias (Argentina) (interpretation from Spanish ):
I should like at the outset to welcome you, Sir, to
congratulate you, together with Ambassador Legwaila, on
Botswana's assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council, and to express my delegation's readiness to
cooperate in the discharge of your duties, which we are
certain will be crowned with success.
I should also like to extend a welcome to, and to
express appreciation for the presence of, the delegation of
the Organization of African Unity (OAU), composed of the
Foreign Ministers of your country and of Lesotho, Malawi,
Namibia, South Africa, Tunisia and Zambia, the
representatives of Guinea-Bissau and Senegal and, of
course, Foreign Minister Venancio de Moura of the
Republic of Angola, who is with us at the Security Council
table. The presence of such an important delegation, as well
as the important peace-keeping operation that the Security
Council has just established, reflects the support that the
international community has been lending to the peace
process in Angola since 1988, as well as the renewed hope
on this occasion following the signing of the Lusaka
Protocol by the Government of Angola and UNITA.
Having left behind 20 years of brutal civil war, which
began as the independence process in Angola was getting
under way, the people of that country deserve to take in
peace the path of reconciliation and reconstruction. The
United Nations has actively supported this process, and
today it is prepared to take an important further step. But
at the same time the Government of Angola and UNITA
should be aware that it is they who bear primary
responsibility for crowning this process with success. On
their continued commitment and implementation of the
agreements reached will depend to a great extent the
support that the international community is prepared to
lend. We believe that this process would be significantly
strengthened by a direct meeting between President dos
Santos and Mr. Savimbi.
In this context, we should also like to highlight in a
very positive way Angola's offer, detailed in its letter
circulated as document S/1994/1451, relating to the
contribution in kind that it has committed to the
application of the Lusaka Protocol and to the third United
Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM. III). We
attach special importance to this effort, in the light of the
great humanitarian crisis experienced by that country.
We should like most especially to thank the
Secretary-General for the very complete report that he has
submitted; we find especially useful the details of the
mandate and the concept of the operation. We wish to
emphasize that the information on the cease-fire and the
parties' repeated commitment to respect for and fulfilment
of the "Acordos de Paz" and the steps established by the
Lusaka Protocol were determining factors in the Council's
advances towards establishing the third phase of the
Verification Mission. This United Nations peace-keeping
operation is the most ambitious and complex to have been
created for nearly two years.
The resolution that we have just adopted provides,
through the establishment of UNAVEM. III, the necessary
framework for the Government of Angola and UNITA to
fulfil promptly and completely the provisions of the
"Acordos de Paz", the Lusaka Protocol and the relevant
resolutions of the Security Council. Accordingly, we hope
that the parties will take all necessary steps to avoid any
further delays, and we hope that the UNAVEM. III
planning and support elements will be deployed promptly,
thus allowing the rapid arrival of infantry units and other
components of the force, when conditions permit.
In the light of the experience gained in other peace-
keeping operations, we would particularly emphasize the
need for the rapid introduction of a broad and well
coordinated programme of mine clearance. We know that
this is a grave long-term problem that the Angolan people
will have to face, and the sooner we begin the task the
better. The support of the international community in this
regard is essential.
Aspects relating to public information also seem to
us important in this new phase of United Nations work in
Angola. We hope that concrete steps will be taken along
these lines, in close cooperation with the Government of
Angola.
The machinery for Security Council follow-up
established in this resolution are also important, since,
without depriving the Secretary-General of the flexibility
that he needs for the management of a peace-keeping
operation, they will enable the Security Council to manage
the political aspects properly and with the necessary
urgency.
The Argentine Republic, in addition to being another
South Atlantic coastal State and working together with
Angola in the Zone of peace and cooperation of the South
Atlantic, has close ties of friendship and cooperation with
that country. Accordingly, since it gained its independence
in 1975, we have been cooperating with it, and from the
very beginning of UNAVEM, in 1988, we have
continuously contributed military and police personnel. This
commitment by Argentina to Angola continues and will be
expanded in UNAVEM. III. The era of peace and hope that
is now beginning for Angola will undoubtedly provide
opportunities for greater cooperation between our peoples.
With the cycle that is beginning, a well-founded hope
arises for an era of peace, stability and prosperity for
southern Africa. That region of the African continent has
every potential to become an important axis of
development, whose benefits will undoubtedly extend
beyond its borders. The Argentine Republic expresses its
hope again today that this crucial opportunity will be fully
seized by the Angolan people, and is prepared to cooperate
to that end.
The President: I thank the representative of Argentina
for her kind words addressed to me and to our Permanent
Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador
Legwaila.
Mr. Rovensky (Czech Republic): First of all, let me
express my delegation's delight in seeing you, Sir, presiding
over today's important meeting of the Council. At the same
time, we congratulate your delegation on the assumption of
the presidency of the Security Council for the month of
February. You have our full support and confidence. I
would also like to express our high appreciation for the
effective and business-like manner in which Ambassador
Cardenas of Argentina guided the affairs of the Council
during January.
Finally, let me welcome sincerely the Foreign Minister
of Angola and all the members of the ministerial delegation
of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) to the Security
Council.
The signing of the Lusaka Protocol on
20 November 1994 opened the path towards peace and
stability in Angola. The resolution which the Council has
just adopted marks a very important step forward along
this path. By authorizing the establishment of the new
United Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM III) peace-keeping operation, the international
community - and, on its behalf, the Security Council -
has firmly committed itself to aid the process of national
reconciliation in Angola.
But let me stress that even the best-drafted Security
Council resolution cannot in itself guarantee the success
of the political settlement in Angola and the return of
lasting peace and prosperity to this long-suffering African
country. It is none other than the Government of Angola
and the leaders of UNITA who bear primary
responsibility for the success or failure of the peace
process. It is up to them to make sure that the letter and
the spirit of the Lusaka agreements are scrupulously
adhered to in the months ahead. The United Nations and
its Security Council will of course support them in their
quest for lasting peace and reconciliation. However, this
role cannot but be a supporting one and should be
understood as such by the Angolan parties.
The Angolan parties also carry the primary
responsibility for the safety and freedom of movement of
United Nations and other personnel deployed under
UNAVEM. III. We hope that the intended meeting
between the President of Angola, Mr. dos Santos, and the
leader of UN ITA, Mr. Savimbi, will give new impetus to
the peace process.
The Czech Republic welcomes the first successful
steps taken by both parties in the implementation of the
Lusaka Protocol. However, we are concerned by
indications that, a mere few weeks into the
implementation of the Protocol, the process is already
slipping behind schedule. It would hardly be acceptable
for this trend to continue. It is necessary for the Angolan
parties to implement the Lusaka Protocol in accordance
with the agreed timetable and even to try to accelerate the
whole process.
We believe that the OAU has an important role to
play in pushing the peace process in Angola forward.
Based on lessons from the past, the United Nations and
the OAU have to work together to bring peace, stability
and development to Angola and the region. After the
flourishing of peace and democracy in Mozambique,
successful national reconciliation and the strengthening of
democracy in Angola would represent another positive
example for Africa, which presently is the theatre of more
internal conflicts than any other part of the world.
Based on the Secretary-General's overall positive
evaluation of the situation in Angola, as indicated in his
report, the Czech Republic, whose military observers
actively participated in UNAVEM. II operations, fully
supports the deployment of UNAVEM. III. We expect in
particular at this stage that the cease-fire arrangements will
be meticulously implemented by both sides in good faith.
The fact that a number of countries have expressed
their readiness to contribute their personnel and material to
UNAVEM. III is an encouraging sign of confidence in the
process of national reconciliation in Angola. We are
grateful that this confidence is reflected in the language of
our resolution. We consider it important that the resolution
was drafted very carefully and that the Security Council
took into consideration all important elements needed not
only for an early launch of this new peace-keeping
operation, but also for its effective functioning and its
successful conclusion. We also underline that, in accordance
with this resolution, the Security Council will be ready to
review the role of the United Nations in Angola if the
cooperation required from the parties is not forthcoming or
is substantially delayed.
We do not forget the fact that many Angolan civilians
are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. We urge both
parties to create, with the assistance of international
humanitarian organizations, conditions which would
facilitate the return of thousands of displaced Angolans to
their homes.
In conclusion, I should like to convey our deep
appreciation to the Secretary-General, the troika of observer
States - Portugal, the United States of America and the
Russian Federation - and the Secretary-General's Special
Representative, Mr. Alioune Blondin Beye, for having
contributed greatly to the success of the negotiating process.
The President: I thank the representative of the Czech
Republic for his kind words addressed to me.
I shall now make a statement in my capacity as
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Botswana.
The Botswana delegation welcomes the report of the
Secretary-General on the United Nations Angola
Verification Mission (UNAVEM. II), contained in document
S/1995/97. I wish to pay a special tribute to the Secretary-
General and his Special Representative for Angola, Mr.
Alioune Blondin Beye, for the excellent work they have
done in the search for peace in Angola. We are meeting
here today to launch UNAVEM. III thanks to their
resilience and tenacious efforts to find a solution to the
Angolan conflict.
The presence here today of the African Foreign
Ministers and the Secretary-General of the Organization
of African Unity is a clear indication of the importance
which Africa attaches to the Angolan conflict. The Lusaka
Protocol and the "Acordos de Paz" which preceded it are
the blueprints for the settlement of one of the most brutal
and destructive conflicts in Africa. It is our hope that our
Angolan brothers will, this time, faithfully adhere to the
spirit and letter of the commitments they have made in
these declarations of intent.
We also hope that they will leave no stone unturned
to ensure that UNAVEM. III becomes the success that the
United Nations and our tortured continent want it to be.
Nobody, and certainly none of us in southern Africa,
wants to hear anything about UNAVEM. IV. UNAVEM
III is Angola's last chance. It is our last chance.
The will of the international community to stay the
course with repeated, and costly, peace-keeping operations
has been tested beyond what is humanly acceptable.
Angola forms an integral part of southern Africa; it pains
our hearts to see the people of Angola continue to kill
each other with abandon in a region that is now otherwise
free of war, a region now marked by good governance
and the rule of law.
We want for the people of Angola what we cherish
most in Botswana: peace and stability, freedom and
development. In other words, we desire for the people of
Angola exactly the good things in life that we desire for
ourselves. We want Angola to become another political
success story in our region, following in the footsteps of
Malawi, South Africa and Mozambique. That would make
southern Africa a strong and viable economic proposition.
As I have already stated, there is general "peace-
keeping-operation fatigue" among members of the
international community. This is perfectly understandable:
peace-keeping operations, by their nature, are very
expensive enterprises with no immediate benefits or
returns. They are prone to breakdowns, as the experience
of the United Nations in Angola, Rwanda and Somalia -
to mention but three cases - has amply demonstrated.
They also become wasteful in material terms, and a
source of frustration. They divert scarce resources that
could otherwise be released for social and economic
development. It is for those reasons that our Angolan
brothers must understand why UNAVEM. III must on no
account fail.
I have so far placed the onus for the success of
UNAVEM. III on the people of Angola. I believe, however,
that the international community has an inescapable role to
play in the progress of Angola towards stable and lasting
peace, national reconciliation and reconstruction. After all,
some Members of the United Nations may be as
responsible as the people of Angola for the colossal
destruction and mayhem that have unquestionably befallen
that country. In that context, the international community
should get its act together and assist the people of Angola
in achieving peace.
In that regard, we wish to urge the Security Council
to guard against making the United Nations Mission in
Angola a victim of stringent conditionalities that could
impede its implementation. We should realize that the work
of the United Nations in Angola is not going to be easy.
Failure or success will depend to a large extent on the
patience, understanding and cooperation of all involved.
There will be no easy solutions. The fact that we are
discussing the deployment of UNAVEM. III today is a clear
indication that we are not dealing with a normal situation.
It calls for the exercise of restraint and flexibility in
monitoring the situation on the ground. In other words,
isolated and sporadic violations of the cease-fire provisions
should not be used as a pretext for the withdrawal of the
Mission.
We should also realize that each peace-keeping
operation is unique and that the experience gained in one
peace-keeping operation is not necessarily directly
replicable in others. Each peace-keeping operation is an
experience in itself. This should not be taken as advocacy
of or a licence for an open-ended peace-keeping mission.
We have noted the concerns of those who advocate "sunset
provisions" in all peace-keeping operations. There is no
problem with that approach so long as it is universally
applied. It would surely help make the parties to a conflict
understand that the United Nations does not have an infinite
amount of time at its disposal for such operations. At the
same time, however, we should guard against being overly
cautious, to the extent that we might threaten the success of
the Mission.
In short, all we are saying is that we should not
unintentionally impede the progress of UNAVEM. III with
too many conditionalities. We should also ensure that we
have in place post-conflict peace-building measures, which
are an indispensable condition for the stabilization of the
country. Thus, the staged implementation of the operation
at the beginning should be followed by phased withdrawal
of the Mission to help the people of Angola build mutual
trust and confidence and live peacefully together as good
neighbours.
To that end, there should be a continued, strong
United Nations presence in Angola beyond the expiry of
the mandate of UNAVEM. III to help the people of
Angola adjust to a new life. We are happy that
paragraphs 37 to 39 of the Secretary-General's report
cover some of these concerns.
Let me highlight once again the primary
responsibility of the people of Angola and their leaders
for the successful implementation of the provisions both
of the "Acordos de Paz" and the Lusaka Protocol. This
could be their last chance to receive the support of the
international community in the search for a peaceful
solution to their problem.
Equally, the United Nations has a responsibility to
the people of Angola. There should be no attempt or
threat to withdraw the Mission for flimsy reasons at any
stage in the implementation of the provisions of the
present resolution. It is the collective responsibility of all
involved to usher Angola into a new era of peace and
stability. We should do everything in our power to ensure
that we succeed this time.
I now resume my functions as President of the
Security Council.
The Minister of External Relations of Angola has
asked to make a statement. I call upon him now.
Mr. de Moura (Angola) (interpretation from French): I asked to speak in order to thank the members
of the Security Council, my fellow Ministers and all the
other guests of the Council who have made statements
since this morning, more than 30 in all. Once more, we
thank them all for their contribution to this debate, which
culminated in the adoption of a new resolution on Angola.
On behalf of the Angolan people and its Government, we
thank the Council and Africa for all their efforts to
establish peace and national reconciliation among
Angolans.
After meeting since this morning, the Security
Council has adopted resolution 976 (1995). We assure
members of our commitment to all resolutions of the
Security Council, especially their positive elements. But,
while reiterating our thanks for all the efforts of members
of the Council and of the Secretary-General, we are obliged
to note that my Government regrets that the resolution
includes a provision that we View as a violation of the
Lusaka Protocol, agreed upon by the Angolan parties with
the assistance of a number of members of the Security
Council.
This violation, which began with the Lusaka Protocol,
should be a warning, because the Security Council will
recall what happened with the Bicesse accords, when an
element called "triple zero" was introduced, from
31 May 1991 until elections were held; those elections,
under international supervision, resulted in the present
Government. When we see the reintroduction of this
provision in paragraph 12 of the resolution, we are
compelled to conclude that once again new elements have
been introduced, in violation of the Lusaka Protocol,
agreed to by the parties, elements that might harm the
legitimate Government.
But let us be optimistic, while ensuring that the
violence of 1992 does not recur. Once again, we reiterate
our firm and sincere commitment to the positive aspects
of the resolution that has just been adopted and to the
implementation of the compromise reached with the
signing of the Lusaka Protocol.
The President: There are no further speakers. The
Security Council has thus concluded the present stage of
its consideration of the item on its agenda.
The Security Council will remain seized of the
matter.
The meeting rose at 7.05 pm.
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