S/PV.3875Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
71
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Security Council deliberations
Sustainable development and climate
Peacekeeping support and operations
African Union peace and security
Economic development programmes
Global economic relations
Africa
The President: I should like to inform the Council
that I have received a letter from the representative of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, in which he requests to
be invited to participate in the discussion of the item on the
Council's agenda. In conformity with the usual practice, I
propose, with the consent of the Council, to invite that
representative to participate in the discussion, without the
right to vote, in accordance with the relevant provisions of
the Charter and rule 37 of the Council's provisional rules
of procedure.
There being no objection, it is so decided.
At the invitation of the President, Mr. Mwamba
Kapanga (Democratic Republic of the Congo) took a
seat at the side of the Council table.
Mr. Richardson (United States of America): Today
the Security Council is discussing one of the most
important issues we face, the future of Africa. The
Secretary-General laid a solid foundation for this discussion
with his frank and incisive report, "The causes of conflict
and the promotion of durable peace and sustainable
development in Africa".
Seven months ago, the Security Council, then under
the presidency of the United States, asked the Secretary-
General to analyse the causes of conflict in Africa and to
identify ways the international community could work in
partnership with Africa to prevent, mitigate and resolve
conflicts. The Secretary-General responded to this difficult
challenge with great courage and vision.
The Secretary-General's report provides valuable
insights into the varied situations confronting Africa today.
While the report recognizes the historical failures of
African countries and the international community to
prevent or resolve conflicts, it urges us to move beyond the
recriminations of the past and focus on the possibilities of
a brighter future for all Africans. The Secretary-General's
recommendations serve as useful frameworks for action
towards that goal.
The United States has taken the Secretary-General's
message to heart. We are committed to an active
partnership with Africa to promote democracy, respect for
human rights and sustained stability and to accelerate
Africa's integration into the global economy.
Only three weeks ago, President Clinton returned
from an historic 11-day, 6-nation tour of Africa. As the
Secretary-General did in his report, President Clinton
stressed the central importance of democracy and basic
freedoms. This was the vision that brought President
Clinton and seven leaders from Central and East Africa
together to sign the Entebbe Accord. The Accord
endorsed the core principles of inclusion, the rule of law,
respect for human rights, the equality of all men and
women and the right of citizens to regularly elect their
leaders freely and to participate fully in the decision-
making which affects them. The eight leaders recognized
that meeting these objectives requires the political will to
resolve conflicts without Violence, achieve sustainable
economic development and prevent the tragedy of
genocide from ever recurring in Africa.
Regional and subregional African organizations have
shown the political will to play a leading role in ending
conflict and thereby enhancing stability and prosperity in
Africa. Over the past several years the United States has
contributed over $10 million to assist the Organization of
African Unity to build a crisis management centre in
Addis Ababa and to train and equip a lOO-man rapid
deployment observation force. We have worked with
regional organizations in West Africa, southern Africa
and East Africa to support African-led efforts to end
conflicts. Our African Crisis Response Initiative and
similar efforts by France and the United Kingdom are
designed to help African nations enhance their ability to
serve as peacekeepers in Africa or in other troubled
regions. Coordination and cross-training are keys to the
success of peacekeeping operations. We urge the
international community to continue helping the regional
and subregional organizations develop their conflict
management and peacekeeping capacities.
As the Secretary-General's report notes, only when
peace and security are established can sustainable
economic development take root. As the benefits of
economic opportunity spread, the prospects for a
sustained and lasting peace correspondingly improve. The
all too familiar cycle of violence can and must be
replaced by a cycle of opportunity.
President Clinton emphasized the need to broaden
economic opportunities for Africans. Africa does not need
or want the world's sympathy; it needs foreign
investment, new trade and commercial links and the
increased tax revenue and improved infrastructure that
come with economic growth. The United States is
implementing the Partnership for Growth and Opportunity
and working with Congress to pass the African Growth and
Opportunity Act, which will open our markets to African
countries undertaking economic reforms. In addition, we are
working with leading reform-oriented countries to consider
additional measures to expand trade and investment
relations between Africa and the United States.
At the same time, President Clinton pledged to work
with Congress to restore levels of official development
assistance to Africa to their historical high-water mark. The
United States believes that there is no sounder investment
than in the well-being and future of people, and we are
making that investment in Africa. We are helping to control
the spread of diseases such as HIV/AIDS and malaria in
Botswana. In Uganda, we launched the Education for
Development and Democracy Initiative, which will improve
the quality of African education at all levels, but give
special attention to educational opportunities for young
women and greater access to the technology and
information needed to compete in the next century.
One of the burdens Africans should not have to carry
far into the next century is the burden of debt. We, along
with other donors, recognize the importance of reducing to
sustainable levels the debts of countries that are taking the
often painful and difficult steps necessary to reform and
modernize their economies. By the year 2000, the United
States will have provided some $3 billion in debt reduction
for African countries. Under a new bilateral initiative for
Africa, the United States hopes to fully forgive concessional
debts owed by African countries that demonstrate the
political will to undertake sustained reforms.
Just as President Clinton's trip launched a critical
reassessment of the United States' relationship with Africa,
the Secretary-General's report should establish the
framework for a new dialogue between the international
community and Africa and spur us all to action.
Today's meeting of the Security Council represents
only the first step in that discussion. We must not walk
away from today's meeting, pat ourselves on the back and
think that our work is done. We look forward to
collaborating with other countries, in the Security Council
and in other United Nations bodies, to study and then
implement the recommendations of the Secretary-General.
We strongly endorse the Secretary-General's call for
ministerial-level meetings of the Security Council every two
years to assess how we are doing and how we can do more.
We must now meet the challenge the Secretary-
General has put before us: to begin a new partnership
among Africa, the United Nations and the international
community. Together we can contribute to Africa's effort
to realize its potential and its dream of peace, stability
and development. Together, as an international
community, we must reach out to support the next
generation of Africans as they work to create a new, more
dynamic and hopeful Africa.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Mauritania. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Ould Deddach (Mauritania) (interpretation from French): Allow me first of all to congratulate you,
Sir, on your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for this month. Knowing your skills and qualities
and the interest that your country has in African issues, I
am sure that you will guide our work to a positive
outcome.
I should also like to take this opportunity to extend,
on behalf of the African Group, my congratulations and
encouragement to the Secretary-General, Mr. Kofi Annan,
for his report, entitled "The causes of conflict and the
promotion of durable peace and sustainable development
in Africa".
On 25 September 1997 the Security Council,
meeting at ministerial level, unanimously acknowledged
the need to engage in concerted international action to
achieve peace, security and development in Africa.
In its presidential statement (S/PRST/ 1997/46), the
Security Council indicated that it remained seriously
concerned by the number and intensity of armed conflicts
on the African continent. Believing that the challenges
facing Africa required a more comprehensive response,
the Council then requested the Secretary-General to
present to it a report
"containing concrete recommendations regarding
the sources of conflict in Africa, ways to prevent
and address these conflicts, and how to lay the
foundation for durable peace and economic growth".
At the same time, the Council affirmed its intention
to review promptly the recommendations of the Secretary-
General with a View to taking steps consistent with its
responsibilities under the Charter of the United Nations.
All of the speakers at that ministerial-level meeting,
and in particular the current Chairman of the Organization
of African Unity, His Excellency President Robert Mugabe
of Zimbabwe, as well as the Secretary-General of the
Organization of African Unity, His Excellency Mr. Salim
Ahmed Salim, put forward the concerns of Africa with
regard to security, peace and development.
The report that the Secretary-General was asked to
draw up has now appeared, and was presented to the
Council last week.
This substantive document, 22 pages and 107
paragraphs in length, is sound in every way. It covers all
relevant aspects of the security, peace and development of
our continent.
Indeed, the sources of these conflicts are varied and
manifold, but they all have a single common denominator:
underdevelopment and economic problems in general. For
example, of the planet's 48 least developed countries, 35
are in Africa.
The Secretary-General's report clearly emphasizes this
aspect of the situation. While the notable decline of
conflicts in Africa must be welcomed, the persistent
consequences of conflicts in several regions of the continent
must nevertheless be acknowledged, consequences that can
threaten peace and security and that significantly endanger
the efforts of the African States to achieve development and
ensure the well-being of their populations.
The Organization of African Unity (OAU) has done
significant work in the areas of conflict prevention,
management and settlement, in particular by creating an
organ entrusted with such action and by undertaking
numerous initiatives to restore and consolidate peace in
certain regions of Africa.
Africa is aware that it holds the primary responsibility
for solving the problems that face it; it must demonstrate to
the international community its will to face these
challenges, but it also needs the international community's
aid and support. The Group of African States would like to
take this opportunity to welcome the recent establishment
of a United Nations liaison office at OAU headquarters,
which will further ensure close cooperation between the two
organizations in the prevention and resolution of conflicts
in Africa and in other areas of mutual interest.
The annual meetings between the Secretaries-General
of the United Nations and OAU also promote better
communication and planning in order to achieve more
satisfactory results. Cooperation with all African
subregional organizations should also be encouraged.
In his report, the Secretary-General requests the
international community as a whole act to deal with the
situations in Africa. The Security Council, within the area
of competence conferred on it by the Charter, must
immediately set about implementing the report's
recommendations.
Other measures and actions recommended in
Mr. Kofi Annan's report fall within the purview of the
General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council and
the Bretton Woods institutions. All of these institutions
should immediately scrutinize the report in order to see to
what extent the actions that are within their competence
should be implemented.
Cooperation and collaboration between the African
countries and the United Nations are necessary to achieve
concrete results. Synergy between the various bodies of
the United Nations, on the one hand, and their partners
for development in Africa, on the other, is also required.
The establishment of a mechanism or a committee
mandated to implement the recommendations contained in
the Secretary-General's report would facilitate the work
of the Security Council.
The States of Africa are undertaking significant
reforms, and it must be acknowledged that these reforms
are beginning to yield positive results. However, those
States are aware that a great deal remains to be done. The
international community must pay greater attention to the
concerns of the continent, for at a time of globalization
and at the dawn of the twenty-first century, it is unjust
that some inhabitants of the planet do not even have the
bare minimum they need.
The best response the Security Council can give to
the concerns of our continent today is the adoption of a
resolution to give greater force to the actions to be
undertaken and to send a clear message to the entire
international community regarding the settlement of
conflicts in Africa, as a way to ensure its harmonious
development.
Africa is in favour of the Secretary-General' 5 request
for a biennial meeting of the Security Council at the
ministerial level to take stock of the efforts made and the
measures to be taken, and also supports the idea of a
summit meeting of the Security Council within five years.
My country, the Islamic Republic of Mauritania, like
all the African countries, welcomes any initiative
undertaken to help the continent extricate itself from
situations that compromise its future and that of future
generations of Africans.
My country's mission is to participate actively in an
organization that, respecting cultural diversity, advocates
cooperation and fruitful dialogue that serve the cause of
maintaining peace and stability for all.
Africa firmly believes that the report of the Secretary-
General will assist the international community in better
dealing with the problems it faces and that new initiatives
will be taken in order to help Africa overcome them.
In that context, for our Group, the only valid response
is that of undertaking specific measures to implement the
report's recommendations, since it is on that
implementation, as well as on the will of the continent's
inhabitants, that the security, stability and development of
Africa ultimately depend.
The President: I thank the representative of
Mauritania for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Nigeria. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Gambari (Nigeria): It is my honour and privilege
to make the following statement on behalf of the member
States of the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS).
Please allow me at the outset to congratulate you, Sir,
on your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for this month. Having known you over the years,
and in View of your country's particular interest in, and
concrete contributions regarding the objectives of, today's
agenda item, I am confident that you will successfully
conduct this and subsequent deliberations of the Council in
a manner that will enhance the principles and purposes of
the United Nations Charter.
Permit me also to express the appreciation of the
ECOWAS Group of Ambassadors at the United Nations for
the convening of this important and very timely meeting of
the Security Council. The initiative on the part of the
members of the Council to focus attention on the need for
a renewed and concerted international effort to promote
peace and stability in Africa is clearly unprecedented and
deserves our commendation. At a time when several
African countries are making considerable economic and
social progress, what is required from the international
community is encouragement and support in order to
sustain the positive tendencies while minimizing or
eliminating the incidence of violent conflicts there.
Africa has the largest number of member countries
at the United Nations, but it is also the continent with the
largest number of intra-State conflicts on the agenda of
the Security Council. The Secretary-General has now
placed before our Organization a report which could
indeed point the way in helping us all to address the
terrible problem of violent conflicts in Africa. It merits
serious and careful consideration. However, there is no
real shortage of insightful analyses of the African
condition including, in particular, this report by the
Secretary-General. But there has unfortunately been a
shortage of concrete actions to ameliorate the socio-
economic situation and establish a regime of sustainable
development in our continent. As the Secretary-General
himself points out,
"it is in deeds rather than in declarations that the
international community's commitment to Africa
will be measured". [S/1998/318, para. 106]
The key causes of conflict in Africa, as listed in the
Secretary-General's report, are varied and complex. Some
are internal and some external. In addition to its heavy
external debt overhang, youth unemployment and poor
and often inadequate infrastructure, Africa is threatened
by serious social instability and conflicts resulting in great
loss of life and alarming numbers of refugees and
displaced persons, the most vulnerable of whom are
women and children. This aspect of the situation is fully
highlighted in the report before us today, and its dire
consequences have continued to compromise Africa's
efforts to ensure long-term stability, prosperity and peace
for its peoples.
At the beginning of the 19803, sub-Saharan Africa
entered a period of serious economic decline, during
which real income per capita fell. This continued until
1993. Investment and saving rates likewise declined
during this period. The debt burden became unsustainable,
with Africa's external debt estimated at a total of $328.9
billion in 1995.
However, beginning in 1994, three successive years
of improved economic performance have provided
grounds for cautious optimism. For the first time since the
beginning of the 1980s, gross domestic product growth
rates stood at slightly over 4 per cent, thereby exceeding
population growth, although by a fairly small margin. This
recent upturn in sub-Saharan Africa, as was highlighted in
the Secretary-General's report, was underpinned by the
continued and rigorous implementation of economic reform
programmes, as well as by reductions in socio-economic
and political instability. A major factor was growth in
exports, which, according to the Economic Commission for
Africa, went from minus 4.2 per cent in 1993 to 3.3 per
cent in 1994 and 16.2 per cent 1995.
There is therefore the urgent need for additional and
more positive action on the debt burden of African States
by the international community to promote and reinforce
these gains from economic reforms. The recent Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries Debt Initiative is, no doubt, a
welcome step, even though its results so far have not been
encouraging. It should be expanded to include other highly
indebted countries in the continent, as only four countries
now qualify for this Initiative.
The ECOWAS group believes that the sustenance of
the recent economic upturn in sub-Saharan Africa depends
on a number of factors, in particular on how successfully
gains from increased export earnings are applied to
strengthen potential growth. A programme of sustained
economic growth should aim at significant investment in
infrastructure which, in many cases, is run down after years
of neglect. There is therefore the pressing need for foreign
direct investment in our economies which could enhance
the process of diversification beyond traditional exports,
which is essential for sustained growth.
Since the late 19805, foreign direct investment has
become an important new and vital instrument for the
integration of countries into the global economy.
Unfortunately, sub-Saharan African countries have not been
part of this trend, in spite of the fact that countries of the
region undertook many efforts to attract foreign direct
investment, for example, by liberalizing their markets and
increasing investor confidence through the conclusion of
bilateral investment promotion and protection agreements
and avoidance of double-taxation situations.
ECOWAS countries strongly believe that Africa is a
continent in which profitable investment opportunities
abound and that corporate and individual investors should
consider African countries as places to invest as we enter
the third millennium. However, the much-needed flows of
investment capital will also depend on the effectiveness of
measures taken by the international community to alleviate
the external debt burden of heavily indebted countries -
to which I referred earlier - which in sub-Saharan Africa
consists mainly of public and public- guaranteed long-term
debt. A satisfactory resolution of the external debt burden
is necessary if Africa is to be successfully integrated into
the world economy. In addition, debt relief would also
free resources needed for government investment in
physical and social infrastructures.
On the maintenance of regional peace and security,
the ECOWAS group is unanimous in its commitment to
the collective security of the entire subregion. This is
manifested through the creation of the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) in August 1990, which
has succeeded in containing the Liberian civil war and
restoring peace to that country so that, in July 1997, it
was possible to have the election of Charles Taylor as
President of Liberia. The same ECOMOG was a crucial
instrument in the efforts which led to the restoration of
President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah as President of Sierra
Leone following the routing of the military junta that had
earlier taken power in Sierra Leone, in May 1997. This is
the first time in the recent history of Africa that a
democratically elected regime, overthrown in a military
coup, was restored to power as a result of collective
action in a subregion. This is a rare achievement for
which we in the subregion are proud.
With this record of achievement, ECOWAS has an
effective mechanism for peace and conflict resolution
which has proven itself. That is probably why at the
meeting of the Ministers of Defence and Foreign Affairs
of ECOWAS member States last March, experts from
member States were directed to work with the ECOWAS
Executive Secretariat to elaborate a mechanism for
conflict prevention, conflict management and conflict
resolution, as well as for peacekeeping, in pursuance of
the decisions of the fourth extraordinary session of the
ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government
held in Lome, Togo, in December of last year. In order to
prevent, manage and resolve conflicts and to maintain
peace in the subregion, the Ministers agreed to abide by
the provisions of the Protocol on Non-Aggression and the
Protocol on Mutual Assistance in Defence and to draw on
the experiences acquired in the field, notably by
ECOMOG, in the preparation of a mechanism for
peacekeeping.
At this juncture, the ECOWAS group wishes to draw
the Council's attention to the Malian initiative on a
moratorium in the production, illegal transfer and
trafficking in small arms in zones of conflict, an issue
discussed in the Secretary-General's report. This initiative
was recently endorsed by all ECOWAS member States
within the framework of ongoing discussions for the
establishment of a mechanism for the prevention,
management and settlement of conflicts in our subregion.
This important initiative deserves the support of the
international community.
The ECOWAS group would further wish to appeal to
the international community to support Africa's regional
and subregional initiatives such as the ECOMOG
mechanism and the OAU trust fund for conflict prevention
and peacekeeping. In doing so the international community
will rightly be complementing African efforts to resolve
African problems, as regional and subregional organizations
are perhaps more familiar with the complexities of local
situations.
We believe that the Bretton Woods institutions have
a key role to play in the promotion, as well as in the
consolidation, of peace in Africa. In this regard, these
institutions should develop what we call domestic "peace-
friendly" structural adjustment programmes which do not
undermine the ability of African Governments to fulfil their
basic responsibilities in such basic and critical areas as the
education, health and welfare of their peoples.
Moreover, even when a violent conflict has been
resolved, we all know that real peace still has to be
established in the form of post-conflict peace-building. This
essentially has to do with the provision of security and
basic social facilities to ordinary people. This is also the
key to preventing the recurrence of armed confrontation and
avoiding a vicious cycle of violence. The Secretary-
General's report clearly articulates the need for the United
Nations to put in place peace-building initiatives in order to
achieve sustainable peace, and we support this imperative.
Finally, the Secretary-General's report is, in our View,
bold in concept, but his recommendations are also practical
and, therefore, achievable - provided that all actors both
inside and outside of Africa honestly and consistently
commit themselves to the aims and objectives of the report.
Our Secretary-General is right in pointing out that
"conflict in Africa has been seen as inevitable or
intractable it is neither. Conflict in Africa, as
everywhere, is caused by human action and can be
ended by human action." [S/PV.387I, p. 2]
Together, by mustering the political will to act on
this report and its recommendations, we can all leave a
positive legacy of durable peace and sustainable
development in Africa. In this regard, we need a United
Nations-led international economic and financial plan for
Africa, as we once had a Marshall Plan for the recovery
of Europe in the post-war era.
In closing, I wish to cite the wise words of a former
Secretary-General of this Organization, the late Dag
Hammarskjold, who warned that no one can expect to
keep his garden tidy by reserving a portion of it for
weeds. The international community and economic system
cannot long endure and function as a system if the
African component is allowed to remain in a permanent
state of economic depression, pervasive poverty and
social decay.
The President: I thank the representative of Nigeria
for the kind words he addressed to me.
Before I call on the next speaker inscribed on my
list, I should like to make a very brief announcement.
Members of the Council will recall that the
Secretary-General made his best efforts to sit through the
morning session of this meeting. He came again to sit in
on part of this afternoon's session, but unfortunately he
has left, leaving the message that he had another pressing
engagement this afternoon. I would like to take this
opportunity to express gratitude on my part, as President
of the Security Council, for his strong interest in
attending this meeting.
The Secretary-General asked me to say that the
Deputy Secretary-General, Mrs. Frechette, is going to
replace him in his chair and I am given to understand that
this is the first time in history that someone other than the
Secretary-General has sat there. I would like to welcome
the Deputy Secretary-General.
The next speaker is the representative of South
Africa. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and
to make his statement.
Mr. J ele (South Africa): I have the honour to speak
on behalf of the member States of the Southern African
Development Community (SADC): Angola, Botswana, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, Lesotho, Malawi,
Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa,
Seychelles, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
We in SADC commend the Secretary-General for his
report, whose holistic approach to the sources of conflict in
Africa has been dealt with in a balanced manner. It is
particularly important that the report provides guidelines on
conflict prevention, management and resolution.
It is imperative that the United Nations strengthen its
capacity in the area of peacekeeping in Africa so as to
respond to conflicts in a way that inspires confidence in its
universal obligation as the custodian of international peace
and security. Conflict prevention is vital and should be
accorded the highest priority and, where conflict has
erupted, timeous and effective management is crucial.
SADC welcomes the Secretary-General's objective to
redouble efforts to institutionalize peace where conflict has
ceased or where the prospects for peace are increased. The
political will of Member States is therefore pivotal in this
process and, in that context, it is important to stress the
need for dialogue and national reconciliation.
Chapter VIII of the United Nations Charter makes
provision for regional arrangements to ensure the
maintenance of international peace and security. It further
stipulates that such arrangements should be consistent with
the purposes and principles of the Charter. This provision
of the Charter provides a framework for developing closer
cooperation between Africa and the United Nations in peace
missions. Therefore, there is a need to reinforce and
implement the existing measures in a manner that promotes
meaningful interaction between the United Nations and the
Organization of African Unity (OAU).
We share the Secretary-General's concern about the
proliferation of arms and endorse his proposals for
strengthening the international and domestic instruments for
the harmonization of policies against illicit arms trafficking,
as this would serve to promote stability. There is an urgent
need to divert the expenditure of scarce resources from
military to development projects.
As the integration of credible deterrent capacities, the
provision of sufficient resources and the mustering of
commensurate political will are imperatives for successful
peacekeeping, it is essential that external actors maintain
common and coherent political approaches towards incipient
or ongoing conflicts and desist from engaging in rival or
competing efforts once a framework for mediation has been
established.
With regard to sanctions, we concur that they are
among the most important tools in peacemaking efforts, but
would emphasize that they should be imposed in
accordance with annex II of resolution 51/242, which
underlines the need for sanctions to be resorted to only
with utmost caution in order to minimize their adverse
effects on the civilian population.
The enhancement of Africa's capacity to operate in
peace missions has been a subject of much debate. Sadly,
international resources provided are commensurate neither
with specific needs nor with the proposed support for
capacity-building. The current processes required by
donor countries to access financing for training exercises
are laborious and often not responsive to the urgency with
which Africa is expected to increase its capacity. We
therefore fully support the Secretary-General's call on
Member States to contribute generously to the OAU
Peace Fund. Once the proper criteria have been
established for endorsing peace missions and needs
assessments have been made regarding those aspects of
Africa's capacity which require strengthening, it would be
easier to determine the applicability and depth of regional
and subregional needs.
We are also encouraged by the practical
recommendations regarding refugee assistance, the
enhancement of the professionalism of public officials and
the creation of a positive environment for investment and
economic growth. The proposals to secure a more
dynamic engagement between business leaders, the United
Nations, the Organization of African Unity and
subregional entities are most appropriate. These
interactions should greatly facilitate an understanding of
the debilitating effect of Africa's problems.
There is a need for the international community to
nurture and advance Africa's renaissance by recognizing
the continent as the principal development challenge
through effective and well-targeted strategies for
development. We would like to underline the principle
that respect for human rights should be linked to the
broader context of peace, democracy, good governance
and development. Respect for these fundamentals would
assist in obviating the instability and violence which have,
sadly, beset parts of our continent and led to large-scale
population movements and the associated misery,
transcending borders.
Central to Africa's renaissance is the economic
regeneration of the continent through economic reform, so
Vital in attracting foreign direct investment. However, one
of the major obstacles to African development is the
inability to address the debt problem generally and its
servicing in all respects. The problem of the unsustainable
debt burden has vexed African development practitioners
for a very long time. Despite bilateral and multilateral
approaches to resolve it, its cumulative impact persists. We
call on the international community to explore and
implement more vigorous and effective methods for a
lasting solution to this problem. It is also of cardinal
importance to Africa's sustainable development that the
developed countries rethink and reverse the decline in levels
of official development assistance to make it more effective
and capable of delivery.
We in Africa are determined to demonstrate to the
world that we are prepared to tackle our own problems. We
trust, therefore, that this determination will serve as an
encouragement to the international community to invest in
Africa's renaissance. SADC is committed to the eradication
of the causes of conflict in Africa to ensure sustainable
development.
The President: The next speaker is the representative
of the United Kingdom, to whom I give the floor.
Sir John Weston (United Kingdom): I have the
honour to make the following statement on behalf of the
European Union. The Central and Eastern European
countries associated with the European Union, Bulgaria, the
Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania,
Poland, Romania and Slovakia and the Associated country
Cyprus, as well as the European Free Trade Association
countries members of the European Economic Area, Iceland
and Liechtenstein, align themselves with this statement.
The European Union warmly welcomes the publication
of this report. The European Union applauds the Secretary-
General for this authoritative and wide-ranging document,
which brings together many ideas and approaches as a
comprehensive policy and at a particularly opportune time.
The Secretary-General has provided a clear and candid
analysis of the sources of conflict in Africa and the reasons
why they persist. The report contains concrete
recommendations on ways to prevent and address conflict
in Africa and on how to lay the foundations for subsequent
durable peace. This holistic approach, as you yourself,
Mr. President, called it this morning, is most welcome, and
the European Union looks forward to further comprehensive
discussions on all the aspects covered in the report.
The report encourages the European Union to continue
its efforts in the field of peace-building and conflict
prevention, management and resolution, and to enhance
African capacities in these areas. The European Union is
committed to a proactive policy on conflict prevention
and resolution, focusing on preventing the outbreak of
violent conflicts at an early stage as well as on post-
conflict peace-building and using the full range of policy
instruments available, including development assistance.
These goals are set out in the European Union's common
position on conflict prevention and resolution in Africa,
agreed in 1997.
The European Union supports the Secretary-
General's recommendations that the United Nations
should develop closer relations with African regional and
subregional organizations and arrangements and has itself
established a consultative mechanism with the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) which we wish to
develop. The European Union also supports increased
cooperation between the United Nations and subregional
organizations in the areas of conflict prevention,
management and resolution. It commends in particular the
initiative of African States in the region to establish the
Inter-African Mission to Monitor the Implementation of
the Bangui Agreements (MISAB) peacekeeping operation
in the Central African Republic, and the role of the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
in the resolution of the crises in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
It also recognizes other regional initiatives such as the
efforts to promote political dialogue in Burundi.
We also very much support the efforts which the
United Nations and the OAU have made to follow up the
Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations'
recommendations last year on efforts to enhance African
peacekeeping capacity. The informal meeting on the
subject, which Under-Secretary-General Miyet chaired,
was a great success and provided a multilateral
framework for activities in this area. We welcome the
new role of the United Nations as a clearing house for
information on such activities. Additional contributions to
the United Nations trust fund for enhancing African
peacekeeping capacity would also strengthen the efforts
of the United Nations.
The European Union also subscribes to the
Secretary-General's idea that where necessary, early
warning must be complemented by early action. The
European Union has followed this approach by
encouraging diplomatic efforts at early stages in unfolding
crises, for example, through the appointment of its own
special envoy to the Great Lakes region of Africa.
Humanitarian assistance, like diplomatic efforts, is also an
integral component of early action. As the largest donor
of international humanitarian aid, the European Union
fully endorses the Secretary-General's call for greater
coordination in the provision of such aid and the need to
ensure the security of humanitarian personnel. The
European Union also welcomes the Secretary-General's
initiative in calling for the establishment of an international
mechanism to assist host Governments in maintaining the
security and neutrality of refugee camps and settlements,
and it looks forward to examining these ideas in greater
depth.
The Secretary-General's report also examines
sanctions as a tool which may be used in cases of threats
to international peace and security. The European Union
welcomes the Secretary-General's recommendation that
sanctions should be better targeted at decision makers and
endorses the call for more rigorous enforcement of
sanctions by the international community. In particular, the
Union supports the Secretary-General's focus on the need
for effective measures to ensure the strict implementation
of arms embargoes.
The European Union welcomes the Secretary-
General's call for all African countries to participate in the
United Nations Register of Conventional Arms. The Union
will continue to support efforts aimed at the establishment
of effective national control measures on the transfer of
conventional arms, combating illegal arms trafficking and
the banning and clearing of anti-personnel landmines. Last
year, the European Union agreed to a programme to combat
illicit trafficking in conventional arms. As part of the
programme, an international seminar involving the
European Union and southern African countries and non-
governmental organizations from both regions will take
place in Johannesburg in May with a view to identifying
practical solutions to the problems of illicit trafficking in
southern Africa. The European Union also participated
actively in the recent seminar in Oslo to discuss the
proposal by Mali for a moratorium on the import, export
and manufacture of light weapons in the Saharo-Sahelian
region.
The European Union fully endorses the hope of the
Secretary-General that the international community should
strive to complement African efforts to resolve Africa's
problems. The European Union welcomes the emphasis
placed in the Secretary-General's report on the further
development of regional cooperation and integration among
African countries across a wide range of different fields.
The European Union is due to host the third in a series of
ministerial meetings between the Union and the Southern
African Development Community in Vienna in November
this year, and it is working to enhance its dialogue with
subregional organizations, for example, the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) in
Eastern Africa and ECOWAS. The European Union is
also in discussions with the OAU and its member States
regarding a proposed European Union/Africa summit for
the year 2000.
The Secretary-General's report rightly focuses on the
importance of creating an environment in which durable
peace is sustained and economic growth promoted.
Recognizing that peace and security are indispensable
preconditions for sustainable development, the European
Union fully supports the emphasis in the report on the
need for good governance, including respect for human
rights and the rule of law. European Union member States
are also working towards a common position on human
rights, good governance, democracy and the rule of law
in Africa which will complement their agreed position on
conflict prevention. Like the rule of law, good governance
is also crucial to economic growth, the promotion of
social development and the alleviation of poverty. Such
values are also essential pillars of the European Union's
own development policy, which over several decades has
been centred on a genuine partnership with Africa.
"Deeds not declarations", as my good friend the
Ambassador of Nigeria said in his statement on behalf of
ECOWAS. The European Union is the world's leading
source of development assistance to Africa: over 50 per
cent of all aid received by developing countries comes
from the European Union, and the European Development
Fund has earmarked over $15 billion for mainly African
countries up to the year 2000. The European Union also
offers, under the Lome Convention, the most open
markets for exports from African countries, and is
Africa's largest trading partner. Presently, the European
Union is engaged in a comprehensive dialogue with the
developing countries on how to strengthen and revitalise
their partnership and in particular to assist them with their
integration into the world economy. Against this
background, the European Union welcomes the Secretary-
General's recommendations on restructuring, international
aid, reducing debt burdens and opening international
markets. The European Union also applauds the emphasis
in the report on the need to tackle poverty in Africa, and
reaffirms its commitment to international development
targets, in particular the aim of reducing by half the
proportion of people living in extreme poverty by the year
2015. European Union member States are also committed
to reducing the debt burden on African countries through
measures such as the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
Debt Initiative.
Throughout this report, the Secretary-General
reinforces the View that it is in the interest of all States, not
only African countries, to work towards the political, social
and economic regeneration of Africa. The European Union
supports this analysis and stands ready to play its part to
ensure meaningful and effective follow-up of the many
proposals and recommendations the Secretary-General has
made. The European Union hopes that the Security Council
will take early action on these where appropriate, and looks
forward to opportunities in other United Nations bodies and
forums to debate other aspects of the report more fully. The
European Union believes that it is imperative that the
political momentum generated by this report not be lost,
and it is committed to working to ensure that Africa
remains on the international agenda at the highest level.
The President: The next speaker is Mrs. Sadako
Ogata, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, to
whom the Council has extended an invitation under rule 39
of its provisional rules of procedure. I invite her to take a
seat at the Council table and to make her statement.
Mrs. Ogata (Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees): I am pleased to have the
opportunity to comment on the Secretary-General's report
on Africa, a comprehensive, timely and insightful
document. With 7 million people of concern to the Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR), Africa continues to be the continent with the
largest total number of refugees and internally displaced
persons. Since the end of the cold war and the settlement
of some long-standing conflicts, however, my Office has
been increasingly involved in repatriation operations.
Today, despite many problems, solutions are foreseeable for
many refugee problems in Africa.
The report recognizes that addressing and resolving
refugee problems is an indispensable contribution to peace
and stability in the continent. Not only are forced
population displacements a grave violation of human rights,
they are also a factor which threatens the stability, and
ultimately the peace and prosperity, of entire regions. The
uprooting of hundreds of thousands of Rwandans between
1994 and 1997 sent dangerous shockwaves through the
entire Great Lakes region and beyond. I should also
mention the current crisis in Sierra Leone, which has
displaced almost half a million people; the continued
displacement of almost 300,000 Burundians; and the
unresolved crises in the Horn of Africa.
Given the exhaustive nature of the Secretary-General' s
report, making any further points on the matters it raises
would be redundant. I would however like to draw the
attention of the Security Council to one issue which I
consider of fundamental importance. The mixed nature of
groups hosted in refugee camps - refugees coexisting
with fighters, criminals and ge'nocidaires - has been the
greatest challenge to the work of my Office throughout
the Great-Lakes-region crisis. I am concerned that this
trend will expand further if no measure to deal with
mixed groups in a rapid and effective manner is designed
and implemented soon. I have already highlighted this
major problem, in the course of the consultations of the
Security Council last Tuesday.
Maintaining the civilian character of refugee camps
is the responsibility of host Governments, as clearly
stipulated by the 1969 Organization of African Unity
(OAU) Convention Governing the Specific Aspects of
Refugee Problems in Africa. However, different situations
may require a variety of responses. Rather than setting up
a single mechanism, I would like to speak of a "ladder of
options", a ladder of which the deployment of
international police or military forces would be the step
of last resort. Let me elaborate on this issue.
In what I would define as normal situations,
adherence to certain basic principles of the OAU
Convention is sufficient to ensure that camps are not used
for military purposes: for example, locating them away
from borders, or prohibiting the circulation of arms.
In situations in which it may be difficult for host
Governments to implement the required principles,
international assistance is needed in building their
capacity to enforce law, for example through the
provision of equipment and other logistical support for
police forces. My Office has been involved in this type of
support in African countries, for example Kenya, for
some years. At yet another level, capacity-building may
involve training and even financial support for police
forces. This is what my Office is currently doing in
Tanzania, in refugee camps at the Burundian border. Let
me remind the Council that in the former eastern Zaire
this support went further, and included supervision by
international officers and a very close operational
relationship between UNHCR and military forces
responsible for the maintenance of law and order in
camps. While this arrangement did not ensure the
separation of refugees from criminals, it did contribute to
improving security, and should be considered when
examining different options to maintain the civilian
character of camps.
There are situations, however, in which building or
supporting local capacity is inadequate to maintain the
civilian character of camps. Separation of refugees from
criminals can then become an important security
requirement, and there may be no other option but to
deploy international police or military forces. For such
cases, I would like to express my strong support for the
Secretary-General's call for the creation of an international
mechanism to assist host Governments in maintaining the
civilian character of camps. I hope that the Security Council
will give concrete follow-up to this recommendation and
will examine the possibility, for example, of creating a
stand-by international force in support of humanitarian
operations. Given the delicate and specific nature of any
separation of refugees from criminals in a camp situation,
my Office stands ready to help develop procedures and
techniques for police and military forces to carry out this
type of activity. It is essential also to define principles and
decide on a division of work for dealing with those who
will be separated and excluded from international
protection.
There are of course other issues of interest to my
Office in the report, to which I would briefly like to draw
attention: the negative effect of sanctions on vulnerable
groups, including returnees and internally displaced persons;
the social and environmental effects of the presence of
refugees and the importance of rehabilitation work in areas
affected by massive human displacement; the need to
address the continued gap between humanitarian assistance
and the long-term reconstruction and development of war-
torn societies; and, last but not least, the essential focus on
civil society in African countries. The challenge more
specifically is to develop grass-roots activities to promote
community reconciliation in post-conflict situations, and
ultimately to contribute to the prevention of further
conflicts.
The President: The next speaker is Mrs. Sylvie
Junod, Head of the delegation of the International
Committee of the Red Cross to the United Nations, to
whom the Council has extended an invitation under rule 39
of its provisional rules of procedure. I invite her to take a
seat at the Council table and to make her statement.
Mrs. Junod (International Committee of the Red Cross) (interpretation from French): On behalf of the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), I thank
the Security Council for this opportunity to participate in
today's debate relating to the report of the Secretary-
General on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa.
The general problem of armed conflict is at the very
heart of the concerns of the ICRC, an organization which
is dedicated to preventing and alleviating suffering caused
by war. Africa is the ICRC's major field of action, as
reflected in our 19 operational and regional delegations,
nearly half of our operations budget and some 3,000 staff
members.
Needless to say, we shall not attempt today to
comment exhaustively on the excellent analysis set out in
the report of the Secretary-General. The ICRC hopes to
be able to continue the consideration of these matters in
the framework of its ongoing dialogue with the United
Nations and with the Organization of African Unity
(OAU). My statement will be limited to two major points:
first, reaffirmation of the relevance of international
humanitarian law; and secondly, the need for truly
humanitarian action on behalf of the victims of conflicts,
which can pave the way for reconstruction and make
sustainable development possible.
Along with the Secretary-General, we note the
drastic deterioration of the level of compliance with
humanitarian norms in crisis situations. Acts of brutality
and atrocities committed against civilians - and more
specifically against women and children and against
refugees and displaced, captured or imprisoned persons -
demand that all armed parties resume their respect for
universal humanitarian principles.
The ICRC therefore supports this clear analysis and
urgent appeal, given the proliferation of conflicts in those
countries in which structures have collapsed and of
confrontations over identity in which the destruction and
the annihilation of the human groups considered as rivals
are the primary objective of the struggle. This is
compounded by a new difficulty linked to the
privatization of war and the emergence of forces that
depend on individuals or private groups over which State
authorities have little or no influence.
Africa is rich in traditions of deeply rooted human
values, which are close to those of humanitarian law and
are found in the codes that traditionally govern the
waging of hostilities. Therefore, our joint challenge is to
revive these values, particularly among youth, that vital
force which constitutes three quarters of Africa's
population.
This mobilization is a long-term preventive task to
make each and every person aware that in all
circumstances there are limits to violence, and neither
those who order acts of violence, nor those who carry them
out, nor those who tolerate them can say, "I did not know".
All Member States of the United Nations have committed
themselves not only to respect but also to ensure respect for
treaties relating to humanitarian law. This universal
obligation of solidarity towards all the victims of conflicts
is everyone's business.
We must also emphasize the responsibility of each
State to incorporate in its national legislation adequate
measures relating to humanitarian law and to prosecute
offenders. In this regard, the African countries have become
involved in this process of legislative reform with the
technical support of the consultative services of the ICRC.
It is sad but true that most of the time war criminals
manage to escape any legal prosecution. The establishment
by the Security Council of ad hoc Tribunals for the former
Yugoslavia and Rwanda constitute an important stage in
applying penal measures.
Today there is a need to work actively to establish a
permanent international criminal court that can contribute
to putting an end to impunity. A tribunal free from all
political pressure, one whose competence would be broadly
recognized and which would provide maximum guarantees
for equitable judgement, would thus supplement national
juridical systems. It would send the clear message to the
perpetrators of crimes of international scope and their
victims that impunity would no longer be tolerated.
The Secretary-General has emphasized the need to
have the international community use in a consistent and
coordinated fashion all the instruments available to it to
achieve global solutions to conflicts. These solutions must
take into account the political, social and economic
elements without which lasting results cannot be obtained.
The ICRC notes with increasing concern a growing
tendency on the part of some States in recent years to resort
to humanitarian action instead of political action, or indeed
military action, when this is justified within the framework
of relevant international instruments. Central Africa
provides a good illustration.
Nothing, however, can replace the political will to
address the causes of conflicts and the tragedies they cause
with all of the legitimate means available, including force.
Humanitarian assistance cannot be a substitute. It is up to
the organizations with a genuinely humanitarian mission
and means of action to provide that assistance to the
victims of conflicts. The question of the security of
refugees in the Great Lakes region provides us an obvious
example. Today we are seeing the tragic consequences.
Acknowledging the need for a strategic approach,
politicians, the military and humanitarians must harmonize
their actions. They must seek a synergy between their
actions and in their interdependence, but also in their
respective mandates and particular characteristics. This
approach, however, should not subordinate all
humanitarian action to political objectives, to the
detriment of principles of humanity, impartiality,
neutrality and independence. The interest of the victims
is always at the core of the ICRC's concerns and
operations.
This does not mean, however, that humanitarian
action has no political dimension or that it never has an
impact on the evolution of a conflict. The presence of
humanitarian organizations has sometimes turned out to
have a negative impact by serving the objectives of war.
That was the case in Liberia in 1996, when the
competition between the organizations in the field resulted
in the prolongation of the conflict, thus gravely
endangering the victims.
The ICRC is just as concerned as the Secretary-
General by emergency situations in which there are many
bodies providing assistance whose objectives and methods
of work differ. Such situations require the actors to
harmonize their actions and avoid duplication. The point
of such coordination is to make it possible to manage
various activities, in time and in space, in a context that
is often unstable and rapidly changing. The security of all
depends very much on this.
The report highlights the need to link and to
integrate concepts and actions relating to assistance,
rehabilitation, reconstruction and development. The ICRC
fully shares this point of View. In its assistance actions,
the ICRC, insofar as possible, has opted for an approach
in which the ultimate objective is to allow individuals and
the communities involved to regain their autonomy and to
break their dependence on external assistance by closely
involving the beneficiaries in the conception and
implementation of these programmes.
It is in this framework that we find the efforts
undertaken in many African situations to restore the
means of production of population groups that have fallen
victim to war, such as agriculture, livestock, fishing and
crafts. The same holds true for programmes designed to
restore basic health services, as well as for the provision
of equipment and prostheses for war amputees and for
repairing systems of supplying drinking water and disposing
of waste water and refuse.
In its work, the ICRC mobilizes all possible local
support. For the ICRC, as for the International Federation
of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, the network of
African national associations represents enormous support.
The volunteers from these associations often work in
extremely difficult conditions. Many of them have died
during the last few months in carrying out their mission in
the Democratic Republic of the Congo and in the Republic
of the Congo.
It also seems important to emphasize the other
essential element for the ICRC's action, which is
protection. To render assistance without concern for
protection would be absurd, and could even be
counterproductive. Any effective intervention for the
victims must simultaneously allow them to receive their
required material assistance, protect them from dangers that
prolong and exacerbate their suffering and ensure respect
for their dignity.
Action by the ICRC regarding protection is primarily
aimed at ensuring respect for life and the physical integrity
of individuals. Such action is inseparable from action to
promote human rights, whose ultimate goal is the
functioning of civil society and the enjoyment of civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights.
Finally, allow me to say how greatly the security of
their personnel concerns the humanitarian organizations
working within the framework of these conflicts. In
addition to the usual threats and dangers, the changing
nature of wars, the growing numbers of individuals
engaging in violence, the diversity of their roles and
interests and the general increase in banditry are curtailing
yet further the control that authorities in the field have over
these individuals and is increasing the vulnerability of
humanitarian workers. Members will recall the murders
carried out in Rwanda and Burundi, the rapes committed in
Sierra Leone and in the former Zaire and the hostage-taking
in the Sudan.
An African proverb says, "Only man is better than
man, only man is worse than man". We are firmly
convinced - as the Secretary-General would agree - that
the best in each person is an inexhaustible source of energy
and hope. Today, 10 of our colleagues were freed after
having been held for 10 days by their kidnappers in
Somalia. I would like to share our happiness and relief
with the Council.
The President: The next speaker on my list is the
representative of Germany. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Henze (Germany): At the outset, I wish to
subscribe fully to the statement made by the Presidency
of the European Union. Allow me to add just a few
additional points that are of particular importance to us.
First, I would like to express particular thanks to the
Secretary-General for his profound, comprehensive and
well-balanced report. It is both impressive and inspiring.
The recommendations contained therein are action-
oriented and of great practical relevance.
The Secretary-General presented his report at a
crucial time of historical importance. Nine years after the
crumbling of the Berlin Wall, we are beginning to
develop and to adapt to new parameters in the field of
international relations as we leave the legacy of the cold
war behind. The Secretary-General describes in detail
what immediate impact this historical transition has had
on Africa in general and on some of the conflicts between
African countries - and inside some of them as well. He
rightly draws the conclusion that significant progress in
Africa will require sustained international attention at the
highest political level. Only then will we avoid
marginalization of this continent and the so-called Afro-
pessimism.
From a German perspective, the changes that have
occurred since the end of the cold war have had wide-
ranging implications. In terms of foreign policy, the most
important one is that we are no longer pre-eminently
preoccupied by what was previously called the "German
question". It is true, Africa has always been important to
us. My country is present in almost every African capital.
This allows us to maintain a permanent dialogue with the
Governments on all issues of common interest and
common concern.
Even more important is close cooperation for
development. The Secretary-General rightly points out in
paragraph 79 of his report that
"Development is central to the prospects for
reducing conflict in Africa."
Germany is meeting its obligations as a donor country.
From 1991 to 1996, my country spent roughly 22 billion
deutsche marks on bilateral and multilateral development
cooperation for sub-Saharan Africa. Our overall debt relief
for African countries amounts to DM. 9.7 billion. From
1994 to 1997, our bilateral and multilateral humanitarian
aid for the Great Lakes region alone - including our
contribution to European aid - amounted to DM. 583
million. In the crucial area of mine clearance, Germany has
since 1995 spent DM. 18 million for various projects mainly
in Angola and Mozambique.
On our political agenda, Africa and African affairs
have never ranked higher. We are devoting more rather
then less attention to Africa as a result of the end of the
cold war.
One of the most important conclusions to be drawn
from the Secretary-General's report is that a renewed spirit
of partnership is urgently required. The Secretary-General
points to the responsibility Africans ought to assume for
their own affairs on the one hand and to the obligations of
the international community on the other. Acknowledging
and respecting African ownership and offering and
accepting advice, support and cooperation must be core
values of this partnership.
To be able to consolidate this partnership we have to
overcome a widespread case-by-case approach in which we
mainly react when impressed by a full-fledged crisis. This
partnership must rather be at the centre of what I would
call an attempt to build a framework of interlocking and
mutually reinforcing multilateral institutions. I would like
to highlight just three important aspects of this more
general task.
First, the task starts here in New York, here at the
United Nations. Drawing on my own personal experience
during Germany's non-permanent membership in the
Security Council during the years 1995 and 1996, and
deeply impressed by the contributions made by our
colleagues from African delegations there, I am of the
conviction that this body needs to be reformed. We have to
overcome what the Secretary-General rightly describes as
a paralysis that threatens to undermine the credibility of the
Organization as a whole. The reform must, among other
things, put Africa in a position to shoulder the
responsibility of permanent membership.
Let me add at this point that recently we have been
observing with some concern that in some cases financial
considerations seem to play an important role in the
decision-making process within the Security Council. It
goes without saying that we all have to provide the
United Nations with the financial resources it needs to
carry out the tasks assigned to it.
Secondly, the Organization of African Unity and
subregional organizations in Africa ought to be
strengthened for the reasons extensively described in the
Secretary-General' 5 report. This applies particularly to the
improvement of their respective capacities in the areas of
conflict prevention, confidence-building and
peacekeeping. Germany is contributing bilaterally as well
as through multilateral channels - primarily through the
European Union - towards achieving this very important
goal. We agree entirely with the Secretary-General that
these efforts have to take place within the context of the
United Nations primary responsibility for matters of
international peace and security. If we point to the
importance of developing genuine African capacity in
these areas, we also do so due to the unique historical
experience of European countries since the Second World
War. Functioning multilateral structures such as the
European Union, the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization and the Council of Europe have contributed
immensely to reconciliation, peace and prosperity in a
continent that for centuries was ravaged by ferocious
wars. In this context, we maintain our position that an
international conference on peace, security and stability in
the Great Lakes region, under the chairmanship of the
United Nations and the Organization of African Unity,
could have a positive impact on the situation in this
region.
Thirdly, Germany believes that the establishment of
a permanent international criminal court should be
pursued as a top priority, as the representative of the
International Committee of the Red Cross has just stated.
In paragraph 49 of his report the Secretary-General points
out the importance of effectively reacting to what he calls
"a dramatic and unacceptable deterioration in the
level of adherence to humanitarian norms in crisis
situations".
We will actively contribute to the forthcoming diplomatic
conference, in June and July of this year, for the
establishment of a permanent international criminal court.
A lot of work still has to be done if we are to overcome
the remaining legal and political hurdles. We are happy
that many African countries are actively participating in
the preparations for the establishment of such a court in
Rome.
Building and constantly strengthening such a
framework of interlocking and mutually reinforcing
multilateral institutions would, in our View, be the most
ambitious and also the most rewarding strategy to promote
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa.
Besides pursuing these rather long-range objectives,
Germany will continue its efforts to contribute to practical
measures of a more concrete nature. Let me give a few
examples to illustrate our recent activities in this regard.
Concerning the goal of stopping the proliferation of
arms, I wish to stress that under German national law any
export of weapons into zones of conflict or tension is illegal
and strictly prohibited. This provision is implemented in the
strictest possible way. We wholeheartedly subscribe to all
the recommendations of the Secretary-General related to
this aspect. In the General Assembly, we addressed the
problem of the illegal flow of small arms and light weapons
in the context of the General Assembly resolution on
consolidation of peace through practical disarmament
measures. We recently contributed to the Trust Fund to
support the work of the reactivated International
Commission of Inquiry on illegal arms flows to Rwanda.
The situation in the Great Lakes region was the theme
of a major conference of German ambassadors which took
place recently in Nairobi, chaired by the Minister for
Foreign Affairs. We will gladly make available the final
document of that conference to interested delegations.
Allow me also to highlight the international workshops
organized by the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs held
annually in Berlin, the last of which was devoted to the
Great Lakes region under the topic of improving African
and international capabilities for preventing and resolving
violent conflict.
We continue to support financially the diplomatic
efforts of the Special Representative of the United Nations
and the OAU for the Great Lakes region, Ambassador
Sahnoun, and the Representative of the Secretary-General
for the Great Lakes region, Berhanu Dinka, as well as the
mediation efforts of former President Nyerere in the
Burundi conflict.
As an important donor country, we have taken very
careful note of the points made by the Secretary-General in
his report on restructuring international aid, reducing debt
burdens and the opening of international markets to more
privately based economic exchange and partnership. We
look forward to more detailed discussions of these
questions within the United Nations and other
international institutions.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Canada. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Fowler (Canada) (interpretation from French):
Thank you, Mr. President, for convening this important
meeting on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa. We
hope this will be the first of a series of Security Council
meetings at which we can review our collective efforts in
support of peace and development in Africa. Steadfast
and long-term commitments will be essential if the
objectives set out in the report are to be achieved.
The recommendations contained in the report of the
Secretary-General are vast in scope but practical and well
conceived. They have the general support of the
Government of Canada.
Some of the strongest messages in this report lie not
in its recommendations but in the analyses that it
contains. The Secretary-General rightly conveys one such
message when he states in paragraph 45 that the efforts
to reinforce the capacity of African countries to operate
in peacekeeping missions
"are not in any way intended to relieve the broader
international community of its collective obligations
under the Charter of the United Nations".
We completely agree with the Secretary-General' s implied
conclusion that collaboration in capacity-building in
Africa must not have the objective of equipping Africans
to respond to crises in Africa solely so as to absolve the
international community of that responsibility. A selective
allocation of responsibility for intervening in crises would
be no more acceptable in Africa than it would be
anywhere else in the world, and would, we believe,
undermine the very notion of collective responsibility and
collective action that underpins the Charter.
Collaboration with a View to the development of
African peacekeeping capacity should instead aim to
ensure that African States receive the support they require
in order to play a still greater role in future United
Nations peacekeeping operations, both on the African
continent and elsewhere. We have worked with the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) in developing a
comprehensive survey of African peacekeeping capacity.
We have also provided bilateral assistance to 14 countries
through our Military Training Assistance Plan.
Canadian Blue Helmets have had the privilege of
serving alongside African troops on many occasions in
Africa and elsewhere. They are doing so again in the
Central African Republic, where Canadian soldiers have
been deployed in the United Nations Mission in the Central
African Republic (MINURCA) alongside soldiers from
Burkina Faso, Chad, Cote d'Ivoire, France, Gabon, Mali,
Senegal and Togo. This deployment reaffirms our deep
commitment both to collective action in general and, more
specifically, to collaboration with our African partners.
We consider particularly compelling the Secretary-
General's observation, in paragraph 46 of the report, that
"Failure to act in the face of serious threats to peace
and human lives in Africa threatens the credibility and
legitimacy of the United Nations not only in the area
of peace and security but also in other areas of its
work."
The credibility of the Security Council in particular is
directly linked to its willingness to act decisively and
effectively to make available the necessary resources to
counter threats to peace and security. The few hundred Blue
Helmets, including a handful of Canadians, who found
themselves in Rwanda under the United Nations flag after
April 1994, experienced - and continue to relive today -
the profound horror and confusion caused by their inability
to prevent or mitigate even to a small extent the flagrant
genocide because the Security Council abandoned them and
persistently failed to provide the support and the troops that
we all knew were needed.
I visited those brave soldiers at the beginning of June
1994, and I witnessed their courageous efforts to save the
lives of 25,000 people scattered throughout the camps
around Kigali, despite the battles for the capital, which they
were incapable of influencing. I cannot adequately describe
the feeling of abandonment, isolation and frustration that
these soldiers - our soldiers - experienced when faced
with such events. They believed that with modest resources
they would have been able to save hundreds of thousands
more lives. They were ready to take the necessary risks -
and they took them anyway. It was we, in New York and
in our capitals, who did not want to take on such risks.
They had laid down the plans for the rescue operation.
Only our will was lacking.
We owe to our soldiers and to those they are sent to
protect a commitment never to repeat this tragic
experience. The Secretary-General is obviously right to
draw attention to the "poisonous legacy" engendered by
our collective failure in Rwanda and to remind us that
we, the Member States, must be prepared to fulfil our
obligations under the Charter if the integrity of our
Organization is to be preserved.
A third message concerns the need to follow up the
first signs of a crisis with timely and effective action. It
is not enough simply to act. If the United Nations is to be
effective and credible, its Members must act with dispatch
in responding to crises. Canada's efforts to enhance the
Organization's ability to respond rapidly to crises - for
example, through the creation of a rapidly deployable
mission headquarters unit - reflect its conviction that
without both the capacity and the will for early and
effective action, early warning is of little value. So, too,
does our contribution of half a million dollars to the
United Nations trust fund for preventive action, set up to
enhance the Secretary-General's ability to head off
emerging crises.
[spoke in English]
The Secretary-General emphasizes throughout his
report the importance of collaboration with regional and
subregional bodies in Africa. The Organization of African
Unity (OAU) has developed a much improved capacity to
respond to crises since its Cairo Summit of 1993. Canada
has provided approximately $2 million in support of the
OAU Mechanism for Conflict Prevention, Management
and Resolution, and we enjoy an excellent consultative
relationship with the OAU in this area. Several of the
subregional bodies of Africa, such as the Inter-
Governmental Authority on Development and the
Southern African Development Community are also
enhancing their capacity to promote stability. All need,
and all merit, greater support.
Subregional bodies have also demonstrated the
capacity to undertake enforcement action with effect.
Sierra Leoneans warmly welcomed the troops of the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
Monitoring Group (ECOMOG), who reversed the coup in
Freetown last May. Regional and subregional bodies
possess the capacity, expertise and, most importantly, the
commitment to act, and, as the Secretary-General
observes in his report, there may be instances when they
represent a better option than United Nations
peacekeeping forces. It is incumbent upon us to ensure that
this complementary capacity continues to be nurtured.
We must, however, be vigilant to avoid the dangers of
cascading responsibility for peacekeeping from the global
level to the regional or even the subregional level. We
cannot subcontract responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security, even by default. Regional
and subregional bodies should respond, not to vacuums
created as a result of inaction on the part of the Security
Council, but to collaborative programmes developed in
close consultation with the Council. Such collaboration
should be based on Articles 53 and 54 of the United
Nations Charter and ought fully to reflect the Security
Council's exclusive mandate for authorizing the use of
force.
Allow me briefly to speak to five particular issues
raised by the Secretary-General with reference to Africa.
All reflect matters currently before the Security Council in
one form or another. Their solution will demand the utmost
creativity and perseverance on the part of Council members.
The first relates to child soldiers. We applaud the
Secretary-General's appointment of a Special
Representative to study the impact of armed conflict on
children. We were pleased to host Mr. Otunnu a couple of
weeks ago in Canada. The Canadian Government has
announced contributions to programmes to assist in the
demobilization and reintegration of child soldiers in Liberia
and the Democratic Republic of the Congo and towards the
provision of assistance for children abducted by rebel forces
in northern Uganda. We join the Secretary-General in
endorsing the notion of children as "zones of peace" and in
urging that this concept be expanded. We applaud the
increased attention that the Security Council has focused on
the practice of recruiting child combatants and urge that it
continue to do so. We also applaud the attention the
Council has focused on the demobilization of child
combatants and other fighters.
The second issue relates to the protection of civilians,
including humanitarian aid workers, in situations of conflict.
Attacks on humanitarian personnel are increasingly
common. A Canadian aid worker was detained in Sierra
Leone recently; only a couple of weeks ago a Canadian
human rights observer was arrested and detained in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo; and ten Red Cross and
Red Crescent personnel were kidnapped recently in
Somalia. We welcome the release, earlier today, of the Red
Cross and Red Crescent personnel. We agree with the
Secretary-General that such attacks are unconscionable and
undermine the basic conditions of humanitarian assistance,
and also that international humanitarian and human rights
norms must be respected by all parties to a conflict. We
also agree that more needs to be done to protect women
and children from the effects of conflict.
A connected issue, the protection of refugees, is
especially vexing. The mandate provided by the Security
Council for the multinational force in eastern Zaire, which
Canada undertook to lead, did not provide for the
disarming of former combatants and their separation from
non-combatants in and around the refugee camps, in
significant part because the number of soldiers this would
have required far exceeded the number that Member
States were willing to pay for and provide. We share the
Secretary-General's support for the establishment of an
international mechanism to assist host Governments in
maintaining the security and neutrality of refugee camps
and settlements, as a means of helping to avoid future
recurrences of the dilemma encountered by refugees
fleeing eastern Zaire.
The third issue relates to economic sanctions. We
agree with the Secretary-General that greater use should
be made of much more finely and carefully targeted
sanctions to maximize their impact on those who are
creating the problems and to minimize the extensive
damage they cause to ordinary people. Surely we have
learned by now that sanctions are a very blunt instrument
indeed. Recent experiences in Sierra Leone, the Great
Lakes region and Iraq remind us that even when sanctions
are selective and an effort is made to provide for
humanitarian exemptions, widespread suffering usually
occurs. We acknowledge that increasingly the Council and
the Secretary-General have taken greater care in assessing
and seeking to mitigate the humanitarian impact of
economic sanctions. The Council cannot, however, allow
sanctions to become a policy tool of preference merely
because other options are even less palatable.
The fourth issue relates to the proliferation of small
arms. Arms expenditures reduce the resources available
for development. We support the Secretary-General's call
upon African countries to follow the world trend towards
capping or indeed reducing military spending, and we
acknowledge the efforts and accomplishments of those
countries that have already achieved a reduction in
defense expenditures. Of equal concern, however, is the
regional instability that the proliferation of small arms
engenders, as we have witnessed throughout Africa. We
would like here to follow the example of many previous
speakers and salute the President of Mali for his
leadership in seeking to achieve a moratorium on the
export, import and manufacture of light weapons in West
Africa. We hope that his valiant efforts are emulated
elsewhere on the continent. We have been pleased to work
with the Institute for Security Studies in South Africa on an
extensive survey of the impact of the increased availability
of small arms in southern and central Africa and on the
development of an action plan for the control of small arms
in the region. We hope the Security Council will address
itself to this issue as a matter of urgency, as recommended
by the Secretary-General.
The Canadian Government and the non-governmental
Canadian Centre for International Peace and Security have
also collaborated with the Institute for Security Studies on
a study of a related issue, the growing "privatization" of
security and violence. This issue, too, merits the attention
of the Council as it is essential that security institutions
remain accountable to civilian Governments and the people
they serve.
The fifth issue is post-conflict peace-building. We
agree with the Secretary-General that the consolidation of
peace in the aftermath of conflict requires an integrated
effort beyond purely diplomatic and military action. The
Canadian Government announced a Canadian peace-
building initiative in 1996, one important component of
which is a $20 million peace-building fund to support local
initiatives to achieve reconciliation, reconstruction and
recovery. We applaud the World Bank's increased
involvement in peace-building, and also the higher priority
the Security Council is giving to this critical phase in
national reconstruction. The Peace-Building Support Office
in Liberia provides an important model.
You would not expect a Canadian to intervene in such
a debate without raising our collective efforts to ban anti-
personnel mines. It is a matter we believe is very much
germane to the thrust of the Secretary-General's report but
which, in fact, receives no mention in this otherwise
comprehensive document. The proliferation of anti-
personnel mines, which have had such a devastating impact
on development in Africa and imposed such an egregious
cost in terms of human lives lost and ruined, not least in
Angola and Mozambique, has an impact across the
spectrum of Africa's development and security agenda.
Thirty-eight African countries are among the more than 120
to have signed the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel
Mines and on Their Destruction since it was opened for
signature in Ottawa last December. South Africa played a
vital role in creating this treaty, and Mauritius was among
the very first to ratify it. We understand that Mali, South
Africa and Zimbabwe expect to do so soon. There are, no
doubt, others in a similar situation. Forty ratifications are
needed to achieve entry into force, a goal which, of
course, Africa alone could achieve.
We laud the Secretary-General's steadfast
commitment to mine action in Africa and elsewhere, and
acknowledge the collaborative efforts of the United
Nations Children's Fund and the OAU in encouraging
early ratification of the treaty, particularly in Africa.
Reflected throughout the report before us is the
Secretary-General's conviction that respect for human
rights and the rule of law are necessary components of
any effort to make peace durable, a conviction we of
course share. Important progress is being made in Africa
both in promoting human rights and in strengthening
democratic governance. The Harare Declaration of 1991
was of course agreed in Africa, and its expression of
commitment to democracy, good governance, human
rights and the rule of law is finding resonance throughout
the continent.
The development of vibrant judicial institutions is
especially important. Canada contributed $1 million
towards the Criminal Tribunal in Rwanda in order to
accelerate efforts to bring those responsible for the
genocide to justice and to help bring an end to a culture
of impunity.
Canada has also provided police monitors and
advisers to several United Nations missions in Africa. We
note with satisfaction the significant contribution made by
civilian police from African countries in United Nations
operations, and we are exploring ways to enhance our
mutual capacity in this area.
The report before the Council reminds us that
political progress cannot be achieved in an economic
vacuum and that development is itself a human right, as
well as the principal long-term objective of all countries
of Africa. We agree that long-term and sustainable
success can be achieved only if African countries enact
sound economic policies that will help integrate Africa
more fully into the global economy.
Donors also have significant obligations, and we
share deeply the Secretary-General's belief that official
development assistance remains a vital component of our
collective efforts to focus the potential of Africa and that
it has a critical role to play in ensuring that African
nations find and remain on the path of poverty-reducing
economic growth and social development.
We also share the Secretary-General's View that debt
burdens must be reduced. Canada has provided well over
$15 billion in aid to Africa, always working closely with
our African partners to ensure that such assistance responds
to their particular needs. We remain fully committed to this
partnership. We have forgiven debt wherever possible, and
will seek further opportunities to do so.
While not a substitute for official development
assistance, trade and investment can also be powerful levers
for development, and Africa is increasingly realizing its
potential in both domains. Canada now exports over $1
billion worth of goods to Africa each year, a quantity which
is exceeded by African exports to Canada. Our direct
investment in Africa has tripled since 1989. We are also
forging new partnerships in telecommunications and
information processing. The African Information Society
Initiative, an action plan designed by Africans in
collaboration with Canada's International Development
Research Centre, will help harness the development
potential of new information and communications
technologies.
The exceptional report before us is ultimately about
the renewal of commitment among the peoples of Africa,
between African people and their Governments, among
African countries, between Africa and the United Nations
and between African and non-African Member States. I
welcome this opportunity to reaffirm Canada's enduring
commitment to Africa. Canada has striven to accommodate
Africa's fundamental development needs while facilitating
pan-African efforts to promote unity, commerce, peace and
security. We remain steadfast in our commitment to this
partnership.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my list
is the representative of Tunisia. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Hachani (Tunisia) (interpretation from French):
My delegation would first of all like to congratulate you,
Sir, on your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for this month and to wish you complete success
in your work. I also extend my congratulations to your
predecessor, the Ambassador of the Gambia, for the
excellent work he accomplished last month.
The holding of this Security Council meeting to
consider the report of the Secretary-General of 13 April
1998, entitled "The causes of conflict and the promotion
of durable peace and sustainable development in Africa",
is indeed a major event, in View of the interest that both
Africa and the entire international community have in this
issue.
Tunisia, which since the advent of its new era on 7
November 1987 has made solidarity and cooperation with
Africa pillars of its diplomacy, welcomes the interest
shown by the Security Council, which took the initiative
of holding a ministerial meeting on 25 September 1997
on the situation in Africa, at which it adopted a
presidential statement, contained in document
S/PRST/1997/46. That statement requested the Secretary-
General to submit a report to the Security Council, which
is the subject of our meeting.
My delegation would like to thank the Secretary-
General for the painstaking preparation of this report, as
well as for its exhaustive and detailed content. This marks
a new and welcome chapter in the increasing interest in
the cause of Africa. This last chapter saw the
establishment by the Security Council of a new United
Nations Mission in the Central African Republic on 15
March 1998. This was a particularly important event, as
it had been more than three years since the United
Nations had established a peacekeeping operation in
Africa.
In order to consider the report of the Secretary-
General, one must first place the question within the
current African context. That context is characterized by
the growing awareness on the part of African States that
the roots of the problems must be addressed by adopting
an approach that dismisses the entirely obsolete vision
that the continent is assailed by irremediable misfortunes.
The successes attained by Africa in its struggle
against colonialism and apartheid resulted from the
determination of its peoples and leaders to defend their
cause and reach the goals they set for themselves. This
spirit has never dimmed, and is renewed today by the
enthusiasm of meeting the challenges in the darkest hours,
an enthusiasm that has always inspired the sons and
daughters of Africa.
Certainly, our continent remains the theatre of
conflicts that require us all to shoulder our
responsibilities. Nonetheless, our determination to restore
and maintain peace has remained constant and is
particularly manifest in the role of the Organization of
African Unity (OAU), an accomplishment of which we
Africans are very proud.
This determination became even more evident with the
establishment in 1993 of the Central Organ of the OAU
Mechanism for Conflict Prevention, Management and
Resolution and with the commitment Africa undertook at
the Thirtieth Summit of the OAU, held in Tunis, to solve
the equation "peace, security and development" by relying
first and foremost on African capacity. This marked a new
phase in Africa's approach to continent-wide cooperation,
the main focus of which is prevention in its widest sense
and the principle of the peaceful settlement of disputes.
The OAU Central Organ has played a crucial role in
addressing several conflict situations and remains very
useful to preserving peace and security on the continent in
the understanding that, as affirmed by the United Nations
Charter, the Security Council remains the organ with the
primary responsibility for the maintenance of international
peace and security.
The United Nations and the Organization of African
Unity have already undertaken to strengthen their
relationship by establishing machinery for consultation and
cooperation to enhance the join action of the two
organizations, particularly that of the OAU with regard to
the maintenance of peace and the prevention of conflict.
We welcome the interest of the Secretary-General in this
question and his intention to continue promoting
cooperation between the two organizations.
The Security Council meeting of 25 September 1997
gave a new dimension to the importance of international
cooperation in helping Africa to meet the challenges before
it. This spirit was clearly reflected in the meeting of 5
December 1997, held at United Nations Headquarters, on
enhancing African capacity for peacekeeping. That meeting
was characterized by the determination to lend the
necessary support to the continent for that purpose. It was
stipulated that initiatives in that framework must be taken
on the basis of parameters defined by the African States
themselves, in accordance with the objectives of the
Organization of African Unity and in close cooperation with
the United Nations Security Council.
We believe that it is important to promote these
initiatives on the basis of universally agreed principles in
order to ensure all due success. Similarly, and given the
fact that United Nations and OAU activities in the
maintenance of peace and the prevention of conflicts
complement one another, it is essential that the international
community attach all due importance to strengthening
pan-African capacity with material and financial support
to the Central Organ of the OAU Mechanism for Conflict
Prevention, Management and Resolution.
The new impulse in the maintenance of peace and
security that we are witnessing today on the part of the
African States is accompanied by a rebirth, characterized
by the implementation by those States of far-reaching
political and economic reforms. Indeed, having long lived
under the one-party system, Africa is increasingly turning
towards pluralist systems and the establishment of
democratic constitutional institutions. Those States have
also been drafting policies to ensure that the principles of
democracy and respect for human rights are firmly rooted
in society. These efforts should be recognized by the
international community and encouraged through positive
activities that take into account the social realities of the
continent and its components, as well as the necessary
global and interdependent approach to human rights,
including the right to development.
In another vein, for several years now the African
States have been adopting new economic policies that
have entailed real challenges for them. These policies
were aimed at reflecting Africa's commitment to
undertaking reforms in keeping with its development
needs and priorities by taking into account the imperatives
of globalization. The difficulties encountered in this
regard were such that it was necessary to make structural
adjustments and to liberalize the economy by opening
national productive infrastructures to international
competition. This had the difficult social and budgetary
consequences which the Secretary-General recalls in his
report.
For its part, within the context of its reform and
restructuring policies, Tunisia has adopted a wide-ranging
and humanist approach, guaranteeing the harmonious
development of society. While seeking the financial and
budgetary equilibrium it requires, the Tunisian
Government has endeavoured to take broad social action
focused on education, training and national solidarity.
While certain African countries have obtained
encouraging results in recent years with regard to
economic growth, others, unfortunately, have encountered
huge obstacles impeding their development. In this regard,
States that are emerging from a recent conflict find
themselves in an even worse situation, since they have to
start from scratch with the reconstruction and economic
recovery of their countries.
Today, it is widely held that there can be no
sustainable development without lasting peace, just as there
can be no lasting peace without sustainable development.
Moreover, the Secretary-General is right to point out in his
introduction to this report that reducing poverty must be a
priority, because success in that field will determine peace
and development alike.
The current international economic situation is
characterized by trends and situations that are not all
conducive to supporting the efforts of the African States to
promote their own development and improve the well-being
of their peoples. Reduced official development assistance,
the debt burden and the imbalance in world trade
competition are factors whose impact on the still fragile
economies of the States of the continent give rise to great
concern. That is why we believe it necessary to prepare an
effective comprehensive plan for African development in
order to facilitate the continent's integration into the world
economy.
It is likewise crucial to give special attention to
promoting regional and subregional integration in the
framework of existing mechanisms on the continent.
Tunisia attaches particular importance to Maghreb
integration in the framework of the Arab Maghreb Union.
The Tunisian Government considers this integration to be
a strategic option and strives tirelessly to strengthen and
develop it. We also attach great importance to integration
at the continental level, as manifested in the Abuja Treaty.
In this context, we believe that the development of the
African economies can also profit from cooperation,
particularly technical cooperation, among developing
countries and from triangular cooperation linking African
countries with developed countries or multilateral
development agencies. Moreover, while emphasizing the
importance of the Secretary-General's ideas on the African
debt question, as mentioned in his report, we would
reiterate the appeal, voiced by President Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali of the Republic of Tunisia, that debt be recycled to
the benefit of social projects and environmental protection.
The Secretary-General's report is a far-reaching
contribution that stresses several highly sensitive issues and
includes most interesting recommendations for helping
Africa to meet its challenges and overcome the difficulties
it faces. The report should allow us to continue educating
the international community about the needs of the
continent - the entire continent - in order to preserve
stability, peace and the well-being of its citizens. While we
support the spirit of the approach proposed by the
Secretary-General, we feel it to be crucial that we
continue, in both the Security Council and the General
Assembly, to give further thought to translating this
obvious interest in the continent into concrete and
effective measures.
The President: I thank the representative of Tunisia
for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of the
Republic of Korea. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Park (Republic of Korea): My delegation
welcomes wholeheartedly the Secretary-General's
comprehensive and timely report on Africa, pursuant to
the presidential statement adopted at the special
ministerial meeting on Africa in September of last year.
I should also like to thank you, Mr. President, for your
able leadership in guiding the deliberations of the
Council. My congratulations also go to your predecessor,
the Ambassador of Gabon, on his successful presidency
during the month of March.
The Republic of Korea believes that for there to be
durable peace, stability and development in Africa,
conflict resolution in that region calls for a comprehensive
approach that takes into account the complex range of
root causes and the devastating consequences in the
region. This is why my delegation welcomes the
Secretary-General's analysis of the diverse sources of
conflict in Africa and the various strategies intended to
respond to conflict situations.
Despite the continent's many unresolved issues and
uncertainties, there is strong optimism in Africa these
days. In many countries across Africa, dedicated political
leaders and hard-working people have contributed to
accelerating economic development on a sustainable basis,
and democracy has taken firm root, and this trend is
spreading all across the continent. Equally encouraging is
the fact that the Security Council, reflecting the
international community's firm commitment to durable
peace and development in Africa, has been actively
engaged in the continent. In addition, the Secretary-
General has undertaken many initiatives for Africa and
introduced pragmatic recommendations in his report.
Against that backdrop, I should now like to make
several comments on the Secretary-General's report.
First, the strategy of conflict prevention is an essential
element in addressing conflicts in Africa. As we are well
aware, it is far less costly to prevent crises than to react to
them. However, it is also true that crises cannot be
prevented by mere words of warning. Indeed, advance
warning is important, but to be effective it should be
matched by early preventive action. In this regard, we
believe that such proactive measures as the dispatch of fact-
finding missions at an early stage and the preventive
deployment of peacekeepers should be further developed.
We are also of the view that the international
community should undertake more resolute efforts to stanch
the arms flow into the region, thereby eliminating one of
the structural causes of persistent conflicts. Among other
things, we need to ensure stricter compliance with the arms
embargoes imposed by the Security Council on conflict
areas in Africa. To that end, my country firmly supports the
Secretary-General's proposal that Member States should
enact legislation facilitating prosecution in national courts
of violations of Security Council arms embargoes, and that
the Council should have an urgent look at the source of
arms trafficking and at illicit arms merchants.
Secondly, the Security Council, in its presidential
statement on protection for humanitarian assistance in
conflict situations adopted last June, highlighted the need
for protection to alleviate the suffering of refugees and
displaced persons in conflict situations. At that time, we
stressed, inter alia, that it is virtually impossible to provide
effective relief and protection for those in environments
where the warring parties refuse to abide by the norms of
international humanitarian law.
In this context, we support fully the Secretary-
General's recommendations to hold combatants financially
liable to their victims under international law and to
develop international legal machinery to facilitate efforts
not only to seize the assets of transgressing parties and their
leaders but also to hold those who violate rules of
international humanitarian law criminally responsible. We
also concur with the Secretary-General' s point that refugees
should be settled at a reasonable distance from any border,
in camps of limited size, in accordance with the
Organization of African Unity's refugee Convention.
By the same token, we highly appreciate the
Secretary-General's initiative for a follow-up to the
presidential statement on protection for humanitarian
assistance and look forward to his comprehensive report
containing practical recommendations. Among other things,
we hope practical measures will be forthcoming on how to
ensure separation of bona fide refugees from militants and
a "zone of peace" for children in conflict situations.
Thirdly, the Secretary-General has emphasized the
importance of good governance and sustainable
development as long-term guarantors of peace. We could
not agree more. Any prescription for conflict must treat
its root causes. The primary tenets of good governance -
democratic institutions and practices and respect for
human rights based upon reverence for life - are
fundamental to the durable peace and prosperity of the
continent, channelling ethnic and tribal differences into
the democratic process.
To help sustain the encouraging pace of economic
growth and reform in Africa, the international community
needs to provide active support, financial and otherwise,
to the various initiatives already under way or planned for
African development. We are of the view that the
Secretary-General's diverse and specific recommendations
to that effect call for the strong support of the
international community for their immediate
implementation.
The Secretary-General, by way of his report, has
prescribed potentially far-reaching remedies for the
political, economic, and social ills which have
encumbered the African continent for so long. It is a
blueprint for change in the way of life in the continent
and emphasizes the substantial role all Africans must play
in defining their future. We share the Secretary-General's
View that conflict in Africa is neither inevitable nor
intractable. As he points out, conflict is caused by human
action, and can be ended by human action.
Now the question is, can the international
community and the people of Africa summon the political
will to bring about such action? I have complete faith in
our concerted ability to do so. A good beginning has
already been made through last year's ministerial meeting
and today's open debate on the Secretary-General's
report. Now it is incumbent upon us to sustain that
momentum. We look forward to the biennial ministerial
meetings and the summit meeting of the Council in five
years, as proposed by the Secretary-General. For its part,
the Republic of Korea, as an ardent supporter of Africa's
ongoing endeavour towards durable peace and sustainable
development, will continue to be actively involved in that
common effort.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Republic of Korea for the kind words he addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Egypt. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Elaraby (Egypt) (interpretation from Arabic): I
wish at the outset to thank the Secretary-General and his
staff, and all others who contributed to the valuable report
that has been submitted to both the Security Council and
the General Assembly. The report unquestionably reflects
the determination of the United Nations to absorb the
lessons of the past, and at the same time sets out an
ambitious vision for the future shape of United Nations
efforts regarding Africa and its political, economic and
humanitarian questions, with a view to achieving the lofty
purposes of the United Nations, as defined in the Charter.
Early on, the report rightly notes that it is impossible
to address the current situation in Africa without
considering the historical, geographical, political, ethnic and
economic elements of what the African continent
experienced between the end of the nineteenth century and
the end of the cold war just a few years ago. It is axiomatic
that any concept of a lasting solution must take all of these
considerations into account.
As today's debate is taking place in the Security
Council, which is primarily concerned with the maintenance
of international peace and security, my statement will
concentrate on the aspects of the Secretary-General's report
that relate to issues within the Council's purview, bearing
in mind that other aspects of the report will later be
considered in detail in the General Assembly.
Since 1993 Africa has been taking tangible, positive
steps towards the settlement of its disputes. It established
the Organization of African Unity (OAU) Mechanism for
Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution, which
was accompanied by vigorous efforts at the regional and
subregional levels which no one can deny. Some of those
efforts, indeed, preceded international efforts, as in Liberia
and the Central African Republic. Furthermore, the
Organization of African Unity and African leaders have
played an active mediation role for States in crisis, which
sends a clear signal of a major shift: that African States
have overcome the excessive sensitivity that they displayed
in the past with respect to intervening in each other's
affairs. Personal mediation by African Heads of State has
become a mainstay of crisis containment on our continent.
At a time when Africa is shouldering greater
responsibility for the settlement of African questions, many
regrettably detect international hesitancy with respect to the
Security Council playing its natural role in some of these
crises. The Secretary-General actually refers to this in
paragraphs 29 and 30 of his report, where he concludes
that setbacks suffered by the United Nations in Somalia
and in the former Yugoslavia have brought about a kind
of paralysis in the international community, of whose
symptoms the Security Council has failed to rid itself to
this day.
If the catastrophe of genocide in Rwanda provided
a clear example of this hesitancy, the fact that the United
Nations has thus far refrained from playing an effective
role in Somalia, and its recent reluctance to undertake
timely pre-emptive intervention in Congo (Brazzaville),
make it clear that the international community in general
and the Security Council in particular have not yet
recovered from this paralysis.
From this, we might conclude that the report of the
Secretary-General is fundamentally bold and honest in
acknowledging the errors and failures that marked the
Organization's past work. But it must be clearly said that
mere acknowledgement of errors, without the intention
and determination to prevent their repetition by adopting
timely and practical measures, is not enough to guarantee
optimal performance in the future.
I shall now make some remarks on specific topics,
starting with Somalia. It is unacceptable to continue to
turn a blind eye to what is taking place in Somalia. The
United Nations should take the initiative to assess
developments there and provide all possible help to
facilitate the establishment of the peace which that
country has been awaiting for so long. For its part, Egypt
supports the efforts made by all parties, and will persist
in these efforts to bring peace to Somalia, in coordination
with the League of Arab States, the OAU and all other
interested parties.
Another question to which the OAU gives top
priority is the sanctions that have been imposed on Libya.
The Security Council cannot maintain its position towards
developments in the Lockerbie crisis, especially the recent
decision of the International Court of Justice affirming the
Court's jurisdiction in the case. While affirming the need
to respect the norms of international law and the
resolutions of the Security Council, Egypt expects the
Council to give serious consideration to the options
proposed by the OAU and the League of Arab States for
resolving this crisis in a way that would ensure justice -
especially as last month's open meeting of the Security
Council on this matter made clear the desire of the
international community to do this expeditiously.
In his report, the Secretary-General speaks of
increasing the effectiveness of sanctions regimes and
stopping the proliferation of arms as measures to ensure the
success of international efforts at crisis containment. On the
question of sanctions regimes, the report observes that
greater use should be made of sanctions aimed at decision-
makers in the targeted State, and that, when an arms
embargo is imposed against a given State, other States
should adopt national legislation to ensure stricter
observance of the embargo by their citizens. Although both
ideas are sound, the experience of implementing a number
of sanctions regimes has proved how difficult it would be
to put the first measure into practice.
The second proposal - relating to the adoption of
national legislation - raises questions about the nature of
the legal commitments arising from resolutions of the
Security Council. In principle, all States are collectively
committed under the Charter to comply with Security
Council resolutions without the need for national legislation
in each State to define the violation of their provisions as
a criminal offence. Here it is worth noting that the present
implementation of sanctions regimes is marred by a number
of deficiencies which led the General Assembly to adopt by
consensus resolution 51/242, entitled "Supplement to An
Agenda for Peace", which included a detailed text on the
question of sanctions regimes. That text could be the
nucleus of a comprehensive reassessment of the entire
question of sanctions regimes.
With respect to the importance of stopping the
proliferation of arms, the report notes that Africa's
compelling development interests require that a minimum
of resources be diverted for military purposes, and that this
could be achieved through transparency and confidence-
building measures in the security and military fields,
including support for the work of the United Nations
Register of Conventional Arms. Despite the fact that we
agree with the general objectives of such an orientation, we
would like to point out that a large number of States have
a firm position on the need to expand that Register to
include also all weapons of mass destruction, in addition to
military holdings and the procurement of weapons from
national production.
All these subjects are of importance to Africa and to
all other regions of the world. Here I would like to refer to
the achievement actually made by Africa through the
establishment of a nuclear-weapon-free zone in the
continent and the adoption in April 1996 of the Cairo
Declaration, which contains a number of principles which
reaffirm Africa's commitment to the maintenance of
international peace and security.
Concerning the illegal inflow of arms to Africa by
private international arms merchants, this is a matter of
extreme gravity. Perhaps the political and military turmoil
from which the States of the Great Lakes region suffered
is the best evidence of the endless conflicts that this
phenomenon can lead to. I wish here to express our full
support for the Secretary-General's proposal relating to
the necessity of confronting this phenomenon through
compiling and publicizing information about it. The
guidelines adopted by the Disarmament Commission two
years ago on illegal trafficking in small and light arms, in
addition to the work results of the panel of experts
formed by the Secretary-General on this subject, may
constitute a framework for strengthening the curb on this
dangerous phenomenon.
The Secretary-General's report also deals with the
importance of supporting regional and subregional
initiatives as a way to promote collective action to contain
crises. It reviewed the United Nations experience in
Liberia and Sierra Leone in cooperation with the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
as successful experiences which must be built upon.
But on another level, it must remain clear that the
proper framework is to enable such regional arrangements
to play an effective role which complements the efforts of
the United Nations, as provided for in Chapter VIII of the
Charter. It is necessary that the efforts of such
arrangements not be used as a pretext for the Security
Council to shirk its primary responsibilities or as a
justification for the Council not to adopt the appropriate
decisions at the appropriate times.
The Secretary-General's report also refers to the fact
that civilians have become more than ever before the
main target in most conflicts. Women and children are
subjected to ruthless atrocities. In this regard, I would like
to support the Secretary-General's call for the
establishment of an international legal mechanism to hold
warring parties accountable for their transgressions.
Yet the establishment of such a legal mechanism
also necessitates an international machinery for follow-up
and implementation. The failure of the international
community to pursue and apprehend those indicted by the
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia yields a clear picture
of sometimes giving political considerations primacy over
legal considerations. This must be avoided in the
establishment of the International Criminal Court.
Egypt agrees with the Secretary-General's reference in
his report to the importance of the humanitarian dimension
and the question of refugees in the African continent. The
report has focused light on the problem of the Rwandese
refugees in the Great Lakes region and on the need for the
international community to act decisively and effectively to
ensure protection and safety to all refugees and to keep
their camps free of any military presence. That may be
achieved through the establishment of an international
mechanism to assist the Governments of host States in
maintaining the security and neutrality of the refugee
camps.
Within such efforts, it is also necessary that all other
aspects of the problem of the refugees be dealt with,
foremost among which is the provision of technical and
humanitarian assistance to the host countries and mitigating
the social and environmental impact on those countries.
This is in addition to containing the negative effects on the
security and stability of the host countries themselves.
These efforts must also include measures for the
establishment of refugee camps away from the border areas,
and rationalized coordination of the provision of
humanitarian assistance between the United Nations
organizations on the one hand, and the international relief
organizations, on the other, and in particular the ICRC.
Concerning the reference in the Secretary-General's
report to post-conflict peace-building and the ways of
establishing durable peace through the promotion of
economic growth, Egypt will make detailed comments on
those subjects to the General Assembly, in its capacity as
the organ responsible for the questions which fall outside
the competence of the Security Council. In this regard, I
wish to refer to the need to respect the specialization and
competence of the various main organs of the United
Nations within the framework of coordination and
cooperation in dealing with multifaceted questions which
are of mutual concern.
Africa is, at present, undergoing a stage of important
historic evolution and of political, economic and social
reform, a stage in which the values of democracy and
respect for human rights are being consolidated. From that
perspective, Africa yearns for the establishment of
democracy on the international level as well. It is our hope
that the process of reform of the United Nations, including
the reform and restructuring of the Security Council, will
lead ultimately to the achievement of justice, democracy
and transparency in international transactions in the light
of respect for the principle of sovereign equality.
Finally, I must express our agreement with the
conclusions of the Secretary-General, contained in his
report, on the need for the African States, the
international community and the United Nations to
discharge their respective responsibilities in order to give
a new impetus to peace and development in Africa within
a true and constructive partnership. The time is long past
when the responsibility for producing change can be
shifted onto the shoulders of others, or be totally relieved
of such responsibilities. The commitment of the
international community to Africa will be measured in
deeds and not in words. Today we are in need of
reactivating the existing initiatives, whether political or
economic, of coordinating them and of presenting new
ideas to deal with their shortcomings.
Finally, the delegation of Egypt would like to
express its support for the Secretary-General's proposal
that the Security Council reconvene at the ministerial
level on a biennial basis and meet at the summit level
every five years to assess the achievements aiming at
establishing peace and political and economic stability in
Africa for the good of its peoples and for their future. We
also look forward to tangible movement on the part of the
Security Council and the General Assembly in the
direction of the recommendations and proposals contained
in this important report, following their thorough
consideration.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Argentina. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Petrella (Argentina) (interpretation from Spanish): Mr. President, I would like to pay a tribute to
your great personal and professional qualities which we
all deeply value. I would also like to congratulate the
Ambassador of the Gambia for his work last month, and
I wish most cordially to bid welcome to Mrs. Louise
Frechette, the Deputy Secretary-General, and wish her
success in her sensitive job.
On behalf of the Argentine Government, we would
like to thank the Secretary-General for his report. It gives
us an important analysis of the historic and current
sources of the conflicts in Africa and provides proposals
to overcome them. We cannot remain indifferent to the
challenge these proposals imply. We are morally duty-
bound to act rapidly, generously and jointly.
We would have to be blind to deny the complexity of
the African situations. We would have to be equally blind,
and certainly unfair, not to appreciate the efforts of most
African countries to strengthen their democracies, promote
human rights and modernize their economies. Similarly, our
assessment would be incomplete if we did not recall once
again that Africa, like Latin America, was the scene of
cruel conflicts during the cold war. These conflicts
invariably left a legacy of backwardness and
discouragement. Fortunately, this situation is changing.
In the economic area, tangible results have been
achieved. Despite the heavy burden of external debt, in
1996 the African economy grew by more than 4 per cent,
which was the highest growth rate in the last 20 years.
Similarly, many African countries have successfully
undertaken thorough reforms of their economies. The
commitment entered into by seven African Heads of State
and United States President Clinton in the Entebbe
Declaration of 25 March 1998 bears eloquent testimony in
this regard.
As the Minister for Foreign Affairs Guido di Tella
stated in his letter to the President of the Security Council
of 22 September 1997, the causes of conflict in Africa are
wide-ranging and call for comprehensive responses. We
concur with the premise, contained in the report of the
Secretary-General, that these conflicts cannot be settled in
an isolated fashion, but must be approached in a manner
that comprehensively deals with peace and security,
sustainable development, democracy and good governance.
Argentina is fully prepared to do all in its power to assist
in the implementation of the proposals of the Secretary-
General and to cooperate with the African States.
These complex political and economic situations are
not isolated realities, however. For its part, Argentina, after
decades of political instability, has re-established democracy
by making sacrifices. Therefore we understand and support
the determination of the peoples and leaders of Africa to
live in peace under the rule of law.
Argentina benefits from this trend towards change. It
has not only strengthened its relations with many African
countries but has also built up extremely fruitful trading
arrangements. The 1997 figures show a 70 per cent increase
in exports and a 50 per cent increase in imports as
compared to 1996. This provides encouraging prospects for
growth in trade.
Argentina has participated in and supported the
African decolonization process since it began in the
1950s. It has established diplomatic, economic and
cultural relations with the new independent States.
In the multilateral sphere, and in a field in which we
have valuable experience, Argentina, together with
interested African and American countries, has supported
the establishment of a nuclear-weapon-free zone in the
South Atlantic. Further, as an active member in the Zone
of Peace and Cooperation of the South Atlantic since it
was established in 1986, and as the venue for the fifth
ministerial meeting, Argentina, together with the 21
African States members of the Zone, is promoting the
values of democracy, development, political pluralism and
the defence of human rights.
In keeping with the aforementioned approach of
linking peace and development, Argentina has been active
in Africa and has tried to make contributions to the
maintenance of peace, humanitarian assistance, good
governance and technical cooperation for development.
Argentina has participated in peacekeeping
operations in Angola, Mozambique and the Western
Sahara, and it continues to offer to provide training
through the Buenos Aires peacekeepers training centre, as
well as to exchange experiences with African countries
regarding this delicate work.
In the area of humanitarian assistance, either through
"White Helmets" missions or directly, Argentina has
participated and will participate in the efforts to
consolidate peace in Angola, Rwanda and Sierra Leone.
As for good governance, Argentina provided
electoral observers for the first election in South Africa
with free and universal suffrage, which put an end to
apartheid, for the referendum on Eritrean self-
determination and for the legislative elections in Algeria
in June 1997. We stand ready to cooperate in the future
when assistance is requested.
At the ministerial meeting of Security Council
member States on 25 September 1997, Minister for
Foreign Affairs di Tella reiterated Argentina's
commitment to cooperate actively in the development of
Africa. In this connection, Argentina is currently involved
in the implementation of a series of programmes of
cooperation with Africa. These range from training in
farming and ranching, the eradication of diseases,
computer science and State reform. Regarding the latter,
from 4 to 5 May, within the framework of cooperation with
the sub-Saharan countries of Africa, a seminar organized by
Argentina will be held in Harare, Zimbabwe, in order to
exchange experiences on the process of State reform and on
bilateral cooperation.
I cannot conclude my statement without expressing the
Argentine Republic's appreciation to Africa. Without the
resolute and substantial commitment Africa has made to the
purposes and principles of the Charter of the United
Nations, almost no changes in any such important areas
such as decolonization, disarmament, the law of the sea,
human rights and development - to mention just a few -
could ever have been achieved by this Organization.
Finally, allow me to congratulate Mrs. Ogata and
Mrs. Junod, who represent the Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees and the International
Committee of the Red Cross, for their valuable
contributions to this open meeting of the Security Council.
I would also like to congratulate the Secretariat staff who
worked on the report of the Secretary-General.
The President: I thank the representative of Argentina
for his kind words addressed to me, to my predecessor and
to the Deputy Secretary-General.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Algeria. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Baali (Algeria) (interpretation from French): It is
a genuine pleasure to see you, Sir, presiding over the work
of the Security Council at a time when it is dealing with the
sources of conflicts and the means to deal with them on my
continent, since your country has endeavoured to
understand it and has made patient efforts for its
development.
I am therefore confident that, under your wise
guidance, our deliberations today - and doubtless tonight
as well - will serve to enrich, consolidate and refine the
international community's understanding of African realities
and of the considerable issues at stake, and that these
deliberations will thus enable Africa to better shoulder its
destiny and take its place in the world with dignity,
independence and respect for its distinctiveness.
I would also like to express my great admiration and
gratitude for the work carried out by your predecessor, the
Ambassador of sisterly Gambia, who, with talent and
modesty, guided the work of the Council during a
particularly busy month.
By meeting at the level of foreign ministers precisely
seven months ago to consider the timeliness of concerted
international action to promote international peace and
security in Africa, the Security Council clearly showed,
for the first time, a proper understanding of the growing
importance of our continent and of the significance of its
contribution to the maintenance of international peace and
security. At the same time it demonstrated its interest in
Africa and its readiness to support the struggle for peace
and development of the continent, which has been able to
throw off colonialism without being able fully to rid itself
of the difficult heritage bequeathed to it, which in many
cases is the cause of the conflicts that tear it apart and of
the rampant poverty.
In submitting to our Organization a report that is as
complete as it is rigorous and supported by a clear
analysis that is not complacent but fully oriented towards
action, the Secretary-General - to whom I should like to
pay a well-deserved tribute for the quality of the work he
has done and the courageous vision that underpins it -
has met the enormous expectations placed on him by the
international community and, above all, by the African
continent, of which he is a worthy son.
This report must, as the Secretary-General intended,
provoke a debate that is as broad as possible and that
focuses on the causes of conflicts and the means of
dealing with them, given that the numerous scourges from
which Africa is suffering today are also affecting other
continents. Africa is by no means the only region in the
world confronted by serious difficulties, nor is it a
continent characterized exclusively by chaos and poverty.
In fact, Africa today is a continent with many
enormous challenges, but one which also has unlimited
potential for development, democratization and the
settlement of conflicts.
Numerous conflicts which are today battering the
African continent undeniably stem from that dark period
in its history when, dismembered by colonial appetites, it
found itself torn apart and carved up, its landmarks
broken and the delicate balances on which it had always
depended irretrievably destroyed.
It is true that we are not here today to put
colonialization on trial; we would obviously need
considerably more than a few meetings of the Security
Council to do that. Nor are we here to attribute all the
problems of Africa to colonialization. However, it is
important to recall here, for the sake of history and out of
concern for objectivity, the huge responsibility borne by the
former colonial Powers for the tragedies that are currently
battering Africa. We must emphasize - and we should not
forget this - that our peoples, in the wake of the
independence that they acquired, often at the cost of great
pain and blood, inherited territories where, since there was
nothing, everything had to be built; where, by way of
economic activity, there was only mining or the harvesting
of produce; and where, therefore, there was a need to create
the necessary infrastructures and open construction sites
everywhere. Our peoples inherited territories where, despite
pompous speeches on the civilizing mission of colonization,
illiteracy exceeded 90 per cent and epidemics were
rampant, and it was necessary to build schools and clinics.
Because there was no State structure aside from that which
allowed the colonial administration to maintain order and to
pillage the resources of the country, it was necessary to
create the State.
Furthermore, the former colonial Powers throughout
the entire colonial period had, without regard for conscience
or scruple, applied the old adage "divide and conquer",
fomenting and fuelling rivalries between tribes and clans,
in so doing thwarting any consolidation process for social
cohesion and national sentiment. In the aftermath of
independence - and up to the present - numerous
African countries found themselves faced with the
phenomenon of tribalism, which economic difficulties and
political games have, it is true, sometimes exacerbated.
From the north to the south and from the east to the
west, Africa therefore had to start from scratch. Throughout
Africa there was a need to meet, rapidly, with limited
means and in an international environment characterized by
structural inequalities and ideological rivalries, the
enormous needs of the people, establish economic policies,
consolidate the social fabric and create a sense of belonging
to a single nation while continually coping with numerous
forms of interference and with the appetites of the Powers
past and present.
Left to itself Africa, it should be recognized, resolutely
shouldered its responsibilities, aware that above all it had
to rely on its own means, regardless of how meagre they
may have been, when faced with the enormous expectations
of its peoples and the magnitude of the task to be
accomplished.
Within the framework of the organization that was
created in the wake of independence, and whose credo of
unity presupposed the liberation of the continent, Africa
mobilized itself in order to dedicate itself absolutely to, in
the words of the Charter of the Organization of African
Unity, "the total emancipation of the African territories
which are still dependent" and to "eradicate all forms of
colonialism from Africa".
Aware of the risks to future relations among the
African States posed by borders that had sometimes been
established contrary to common sense, our leaders
decided then that, as from 1963, they would ratify the
borders inherited from the colonial period, thereby
demonstrating wisdom and responsibility and avoiding the
danger of suddenly plunging the continent into bloody
conflicts with immeasurable consequences.
Furthermore, our countries committed themselves to
dialogue, to cooperation and to harmonizing their
positions and policies. Today, concerted action among
African countries is a true reality, evident in the regular
and frequent contacts at bilateral, regional and continental
levels between heads of State and other African leaders,
which attests to the will of Africans to seek by
themselves, working together within the continent, ways
and means of living together in greater harmony, stability
and shared prosperity.
The establishment by the OAU of it Mechanism for
Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution, whose
role is now undisputed, illustrates this African awareness
that there exists in Africa the political will, the means and
the necessary human resources for the settlement of
African problems, even if the continent will, for a long
time to come, need financial and logistical support from
the international community if it is to successfully
complete its peace initiatives.
Finally convinced that without true economic, social
and cultural development, and that without the progressive
integration of the African economies Africa would not be
saved, the African countries decided at Abuja to create an
African economic community at both the regional and
subregional levels, with countries grouped together within
political and economic units so as to better pool their
efforts and utilize their complementarities.
Parallel with this multilateral effort, the
overwhelming majority of the countries of Africa
committed themselves at the national level to a dual
undertaking: the bold task of the democratization of
societies and institutions, whose results can be seen today;
and the no less ambitious undertaking to recover and
restructure the economy, with the support of the Bretton
Woods institutions, which are so far fulfilling all of their
promises. This is attested to by the boost given to economic
growth in numerous African countries, even if the social
cost is often very high.
It is true that numerous complex problems remain, and
there are substantial liabilities at the political and economic
levels. The young shoots of democracy are still fragile and
the economic gains precarious. But it is undeniable that
today in Africa a democratic, free enterprise culture is
developing and that this movement is growing daily and
little by little becoming irreversible.
Africa, however, needs support in the huge effort that
it has undertaken, and if it is to be supported effectively our
distinctive features must be better understood and our
priorities better grasped. It must be clear, therefore, that the
cause of democratization and development in Africa will
not be furthered by exerting pressure on African countries,
attempting to impose on them social or developmental
patterns which have been conceived elsewhere and which
are irrelevant to the realities of Africa or by sometimes
brandishing the scarecrow of sanctions.
Today, the men and women of Africa are determined
to see the fulfilment of their will to establish democracy
and respect for their rights throughout the continent; but
they also know that these goals must be promoted at their
own pace and in terms of their own specific national and
local characteristics. At the same time, they are aware that
if their economic and social rights - that is, their right to
education, work, housing and health care - are not ensured
at the same time, the concept of human rights will be no
more than a hollow shell and a pious wish.
Consideration of the Secretary-General's report leads
us to a number of preliminary ideas that I should like to
share with the Council today. Other observations, and no
doubt other proposals, will in due time be formulated in
other bodies of our Organization.
We consider, first of all, that while the Security
Council has the merit of having launched the debate on
Africa, it is not, obviously, by its very mandate - which,
as we know, is limited to the maintenance of international
peace and security - the appropriate or sole framework for
multifaceted, effective and concerted action on Africa.
The General Assembly, the Economic and Social
Council and the Bretton Woods institutions, which also
have before them the report of the Secretary-General, as
well as the Organization of African Unity (OAU), are in
fact all called upon together to make their contribution to
our reflective endeavour on the means to be implemented
to assist Africa in meeting the challenges that confront it.
Indeed, without a genuine mobilization of the
international financial institutions and the United Nations
agencies, constructed around a real programme of support
for Africa that would deal with the questions of
investment and aid for development, as well as the
problems of debt, commerce and trade and the negative
effects of structural adjustment policies, any policy on
Africa would be mere posturing. In his report, the
Secretary-General has clearly and convincingly indicated
the path to be followed, which we find both reasonable
and realistic.
Regarding the handling of conflicts in Africa, it is
absolutely essential that the United Nations cooperate in
a close and ongoing manner with the OAU, which, better
than any other organization, knows and understands
African realities and sensibilities, and, in particular, with
the Central Organ of the Mechanism for Conflict
Prevention, Management and Resolution. This should not,
however, mean that the international community - that
is to say, the United Nations - should consider itself free
from its obligations under the Charter.
In this context, and while recognizing the merit of
the initiative undertaken by certain countries to strengthen
African peacekeeping capabilities, it is imperative that the
principles of multilateralism, universalism and
transparency preside over the conception and
implementation of this initiative. Here, the United Nations
and the OAU, through its Mechanism, must be fully
involved.
Hence, in this, as in any operation of preventive
diplomacy or peacekeeping, the consent of the State
involved, and thus its cooperation, are absolutely
indispensable. This principle also applies to all situations
in which the delivery of humanitarian assistance may
seem necessary.
Regarding this last point in particular - in the light
of the dangerous problems to which humanitarian aid is
sometimes susceptible, which the Secretary-General has
clearly highlighted, and because of the ways politicians or
the media exploit such forms of aid - it seems to us of
the greatest importance that all precautions be taken so that
when such aid has been decided upon and accepted, it does
indeed reach its beneficiaries, above all the most vulnerable
ones, and that it does not exceed the strictly humanitarian
framework in which it belongs. It must also be perfectly
clear that humanitarian assistance must not be substituted
for the prevention and settlement of conflicts, nor must it
be used for propaganda purposes, nor serve as an
alternative to development aid, whose positive effects on
populations are far more lasting.
My other comment addresses the question of the
proliferation of weapons. In proportion to its geographic
area, Algeria is the country that devotes the smallest part of
its gross domestic product to national defence; therefore, it
obviously cannot fail to demonstrate its interest in the
Secretary-General's recommendation to decrease
expenditures for weapons and munitions to 1.5 per cent of
the gross domestic product, even if that recommendation
needs further clarification and refinement.
In the same context, Algeria can only welcome the
proposal regarding the compilation, research and publication
of information on the weapons trade, which fuels large-
scale international crime and terrorism. To be effective,
however, this proposal, which may be taken up by the new
Department for Disarmament Affairs, must be part of a
framework of effective and objective cooperation by the
international community aimed at dismantling and
neutralizing the networks of logistical support and supply
of armaments that fuel the terrorist groups in their work of
destabilization, destruction and death.
My last observation has to do with the policy of
sanctions to which the Security Council has, with increasing
frequency and uneven success, resorted over recent years.
In fact, while the embargo on the shipment of
weapons to warring countries - as long as it is respected
by all, which is rarely the case - can be an effective
means of containing or preventing an armed conflict,
economic sanctions often serve only to penalize civilian
populations and can even lead to results that are
diametrically opposed to those initially sought.
The serious abuses and excesses experienced in
connection with sanctions regimes make it absolutely
necessary for this kind of measure to be re-examined by the
competent bodies of the United Nations, including the
Security Council. Such reconsideration - obviously, going
beyond the framework of Africa - must, beyond the
recommendations of the Secretary-General, take up all
aspects of the conditions for imposing and lifting
sanctions, as well as the effects of sanctions on the
civilian populations of the countries involved and of
neighbouring countries, and must specifically define their
objectives. Finally, the decision to impose sanctions must
continue to lie solely with the Security Council.
The machinery to ensure that the recommendations
of the Secretary-General are followed up could take the
form of an ad hoc committee or working group that the
Secretary-General would establish in cooperation with the
OAU and that would be open to representatives of these
two organizations and to those of the Bretton Woods
institutions, the Economic Commission for Africa and the
African Development Bank. The mandate of such a group
would be to see to the implementation of agreed
recommendations and to report to the General Assembly
and the Economic and Social Council, which, because of
their extensive competencies, seem to us to be in the best
position to act on the report of the follow-up mechanism.
Obviously, the Security Council should also be kept
informed.
As the intense deliberations of the Council have
shown, the Secretary-General's report on Africa contains
a valuable set of ideas and recommendations that will, we
are convinced, contribute to a better understanding,
knowledge and evaluation of the magnitude and
complexity of the problems experienced today not only by
Africa but also by the international community as a
whole.
Many of these problems are also faced by other
regions of the world and cry out to all of us for solidarity;
many of them are complex and require our serious and
thorough consideration both in this Council and in other
organs and institutions, first and foremost among which
is the OAU, which is bound to the United Nations by a
long tradition of concerted action and cooperation,
strikingly illustrated last year by a joint commitment for
peace in the Great Lakes region.
What Africa expects from our Organization today is
that for once it will go beyond making declarations of
intent and expressions of solidarity and truly commit
itself, side by side with Africa, through a programme of
action that fully addresses our concerns and our particular
features and that can meet our expectations and the
historic challenges that face our continent every day.
The President: I thank the representative of Algeria
for his kind words addressed to me and to my predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of Ukraine. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Yel'chenko (Ukraine): This is the second time
during the current session of the General Assembly that the
Security Council is convening to consider the situation in
Africa. In our View, it is yet further evidence that the
United Nations continues to attach great importance to the
problems in this part of the world. We therefore believe
that this meeting of the Security Council is very timely.
Today, Africa has reached a very important turn in its
historic development. In a number of African countries the
economy has started to come out of the abyss, and the
people seem to have realized the importance of gaining
strength through unity. With the efforts of individual
countries, the Organization of African Unity (OAU) and
other regional organizations, some of the hot spots and
conflicts on the continent have been eliminated or eased.
At the same time, there are still persistent problems
which continue to impact negatively on the situation in
many African countries, especially those which appear on
the list of the world's poorest nations. As a whole, Africa
remains marginalized in the present system of international
economic relations. As a result, the situation in most of the
continent is still characterized by striking poverty and
underdevelopment. The United Nations, therefore, cannot
and should not take the position of observer and must act
adequately.
Years ago, the United Nations initiated the process of
the decolonization of Africa, and it succeeded in those
efforts. This Organization equally succeeded in eradicating
the vicious system of apartheid in South Africa. Ukraine
was proud to make its personal contribution to this noble
endeavour as a member and Vice-Chairman of the United
Nations Special Committee against Apartheid. As one of
those who were honoured to be among the United Nations
electoral observers in South Africa, I still remember those
exciting moments at the end of April 1994.
Ukraine was also actively involved in the ongoing
United Nations peacekeeping operation in Angola, as well
as in some humanitarian relief transportation missions to
other parts of Africa.
Today, the United Nations should help Africa in its
just striving for progress and sustainable development by
ensuring stability and peace on this continent.
In the area of socio-economic assistance to Africa,
the international community has already developed a
number of specific programmes, including the United
Nations System-wide Special Initiative for Africa, which
was launched by the Secretary-General. However, we
believe that external assistance should complement rather
than replace the steps to be taken by African States
themselves. In this respect, we welcome with hope and
optimism the decisions adopted at the Entebbe summit
during the recent visit of President Clinton to Africa. It is
very important that its participants and the United States
commit themselves to a series of measures aimed at
speeding up Africa's transformation and to facilitate its
full integration into the global economy.
Despite the positive developments I have just
referred to, political instability and serious retreats from
democracy are still preventing certain African countries
from moving forward. In some of them, vast movements
of refugees and displaced persons continue to be an
alarming factor which contributes to political instability.
In addition, internal conflicts are threatening the very
survival of those countries. Therefore, we strongly believe
that the issues of peace, security and stability and the
problems of economic development of Africa should be
addressed simultaneously, as they are closely interrelated.
The United Nations should be ready to meet those
challenges through its peacekeeping operations, good
offices missions and emergency relief programmes. At the
same time, broader international efforts, such as the
imposition of sanctions, if necessary, can succeed only if
they are complemented by genuine cooperation and
support on the part of the countries of the region.
In our View, the continuing leading role in ensuring
such cooperation should be played by the Organization of
African Unity. It is also imperative that the international
community enhance its political support for that
organization, as well as the material and technical support
required to improve its capabilities in resolving the
problems and conflict situations within the African
framework.
In past years we have witnessed positive examples
of preventive and peacekeeping efforts undertaken by
subregional organizations in southern Africa, West Africa
and the Horn of Africa. Therefore, we support the
implementation of the recommendation contained in the
Secretary-General's report to improve coordination and the
exchange of information between the United Nations and
these organizations.
Given the scope of a number of recommendations in
the Secretary-General' s report, our delegation fully supports
the idea of presenting it to the General Assembly and other
bodies of the United Nations system, as well as to
respective humanitarian organizations.
Finally, I would like to stress that Ukraine approaches
the issue of cooperation with Africa primarily from the
position of developing a mutually beneficial partnership.
From the very first days of its regained independence,
Ukraine, keeping in view the long-standing traditions and
history of its relations with many African countries,
proposed to develop such cooperation at a qualitatively new
level. We are only at the initial stage of this promising
cooperation, and I take this opportunity to encourage
interested African States to embark on this undertaking.
In conclusion, I wish to express our sincere hope that
the difficulties which Africa is facing today will eventually
be overcome and that this continent will turn into a region
of political stability and social and economic progress. It is
the obligation of all Member States of this world
Organization to help Africa to realize this goal.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my list
is the representative of Morocco. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Snoussi (Morocco) (interpretation from French):
Allow me, first of all, to express to you Sir, my country's
deep satisfaction upon seeing you preside over the Security
Council, and to extend our congratulations to your
predecessor, Mr. Abdoulie Sallah, for the very efficient
manner in which he conducted the work of the Council.
The Kingdom of Morocco cannot but welcome the
holding of today's meeting concerning a continent of which
we are a part. My country wishes to take this opportunity
to applaud the tireless efforts made by the current President
of the Security Council, Japan, with regard to the
development and prosperity of the African economies,
particularly through the Tokyo International Conference on
African Development.
The meeting of the Security Council at the level of
Ministers for Foreign Affairs on 25 September 1997,
convened on the initiative of the United States and Japan to
examine the issue of joint international action to promote
peace and security in Africa, was a welcome and
necessary initiative. Indeed, it allowed us finally to draw
the attention of the international community to the ills and
the tragic situation currently being experienced by our
continent.
The report of the Secretary-General, which we
welcome, outlines and presents the true problems,
principal causes and realistic and achievable remedies for
meeting the numerous problems faced by African
countries and promoting peace and sustainable
development in Africa.
As everyone knows, despite notable progress
achieved by some African countries in the economic and
political areas, the scope and intensity of armed conflicts
in the continent remain the subject of deep concern to the
international community. The 30 wars which have
ravaged Africa since 1970 have caused hundreds of
thousands of deaths and millions of refugees and
displaced persons and have compromised all the efforts
made by Africa to ensure peace, stability and prosperity.
The tragic state of affairs on the African continent is
certainly the foremost among those questions calling on
the international community to pool its efforts in the
search for effective and practical solutions for improving
the grave economic, social and humanitarian situation on
our continent, which has been exacerbated by such
tragedies as civil wars, rampant epidemics and disease,
and desertification, not to mention the refugee problem
and its related difficulties.
With your permission, Mr. President, a question
comes to mind: Is it not time for us to establish, together,
clear and realistic standards for defining the meaning of
the word "genocide"? These standards would undoubtedly
help us to avoid characterizing as genocide a conflict that
claims 300 victims in one region, while, in another part
of the world - in this case, Africa - we allow 300,000
Victims to fall before crying genocide.
Morocco, as a part of Africa and through its age-old
and diverse links to the other countries of the continent,
is aware of the responsibilities arising from that
connection and expresses its deep concern over the
degeneration of the political and socio-economic situation
in several regions of the continent.
With regard to security and stability, Morocco has
followed with real concern the emergence and longevity
of hotbeds of tension in certain African regions and
reaffirms its determination to join and support the efforts of
the international community, and the United Nations in
particular, to find adequate and lasting solutions to these
crises.
With respect to North Africa, it seems undeniable to
us that a situation such as that brought about by the
Lockerbie affair cannot be passed over in silence while we
speak today about peace, security and stability in Africa.
The regional organizations - Arab, Islamic, African and
non-aligned - have all taken a position in favour of a
settlement that we feel is truly just and truly fair. In doing
so, they have yet again demonstrated and strengthened the
notion that negotiation is superior to sanctions and other
coercive measures.
The precarious economic situation in Africa continues
to preoccupy the international community. This situation is
particularly evident in the continent's feeble participation in
international trade, its increased debt burden, a chronic
deficit in its infrastructures, the highly advanced
degeneration of its social and health conditions, and the
paucity of foreign investment despite the massive structural
reforms undertaken by these countries.
In this regard, Morocco welcomed with great pleasure
Portugal's initiative to convene a Euro-African summit to
consider and seek appropriate solutions to the situation on
our continent. This initiative reflects the European Union's
growing awareness of Africa. In this respect, Morocco has
proposed a ministerial meeting to prepare for the summit.
Moreover, we welcome the United Nations initiative for
Africa and believe it imperative that the appropriate
conditions for its success be ensured through the provision
of the necessary financial and technical support by the
United Nations and the international community.
Morocco can only support the Secretary-General's
principal recommendations on Africa, particularly those that
call for establishing structural adjustment programmes that
are fully compatible with peace, in order to ensure that the
assistance is structured to focus on the areas where it will
be most effective and to reduce the dependence of the
African countries.
Furthermore, Morocco fully endorses the idea that the
creditors should consider entirely forgiving the debt of the
poorest countries of Africa and that the most industrialized
countries entertain the possibility of eliminating trade
barriers against African products and ensure that the larger
part of the resources provided for assistance are
effectively spent in Africa.
On the subject of development assistance, Morocco,
as was noted by its sovereign, His Majesty King Hassan
II, was the first, at the Ministerial Meeting of the
Uruguay Round held in Marrakesh in 1994, to call for the
launching of a "Marshall Plan" for Africa and for an
intensification of international efforts to help the African
States to develop their economies and strengthen their
integration into the world economy.
But an undertaking of such scope can succeed only
if the international community, in a massive show of
solidarity, agrees to make an enormous contribution in
order to allow the African continent to become a true
partner and to contribute, in its turn, to overall
development. The United States certainly did so following
the Second World War. Our community, comprising all
the developed national entities, is undoubtedly more
prosperous and stronger. It, too, could do so, but will it
agree to make such a sacrifice to save Africa? That would
require a new spirit, a new philosophy on the part of the
industrialized countries, and the will to leave old notions
and outmoded strategies behind.
Africa did not choose to solve its problems by
incessant wars. Africa certainly did not choose, moreover,
to be underdeveloped, nor did it choose to be stricken by
waves of epidemics and natural disasters. Africa needs to
be helped to avoid the temptation of soliciting help from
the rich and so that its children might no longer be
siphoned off by humiliating and futile emigrations.
In convening this special meeting devoted to Africa,
the Security Council is sending our continent a reassuring
signal full of hope. May that signal be followed by
concrete action to make up the delays and bring us in step
with the twenty-first century.
Allow me to conclude by saying that a
comprehensive effort should be made to give impetus to
Africa's renewed quest for peace and greater prosperity.
As the Secretary-General emphasized, Africa needs
realistic and achievable recommendations for reducing or
even ending conflicts in the long run.
We certainly do not need to keep rehashing the
misdeeds of colonialism, but in order to advance we must
remember them. We must remember that colonialism,
even in its simplest form, bequeathed us a fragile
economy and, sometimes, structures and systems that,
undeniably, long hindered our efforts towards development.
A clear understanding of the challenge, the political
will to respond to it and the resources necessary to an
appropriate response are the three bases for any
improvement in Africa's situation. The will exists and
Africa has made enormous efforts to prepare the social and
political environment necessary to development. Our very
tangible progress towards democracy makes us highly
optimistic; increased solidarity and a stronger desire to
succeed will be the best guarantees for our triumph.
The President: I thank the representative of Morocco
for the kind words he addressed to me and to my
predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of Norway. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Kolby (Norway): Norway has a strong
commitment to the African continent. We therefore
welcome and commend the Secretary-General's report on
the causes of conflict and the promotion of durable peace
and sustainable development in Africa. We support the
broad and holistic approach of the report and the
recommendations it contains, and we appreciate this
opportunity to discuss these issues in an open meeting of
the Security Council.
Norway shares the View that conflict prevention,
including early warning and action, and peace-building are
preconditions for lasting peace in Africa. A development
perspective is, however, important. There can be no
development without peace and no peace without
development. The reduction of poverty is a necessary
condition for realistically promoting human rights, stability
and security. The Norwegian development cooperation
programmes with African countries have also increasingly
addressed questions of governance, democracy-building and
human rights, factors which are crucial in order to prevent
conflicts from erupting. We also view humanitarian aid in
close conjunction with efforts to promote peace and prevent
conflict, and we support efforts to enhance African
peacekeeping capacity.
The Secretary-General rightly emphasizes the
responsibility of African countries themselves for
developments in Africa. We welcome the involvement of
the Organization of African Unity and subregional
organizations in all stages of conflict resolution and in
enhancing the capacity for peacekeeping operations.
Improving and enhancing African capacity with regard to
peacekeeping operations and conflict prevention will
contribute to the stability of the continent. The role of the
international community should primarily be to strengthen
and support the efforts and initiatives taken by the
African countries themselves. This is part of the
responsibility of the international community, and we are
looking forward to cooperating with African countries and
others under the aegis of the United Nations.
Norway fully concurs with the Secretary-General's
identification of three critical factors in addressing the
security challenges facing Africa: the need for a clear
understanding of the causes underlying conflicts, the
political will to respond and the need for adequate
resources to address the challenges.
Poverty reduction represents one of the most urgent
challenges in Africa. Poverty reduction is crucial in terms
of economic development, political stability and regional
and global security. It is also in itself a realization of
some of the most fundamental human rights in the social
and economic area. To succeed in this endeavour, we
believe that the following factors must be emphasized.
First, the international trend of reduced disbursements of
development assistance must be reversed. There should
be, inter alia, an increase in the aid provided to least
developed countries. Secondly, increased resources must
be channelled to the social sectors, specifically to
education and health. And thirdly, the focus should be on
the poor segments of the population.
Economic development is fundamental in achieving
poverty reduction. The building of local capacity, which
is a central theme in the Secretary-General's report, is
crucial for economic development, and we see the untying
of aid as a vital step towards facilitating the growth of the
private sector in African countries.
My Government is currently working on a plan to
increase Norwegian development assistance to 1 per cent
of our gross domestic product by the year 2001. Special
emphasis will be placed on increased cooperation with
African countries, on poverty alleviation, on improved
delivery of social services and on debt reduction. Norway
has for a long time strongly advocated international
solutions to the serious debt burden of the heavily
indebted poor countries, and we have focused on
programmes which can provide efficient debt relief
operations. We regard the Heavily Indebted Poor
Countries Debt (HIPC) Initiative as an important initiative
and a milestone in the efforts by the international
community to ease the debt burden of the poorest and most
indebted countries. The Norwegian Government is now
finalizing a plan for debt reduction for the developing
countries.
Initiatives to stop the unlawful use and excessive
accumulation of small arms ought to be an integral part of
domestic as well as foreign policy. In some countries,
support is needed to restructure the national security sector
and train security personnel. Efforts to collect and destroy
small arms after conflicts also merit our active support. The
proposal by Mali to establish a moratorium on small arms
for West African countries is a very encouraging one, and
we were pleased to be able to participate in thorough
discussions of this proposal at a recent seminar in Oslo. We
join the Secretary-General in urging all African countries to
participate in the United Nations Register of Conventional
Arms.
Landmines constitute a serious obstacle to post-conflict
reconstruction. We urge all Member countries to sign and
ratify the Ottawa Convention. We join others in
emphasizing strongly the need for adequate resources for
mine-clearing activities. Norway has already stated its
intention to contribute $120 million over the next five years
to this task.
The development efforts of many African countries are
currently being hampered by the lack of adequate
coordination among donors. Sometimes one may actually
do more harm than good. Better coordination at the country
level is crucial, among donors and between donors and the
African countries. This implies that everyone should be
prepared to lower their own flags for the sake of better
results in our development efforts.
Such coordination is also crucial in responding to
conflict situations in order to harmonize policies and
actions, to avoid the possible pitfalls of a proliferation of
mediation efforts and, in cases where sanctions have been
imposed by the international community, to improve their
effectiveness. In this respect we welcome the
recommendation that sanctions should be better targeted at
decision makers. This is in line with a holistic human rights
perspective, where the effects on social, economic and
cultural rights are also duly taken into account.
Finally, I join the Secretary-General in the hope that
the report will mark a new beginning in the relationship
between the United Nations and Africa. Norway strongly
supports the call for continuous involvement by the world
community in the development and security of Africa.
Hopefully, such a partnership will contribute to the
creation of a true African renaissance.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Bangladesh. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Chowdhury (Bangladesh): Bangladesh
participates in this debate in the Security Council with a
great sense of pride and commitment: pride, because of
the indomitable spirit of the African people, which has
energized us always, and commitment because we believe
in the cause of peace and development in Africa.
It is in this perspective that Bangladesh
wholeheartedly welcomes the report of the Secretary-
General contained in document S/1998/318 on the causes
of conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa. We note with
particular appreciation the outlining of some initiatives by
the Secretary-General which are to be pursued both within
Africa and by the international community with a View to
eliminating the roots of conflict through a variety of
sustained economic and social measures.
We express our satisfaction at the Security Council's
initiative to address an issue of such great import for
international peace, security and development. In this
connection, we note that the Secretary-General has
submitted this report both to the Security Council and to
the General Assembly, and that he intends to involve the
United Nations system, including the Bretton Woods
institutions, in the formulation and implementation of a
comprehensive set of measures to bring Africa out of the
spiral of conflict and set it on the road to stability and
sustained and equitable growth. This context is important
to my delegation.
We fully share the view expressed by the Secretary-
General that the prevention of conflict begins and ends
with the promotion of human security and human
development. As in other places, conflicts in Africa have
their roots in social discrimination, economic deprivation
and lack of accountability in the use of political power.
At the same time, we believe that the colonial legacy and
its continuation in different forms and manifestations are
still at work to prevent social and political assimilation
and equitable distribution of resources; this foments
tension and conflict within and among nations. There is
little justification for lamenting human and material losses
in conflicts in Africa and elsewhere when the policies of
yesteryear contributed to creating irreparable socio-
economic and political divisions in every society, feeding
today's violence.
Prevention is always better than cure. The Secretary-
General has reaffirmed this idea once again in the context
of the African situation. We share his conviction and
therefore support his suggestion that the international
community should encourage the concerned Governments
to seek a political solution of a conflict situation, working
through special mediators and commissioners. We also find
interesting his suggestions in part III of the report for
addressing threats to peace and security in Africa. We note
in particular his emphasis on the need to seek political
solutions to disputes by utilizing the resources of regional
organizations such as the Organization of African Unity
(OAU) under the direction of the United Nations; this is
worth considering.
We would, however, like to reiterate our view that
while we welcome the significant role of regional
organizations in peacekeeping and peacemaking activities,
the primary responsibility of the United Nations in this
regard should not be compromised in any way. In this
context, we would also be happy to know how effectively
the newly created Executive Committee on Peace and
Security is contributing towards harmonizing United
Nations efforts to promote the Organization's goals in this
area.
On sanctions, we believe that further study needs to be
undertaken to make these more focused and effective in
achieving the desired objective without too much collateral
damage. In this connection, suggestions put forward by the
Secretary-General are useful and could be studied in the
context of General Assembly resolution 51/242, entitled
"Supplement to an Agenda for Peace".
Peacekeeping remains an essential tool in the hands of
the United Nations to address conflict situations.
Bangladesh, as a leading contributor to peacekeeping efforts
of the Organization, has had its share of service in African
and other missions. We also concur with the view that
peacekeeping is becoming increasingly complex, with
additional responsibilities being added to its mandate. While
we note this emerging trend in peacekeeping efforts, we
believe that due care should be taken not to load
peacekeeping missions with too much responsibility beyond
their agreed jurisdiction. Post-conflict peace-building efforts
should be calibrated carefully, taking into consideration the
distinctive roles of the various organs and agencies of the
United Nations in this function. In particular, the key role
of the General Assembly in the formulation of post-
conflict peace-building activities needs to be recognized.
We believe that an overwhelming consensus exists on this
point.
Violations of humanitarian law and of the sanctity of
the human person, particularly abuses of the rights of
women and children during a conflict, are a major
problem, and we are happy to see the attention paid by
the Secretary-General to these aspects in his report. We
should like to commend him for appointing a Special
Representative for children in armed conflict with a View
to keeping a sustained focus on this issue. We fully
support the idea of making children a "zone of peace"
during any conflict. On human rights abuses in conflict
situations, we note the Secretary-General's proposal to
fund all special human rights missions from assessed
contributions to the Organization. We support the idea
that the rights of all civilians, including relief workers, in
situations of armed conflict should be respected and
protected.
A fair degree of consensus exists these days on the
idea that Governments should be politically accountable
and socially responsible, as well as pro-people, based on
the rule of law and respect for the dignity of the human
person. In this context, we find merit in the Secretary-
General's suggestions in his report on various aspects of
good governance. We believe that non-governmental
organizations can play a complementary role to support
efforts to make Governments more accountable and
responsive.
We also share the View expressed by the Secretary-
General that development is a human right and is central
to the prospects for reducing conflict in Africa. Indeed,
we believe that lack of development is the source of all
conflicts in Africa and that the international community
therefore needs to encourage African countries to focus
on development, with particular emphasis on investing in
the social sector. As the Secretary-General has said,
investment in human resources must be recognized not
merely as a byproduct of economic growth but as a
driving force for development. It is also an essential
component of eliminating poverty, which feeds all
discontent and hatred. Here, we believe that investment in
the education of girls has the most effective return.
Indeed, we have seen in our country how investment in
women's and girls' education and empowerment through
an elaborate network of microcredit and other support
programmes has transformed them into socially
productive resources. We are encouraged to note that
during the first ever high-level meeting between the
Economic and Social Council and the Bretton Woods
institutions, held last Saturday here at United Nations
Headquarters, the benefit of social investment as an
essential development tool emerged as a common theme
among the participants.
No domestic efforts can be successful in the
developing countries, in Africa in particular, unless these
are matched by equally robust and positive international
support. In this context, my delegation fully supports the
Secretary-General's call for at least 50 per cent of donor
aid to Africa to be spent there. Likewise, we endorse the
Secretary-General's call to all bilateral creditors to convert
all their remaining bilateral debt owed by the poorest
African countries into grants.
Besides debt support, market access to products from
the less developed African countries is also important, and
in this connection we support the idea of enhanced and
guaranteed access to developed country markets as well as
improved regional South-South cooperation. Indeed,
relatively advanced neighbouring countries could consider
providing market access to products from the African least
developed countries on a non-reciprocal basis. Regional and
subregional integration can also help overcome single-
country handicaps in economic activities. The Secretary-
General's suggestions in this regard deserve serious
consideration.
Bangladesh's commitment to the well-being of our
brothers and sisters in Africa is rooted in a number of
compelling factors. Bangladesh has been a major
contributor in almost all peacekeeping and peacemaking
efforts of the United Nations in the African continent. We
have together pursued a similar line of struggle for our
independence and still share similar values of life and
outlook about the contemporary global situation. On the
economic front, most of the African countries are the
members of the group known as the least developed
countries (LDCs), of which Bangladesh has the honour to
serve as the coordinator. We therefore share common
experience and a common goal in our struggle to foster a
stable social order, economic emancipation and political
freedom to make life meaningful to our peoples. Let me
reaffirm our commitment to see a conflict-free Africa
contributing to global peace, security and development in a
meaningful way.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my list
is the representative of Pakistan. I invite him to take a seat
at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Kama] (Pakistan): Mr. President, since this is
the first time I am addressing the Security Council under
your presidency, allow me to congratulate you on your
assumption of this important post and to express the deep
admiration of Pakistan for the consistent and committed
manner and the committed interest and support which
your country, Japan, has always extended to Africa and to
African causes.
The participation by a large number of delegations
in today's debate on Africa amply indicates the concern
of the international community over the prevailing
situation in the African region. The gravity of the
situation is also reflected by the fact that over 60 per cent
of the issues currently under active consideration by the
Security Council relate to Africa.
In his report the Secretary General has made a
sincere effort to identify the causes of the conflicts in the
African region. The report lists an array of political,
historical, socio-economic and cultural reasons for these
seemingly unending conflicts. An earnest effort has been
made to suggest plausible solutions to these conflicts, and
they are duly appreciated.
The overriding factor for the sad state of affairs in
Africa has been, and is, the all-pervasive and abject
poverty in the continent. Poverty is deprivation.
Deprivation leads to frustration. And frustration engenders
instability and conflict.
The international community should therefore
concentrate its efforts on poverty eradication in Africa.
What is required is liberal technical and financial support
to augment its human resource development and to build
and enlarge its essential infrastructure for result-oriented
socio-economic development. Despite our own financial
difficulties, Pakistan has implemented a 250 million rupee
Technical Assistance Programme for Africa since the
early 1980s. Under this Programme, we are extending
training facilities to young professionals from African
countries in diverse fields.
Without attaining the objective of sustainable
development, the possibilities of achieving durable
solutions to conflicts in Africa would remain as elusive as
ever. Large-scale migration of populations, recurrence of
epidemics and increasing environmental degradation
underscore the importance of a more focused attention on
developmental issues in the region.
Africa remains among the poorest regions in the
world. It lacks both in human resource development and
material resources. Its poverty is further exacerbated by
pressures of debt servicing, deteriorating terms of trade,
declining official development assistance, falling
commodity prices, increasing protectionism in developed
countries and negative effects of structural adjustment
arrangements.
At present the total debt of Africa is around $350
billion. The African countries are unlikely to be able to pay
back this huge amount through indigenous resources. This
high level of indebtedness, coupled with the lack of
infrastructural back-up, is a major impediment to the flow
of private investments in Africa, which are of paramount
importance to achieve sustained economic growth and
sustainable development of the region. We therefore fully
support the Secretary-General's appeal to the donor
community and the international financial institutions to
take immediate steps to reduce Africa's debt burden.
We believe that explicit debt reductions would have a
more positive impact on the economies of the countries of
the region than the routine ritual of debt rescheduling. We
hope that creditors will respond positively to the appeal and
agree to convert all the remaining bilateral debt of the
poorest African countries into grants.
We also support the call to the donor countries to
ensure that at least 50 per cent of their aid to Africa is
spent in the region. This would effectively curtail the
reverse flow of resources from poor African countries to
rich donor countries.
Africa deserves the international community's full
support to break out of the vicious circle of poverty and
underdevelopment. It needs a supportive international
economic environment, including priority access to markets
for its exports and preferential access to technology.
The potential benefits of the information revolution for
Africa cannot be overemphasized. A wealth of ideas and
practical proposals for the eradication of poverty, disease
and hunger has been developed and is readily available.
There is an abundance of models and projects which
demonstrate the success of various developmental
approaches. The African countries can benefit from this
wealth of knowledge according to their own specific needs.
With the help of the United Nations funds and programmes
all this data could be consolidated into an integrated
information system and then progressively linked to an
exclusive Africa help database.
As for the United Nations efforts towards conflict
resolution and peacekeeping in Africa, the response to
incipient crises and even full-blown tragedies has been
slow in the past. The massacre of over half a million
people in Rwanda is a painful reminder of this sluggish
response. The United Nations needs to prepare itself fully
for any future emergencies. The best course to prepare for
such eventualities would be to develop an efficient early
warning system and to build appropriate capacities to
respond effectively to simmering crises in Africa and in
other parts of the world.
The problems faced by the African region are
colossal. These require earnest efforts for political
solutions and liberal support for economic development.
We hope that this debate will constructively contribute to
developing comprehensive responses to the
multidimensional problems being faced by the African
region. Let us join hands to attain this long elusive
objective.
The President: I thank the representative of
Pakistan for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Indonesia. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Effendi (Indonesia): At the outset, the
Indonesian delegation would like to express its
appreciation to you, Mr. President, and the members of
the Council for convening this meeting at a critical
juncture for the African continent. Our deliberations today
reflect the utmost importance that the international
community accords to issues concerning Africa,
particularly those relating to security and economic and
social development. It provides a unique opportunity to
take stock of the significant achievements and progress
made by the African people over the last few years and
concurrently to focus attention on the need for enhanced
international cooperation to establish on the continent a
partnership with the rest of the world based on mutual
benefit and prosperity.
Before proceeding further, I should like to express
our sincere gratitude to the Secretary-General for his
comprehensive report, entitled "The causes of conflict and
the promotion of durable peace and sustainable
development in Africa", which in paragraph 107 contains
recommendations and proposals
"to reduce conflict and in time help to build a strong
and durable peace".
It is expected to generate action from the international
community to establish peace and prosperity in Africa.
Equally important is that it envisions intensified cooperation
and closer coordination between the United Nations and
regional organizations in Africa, thus providing greater
momentum for the realization of stability and sustainable
development for Africa and its people.
During the past years the African continent has
undergone profound change and transition. Colonization and
apartheid have successfully been relegated to the dark
chapter of history. We rejoiced when Namibia succeeded in
its long struggle for independence and apartheid was
forever eradicated in South Africa, thereby bolstering hopes
and optimism that a new era was unfolding on the
continent. Today, at the threshold of the next millennium,
Africa stands closer to attaining its goal of stable peace and
economic prosperity. It is therefore gratifying to note in the
introduction to the report of the Secretary-General that
"Africa as a whole has begun to make significant
economic and political progress" and "efforts to break
with the patterns of the past are at last beginning to
succeed."
As a vast continent with abundant natural resources and
industrious people, Africa holds great untapped potential for
development and is a vital force to be reckoned with in the
global markets.
For such prosperity to flourish and grow there must be
an environment of peace and security. In this context, my
delegation views with concern the conflicts taking place in
some parts of Africa that have torn the very fabric of its
society, resulting in immense suffering for its people. It is
our fervent hope that the long and relentless efforts of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and the United
Nations will bring the concerned parties together to settle
their disputes in a peaceful and amicable manner through
dialogue and negotiations. We therefore commend the
efforts of the OAU, which has long been at the helm of all
concerted endeavours to resolve conflicts through peaceful
means. Over the past three decades, the OAU has continued
to be the leading and most indispensable organization
through which the African nations and their peoples have
been able to address crisis situations. There is much that the
OAU and the United Nations can achieve when both
Organizations work in concert to remove obstacles
endangering the peace and thereby facilitate the peace
process. We believe that such a partnership of cooperation
can be built within the framework of Chapter VIII of the
Charter of the United Nations.
In this regard we fully concur with the Secretary-
General's observation that the international community
has a crucial role to play in nurturing the ongoing peace
process by extending assistance to provide short-term
stability and providing various inducements while the
parties to the conflict work towards long-term
reconciliation and the reconstruction of their societies. At
the same time, my delegation underscores the importance
of the African countries, like all other countries, being
masters of their own destiny in choosing the road map to
development that is fully in accord with the sacrosanct
principles of respect for the sovereignty of nations and
strict adherence to the principle of non-interference in the
internal affairs of other States.
It is clearly evident that to succeed in building
frameworks for enduring peace and stability on the
African continent, the international community must work
together with the African countries to strengthen the
continent's social and economic foundations. Abject
poverty, illiteracy and hunger only breed despair and
resentment. Only through increased economic
development and generalized improvement in standards of
living will people gain a vested interest in working
towards peaceful resolutions of their differences. It is no
longer sufficient for the international community to
convene and merely express empathy and support for the
African countries without providing concrete
contributions. If indeed there is a genuine desire to avoid
the need for emergency humanitarian assistance or to
avoid costly peacekeeping and peacemaking operations -
as well as to give meaning to the expressions of concern
so often voiced - then comprehensive, concerted and
concrete action on economic development cooperation
must be taken. Anything less will result in a loss of
credibility.
In that connection, the initiative announced by the
Secretary-General, in collaboration with the Secretary-
General of the OAU, to promote large-scale long-term
investment in growth-promoting sectors in Africa is a
positive and constructive step forward. Clearly, new
efforts need to be made to attract foreign direct
investment in Africa, which accounted for less than 5 per
cent of the overall direct investment in the developing
countries in 1996. Those African countries that have, in
the framework of their economic reform programmes,
worked vigorously to establish a favourable climate for
attracting private, domestic and foreign direct investment
should receive a positive response and serve as models for
replication.
At the same time, steps must be taken by the
developed countries to increase market access for African
exports through a reduction of trade barriers. As the
sustained economic growth of the continent will depend
largely on export-led growth, we believe it appropriate for
the World Trade Organization to closely monitor the critical
situation and to work with all concerned to alleviate all
obstacles. In the near term, the continuing importance of
official development assistance, particularly in meeting the
resource requirements of the low-income countries, needs
to be strongly underscored. The global decline in official
development assistance, as market forces are increasingly
left as the determining factor, must be reversed. A
constructive global partnership to support the development
efforts of the developing countries, particularly the least
developed, needs to be re-established. This is in the
interests of all members of the international community, not
only aid-recipient countries. It is no longer acceptable for
developing countries to continually call for official
development assistance commitments to be fulfilled, only
to be ignored. We must get off that treadmill and all take
a serious look at the benefits of development aid and begin
to restore the flow of international development assistance.
Concurrently, vigorous efforts must be taken to finally
resolve the unsustainable debt burdens of the African
countries. It is a travesty for the African countries to
continue to pay more than 17 per cent of their total export
earnings to donors and commercial lenders while many
struggle to meet the most basic needs of their people.
Maintaining the status quo is unacceptable. Indonesia
therefore supports the OAU's call for an international
agreement to clear the debt stock of the poorest countries
in Africa. This would represent an important step in the
effort to revitalize the economic performance of these
countries and put them back on the path of growth.
Likewise, we see merit in the proposal for creditor
countries to convert into grants the remaining official
bilateral debt of the poorest countries, and for financial
institutions to significantly ease and speed access to
facilities, as well as to provide sufficient resources for
economic growth and social development for the heavily
indebted poor nations.
South-South cooperation also holds promise for
supporting the development objectives in Africa, as many
developing countries are clearly in a position to provide
assistance and capacity-building. Such assistance could be
developed in the areas of trade promotion and
strengthening food production and distribution, to name
but a few. This also provides a good opportunity to draw
on the experiences of the African countries and to
determine priorities. The countries of the South can ill
afford to miss this opportunity to act in solidarity and to
contribute to lasting solutions to their common problems.
In the long and arduous struggle for political
freedom, Africa has shown great resilience and courage.
So, too, at the present time, the spirit of Africa can break
the chains of underdevelopment, and Africa can gain its
rightful place as a peaceful, harmonious and prosperous
continent. But in this era of interdependence and
globalization it cannot go it alone. Africa deserves the
attention of the international community. There is
therefore an urgent need for action on the part of the
United Nations and the international community. In this
respect, we commend the report of the Secretary-General,
which is a step in the right direction. Let us therefore
reaffirm our commitment to the African nations to secure
lasting peace and security and promote in earnest
international cooperation in which strong economies can
be built anew to sustain the peoples of Africa in a self-
reliant and sustainable manner. It is only through our
collective efforts that the true destiny of this great
continent can be successfully fulfilled.
As for Indonesia, although it, too, is a developing
country with economic problems of its own, it is firmly
committed to assisting its partners in Africa in achieving
their vision of a peaceful and prosperous Africa.
Indonesia and African countries have long enjoyed close
and fraternal relations, having their roots in the distant
past, the seeds of which were first sown in Bandung in
1955. That historic forum was the precursor to the
establishment of the Non-Aligned Movement, which
charted the way not only for Asia and Africa but also for
the future of mankind as a whole. The non-aligned
countries have since then adopted policies through which
they have assiduously sought to promote and consolidate
their hard-won independence, sovereignty and territorial
integrity and the social and economic uplift of their
peoples. These remain as valid today as they were more
than four decades ago.
Indonesia's commitment to its brothers and sisters in
Africa over the past few years is reflected in, among
other things, Indonesia's support of African development
during its chairmanship of the Non-Aligned Movement,
the convening in Indonesia of the Asia-Africa Forum, our
participation in such forums as the United Nations New
Agenda for the Development of Africa in the 1990s
(UN-NADAF) and support for the United Nations System-
wide Special Initiative on Africa, as well the strong
bilateral cooperation that Indonesia maintains in various
parts of the continent. Next year Indonesia will convene a
summit-level meeting on South-South cooperation, to be
held in Jakarta. It is our hope that such a summit-level
meeting will result in a clear and determined path for the
South into the twenty-first century, from which it can meet
the challenges of globalization and emerge from the socio-
economic exclusion of the past.
The President: The next speaker is the representative
of India. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and
to make his statement.
Mr. Pal (India): It is appropriate that this meeting is
taking place under your presidency, Sir, given Japan's
interest in African affairs and your personal commitment to
this cause.
We read the Secretary-General's superb report with
very great interest. It was not an easy task that the Security
Council set the Secretary-General last September, and
perhaps the questions the Council posed, and the fact that
it was the Council that posed them, presupposed the
answers. The Council acts only when there is a grave threat
to international peace and security, and if it asks the
Secretary-General to produce a report on the causes of
conflict in Africa, it seems to follow that Africa must be
peculiarly prone to conflict, that there are special reasons
why Africa suffers from violence and that conflict is its
defining characteristic. But are these assumptions correct?
One of the great minds of this century, Octavio Paz, who
died earlier this week, wrote some lines about a country
which, modified, apply equally well to Africa: in general,
the world has not looked for Africa in Africa; it has looked
for its obsessions, enthusiasms, phobias, hopes, interests -
and these are what it has found.
In some ways, nothing has changed in a hundred
years. In 1898, too, the world could have wrung its hands
over a continent where nation-States had been formed in
recent years, often cutting across ethnic and linguistic lines,
leading to endemic discontent. Democracy had not quite
taken root. Development was patchy and its fruits available
only to a minority. Conflict was rampant, and fuelled by
arms merchants answerable to no one. This was not Africa;
it was Europe in the late nineteenth century. But it was
never assumed that there lurked in Europe a continental
malaise, peculiar to it, for which continental remedies were
available. Apart from anything else, international opinion
then meant European opinion, and Europe was driven by
the ambitions of the great colonial Powers rather than by
the problems of the new nations in its midst. This,
perhaps, led to the holocausts of the world wars. But
Europe has now recovered to levels of prosperity
unmatched by any other continent in history, though this
took it the better part of a century. It was made possible
after 1945 by extremely generous aid, through the
Marshall Plan. The World Bank, we sometimes forget,
was set up for the reconstruction and development of
Europe. Europe's recovery was aided by Europe's control
over a system of foreign trade that helped its nations on
an export-led path of recovery.
Africa has none of these advantages, but neither are
Africa's problems unique. They are not problems because
they are African; they are problems which have bedeviled
countries in similar situations, in Europe and elsewhere,
many times before. The solutions to Africa's problems are
the solutions that were found for Europe after 1945: aid,
development, trade and cooperation. The Secretary-
General has recognized this, since so much of his report
examines the questions of development, which are at the
heart of the problems faced by all developing countries,
whether they are in Africa or elsewhere. These, however,
are not problems which the Security Council can address;
they are completely outside its mandate, and we are glad
that the Secretary-General's report is also being submitted
to the General Assembly and to the other relevant bodies
of the United Nations system, including the Bretton
Woods institutions. We hope they will look at them
carefully.
Africa is not immutably set on a road to conflict and
violence. The Secretary-General's report notes that in
1996, 14 of the 53 countries of Africa were in conflict.
But this figure came down in 1997 and has continued to
fall in 1998. This is surely encouraging. But Africa, like
many other developing regions, has been on what Ben
Okri called the famished road. The UNICEF study on
Africa's recovery in the 19905 noted that while Africa's
economies benefited little from the policies followed in
the 19605 and 19705, the adjustment policies forced on
Africa in the 19805 did not contribute to the long-term
objectives of development adopted by the Organization of
African Unity (OAU) in the Lagos Plan of Action of
April 1980. Exactly 18 years after that Plan was adopted,
we need to ask ourselves why its objectives by and large
still remain unfulfilled.
It is virtually impossible now to determine whether
the decline or stagnation in parts of Africa were caused
by domestic policies, external shocks or the adjustment
policies imposed upon them, but there is a fair amount of
consensus that responsibility must be equally shared
between the three. It is against this background that we
should consider whether general prescriptions, however
well-meaning, address the real needs of Africa.
Current political orthodoxy recommends a weakening
of the State in Africa and elsewhere, through privatization,
a reduction of the role of government and greater reliance
on market forces. It is not explained how a weak State can
be expected simultaneously to tackle the strong interest
groups that are believed to have exploited national
economies and political systems or, furthermore, how it is
to impose the harsh adjustment policies that are still needed
to integrate nations into the global economy.
Adjustment and liberalization inevitably impose social
tensions, carrying with them the risk that large sections will
be pauperized, even if temporarily. This interim period
needs to be bridged. Governments going through this period
of transformation must have the money to pay for social
support, without which adjustment policies will fail. Such
failure carries with it the even greater danger that the
democratic experiment will also founder, creating precisely
those tensions that find release in violence. That countries
in transition need massive financial support to pre-empt
violence and entrench democracy has been recognized in
East Europe. It is a pity that Africa, which has exactly the
same problems, as the Secretary-General's analysis makes
clear, does not receive anywhere near the same support. As
President Vaclav Havel once wrote in a devastating essay
on "Evasive Thinking", which the Council could take to
heart before it pronounces itself on Africa,
"Between a detailed prediction of the future and a
broad interpretation of the past, there is somehow no
room for what is most important of all - a down-to-
earth analysis of the present."
This chamber should be haunted by the ghosts of the
millions of Africans who would be alive today if they had
not been drawn into proxy wars over the last 30 years, and
if in Africa in the 19905 the Council had not been held
back from action because of the disinterest of the powerful
when action could have saved countless lives. Africans
themselves, as in Sierra Leone, have tried to take up the
burden which the Council was expected to shoulder. If this
meeting means that the Council will make a new beginning
in Africa, it will have served some purpose.
The Secretary-General has made extremely important
suggestions in the section on humanitarian assistance. We
have two points to make on this.
First, humanitarian assistance is taking an increasing
share of official development assistance, at a time when
aid levels are falling just as sharply. Its share of overall
aid rose from 1.5 per cent in 1991 to 8.4 per cent in
1994. What this means is that the international community
has tried to staunch crises while less and less money is
being devoted to addressing the underlying causes, those
long-term problems of development that international
assistance could best address. In The State of the World's
Refugees J 997, the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees noted that
"by donating large sums of money to highly
publicized relief operations, Governments have to
some extent been able to satisfy the demands of
public opinion and the international media".
In other words, aid has been channelled to humanitarian
assistance to raise the comfort level of donor States, not
necessarily to address the real needs of recipients.
Secondly, and even more tellingly, inter-agency
consolidated appeals for humanitarian assistance are rarely
funded in full for Africa, whereas they are oversubscribed
for situations in some other regions.
International interest, therefore, is focused on
humanitarian assistance only when a spectacular crisis in
Africa, of interest to the world's media, forces
international action. The challenge before us is to ensure
that there is sustained attention, both in providing
humanitarian assistance to those affected and in
addressing the long-term causes that create the problems.
We note the Secretary-General's intention to take a hard
look at the United Nations System-wide Special Initiative
on Africa; we trust that it will be strengthened,
particularly in areas like health, education, technology
transfer, trade and investment and food security which
would be of immediate and direct benefit to Africans.
Above all, we must not forget or ignore the many
remarkable achievements Africa has made when progress
has depended on African decisions and actions, and we
must remember that failures have quite often been for
reasons over which they had no control. The whole world
can learn a lesson about political wisdom and
magnanimity from South Africa, which has shown us how
the challenge of political reconciliation can be addressed,
even in apparently impossibly difficult circumstances.
Zimbabwe has shown the world how to balance the needs
of wildlife and the environment with those of the men and
women who make a living from the forests. In the early
years of the United Nations Development Programme-
sponsored Human Development Report, before political
prudence got the better of its authors, Botswana consistently
ranked higher in the index than several developed countries.
Mauritius surpassed the targets of the Lagos Plan of Action
some years ago. These are achievements to be proud of,
and to build upon.
And indeed, Africa is doing 50. Regional and
subregional groupings have emerged in Africa and are
stimulating cooperation and economic growth; the
international community should help strengthen them. The
Secretary General's report on "The World Economy at the
Beginning of 1998" forecast that African growth, which had
slowed to 3 per cent in 1997, would rebound to 4 per cent
this year. This in itself is encouraging, particularly because
the Secretary-General's analysis showed that growth had
slowed in 1996 only because either drought or floods had
affected agriculture. African Governments had continued to
follow sound economic policies, according to the Secretary-
General. The only exceptions were in six countries affected
by political instability or civil strife. In the 38 African
countries monitored for the report, the Secretary-General
noted that in 1991, only 6 had a gross domestic product
growth of 3 per cent or more, and this benefited only 8 per
cent of the population. In 1997, the number of such
countries had grown to 14, an impressive improvement, and
what was most remarkable was that growth in 1997
benefited 33 per cent of the population. In other words,
growth in Africa has increasingly become growth with
social equity. This is, therefore, not an alarming picture; it
is an encouraging one. Certainly, in light of the Secretary-
General's analysis, it could not be argued either that Africa
was in a systemic crisis, or that the policies of African
Governments needed drastic change or improvement.
But when all is said and done, Africa's needs are
special and need special attention. The Secretary-General is
to be congratulated for the candour with which he has
responded to the Council's interest in Africa. As a country
with very old historical ties to Africa, cemented after the
modern nations of Africa and we both became independent,
we have a very keen interest in what happens there. When
the Council has responded to conflict situations in Africa by
sending peacekeeping operations, India has participated in
every one. We share common problems, and we can benefit
from each other's experience. We have allocated the bulk
of our technical assistance programme to help build up
capacities in Africa in areas of African interest. Equally,
we believe we have much to learn from Africans as they
address challenges which we face in other continents. The
Secretary-General's report gives the international
community the chance not to preach, but to learn from
Africa, to help itself by helping Africa. We hope we will
all seize this opportunity.
The President: I thank the representative of India
for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of the United
Republic of Tanzania. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mwakawago (United Republic of Tanzania):
My delegation wishes to associate itself with the
commendations expressed by previous speakers about
your presidency and that of your predecessor, the
Ambassador of the Gambia. We also associate ourselves
with the statements made by Ambassador Machivenyika
Mapuranga of Zimbabwe on behalf of the Organization of
African Unity and Ambassador Mahfoudh Ould Deddach
of Mauritania on behalf of the African Group for the
month of April, as well as that made by Ambassador
Khiphusizi Jele of South Africa on behalf of the countries
of the Southern African Development Community
(SADC). It is a happy coincidence that the Security
Council is presided over by Japan, which has been taking
important initiatives on African development. We are
therefore very optimistic that the results of this debate
will be positive.
We would also like to pay tribute to the Security
Council for the initiative it took in September 1997 in
having a ministerial debate on Africa, the result of which
is the report of the Secretary-General, entitled "The
causes of conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa". We applaud the
Secretary-General for an insightful and constructive
report. We welcome the report as a banner headline of the
challenges facing Africa and, indeed, the international
community as a whole.
A week ago, on 16 April 1998, while introducing the
report, the Secretary-General cautioned and underscored
a matter we wish to emphasize, if only to highlight a
sense of the problem and the magnitude of the challenge
we face. He pointed out:
"Let us never forget that it is the persistence of
poverty that is impeding the full promise of peace
for all of Africa's peoples. The alleviation of poverty
must be the first aim of our efforts. Only then - only
when prosperity and opportunity become real - will
every citizen, young or old, man or woman, have a
genuine and lasting stake in a peaceful future for
Africa - politically, economically and socially."
[S/PV.387], p. 4]
Indeed, we could add that only then will Africa take its
rightful place in the global economy.
Africa is a continent composed of 53 States. Of the 48
least developed countries in the world, 33 or more are in
Africa alone. They are also in many ways highly indebted,
a factor which further exacerbates poverty in the region. If
poverty breeds tension and instability, there could therefore
not be a better breeding ground. Not surprisingly, Africa
has dominated and continues to dominate the Council's
agenda. This is a matter to be regretted. It is also a matter
of shame to Africa and to the common humanity we all
share. It is a matter calling for urgent reversal. It is equally
a matter for which Africa bears primary responsibility. It is
nevertheless a matter which, admittedly, Africa alone does
not have the answers. Pious hopes or even eloquent rhetoric
cannot be a substitute for concrete action. Sadly, Africa, our
dear continent, has been the object of many initiatives over
the last 10 years, to no avail. Perhaps it is about time to
find out why there has been so little progress on the
ground.
The Secretary-General's report calls for concerted
effort to assist Africa. It also notes the positive changes
taking place in the continent in the context of further
democratization, governance and economic reforms. These
efforts need to be nurtured and promoted. Any concrete
contribution that can be made in terms of required
resources is an investment in Africa's prosperity, the
rewards of which, in the end, will not only be seen in the
peace dividends, but also in establishing a firm partnership
for truly global cooperation.
The Secretary-General has further made certain
recommendations, some of which bear on Africans
themselves and some on Africa's cooperating partners, as
well as the United Nations. We look forward with
anticipation to measures which would transform those
recommendations into a workable strategy for real changes
in Africa. Perhaps we need to agree how best to proceed
from this debate. It is crucially important that there be an
appropriate forum where concrete measures and resources
will be worked out.
As Africans, we welcome the challenges we have to
shoulder. We do, nevertheless, request of our cooperating
partners to consider seriously the proposal by the
Secretary-General to examine further additional action on
the debt facing Africa, particularly that of the least
developed countries.
I wish to record our appreciation to the countries
that have taken measures to alleviate the debt problem.
Admittedly, the results of well-meant programmes
such as the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Debt
Initiative of the Bretton Woods institutions have been
disappointing. And yet, Africa continues to face crippling
debt at a time when even the frailest economies, including
that of my country, have just recently been ravaged by
the vagaries of the El Nifio phenomenon. While Africa
does not desire to dishonour its debt obligations, a
cancellation of such a debt burden would release and
make available to Africa critical resources it needs to
build appropriate infrastructure for its prosperity and
peace.
In conclusion, we plead to the Council to follow the
positive developments of recent weeks from the continent
and come up with a message that will reassure Africans
that all hope is not lost. And in that message, it will be
reassuring to get an affirmation that the United Nations
will work, not only with African countries, but also with
the Organization of African Unity, in addressing the twin
goals of peace and security on the one hand, and
development on the other.
The President: I thank the representative of the
United Republic of Tanzania for his kind words addressed
to me and to my predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of the Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Ibrahim (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya)
(interpretation from Arabic): I would like to extend my
congratulations to you, Sir, on your assumption of the
presidency of the Council for this month. I would also
like to express our gratitude and appreciation for the skill
demonstrated by the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the
Gambia and members of his delegation in their
stewardship of the Council last month.
We also thank the Secretary-General for his report
on the causes of conflict and the promotion of durable
peace and sustainable development in Africa. The report
contains many subjects and proposals that merit serious
examination and deliberate study by bodies of the United
Nations.
My delegation will only make preliminary remarks on
the report at this stage. Following an in-depth analysis, we
will define our position regarding the subjects and the
proposals contained therein when the report is discussed by
other relevant bodies.
I would like to state at the outset that the Secretary-
General indeed put his finger on the root causes of the
perennial problems when he identified the results of the
policies and strategies of the Congress of Berlin in 1885 as
the primary causes which fuel conflict and division
afflicting several African societies. The colonial Powers
attending the Congress of Berlin partitioned Africa into
territorial units. Kingdoms and States in Africa which
enjoyed a high civilizational and cultural level were
arbitrarily divided and groups and ethnicities were
arbitrarily and unjustly fragmented. Likewise, unrelated
areas, peoples and tribes were joined together.
The review contained in the report of the Secretary-
General reveals that the full spectrum of Africa's problems
of political instability in some regions and economic
underdevelopment in most if not all countries arose as a
result of the practices of those who drew the political
boundaries of Africa's countries. Not a single African State
demarcated its own political borders with its neighbours.
The colonial Powers did that; they divided tribes and
communities and sowed the seeds of the violent conflict
that we are now witnessing in most parts of the continent.
African communities knew neither tyranny nor human
rights violations before colonialism. Disputes between
tribes, communities or African political entities were
resolved peacefully by the wise elders and leaders of
Africa.
Despite that, we cannot belittle the political and moral
responsibility of all local political actors. It is their
responsibility to avoid by all possible means the tragedies
and disasters that arose from the fragmentation of their
societies and to explore every available means of ensuring
harmony and peaceful coexistence among all sectors of
those communities. Africa remains in its early stages of
development and therefore has every right to choose the
political and economic formulas suitable to its particular
environment.
In the economic arena, Africa has fared no better
than in its social and political spheres. The trade relations
laid down by the colonial Powers resulted in long-term
distortions, affecting African economies and economic
structures. The consequences of this are still being felt
today. The conventional patterns of trade that prevailed
during the colonial era, which focused on mining, the
extraction of raw materials and their transfer outside
Africa, have not significantly changed. Moreover, no
significant investment was made in the infrastructure,
such as in roads, railroads, ports, education or health,
among other things.
The trade agreements offered to Africa continue to
impose certain conditions that result in inequalities. These
conditions include demands of unrestricted foreign
investment in all areas and an orientation towards
privatization. This has resulted in the African
Governments' being forced to sell their economic sectors,
including their mining and forestry interests. To whom
were these resources sold? Not, of course, to the private
entrepreneurs of Africa, but to the foreign companies and
monopolies, whose primary concern is to make enormous
profits and satisfy the needs of their shareholders in
advanced economic and financial centres.
Is this not an injustice to Africa and an infringement
of the sovereignty of its peoples? Those who wish to
assist Africa should help to train African nationals and to
promote Africa's capacity to exploit the continent's
resources and primary commodities. Thus, risks and
returns would be shared within a partnership. Africa has
as yet no economy and no market and there can therefore
be no African partnership in the market economy. There
will be no peace without development, growth and
economic prosperity. There will be no development and
prosperity under the heavy debts burdening Africa. Until
the unconscionable terms of assistance imposed by
financial institutions, intergovernmental or private, are
rescinded; until Africa's debts, in which Powers vying for
control of the continent have ensnared African States, are
written off; and until fair economic and trade cooperation
agreements that take into account the particular
circumstances of every African State are reached between
Africa and the developed countries, the African
Governments will find themselves unable to satisfy the
basic needs of their peoples and will remain caught in a
vicious circle of conflict over the remaining meagre
resources.
It is Africa's full right to demand debt cancellation
and it is the duty of creditors seriously to consider that
request if they are truly troubled by the deteriorating
humanitarian, social and economic conditions in Africa and
if they truly see themselves as the future economic and
trade partners of Africa and not the new colonialists of the
continent. Any relationship, including economic and trade
relations, if anchored in equality, would have highly
tangible benefits.
However, it is unfair at this point to require the
African States to engage in competition, to their detriment,
with those who have progressed at Africa's expense and
have had a head start of centuries. It is, indeed,
unreasonable that Africa should be left to languish in the
grip of intra- and inter-State conflicts and backwardness. It
is illogical that the international community should stand
idly by, throwing crumbs of charity to Africa and giving
lip-service that solves no problems, satisfies no hunger and
offers no genuine hope of salvation.
If the developed countries do have the good faith and
political will to assist in the development of Africa, they
should at least desist from taking any measure that would
hinder the development efforts of the African countries.
One such measure is the imposition of arbitrary economic
sanctions, such as those imposed by the United States of
America on Libya, the Sudan and Nigeria - freezing their
assets, severing political and economic relations, and
denying them access to technology needed for growth and
progress. As if all this were not enough, the United States
has enacted legislation to block cooperation between those
States and other countries.
The responsibility for everything that occurred in
Africa in the past and that is now taking place should be
borne by those who originally caused it. The time has come
for the Powers that colonized Africa, exploited its wealth
and resources and enslaved its peoples to offer solemn
apologies and pay full reparations for all the damage
wrought by colonialism. As Mr. Robert Mugabe, President
of the Republic of Zimbabwe and Chairman of the
Organization of African Unity, stated before the General
Assembly and the Security Council, Africa seeks no charity
from anyone; rather, it claims a restoration of its rights. A
refusal to pay compensation and to offer an apology can be
understood only as a perpetuation of a racist attitude that
looks down upon the peoples of Africa.
These were general remarks on the causes and sources
of conflict in the African continent. My delegation would
now like to make some specific remarks on the content, or
lack thereof, of the report.
First, my delegation is extremely surprised that the
report does not make any reference whatsoever to a
conflict that has a negative impact on peace and security
on the African continent as well as on the development
efforts there. I am referring to the existing dispute over
the Lockerbie issue between the United States of America
and the United Kingdom on one hand, and the Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya on the other. It is even more surprising
because the dispute has been, since its inception, at the
centre of interest of the Organization of African Unity
(OAU) at the highest level. The OAU has over the years
made continuous efforts to reach an expeditious, peaceful
and fair solution that would uncover the truth and end the
unjust suffering of the Arab people of Libya, who have
been the victims of unjustified sanctions whose illegality
has been proven.
This interest in the dispute on the part of the OAU
was expressed by His Excellency President Mugabe of the
Republic of Zimbabwe, current Chairman of the OAU,
during his statement before the Security Council on 25
September 1997:
"I would be remiss were I not to raise another
matter of concern to the African continent that
requires the attention of the Council and that was
debated at the last summit meeting of the
Organization of African Unity, namely, the need to
find a solution to the dispute between Libya, the
United States of America and the United Kingdom
over the Lockerbie tragedy. In addition to the
families of those who lost their lives, many other
innocent third persons continue to suffer as a result
of the sanctions imposed on Libya. Now that Libya
has agreed that the two accused Libyans can be tried
under Scottish law, by Scottish judges but in a third
country or at the International Court of Justice, we
feel that this offer should receive your serious
consideration so that matters can move forward. The
Organization of African Unity stands ready to assist
in trying to break the present impasse." [S/PV.3819,
p- 4]
The Secretary-General of the OAU and the ministers who
spoke at that Council meeting agreed with this statement.
If the Security Council does indeed wish to help
resolve African problems, it only has to act today in
accordance with the wishes expressed in no uncertain
terms by the African nations and the international
community as a whole before the Security Council on 20
March 1998. Thus it would lift the sanctions imposed on
the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and adopt one of the options to
resolve the dispute proposed by the OAU and the League
of Arab States and endorsed by the Organization of the
Islamic Conference, the Non-Aligned Movement and the
majority of the members of the Security Council, or await
the ruling of the International Court of Justice, which
stressed that it has jurisdiction to consider the dispute and
the purely legal nature of that dispute. Therefore, there
remains no moral/political or legal justification for the
maintenance of sanctions.
Secondly, my delegation strongly supports the right of
all States to acquire the means of self-defence and believes
that it is their exclusive, inherent right in view of the
potential of foreign threats. It is inadmissible that only
African States should have their expenditures for the
acquisition of armament restricted to a certain percentage
without regard to the particular circumstances of each State.
In this context, the proposal of the Secretary-General,
whether regarding the United Nations Register of
Conventional Arms or the volume of military spending,
should be reviewed. In this regard, we must recall that a
number of African countries are threatened today by a non-
African country that has an enormous arsenal of weapons
of mass destruction and refuses to subject those weapons to
any international supervision, while being supported by a
permanent member of this Council. My country would also
cite the military arrangements that are being made outside
Africa in order to prepare for possible interference in
certain African countries.
Thirdly, my country, whose people have suffered for
over six years as a result of the harmful impact of the
illegal collective sanctions which this Council was
pressured to adopt, would warn against the slippery slope
of hasty adoption of such sanctions irrespective of pressures
or temptations. This stems from my country's belief in the
futility of such sanctions in the first place, and its
recognition of their devastating effects on the living
conditions of entire peoples. We also believe that resort to
peaceful channels and means for the resolution of conflicts
is the only way to secure lasting peace and security.
Fourthly, my country welcomes the consolidation of
cooperation between the United Nations and the OAU in
the area of the peaceful settlement of disputes. We see this
as a natural matter which lies within the provisions of
Chapter VIII of the United Nations Charter that afford
regional arrangements an important role in the maintenance
of international peace and security. As my country looks
forward to the promotion of this cooperation, we call upon
the United Nations, the primary custodian of international
peace and security, to enhance the capacity of the OAU
to prevent, manage and settle disputes and promote
peacekeeping efforts. This should be done through
supporting the Mechanism established in 1993 by the
OAU for this purpose. My country would like to
underscore the need for the United Nations to increase its
support of the capacity of the OAU and subregional
groups to carry out conflict prevention, management and
resolution. We also strongly oppose any policies aimed at
creating any military or security arrangements under any
pretext coming from outside the continent or without the
consent of the OAU. Africa, in the final analysis, has no
ally except itself. Experience has taught us that African
skill and wisdom, when not impeded by foreign Powers,
can indeed find peaceful and practical solutions to African
conflicts and disputes.
Finally, my delegation fervently hopes that today's
meeting will not prove to be an isolated event or a single
occasion. In this regard, we agree with the Secretary-
General's proposal that the Security Council should
convene at the ministerial level once every two years and
at the summit level once every five years. We also hope
that concern for African issues, especially those relating
to peace and development, will not be addressed by one
intergovernmental body only, but will be dealt with at the
highest levels across the board in all organs of the United
Nations system.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya for the kind words he addressed
to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Colombia.
I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Forero (Colombia) (interpretation from Spanish): I wish to begin by congratulating you, Sir, on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security Council
for this month.
Let me join other delegations in thanking the
Secretary-General for submitting his report on the causes
of conflict in Africa, a most important contribution to the
quest for an explanation of the violence and instability
which have been experienced by the African continent
throughout its entire recent history and which have
perceptibly increased in recent years.
I must note at the outset that, as a developing
country, we are linked by powerful ties of solidarity and
kinship to that continent, all of whose countries are
members of the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries. We
therefore welcome the fact that, even though it has been
late in coming - all too late if we consider the millions of
lives lost while the international community stood by
indifferent - there is now an investigation into the
underlying causes of this great suffering and desolation,
something which the Non-Aligned Movement has urged for
many years now.
The report of the Secretary-General is first and
foremost a document whose scope demands careful study
by the General Assembly. In view of the importance of this
matter, all Members of the United Nations, and especially
African countries, must contribute their views. This will
give us additional perspectives on the report, which will
make possible a discussion aimed at defining a common
United Nations position on this matter. This examination
must not become just another endless debate; what is
needed is conclusions that will enable us to adopt specific,
urgent measures. But this will be impossible, and its
implementation will be ineffective, without consensus
among the international community, and especially among
the African countries.
The report's analysis and recommendations do not
themselves constitute a definitive navigational chart for the
international community, for African States or for
developing countries in general. The report is a serious and
intelligent effort by a son of Africa with great experience
in United Nations peace efforts in that continent. But the
unfair fate of Africa, resulting from prejudice and from
prescriptions imposed by an international community that
has repeatedly failed to understand the complex realities of
Africa, is lesson enough that this time we must act
cautiously and, most important, respectfully when
considering the action that should follow general agreement
on the international system's policies towards Africa.
As the Secretary-General notes in his report,
development is a human right - my delegation would say
a fundamental human right - and is the long-term goal of
all the nations of Africa. Unfortunately, the seriousness of
Africa's problems, on so many fronts, means that the need
for greatly accelerated economic development will not
allow development to be relegated to a less important
position vis-a-vis other equally pressing factors in the
sphere of peace.
Developing countries hold the View that, when it is a
matter of achieving development, political efforts should
not have priority over economic efforts. We are therefore
concerned that some might see the opposite position in
this report or detect a focus that promotes the idea that
the fulfilment of certain political or institutional standards
is a sine qua non if Africa is to rid itself of
underdevelopment. We believe that we must make an
effort to avoid dogmatic stances that would favour one
position and reject another when considering whether
solutions should first tackle the problems of peace or the
problems of development.
We want to stress the report's view that African
countries should understand that the ability to achieve
peace lies first and foremost in their own hands, and that
the effectiveness of international support hinges on the
cooperation and political will of the recipient State. We
agree that any analysis of Africa must be based on
something other than the image of a dependent continent
anchored in the traumas of its colonial post, and that the
ability of Africans to determine their own future must be
recognized.
But we must take care not to assign to African
countries a responsibility beyond their capacities, thus
absolving the international community of nearly all its
responsibilities while leaving it with the power to monitor
compliance with a whole set of political, social and
institutional obligations and requirements. In our View, the
notion of Africa's principal responsibility with respect to
its own problems implies that both the cooperation and
the explicit consent of the State in question are essential
for the success of international efforts to promote peace,
and are moreover a basic principle of international law.
My delegation will now speak briefly about several
specific elements of the report. We fully agree with the
Secretary-General's initiative by which the Security
Council would urgently take up the question of publicly
identifying international arms traffickers and their
activities. There may be no more harmful international
influence on Africa and on developing countries in
general than the illegal introduction of weapons to their
territories. Hence, the international community's neglect
of this issue has unacceptable moral implications. The
response of the Security Council must be commensurate
with the scope of the problem; it should set up a
multilateral machinery that would begin by compiling and
publishing information on those who engage in the illegal
traffic in arms.
We View as interesting the Secretary-General's
analysis of humanitarian issues. His statement that human
security is the cardinal mission of the United Nations is
the most original utterance on this subject. But this is a
poorly defined concept that is not set out in the Charter,
and it must be discussed very carefully, as must the
concepts that derive from it, such as the use of force by the
Security Council to defend members of a peacekeeping
operation, humanitarian workers in a hostile environment,
or refugees or displaced persons subjected to massive
violence. Perhaps the initial answer to questions to which
these matters give rise can be found in the Secretary-
General's reference to the fact that the operations in Bosnia
and in Somalia illustrate the magnitude of the challenges
and dangers posed for peacekeepers and humanitarian
workers operating in a hostile environment without the
consent or support of all of the parties.
In the opinion of my delegation, United Nations
efforts to find an effective machinery to defend the
recipients of humanitarian assistance, as well as those who
distribute it, must be reconciled with the need to respect the
intergovernmental nature of the Organization and therefore
the sovereignty of Member States. The most notable aspect
of the report is its attempt to understand the new realities
that define the causes of recent conflicts in the light of
lessons learned over recent years. But, just as the failure in
Somalia should not discourage the international community
about its ability to take action for peace in Africa, that and
other exceptional cases should not be used as models for
building a theory that would disregard the sovereignty and
have no faith in the intentions and the legitimacy of African
States.
Another noteworthy aspect of the report is its search
for approaches ensuring that the efforts of the international
community do not end with the signing of peace accords,
but that they seek to foster development and stability from
all possible angles. This necessarily implies the
establishment of boundaries between efforts for the
maintenance of international peace and security, which are
mainly within the competence of the Security Council, and
activities for the reconstruction and strengthening of
institutions, which by their very nature fall under the
purview of the General Assembly. It is not a good idea to
erase the dividing line between responsibilities carried out
by force and those designed to assist the social and
institutional efforts of States, which must be transparent and
consensual.
The report of the Secretary-General offers the
international community a framework and instruments that
constitute a challenge as well as an opportunity to try to
recuperate from all the years of oblivion and discrimination
to which the African continent has been subjected. It is
clear that respect and cooperation are the only way.
The President: I thank the representative of
Colombia for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Lebanon. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Moubarak (Lebanon) (interpretation from French): Allow me first of all to sincerely congratulate
you, Mr. President, on the manner in which you are
guiding the debates of the Council this month. Allow me
also to thank your predecessor, the Permanent
Representative of the Gambia, for the manner in which he
conducted the Council's debates last month.
We welcome the fact that the Council is getting
down to the job of developing concerted international
action to promote peace and security in Africa. Indeed,
the situation in the great African continent remains a
subject of deep concern requiring a global response.
We welcome the Secretary-General's report on the
causes of conflicts and the promotion of durable peace
and sustainable development in Africa. The report has the
merit of grappling with all aspects of the problem by
analysing the sources of conflict both in terms of their
historical context and in terms of internal and external
factors. It also has the merit of getting down to an overall
plan of action in order to act on potential conflict
situations by establishing conditions of good governance
through respect for human rights and the rule of law, as
well as through responsibility in public administration
through harmonized economic growth and the rigorous
establishment of democracy.
It is high time Africa was given the means to which
it aspires in order to allow it to ensure for its peoples a
harmonious sustainable development, both structurally and
in crisis situations. It is high time Africa was able to free
itself from its debt burden in order to give special priority
to social development, in particular through the
restructuring of international assistance and the opening
up of international markets. It is high time regional
cooperation and integration was supported by harmonizing
the international and bilateral initiatives now under way.
It is high time the bloody conflicts in Africa were put to
an end, in particular by limiting the proliferation of
weapons. It is equally urgent to seriously address ways
and means of preventing new conflicts by laying the
foundations of sustained economic growth.
The ills of the African continent are numerous and
interdependent. The Security Council, as well as the
General Assembly and the other United Nations organs
whose responsibilities include Africa, will have to stress
more than ever their interaction if we wish Africa to
overcome the conflicts and underdevelopment that continue
to hinder its development and growth. It is clear that the
Bretton Woods institutions will have to be closely linked to
this great challenge of the beginning of the third
millennium.
Since 1970, more than 30 wars have ravaged Africa,
especially internal conflicts, causing more than 8 million
refugees and displaced persons. The causes have been
diverse and now have given rise to critical self-examination
at the global level. This is the beginning of wisdom.
Colonialism has left a legacy of deep structural and
humanitarian problems that have hindered the building of
States and nations. Africa continues to feel those effects.
The effects are still being felt in terms of economy, social
rights and inter-African trade.
Today it is recognized that it is essential to take swift,
concrete measures at the first signs of crisis. There are
indeed various means available, but we often lack the
common will to contain a brewing crisis. Swift action is
essential, and this applies also to humanitarian assistance,
the corollary of conflicts.
But over and above the concrete urgent measures that
must be taken to prevent new conflicts, it is necessary to
emphasize that a return to normality can occur only through
rebuilding and development at the State, economic and
human levels. The process must be continuous, and it is
useless to resort to short-term or limited operations if they
are not sustained through responsible assistance by the
international community through all its various organs, in
particular through massive financing and coordinated
international action.
In order to compensate for low savings it is essential
to encourage investments, in particular through the Bretton
Woods institutions. Let us not delude ourselves: economic
recovery in Africa can take place only through the generous
and courageous action of the international community. It is
Africa's legitimate right and the duty of the entire
international community. The competitive global trade
environment must be adjusted if international cooperation
is to be really meaningful.
These conclusions have indeed already been reached
and reiterated at numerous international conferences at the
regional level, in the United Nations Conference on Trade
and Development, in the Group of 77, in the Economic
and Social Council and in the General Assembly. This
fundamental debate today in the Security Council on the
resurgence of Africa should not be a dead letter. Let us
ensure that the dream becomes reality. It is no longer
possible to avoid our obligations to Africa. Several
decades have been lost through endless talk, when we
know what the remedies are to solve the diverse problems
facing Africa. The time is past when, as the Secretary-
General says in paragraph 107 of his report,
"the responsibility for producing change could be
shifted on to other shoulders".
In an interdependent world it makes no sense to
hope for independent development in any region of the
globe unless there is harmonious development on the
great African continent. For our part, we vigorously
support the historic priority to be accorded to Africa in
order to allow it to achieve a future for its peoples that is
commensurate with its rights, its ambitions, its
responsibilities and its wisdom.
The President: I thank the representative of
Lebanon for his kind words addressed to me and to my
predecessor.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the Most
Reverend Secretary for Relations with States of the Holy
See, Archbishop Jean-Louis Tauran. In accordance with
the decision taken earlier in the meeting, I welcome the
Most Reverend Secretary for Relations with States of the
Holy See and invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Archbishop Tauran (interpretation from French):
It is a great honour for me to take the floor in this
Chamber on behalf of Pope John Paul II, who has
instructed me to convey his cordial greetings and to tell
the Council how much he shares its concerns and its
desire to support the peoples of the African continent.
Just one month ago, during his pastoral visit to Nigeria,
he did not hesitate to introduce himself as "a friend of
Africa".
The Holy See is particularly grateful to the
Secretary-General for the report that he has prepared for
the international community, drawing to our attention his
vision of today's Africa. The Holy See shares his analyses,
which are marked by realism and solidarity.
As Mr. Kofi Annan notes, Africa is not lacking in
either material or human resources. The sense of family,
respect for elders and hospitality to refugees are
manifestations of the love for life and the fraternal spirit
that are so dear to Africans.
But who among us would disagree with other elements
that the report highlights? The ongoing degradation of
natural resources, the vast tracts of unproductive land,
widespread malnutrition, inadequate health-care policies,
cruel ethnic conflicts, a fragile spirit of democracy,
systematic corruption and the weight of external debt are so
many wounds to the spirit of kinship and harmony. In fact,
all these problems are linked. Injustices foster wars,
conflicts lead to poverty, extreme poverty results in the
displacement of individuals, and the impoverishment of
whole societies brings about despair and passivity.
All of these aspects of the African situation are
formidable challenges that the international community
must take up. Allow me to assure the Council that, in its
efforts to do this, it will always find at its side the Catholic
Church, whose solicitous concern for Africa has a long
history. Formerly, it was the generosity of missionaries;
today it is priests, nuns and indigenous laypersons who
have lent their voices to those who have none and who
have cared for, educated and shared the difficult and
laborious daily life of millions of Africans. That is why,
inspired by this solidarity with past and present Africans, I
would like to share with the Council the Holy See's
priorities with regard to Africa.
The lack of respect for the human person, which has
characterized the life of Africans, sows hatred and
continues to foster countless conflicts. This very
morning - despite many appeals for clemency, including
from Pope John Paul II - public executions took place in
several Rwandan locations, plunging Africans and their
friends into despair. Everyone knows that this is not the
way to foster the national reconciliation so needed in
Rwanda.
It is therefore necessary to create a new awareness that
respects life, ethnic diversity and the abilities of each
individual. The violation of the rights of the human person,
of which inter-ethnic massacres are the most tragic
manifestation, call for immediate and clear human rights
education to put an end to situations where might makes
right.
Persistent poverty has led to passivity and despair.
We must restore courage and optimism to those peoples
whose lands, as the Secretary-General states in paragraph
104 of his report,
"are rich and fertile enough to provide a solid
foundation for prosperity".
The international community must permit Africa to ensure
its own economic development. This would require an
immediate search for measures capable of leading to the
cancellation of foreign debt, as well as the opening of
markets without insisting upon burdensome conditions -
by providing, for example, preferential economic
assistance and appropriate transfers of technology. All of
this, of course, would have to be carried out in a manner
that takes into account the proper pace for African
development.
Armed conflicts are most often born of the thirst for
power. Only education that promotes democracy
respectful of local traditions, along with political dialogue,
will be able to bring about justice and peace. Pope John
Paul II, addressing the diplomatic corps accredited to the
Holy See last January stated,
"If violent attainment of power becomes the norm,
if insistence on ethnic considerations continues to
override all other concerns, if democratic
representation is systematically put aside, if
corruption and the arms trade continue to rage, then
Africa will never experience peace or development,
and future generations will mercilessly judge these
pages of African history."
The wisdom of leaders, enlightened by the progress in
political and administrative science, should help them
understand better that political activity is, first and
foremost, service to others.
The constant flow of arms of all kinds from one
country to another not only increases violence, it also
leads Governments to go further into debt, thus seriously
delaying economic and social development. The
international community is, fortunately, increasingly
aware that this cannot be justified and that exporting arms
becomes, in fact, a means of collaborating in conflicts and
genocides. No one can remain unmoved by such a
situation, nor can it be forgotten that it is armed violence,
along with extreme poverty, that was the source of the
tragic fate of the 8 million refugees mentioned in the
report.
Of course, the problems of Africa must be resolved by
the Africans themselves. But we must admit that they
cannot succeed if they are abandoned and left to
themselves, and even less if they become pawns of
hegemonies and foreign interference from near or far.
Africa needs disinterested friends who are inspired by a
political will to help the vital forces in their societies take
the path towards respectful political dialogue, equitable
public administration and fraternal solidarity. The economic
progress and social development that certain African
countries have already experienced, thanks in part to
effective regional cooperation, demonstrates that there is
hope. The efforts of all must be united in order to make
progress in this direction.
In conclusion, allow me to cite once more Pope John
Paul II:
"Africa bears the scars of its long history of
humiliations. This continent has too frequently been
considered only for selfish interests. Today Africa is
asking to be loved and respected for what it is. It does
not ask for compassion, it asks for solidarity."
[Angelus of 24 September 1995]
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my list
is the representative of Italy. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Terzi di Sant'Agata (Italy): First of all, I wish
to associate myself with the statement made by the
Permanent Representative of the United Kingdom on behalf
of the European Union.
My authorities have carefully assessed the Secretary-
General's report. Italy fully shares and supports the
Secretary-General' 5 recommendations and conclusions. The
report goes beyond easy rhetoric to realistically address the
inextricably related problems of peace and development.
The Secretary-General's recommendations and suggestions
should be translated into concrete actions to foster full
collaboration with African countries. In addition to the
Security Council, other United Nations bodies, in particular
the Economic and Social Council, should ensure that there
is appropriate follow-up and that the significant economic
implications that this report contains are implemented.
Africa has experienced tragedies and conflicts, but the
picture is changing, however slowly, and prospects look
brighter today than in the past. The holding of free
elections, the consolidation of democratic Governments and
the increase in the growth rate contain the seeds of hope.
Africa is once again at the centre of the international
community's attention, as is proved by the initiatives of
the United Nations, the Bretton Woods institutions and
the G-8. We hope that this renewed attention leads to a
greater awareness of the potentially harmful effects of
what would be an unacceptable marginalization of the
continent in the global economic environment.
The social and human costs of poverty - the
primary cause of conflicts - are high. The recent
meeting in New York between the United Nations and the
international financial institutions in the framework of the
Economic and Social Council emphasized the idea that
we must continue to join forces to eradicate poverty and
open the road to future sustainable development. This is
particularly true for the African continent.
The international community, as the Secretary-
General has underlined, should aim to help African
Governments create an environment favourable to
investment flows and alleviating the burden of debt.
Development cooperation must aim more and more to
create economic partnerships rather than economic
dependency.
In particular, we need to promote the integration of
African countries into the flow of international trade and
investments at a time when there is a drive towards the
liberalization of exchanges and when Africa is
experiencing a decline in its export rates and in the flow
of direct investments.
On the basis of this premise, Italy's policy, outlined
in September 1996 by our Minister for Foreign Affairs,
Lamberto Dini, aims to increase collaboration with
African countries at every level in the prevention and
peaceful settlement of conflicts and the promotion and
affirmation of democratic processes and development.
Pacification, economic development, the safeguarding of
human rights, respect for minorities, inter-ethnic
coexistence and the acceptance of religious and cultural
diversity are primary aspects of this programme. Our
location in the Mediterranean leads us to see the African
continent as a priority area for political and economic
commitment.
In this framework, development cooperation
represents an essential instrument. Africa receives a
prominent share of Italian aid, which is contributed both
bilaterally and through the international organizations and
also in the form of emergency relief for refugees. In its
latest budget, my Government included a provision for the
conversion of debt in developing countries into investments.
We support the Secretary-General's appeal to reflect
on the best response to African conflict situations. The
United Nations can also help lower tensions through
increased recourse to mediation and by facilitating
negotiation and dialogue, as provided for under Chapter VI
of the Charter, in close collaboration with the interested
regional and subregional organizations.
The Somalia and Rwanda experiences have
demonstrated the need to place the accent on prevention;
we share the Secretary-General's views on this point.
In the Horn of Africa Italy is collaborating with
countries that belong to the Inter-Governmental Authority
on Development (IGAD): Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea,
Kenya, Somalia, the Sudan and Uganda. Since November
1996, Italy has chaired the IGAD Forum, aimed at bringing
together the organization's member countries and Western
donor countries. On 19 and 20 January this year the first
ministerial meeting took place in Rome to give new
impetus to negotiations on the resolution of conflicts in the
region and to the process of regional economic growth. In
this area, the most acute crisis is still Somalia. Our efforts
are aimed at contributing to the Organization of African
Unity, IGAD and all other initiatives to re-establish in
Somalia the conditions for civil coexistence and to give a
State back to the Somali people. To this end, on 4 May in
Rome the first meeting of the Committee for Somalia will
be held, established in the framework of the IGAD
Partners' Forum.
Hundreds of Italian nationals were present and active
as volunteers in the Great Lakes region, even at the most
dramatic moments. Italy also supports parallel forms of
preventive diplomacy, such as the initiative of the
Community of Sant'Egidio to bring together the parties in
Burundi, following its successful experience in
Mozambique.
We must not forget that in Africa some peacekeeping
operations have been crowned with success, such as that in
Mozambique, or are showing signs of being on the road to
success, such as that in Angola. These experiences prove
that when the right basic conditions are in place, the
deployment of a United Nations peacekeeping operation can
be a most effective instrument.
In this respect, we also share the Secretary-General's
analysis of the usefulness of preventive peacekeeping
missions and of co-deployments of multinational and
United Nations forces, as was the case in Liberia.
Italy believes that the excessive accumulation of
conventional arms can destabilize regions in Africa or
aggravate conflicts. In other continents, the agreements on
force limitation and arms control have been a reality for
some time now. After prohibiting the manufacture of anti-
personnel landmines, Italy signed the Ottawa Convention.
Because of the serious effects of such weapons on
populations, the United Nations demining assistance
programmes must be fully supported. We support Mali's
initiative for a moratorium on the import, export and
manufacture of small arms in the Sahara-Sahel region.
Together with other countries, we are participating in the
initiative that the newly created Department for
Disarmament Affairs is coordinating in the framework of
resolution 52/38 G, and we will contribute to a seminar
on this subject in Libreville.
Finally, I wish to draw special attention to the part
of the Secretary-General's report regarding humanitarian
assistance, in particular the protection of civilians in
conflict situations and the impact of conflicts on human
rights and on children's rights. These aspects require a
strong commitment by the international community as a
whole to launch broad-based initiatives in defence of the
sectors of the population that are weakest and most
vulnerable to war-related violence.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Cuba. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Rodriguez Parilla (Cuba) (interpretation from Spanish): I should like to thank the Gambia for its
important contribution during its presidency of the
Security Council, and I should like to wish you,
Mr. President, success during your leadership of this
important body.
Today the Security Council is formally considering,
through a public debate, the progress and problems of
Africa, matters which, because of their importance and
nature, must also be taken up by the General Assembly
and other bodies within the system, which should fully
exercise their authority and fulfil their responsibilities so
as to help the region.
Cuba welcomes the report of the Secretary-General
being considered at this meeting, and we acknowledge its
indubitable merits. We are particularly pleased that it
includes reference to certain elements pertaining to the
origins of conflict on the African continent and the
consequences of colonialism for African nations.
We attach the utmost importance to the international
community's reflections on the problems of the African
continent. In particular, we consider it of vital importance
that urgent measures be adopted throughout the United
Nations system in order to support the successes and
progress that Africa is achieving at the cost of terrible
hardship, as well as to contribute to the bold efforts African
countries are making for development, to remove the
serious external obstacles in their way, to put an end to the
grave consequences and imbalances brought about by
colonial and neo-colonial pillaging, to confront the poverty
in which millions of our African brothers live and to
resolve the overwhelming problems of the present and the
threats of future marginalization.
Of the regions that make up the so-called third world,
or the developing world, as we are sometimes
euphemistically called, the African continent is undoubtedly
the one that has suffered most. The massive colonization of
that continent and the centuries of colonial plunder have led
to an almost unparalleled accumulation of serious economic
and social problems.
While the practice of slavery existed in other regions
of the third world, Africa was the continent where slavery
was reborn in modern times and millions of Africans were
abducted, where the genocide of the conquest occurred and
where enormous wealth was extracted to feed the prosperity
of a few countries and make possible the development they
enjoy today.
Africa has been more plundered than any other region.
The worst of it is that today, like all the developing world,
it continues to suffer from the philosophy of plunder, which
cannot be spoken of in the past tense because it is a fully
contemporary phenomenon, one we will undoubtedly
continue to have to speak of in the coming millennium if
the growing marginalization is not reversed and if so-called
globalization does not include real opportunities to do
something other than increase the opulence of the few and
the poverty of most of the planet's inhabitants.
The debt to the African continent has not yet been
settled. While it is up to the international community as a
whole to contribute to the search for ways to bring about its
recovery and development, the greatest historical
responsibility falls on those countries that for years
benefited from Africa, from its resources and from the
labour of its men and women.
Historical apologies are not enough. Nor is the
solution to Africa's problems to be found in the
marketplace or to be considered a business matter;
cooperation and solidarity are required.
Despite the initiatives of financial institutions and the
United Nations system, as well as the occasional
contributions made by some countries, the African
countries continue to be burdened by the unbearable
weight of external debt, adjustment measures, the unfair
and unstable international monetary system, trade
imbalance and protectionist and discriminatory measures,
all of which widen the gap that separates them from the
countries of the first world.
What we, the developing countries, seek in our
relations with developed countries is not charity, but equal
and non-discriminatory treatment, fair prices for products,
fair access to international markets and, finally, a
cessation of the continuous pillage to which our peoples,
including the African peoples, are subjected.
Cuba is proud of the enormous contribution it has
received from hundreds of thousands of Africans, and of
its own origins, which have deep African roots. We
Cubans are deeply proud of the African blood that flows
in our veins and of the fact that the presence and
assistance of Africa contributed decisively and indelibly
to forging the Cuban nation.
It has been our fundamental duty to offer, with the
fullest respect, absolute unselfishness and deep humility,
our cooperation to Africa, and Cuban blood has been shed
in struggles for the independence of its peoples. We have
also tried, and despite our economic difficulties we
continue to try, day by day, our cooperation, primarily by
sending doctors and teachers to Africa and by training
professionals and technicians in our country.
Cuba confirms its will and its commitment to
continue to cooperate, within its limited resources, with
other third world countries and with the cause of Africa.
Cuba hopes that the entire international community will
join in these efforts for Africa, and we expect this in
particular from those who have the sufficient and
necessary means to do so. This would be a minimal act
of justice and reciprocity, and, to view it from an
objectionable and selfish viewpoint of national interest, it
would even be an indispensable investment for the future
and to ensure the stability of the world.
Peace cannot be exported or imposed, it is true, and
much less can it be imposed by force of arms. Lasting
solutions cannot emerge from the barrels of guns. It is not
by imposing allegedly democratic models, by weakening
the sovereignty of States or by requiring the use of
neoliberal recipes for adjustment that we will advance
towards peace.
As long as tens of millions of Africans live in hunger,
disease, ignorance and injustice, there will be no peace in
Africa. As long as the profound structural causes of
conflicts are not eliminated, there will be no peace in
Africa. As long as there is no social peace, there will be no
peace.
Africa has extraordinary potential and needs only the
opportunity that all developed countries had in their
beginnings to demonstrate the strength and qualities of its
people, the depth and wealth of its culture, the talent and
unselfishness of its children. This is further supported by
the enormous economic resources that are at its disposal.
Africa must be treated as an equal partner and as the
extremely weighty factor in the balance of the world that it
is. The world must, of necessity, change if it wishes to
survive, and in that new, lasting world that we are still far
from discovering or constructing, Africa will be essential
and will occupy its rightful place.
The President: I thank the representative of Cuba for
his statement and for his kind words addressed to my
predecessor and me.
The next speaker is the representative of the
Philippines. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Mabilangan (Philippines): The Philippines joins
previous speakers, particularly those from our brotherly
African delegations, in commending you, Mr. President,
and the Security Council for the convening of this highly
important meeting and in welcoming the comprehensive
report on peace and development in Africa issued by the
Secretary-General. I am particularly delighted to see you,
Sir, presiding over this meeting, knowing your deep
personal interest in African development and progress. It is
indeed timely that the Secretary-General and the Security
Council have devoted this occasion to a serious evaluation
of the current political, humanitarian and socio-economic
conditions faced by the continent. This is complementary
to the work of the other organs and groups within the
United Nations system, particularly the General
Assembly.
My delegation shares the concerns raised by the
Secretary-General in his report and amplified by the
statements of our African colleagues. We reaffirm that,
ultimately, the key to the resolution of conflicts in Africa
and in all regions is to address in a meaningful way the
problems of development in its social, economic, cultural
and humanitarian aspects. Prevention, in the
comprehensive sense, is far superior to cure.
The socio-economic situation in Africa is of priority
concern. International solidarity is fundamental to Africa's
development, and international cooperation and support
must necessarily complement the national resources
mobilized by the African countries themselves. It is
troubling, however, that as is noted in the United Nations
Agenda for Development, tackling the problems and
paving the way to accelerated and self-sustaining growth
and sustainable development through decisive
implementation of commitments and actions have been
lacking. Official development assistance to the continent
has consistently declined over the past five years, and the
debt problems of many African countries have yet to see
a comprehensive and durable solution. The international
community must undertake purposeful efforts to carry out
fully and speedily the United Nations New Agenda for
the Development of Africa in the 19905, as well as the
recommendation of the mid-term review of its
implementation.
We are greatly encouraged by certain developments
in the continent, particularly the increasingly active role
of African regional and subregional organizations in
mediation and crisis management, as well as in economic
cooperation. As in the recent case of Liberia, the
Organization of African Unity and the Economic
Community of West African States have played a major
and indispensable role. The Southern African
Development Community, with the new democratic
Republic of South Africa, is emerging as a key actor in
African affairs. These developments parallel the situation
in my region, South-East Asia, where the Association of
South-East Asian Nations has steadily evolved to become
a regional coordinating mechanism. In the realization of
further South-South cooperation, the importance of which
was clearly underscored by Mr. Annan's report, African
regional organizations may wish to seek to expand
cooperation with other regional economic groupings.
As for the various political/security dimensions
discussed by the report, I would like to bring into our
deliberations today the thinking which has emerged so far
from the various working groups of the General Assembly
on an Agenda for Peace. The results of the two concluded
subgroups, those on coordination and sanctions, are of the
same mind as the Secretary-General's report. Closer
coordination is called for between the United Nations
system and African regional organizations, a point also
underscored by the Special Committee on Peacekeeping
Operations. At the same time, Security Council sanctions
should be more discerning in that their effects on the
populace at large of the target country and on third States
should be taken into account to a greater degree.
Post-conflict peace-building is a reconstructive process
which has political, economic, humanitarian and social
dimensions. By definition, it is launched after a conflict.
Hence, it is important that post-conflict peace-building
activities be undertaken in an integrated and coordinated
manner aimed at addressing the various factors that caused
or threaten to rekindle the conflict. The Security Council
has an important role to play in this endeavour. However,
the participation of United Nations and other international
bodies would be equally essential, if not more crucial in
many cases, given the multidimensional and development-
oriented aspect of post-conflict peace-building.
The proliferation of arms, particularly small arms, and
of mines, should be curtailed. My country has supported the
Council's various sanctions on the flow of arms into the
crisis areas of the continent and calls on all Member States
to do their part in restricting such activity.
Democracy, as the guiding principle of the
international community's efforts in the political sphere,
should be underlined. The Secretary-General' 5 report echoes
the thinking of the International Conference on New or
Restored Democracies, particularly on the need to realize
good and strengthened democratic governance, to promote
transparency and accountability and to enhance
administrative capacity in individual States. The
International Conference on New or Restored Democracies
also believes that the strong participation of civil society
plays an indispensable role in assuring the realization of
truly democratic governance.
The international community's renewed commitment
to Africa - which is indeed a timely and necessary
endeavour - should ultimately take into account the work
already being done by the various organs, bodies and
groups of the United Nations system, and that such work
can proceed most efficiently if a division of labour is
maintained.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Philippines for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of Cyprus. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Zackheos (Cyprus): Allow me to extend to you,
Sir, my congratulations and to express my confidence
that, under your widely acknowledged wisdom and
leadership, our deliberations will be successful.
My delegation has aligned itself with the statement
made on behalf of the European Union, but in view of the
special significance of the item under discussion, I would
like to make a few additional remarks.
At the outset, I would like to pay tribute to the
Secretary-General and extend our appreciation for his
excellent, thorough report and to commend him for the
special importance the Secretariat and he personally attach
to the promotion of durable peace and sustainable
development in Africa. His recommendations merit the
most serious consideration and support of the international
community.
Cyprus considers this discussion in the Security
Council as a good opportunity for refocusing the attention
of the international community and its commitment to
strengthen peace and security and to support Africa's
endeavours for economic and social development. We
believe that Africa, with its talented people and vast
fertile lands, has the capability to face the challenge and
emerge as a significant factor in world politics in the next
century.
Cyprus welcomes the positive developments taking
place across Africa in the political field. We have been
encouraged by the democratization process and the efforts
of African countries in the field of protection of human
rights. We have also rejoiced at the termination of the
abhorrent policy of apartheid, which constituted an affront
to human civilization. We note in this respect the
contribution of Nelson Mandela, one of the greatest
figures of the twentieth century.
A major concern of the international community,
however, is the alarming number of mostly internal armed
conflicts in the continent, which, in addition to
endangering peace and stability, cause extreme suffering,
especially to women and children. In this respect, we
welcome the realistic recommendations of the Secretary-
General. In general, we support the close coordination for
early action and prevention between the United Nations, the
European Union and subregional groups. Our special
preoccupation, in view of similar bitter experiences since
1974, is the plight of more than 8 million refugees and
displaced persons. This problem needs to be addressed
urgently on the basis of human rights norms.
While we note the progress made in some African
countries, we observe that serious economic problems still
persist. Noting the courage and burden of African countries
in pursuit of economic reform, we believe that the
international community should redouble its efforts to
alleviate the suffering of millions of people. Special
attention should be given to debt relief and to the needs of
the least developed countries in Africa.
Economic development and social justice need to be
addressed as matters of high priority in order to enable
Africa to meet challenges and take advantage of
opportunities which have emerged internationally in recent
years.
My country, located at the crossroads of three
continents, has long been a bridge of cooperation in the
region. Being so close to Africa, we have always had
strong ties with the African peoples, especially in our
common goal to implement the provisions of the United
Nations Charter, which has always been a major factor of
our foreign policy.
Cyprus, within its potential, has consistently offered
assistance to African countries. In particular, the Cyprus
Government is providing scholarships for graduate and
postgraduate programmes, especially in the fields of
tourism, management, forestry and nursing, where we have
comparative advantages and experience. We have also
participated in election-monitoring in some African
countries.
We pledge our continued support to the efforts of the
international community, in solidarity with Africa, to
strengthen peace, cooperation and development in the
continent. In conclusion, we underline the need to act upon
the Secretary-General's report as soon as possible.
The President: I thank the representative of Cyprus
for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker is the representative of Uganda. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Semakula Kiwanuka (Uganda): The Uganda
delegation joins previous speakers in congratulating you,
Sir, on presiding over the proceedings of this meeting and
on being the President of the Security Council for this
month.
In the same spirit, we congratulate your predecessor,
the Ambassador of Gambia, for the sterling work he did.
The Uganda delegation associates its statement with
those made earlier by the Ambassador of Zimbabwe, on
behalf of the Organization of African Unity, and the
Ambassador of Mauritania, on behalf of the African
Group at the United Nations.
Uganda welcomes this opportunity and commends
the Secretary-General for his concise and comprehensive
report on Africa, entitled "The causes of conflict and the
promotion of durable peace and sustainable development
in Africa". We also commend the manner in which the
Secretary-General has carefully identified and weaved the
linkages between peace, security and economic
development. An understanding of this symbiotic
relationship paves the way for the building of stability,
durable peace and sustainable development.
The Secretary-General's report comes at a time
when, in spite of enormous problems, positive change is
under way in Africa. There is a new political leadership
that is championing democracy, human rights and good
governance. That leadership has championed economic
reforms and the stabilization of Africa's currencies.
Economic growth has more than tripled since 1990 in
many African countries. All these positive changes point
to a potential for a stable and democratic Africa.
The Uganda delegation wishes to address a few
areas that are of crucial importance to the future
development of Africa and for which Uganda welcomes
the attention which the Secretary-General has paid to
them.
I turn first to the causes of conflict. To build durable
peace, it is imperative to address the root causes of
conflict. Economies that do not grow cannot develop.
Sustained economic growth is essential, therefore, for
sustainable development. Without sustainable
development, we cannot eradicate poverty; and yet,
poverty is a war that Africa must fight and win. To win
that war, we need policies that are multidimensional in the
broad social development sector. Such policies should target
women, the growing population of unemployed youth and
the poor in general. Micro-finance should be channelled to
those groups and into the informal sector. The Government
of Uganda is vigorously addressing these problems through
a wide variety of micro-credit projects for women and
youth and through macroeconomic reforms, the
liberalization of the economy, privatization and the control
of inflation. For Uganda, these measures have ensured a
steady economic growth, with rates averaging 6 per cent
per year.
Concerning agriculture, the green revolution, which
modernized agricultural production in Asia, has,
unfortunately, bypassed Africa. T o eradicate poverty, Africa
must pay serious attention to the agricultural sector, which
needs to be modernized through the application of
appropriate technologies, credit to the farmers and the
provision of rural infrastructures.
I wish now to address myself to industrial
development. Apart from a few countries in the region,
Africa has never undergone an industrial revolution. Thus,
by remaining an exporter of raw materials, Africa cannot
enter the global economy. Industrial development is a key
element of sustainable economic growth. It creates jobs and
expands employment and equity.
The Secretary-General's report pays great attention to
democracy and good governance. Where democracy is
absent; where gross abuses of human rights prevail; where
there is a denial of basic freedoms; where there is an
absence of the rule of law; where citizens are denied access
to resources and are excluded from power, conflicts are
inevitable. Democratization and the protection of human
rights, as well as wide political participation, are essential
benchmarks for the consolidation of lasting peace.
The Uganda delegation appreciates that African
countries are at different levels of the democratization
process and that experiences in governance will differ from
country to country. Empowerment and broad participation
in the political process have been achieved in Uganda
through the decentralization of power from the centre and
through periodic elections down to the village level. All
these activities in good governance are nurturing a culture
of constitutionalism and the rule of law.
As regards the debt burden, Africa's foreign debt of
$328.9 billion is totally unsustainable and has crippled the
region's efforts to build its economies. As the size of debt
has escalated, so have the debt-service ratios to export
earnings. Africa calls for a serious review of the debt
burden to make it sustainable, with higher ceilings and
longer periods. Indeed, the Secretary-General's
recommendations can hardly be improved on. The
Secretary-General has called upon the creditor nations to
convert into grants all the remaining bilateral debt of the
poorest African countries. He has called upon the
creditors to clear the entire debt stock of the poorest
African countries, as recommended by the Organization
of African Unity.
I now turn to the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPC) Debt Initiative. Uganda, as the first country to
benefit from this facility, welcomes the Initiative but
suggests that there should be more money available and
that the waiting period should be shortened.
The thrust of the Secretary-General's report is
conflict resolution and peace-building. Uganda has
experience in this area. If time had allowed, I would have
shared Uganda's experience in a detailed manner with the
distinguished delegates here present. Briefly, this has been
Uganda's experience. To build lasting peace, there must
be a clear understanding and identification of the
complexity and diversity of the causes of conflicts.
Successful peace-building measures must address all or
most of the causes, and reconciliation in the case of
Uganda has proved to be a major confidence-building
factor.
Many African countries need sustained international
assistance for post-conflict peace-building and for
financing development. Africa needs partnerships to
promote economic growth and development and private
investment, and to expand its currently small
manufacturing sector. Africa needs partnerships to expand
its market size. For this reason, the Uganda delegation
welcomed President Clinton's recent visit to Africa as an
opportunity to convey to Africa that the United States of
America desires, and Africa desires, a long-term
partnership and mutual understanding to promote trade
and investment.
Finally, Uganda thanks the Secretary-General for his
great vision for Africa. We pledge our full cooperation in
the implementation of that vision.
The President: I thank the representative of Uganda
for the kind words he addressed to me and to my
predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of the
Netherlands. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Ramaker (Netherlands): The Netherlands
subscribes wholeheartedly to the statement of the European
Union delivered earlier today by the British Presidency of
the Union. Allow me therefore to make just a few
additional comments.
The Netherlands warmly welcomes the Secretary-
General's report on Africa. The report before us will
remain a source of reference for a long time for the
problems it is addressing. It is comprehensive, thoughtful,
critical where necessary, and practical. It shows for the first
time clearly how a reforming United Nations, a closely
coordinating United Nations system, including the Bretton
Woods institutions, hand in hand with civil society, the
non-governmental organization world and the regional
organizations and Governments in Africa in close
cooperation can turn things around.
The report does not merely assess problems; it
suggests innovative solutions and ways to contribute to
durable peace and economic growth in Africa. Some
recommendations are especially directed at the Security
Council, and the Netherlands would hope that the Council
will give them the attention they deserve. Other suggestions
should be discussed in the relevant United Nations bodies,
and still others by the Member States themselves at the
national level. The Netherlands will not be found wanting
in its active participation in further discussions on how best
to put the Secretary-General's recommendations into effect.
The report notes that the United Nations early warning
capabilities have been significantly improved over the past
few years. But yes, indeed, early warning without early
action remains an empty shell. The report is clearly based
on lessons learned, not only on early warning and conflict
prevention, but on conflict management, peacemaking and
post-conflict peace- building. In doing so, the Secretary-
General was so courageous as not to spare the United
Nations and its institutions the critical scrutiny they should
be given, as the United Nations has itself been an actor in
many conflict situations. We should benefit from reviewing
the successes and failures of these actions. On the basis of
lessons learned, the Netherlands endorses in particular the
report's calls for mediation efforts in conflict situations to
start early and to have special envoys or special
representatives appointed at an early stage.
The report notes that preventive deployment is a
proactive response to the threat of conflict. The
Netherlands feels that one of the lessons learned should
be that conflicts tend to escalate quickly and policies
developed in response may already be outdated by the
time they can be implemented. In peacekeeping, perhaps
even more than in other domains, it is of essential
importance not to be overtaken by events. When the
tragic events unfolded in the Great Lakes region in 1994
before the eyes of the world, the Netherlands pointed to
the necessity that the United Nations be provided with the
instruments to respond rapidly to emerging conflicts. In
the years since, several initiatives have been launched to
this effect, but none of those have, much to the regret of
the Netherlands, materialized in a concrete military
capacity. This clearly shows that we still have a long way
to go to meet this requirement, the principle of which
remains as valid now as before. The Netherlands will
continue to support all efforts aimed at further
strengthening United Nations rapid deployment
capabilities.
The Netherlands shares the Secretary-General's view
that humanitarian assistance is of great importance at
various stages of conflict. In fact, humanitarian assistance
may serve prevention as it reduces the danger of conflicts
emerging from emergency situations. Humanitarian
assistance during an actual conflict is also essential in
order to prevent the population from suffering from strife,
and in the phase of post-conflict reconstruction as well, to
help stabilize the situation and promote sustainable peace.
Another lesson learned points to the enormous importance
to be given to measures to prevent the parties to a conflict
from using humanitarian aid flows as a weapon in their
struggle.
The report notes that a lack of economic
development in itself may constitute an important source
of conflict. The Netherlands shares the Secretary-
General's View that economic reform is needed in many
parts of Africa. Indeed, African countries should strive to
make foreign investment more attractive. On the other
hand, unwanted consequences of economic reform should
be kept in check. The Netherlands especially endorses the
Secretary-General's appeal that while implementing
economic reform programmes the position of the weakest
sections of society should be given special attention and
consideration. In fact, much of the development effort of
the Netherlands is geared to that objective.
The Netherlands welcomes a critical examination of
aid flows. The report cites the example of a huge portion
of technical assistance to Africa being spent on foreign
expertise. The Netherlands, as is well known, is strongly in
favour of increasing the effectiveness of development
assistance. We are convinced that assistance meant for
Africa should be spent as much as possible in Africa. In
fiscal year 1996 - we have no more recent figures
available - the Netherlands devoted some $3 billion to
development assistance, almost 30 per cent of which, or
roughly $800 million, was used for projects and
programmes for Africa. It is estimated that of this sum,
substantially more than 50 per cent was spent in Africa
itself.
The Netherlands welcomes the call by the Secretary-
General to help reduce the debt burden for the poorest
countries. This has been part of the Netherlands
development policy for a long time. Over the period from
1991 to 1996, the Netherlands agreed on bilateral debt
alleviation to a total of $648 million, constituting a
significant contribution to debt redemption worldwide.
An important quality of the present report is that it not
only looks at the past, but is forward-looking at the same
time. Indeed, we share the report's guarded optimism.
There are encouraging signs from Africa in areas which
constitute vital preconditions for durable peace and
development, for democratization, good governance and
respect for human rights. For the first time in decades,
African economies are reporting sometimes substantial real
growth. Positive developments in Africa are seen to be
gaining momentum. The Netherlands fully endorses the call
of the Secretary-General to summon the political will to
make a change and to use the momentum which is already
under way. If the political will can be summoned, both by
the international community and by Africa itself, a better
future for Africa, for millions of people who desire to live
in peace and to see their living conditions improving, is
really within reach.
The President: The next speaker is the representative
of Guyana. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Insanally (Guyana): Let me say first of all,
Mr. President, how pleased we are to see you in the
Chair - despite the very long day you have had today. I
also say a word of welcome to our new Deputy Secretary-
General, who has joined the Security Council for these
deliberations, and a word of appreciation to the delegation
of Gambia for its stewardship of the Council last month.
As a country which has always had close relations
with sister States in Africa, Guyana felt compelled to
participate in the Council's debate on the report which
has been presented by the Secretary-General for
consideration by the relevant organs and agencies of the
United Nations. Our participation, I hasten to add, was
not prompted by a belief that we have any advice to offer
Africa on how it should manage its affairs, but rather by
the sense of solidarity which we feel with its people.
Coming as we do from a similar colonial past, we share
many of their limitations and problems as well as their
hopes and aspirations for a better life. These historical
bonds led us over the years to our active role in the
struggle for African independence. Now, with the
liberation of the entire continent, we would wish to see
this political freedom not only preserved but fully
matched by economic independence.
The report is to be welcomed as an attempt to
highlight those issues that are critical to Africa's future
development. Written as it is in the first person, it reflects
the personal commitment of the Secretary-General,
himself an African, to the cause of that continent's
development. Equally reflective of his perceptions of the
Africa dialectic were the remarks he offered on the
launching of the report. He was careful to remind his
audience that not all of Africa was in difficult throes and
that conflict situations were fairly well defined. And
indeed, it may be observed that several African countries
now show encouraging prospects for economic
development. The Secretary-General also publicly
recognized Africa's capacity for dealing with most of its
own problems, making it clear that the recommendations
contained in the report were not intended to supplant, but
rather, as he said, to complement, the continent's own
efforts. We cannot but applaud these observations, since
we believe that Africa's failure in the past to achieve
progress has been due in large measure to the imposition
of external perceptions and prescriptions which did not
take account of the particularities of the continent's needs.
To its credit, this latest report of the Secretary-
General does not pretend to offer facile solutions to the
problems of African countries. Instead, it limits itself to
a broad survey of today's realities and to a brief
indication of those areas in which cooperation among
Governments of the region, the international community
and the United Nations can prove beneficial.
Consequently, the report may thus be better seen as a
framework for action rather than as an exhaustive
compendium of definitive proposals.
To turn now to specific parts of the report, beginning
with what may be called the political chapter, we find that
the analysis of conflict situations and their causes is both
comprehensive and perceptive. Some conflicts, particularly
those in recent years, do indeed have their roots in age-old
controversies and in ethnic divisions and rivalries. However,
external factors have also undoubtedly contributed to the
eruption of conflict in many places. Certainly, the major
arms-producing countries have been responsible for the
growing supply of weapons to fuel wars. In addition, as the
Secretary-General said, early-warning systems and adequate
peacekeeping and peace-building machinery are essential to
reduce the threat and consequences of conflict. We agree
with him entirely that greater emphasis must now be placed
on preventive diplomacy.
Our own experience in the Latin American and
Caribbean region has amply demonstrated that while the
United Nations must retain primary responsibility for
international peace and security, there are, as the Secretary-
General suggests, benefits to be derived from cooperation
between organizations within the ambit of their respective
constitutions. I recall the Secretary-General of the
Organization of African Unity saying to this body that, for
want of a nail, the horse in Rwanda died. I think that
thereafter we learned the lesson of closer cooperation
among our respective organizations. Stronger regional
bodies that are closer to the local situation and are therefore
better able to understand and respond to them can help
stem the tide of conflict through the early initiation the
procedures for peaceful settlement set out in Article 33 of
the Charter.
However, while no one can deny the negative
consequences which conflicts hold for African countries, it
is fair to say, I believe, that the primary causes of political
and social instability in the region lie in the weak economic
and physical infrastructure which exists in most countries.
The ravages left by colonialism are not easily remedied. To
understand the phenomenon of African underdevelopment
today, one has to read the classic analysis by Walter
Rodney, a distinguished scholar and compatriot of mine, in
his seminal work, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa.
This book is indispensable to a full comprehension of the
difficulties in which some African countries find themselves
today.
Admittedly, it is not too helpful to dwell on the past
when one's energies can be better applied to shaping the
future. Very often, however, unless there is a true
appreciation of the fundamental issues involved, there can
be no guarantee of finding definitive and durable solutions
to outstanding problems. For the seeds of democracy,
good governance and human rights to germinate and grow
in Africa, one must remove the detritus of colonialism
and lay down structures that will be conducive to a new
culture.
Compounding the disadvantage of a weak physical
infrastructure is the serious debt overhang to which many
have referred and which now plagues most African
countries. The total debt, we are told, now stands at an
astronomical $338 billion. How can we truly speak of
development with that kind of burden? At the same time,
official development assistance remains extremely limited,
and with extremely low gross national product, more than
half of the continent's population lives in conditions of
dismal poverty. The eradication of poverty has therefore
to be a primary focus of international efforts in support of
Africa's development.
In such straitened circumstances one can understand
that some African countries are hardly in a position to
attract foreign investment, which, as we all know, flows
mainly to countries deemed to be safe havens. As a
consequence, many of these countries cannot take
advantage of arrangements to provide them with
preferential market access for their commodities, which
are, in any case, in the process of disappearing. Not
surprisingly, therefore, although Africa has almost 22 per
cent of the world's population, the continent accounts for
only 2 per cent of world trade. That, I think, is a very
telling figure. It is to be hoped, as the Secretary-General
says, that the special initiative already taken by the United
Nations to promote African development, as well as the
United Nations New Agenda for the Development of
Africa in the 19905 (UN-NADAF), will assist Africa, if
implemented properly, to make some progress in the next
decade. Of further encouragement, I should mention, are
the steps taken by your own Government, Mr. President,
the Government of Japan, and by the Government of the
United States to offer incentives for the expansion of
Africa's productive capacity. Such special programmes
could conceivably offer African countries the opportunity
for economic take-off.
In conclusion, let me echo the view that the report
goes beyond Africa and may apply, mutatis mutandis, to
other stricken regions of the world. Indeed, many of the
diagnoses and recommendations which it proffers can be
directed elsewhere. Developing countries everywhere,
therefore, will watch with interest to see how this report
will be implemented and we will do all in our power to
ensure that its promises are fulfilled. For the success or
failure of the measures which it presents will not be that of
Africa alone. The failure or success will be that of us all.
The President: I thank the representative of Guyana
for his kind words addressed to me and my predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of Belgium. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Wouters (Belgium) (interpretation from French):
We have read with keen interest the Secretary-General's
report on Africa. The analysis of the in-depth causes of
African conflicts and the formulation of a series of
recommendations have today given rise to an open and
helpful debate. We hope that the interest shown in the
course of this debate will be followed by concrete actions
from all actors identified in the report. This report cannot
be seen as an end in itself. It is rather an instrument that
should guide us in our action. Our efforts must be sustained
and should apply in other appropriate forums and be part of
a long-term programme. Failing this, however
commendable this good report is, it will remain just another
document.
The report strikes a subtle balance between the
responsibilities of the various parties in the past and at
present. My delegation wishes to highlight the importance
of an overall approach that would no way undermine this
balance. Partial implementation of these recommendations
would give rise only to a partial solution to the many
problems that have given rise to conflicts and impeded
sustainable development in Africa.
On the basis of a frank and honest analysis of the past,
with its successes and failures, the Secretary-General has
presented a vision for the future. Belgium, for its part, has
not hesitated to face up to the past, draw the necessary
lessons and determine a new approach in policy of
partnership and cooperation. In 1995, the Government of
Belgium drew up an agenda for a new dialogue and new
cooperation with Africa. More recently, it carried out an
overall assessment of its peacekeeping policy following the
1994 events in Rwanda, and certain conclusions have been
drawn as a result.
In order to develop a global strategy for the future,
one cannot merely analyse the past. I would therefore take
this opportunity to highlight those recommendations in the
Secretary-General's report that deserve special mention,
without doing an injustice to the rest of this excellent
report.
All organized societies are based on assurance that
their members will settle their differences without turning
to violence. Unfortunately, one cannot always rely on the
peaceful settlement of disputes. Consequently, the priority
goal of the Untied Nations must continue to be that of
providing instruments that would stem and resolve
conflicts while attacking their root causes. In this context,
cooperation with regional organizations opens up great
prospects. The recent close ties established between the
secretariats of the Organization of African Unity (OAU)
and the United Nations are a good example, in particular
in improving the mechanism for monitoring and detecting
threats to peace and security. However, in order to
transform the rhetoric of prevention into the reality of
peace, an early-warning capacity must be followed up by
swift decision-making.
Using mandatory sanctions is a very useful
instrument available to the Security Council which
enables the United Nations to exert pressure without
resorting to force. Nonetheless, the concern expressed at
the negative repercussions on the most vulnerable sectors
of the population should encourage us to find ways of
transforming sanctions into a less indiscriminate
instrument and, if possible, a better targeted one.
Despite the significant progress made recently in
arms regulation and disarmament - I have in mind in
particular the success of the Ottawa Treaty - a great deal
remains to be done to make up for the absence of norms
governing conventional weapons, in particular small arms
and light arms. We note that in many armed conflicts in
Africa where the United Nations is called in to play a
role, the main and even sole weapon is precisely this type
of arms, which is readily available in the marketplace and
for which there is keen competition in exports. We
welcome the reactivation of the international commission
to investigate arms trafficking in Central Africa, and
Belgium intends to contribute to its financing.
Virtually all internal conflicts in Africa have an
influence on the stability and internal security of
neighbouring countries. There is therefore a need for
regional and subregional political cooperation.
Belgium has been paying special attention to
stepping up the peacekeeping capacity of African
countries. We are contributing to this effort through
support in terms of material and logistical support, as well
as through support for training peacekeeping forces. We
contributed to equipping a Malawi company participating
in United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda in
1994, to the deployment of OAU observers in Burundi in
1995 and to equipping a Burkina Faso battalion to
strengthen ECOMOG's forces in Liberia in 1997. More
recently we have taken part in training exercises in the
context of the initiatives undertaken by France and the
United States.
On the basis of our initial experiences, our
Government will soon be drawing up an overall approach
to assistance for peacekeeping efforts in Africa. This
concept will demonstrate Belgium's determination to
complement the efforts of the African countries, as opposed
to replacing them. Further, we welcome the steps taken by
the United Nations and the OAU to establish an appropriate
multilateral framework for the exchange of information and
for coordination.
In these days when humanitarian action is taking place
in an increasingly complex, explosive and dangerous
context, it is alarming to note that combatants deliberately
target civilian populations, either to displace them by force,
to terrorize them or make use of them. Similarly, major
humanitarian missions have been jeopardized, blocked or
manipulated following tactical or strategic calculations on
the part of the warring factions. These deplorable practices
very often confront the international community with
difficult choices. Nonetheless, these practices should not
stop the international community from making those who
impede humanitarian action and who refuse to respect the
essential norms of international humanitarian law face up to
their responsibilities.
Like the Secretary-General, we are convinced that
humanitarian action cannot replace political action. If we do
not at the same time attack the root causes of conflicts,
humanitarian assistance will only have a palliative effect.
The results of our cooperation with Africa show that
foreign aid, interventions or pressure, however significant,
cannot by themselves bring about sustainable development,
good governance or the rule of law. More than ever,
development in Africa is a long-term undertaking. Africa
must itself establish models for democratic societies in
which individuals can develop their potential and take part
in the decisions that concern them, in which minorities are
involved in decision-making and where there is a
consensus-based form of democracy. Regimes in which
corruption prevails over good governance, where human
rights are violated, where democratization remains a dead
letter or where there is complete reliance on foreign aid do
not meet the conditions for lasting stability. Such regimes
might well find international attention turning elsewhere.
The international community must, however,
undertake to support actively the efforts of those African
countries that have made a new beginning, or are
preparing to do 50. Development assistance should focus
on those areas in which it will have the greatest impact
and should seek to reduce the dependence of recipient
countries. We fully associate ourselves with the efforts of
the European Union, which, in particular through the
Lome process, assists developing countries to integrate
themselves into the world economy. We also support
efforts to assist Africa in escaping the debt trap.
In conclusion I would like to express my country's
fervent wish that the report of the Secretary-General
would contribute to mobilizing the political will required
from all sides. For its part, Belgium is prepared to
continue to assume its responsibility in Africa. We will be
active in those areas in which, in collaboration with our
African partners, we will be able to achieve progress and
open the path to development.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of the United Arab Emirates. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Samhan Al-Nuaimi (United Arab Emirates)
(interpretation from Arabic): On behalf of the delegation
of the United Arab Emirates, I am honoured to
congratulate you, Sir, on your assumption of the
presidency of the Security Council for this month. I wish
you every success. By the same token I would like to
thank your predecessor, the Permanent Representative of
the Gambia, for his fine work in conducting the
deliberations of the Council during the past month.
My delegation carefully studied the report of the
Secretary-General on Africa. It clearly reflects an
objective and comprehensive analysis of the current
situation in this continent. Although there have been
positive developments in some political and economic
spheres over the course of the past decade, these
improvements have yet to affect many areas of Africa.
These areas are still threatened with regional, ethnic and
civil conflicts.
Past experiences have proven that issues of peace,
security and stability and problems of social and
economic development are interdependent and
complementary concerns. They are mutually reinforcing.
Consequently, increasing or containing any of them
cannot be achieved without influencing the others. The
series of bitter conflicts and tragedies that some African
States have witnessed are saddening manifestations of this
reality, which has caused staggering material, human and
environmental losses which in turn have worsened complex
situations and impeded the processes of integration into
global economic development and changes.
The delegation of the United Arab Emirates supports
the conclusions and proposals in the report of the Secretary-
General, since they constitute new modes of thinking and
means of enhancing activities in Africa whether in the
fields of peacekeeping or of humanitarian assistance and
post-conflict peace-building. Yet at the same time we see
the necessity of mobilizing regional and international
capacities aiming at enhancing Africa's resources and
human capabilities so as to enable Africa to undertake
required reforms and to play its roles effectively in the
global economy and trade as a significant component of
international cooperation.
This, in our view, requires the adoption of five basic
steps.
First, the African States and the international
community need to manifest the political will to implement
a joint comprehensive strategy that ensures the containment
of existing conflicts through peaceful means of negotiation
in accordance with the principles of the Charter, the
provisions of international law and the international rules of
human rights.
Secondly, there should be a rapid political response to
contain conflicts, taking into account the elements peculiar
to each individual situation through the adoption of more
developed early-warning mechanisms. This would help
maintain peace and prevent crises from breaking out by
sending more effective peacemaking missions, promoting
initiatives for negotiation, mediation, good offices and fact-
finding missions and resorting to legal settlements and
arbitration in cases of intractable conflicts.
T hirdly, cooperation and coordination between the
United Nations and the Organization of African Unity, as
well as other relevant organizations, should be enhanced.
This would be in addition to the expansion of the
participation of and partnership among States that are
contiguous to areas of conflict and other States which are
interested in containing such situations peacefully and
contributing to implementing relief and reconstruction
programmes, as well as to rebuilding the infrastructures of
institutions that have been destroyed. The capacities and
freedom of action of the international and humanitarian
agencies and organizations, which perform a distinctive
role in achieving these noble goals, must be supported.
Fourthly, the working methods and procedures of the
Security Council should be reviewed. Double standards
should be avoided, particularly with regard to the use of
sanctions regimes, whose objectives must be improved in
accordance with what the Secretary-General has indicated
in his report. Sanctions should be confined to weapons
only and should not include economic sanctions, which
have proven their inefficiency and their adverse impact on
people's lives. The United Arab Emirates would like to
take this opportunity to urge the Security Council to lift
the economic sanctions imposed on Libya. This is
particularly important given the two decisions taken by
the International Court of Justice.
Fifthly, joint development investment programmes
and financial and technical assistance to Africa should be
enhanced, whether they come from States acting
unilaterally, from the World Bank, or from other financial
and economic institutions and funds. This would enable
countries to implement necessary reforms and changes in
their economic and social institutions and deal with their
heavy foreign debts and help them gain access to world
markets as real partners in achieving the goals of
international development.
The United Arab Emirates has been keen to develop
its relations with African States on the basis of our
historical and political relations as well as of our joint
interests and goals. Through the directives of His
Highness Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al-Nahyan, the
President of the State, we, in our general policies, are
paying particular attention to providing assistance and
various forms of support to African States, whether
humanitarian, through the humanitarian Zayed Institution,
the Red Crescent or other organizations; or
developmental, thorough the Abu Dhabi development
fund. The latter has contributed to the implementation of
many joint development projects and concessional funds,
which exceeded $3 billion. Similarly, we are writing off
debts and the interest on them for a number of African
States, particularly the poorest.
In conclusion, we call for activating the role of the
United Nations and its organs and specialized agencies, in
addition to that of the international development
institutions, in cooperation with the African States so as
to help such States solve their existing political, economic
and social problems. This would enable them to meet the
requirements of decent standards of living and prosperity
for their people and enable them to build a future in which
peace, stability and development can prevail.
The President: I thank the representative of the
United Arab Emirates for the kind words he addressed to
me and to my predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of the Comoros.
I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Mahmoud (Comoros) (interpretation from French): I take great pleasure in seeing you, Sir, presiding
over the work of the Council for the month of April. I
should also like to take this opportunity to congratulate
your predecessor, His Excellency Mr. Sallah, for his strong
and effective leadership of the work of the Security Council
for the month of March. My delegation aligns itself with
the statement made by Ambassador Mapuranga of
Zimbabwe in his capacity as the current Chairman of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), as well as that made
by Ambassador Ould Deddach of Mauritania in his capacity
as Chairman of the African Group for the month of April.
We are meeting once again to debate the prevailing
situation of conflict in Africa. As the Secretary-General,
Mr. Kofi Annan, reminds us in his report entitled "The
causes of conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa", the resolution of
problems that continue to afflict a large part of the African
continent must take place in a voluntarist political
framework whose first task would be to introduce the basic
elements necessary for development. Such elements would
include a legal authority endowed with the means necessary
to carry out its functions, and, more broadly, a responsible
State whose first task would be to introduce the elements
necessary for ensuring that the country achieved its
economic and political potential. We believe that these are
the elements that must be stressed if a successful
transformation of our societies is to be achieved.
We fully subscribe to the ideas of the Secretary-
General, and we again assure him of our commitment to
support the steps that he takes in this direction. Similarly,
the Government of the Comoros congratulates and
encourages the OAU for establishing its Mechanism for
Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution. Like
many Member States, we welcome the various signs of
progress and economic recovery that the African continent
has shown recently. The Afro-pessimism of the 19805 is
gradually yielding to measured yet real optimism. Many
countries have committed themselves to stabilizing their
public finances, and various ambitious national
programmes have been implemented with performance
and competitiveness as a common yardstick.
Africa has come a long way, but a great deal still
remains to be done. Indeed, if a country is to prosper and
enjoy any level of economic development, if a State is to
play its role as a guarantor of freedoms, the institutions of
the State must be able to function effectively.
For this reason, His Excellency Mohamed Taki
Abdulkarim, President of the Islamic Federal Republic of
the Comoros, has committed himself to modernizing the
economy of the Comoros. To this end, measures have
been taken with respect to the Government's rate of
expenditure and to private sectors, where various
initiatives are designed to breathe new energy into the
spirit of entrepreneurship. The necessary reform of the
public sector began with an inventory of public goods, an
auditing of resources and an examination of individual
accounts to track down abuses committed during the years
of administrative negligence and misappropriation which
marked the previous regimes.
Various development plans, including those of
foreign investors, have been studied, for the Comoros
needs, inter alia, large-scale international support that
would allow the State institutions to function effectively.
In this context, the Government of the Comoros would
ask all of you to support the Islamic Federal Republic of
the Comoros vis-a-vis the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund regarding the adoption of a
budgetary aid programme on its behalf, and also to
advocate greater flexibility in the measures related to the
structural adjustment plans that have been drawn up for
the country.
As we said earlier, a great deal of work remains
ahead of us. Nevertheless, we are confident of our
capacity to take advantage of our natural wealth. The
Comoros islands have a wonderful coastline and a
landscape free of all industrial devastation, whose beauty
has often been praised. Despite these assets, we have real
grounds for concern.
Since its independence in 1975, my country has
unfortunately been rocked by a series of raids carried out
by European mercenaries. You will undoubtedly recall the
dramatic events of September 1995, when Comoros was
invaded by international mercenaries, which caused major
economic and social trauma. The people of Comoros have
suffered from many attempts at destabilization that have
been fostered abroad. The Government of the Comoros
calls on the Secretary-General to encourage the Member
States of our Organization to ratify the International
Convention against the Recruitment, Use, Financing and
Training of Mercenaries, adopted by the General Assembly
in resolution 44/34 of 4 December 1989.
There is no need for me to recall that for a year now,
separatist ideas have been emerging among the Comorian
population, particularly in the island of Anjouan, which has
been clamouring for a return to French trusteeship. The
tragic events which have occurred in the Comoros in the
past few months resulted from the unprecedented socio-
economic crisis that has so seriously afflicted my country.
Certainly, the incomplete independence of the Comoros is
also an element that should not be overlooked. The impact
of this economic and political instability has undoubtedly
forced the people of Anjouan to revolt against the Comoros
Government. Nonetheless, such a movement could not
endure without external support.
It is high time that action be taken to ensure that such
outdated acts cease to occur anywhere in the world. In a
statement of 1 August 1997, Mohamed Taki Abdulkarim
recalled that the Comoros archipelago was recognized by
the international community in General Assembly resolution
3385 (XXX) of 12 November 1975 as an independent
country comprised of four islands: Grande-Comore,
Anjouan, Moheli and Mayotte.
Decades after the adoption of this resolution, the
question of the Comorian island of Mayotte still appears on
our Organization's agenda. In a spirit of openness and
dialogue, the Government of the Comoros has made several
proposals seeking to resolve this dispute in an atmosphere
of calm and national unity. I will take this opportunity to
reiterate, on behalf of the people of the Comoros, our
deepest gratitude to the Organization of African Unity
(OAU) and its Secretary-General, His Excellency Salim
Ahmed Salim, as well as to the League of Arab States and
all the friendly countries for the decisive role they are
playing in the resolution of the conflicts in my country.
In this distinguished forum, I would like to make a
solemn appeal to the international community, and in
particular to the members of the Security Council, to assist
us in solving the problem of the dismemberment of the
Islamic Federal Republic of the Comoros and to help the
archipelago of the Comoros to enter the twenty-first century
as a reunited country.
You, Sir, would undoubtedly agree with me that, as
human beings, the Comoran people have the right to
peace, security, health, education and hope for a better
future.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Comoros for his kind words addressed to me and to my
predecessor.
The next speaker is the representative of Cameroon.
I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Belinga Eboutou (Cameroon) (interpretation from French): First of all, I should like to say how
pleased we are to see you, Sir, presiding over the work of
the Security Council in the month of April and over the
present discussion on Africa. You represent a country
whose commitment to peace and development in Africa
is demonstrated anew each day. The first Tokyo
International Conference on African Development, and
soon the Second, are witness to that. We feel sure that
under your guidance the Council will give a new impetus
to the relationship between the United Nations and Africa.
I would also pay tribute to the positive actions of your
predecessor, Ambassador Sallah of the Gambia. Finally,
I would like to thank you for allowing me to speak here
before this assembly on the occasion of this debate, which
is important on two grounds.
It is important, first of all, because it deals with
international peace and security and the development of
Africa.
It is equally important for the United Nations, and
more specifically for the Security Council. The
international community's reluctance in the last few years
to take the appropriate financial and political risks in
order to deploy peacekeeping operations and to ensure
development in Africa was already giving rise to a
number of questions. A feeling of marginalization was
developing here and there, and even of abandonment of
a continent presumably doomed only to war, disease and
poverty. The present debate thus comes at a good time, so
that this Organization and the Security Council can regain
credibility among the people of Africa - particularly the
Security Council, which has done so much in the past for
the liberation of our continent.
We would also take this opportunity to congratulate
the Secretary-General for his courageous report. The
document does indeed describe the true state of Africa; it
is an in-depth and detailed study of the causes of conflicts
in various parts of our continent and of the elements that
could provide possible solutions.
We are also pleased that he has drawn the attention of
the Security Council to the current economic situation in
Africa, which will become a threat to international peace
and security if it is not dealt with. As the Security Council
recognized in its presidential statement when it met at the
level of Heads of State and Government on 31 January
1992,
"The absence of war and military conflicts
amongst States does not in itself ensure international
peace and security. The non-military sources of
instability in the economic, social, humanitarian and
ecological fields have become threats to peace and
security." [S/23500, eleventh paragraph]
On the question of conflicts, Cameroon fully endorses
the recommendations of the Secretary-General on
preventive diplomacy and the restoration and maintenance
of peace. Priority should be given to preventive diplomacy,
which has three tasks: to detect as soon as possible
situations that may give rise to conflicts and put an end to
them before violence emerges; to ease tensions before they
lead to conflicts; and to act quickly where conflict has
already broken out in order to contain it and eliminate its
underlying causes.
Action to maintain peace and prevent the thundering
of guns cannot be delayed under any circumstances. That
is the vital duty of the Security Council: to prevent the
thunder of guns. Here we should commend and thank the
Secretary-General for the initiatives he has taken with
respect to conflicts in some African countries, by deploying
missions of investigation, mediation and good offices and
by sending special representatives. In this connection, the
recent establishment of the Executive Committee on Peace
and Security under the authority of the Under-Secretary-
General for Political Affairs should be lauded.
Cameroon, which has made peace the main pillar of
its policy within and beyond its borders, expects the United
Nations, and the Security Council in particular, to
implement preventive diplomacy with determination, in
order to keep disputes between States from degenerating
into armed conflicts and to shift potential conflicts from the
battlefield to a forum of peaceful resolution.
As a member of the United Nations Standing Advisory
Committee on Security Questions in Central Africa and as
a signatory of the Non-Aggression Pact between the
States of Central Africa of July 1996, Cameroon is
concerned about the proliferation of illegal weapons in
Africa. The statistics in this regard are clear and
particularly enlightening. At the end of the cold war the
arms industry converted to the production of light
weapons. The blame for the proliferation of illegal arms
in Africa belongs to the operators of the black market.
They sell those weapons at such low prices that they are
now available to the ordinary citizen. We can see the
gravity of such a situation.
That is why Cameroon endorses the Secretary-
General's proposal to compile and publish a list of the
names of these merchants of arms and death in order to
permit the international community to take concerted
action to put a decisive end to their illegal and deadly
activities.
Peace and development are intrinsically linked.
Development is even the new name for peace, but there
can be no sustainable development without lasting peace
and no lasting peace without sustainable development. We
have come to realize that these elements are
interdependent and that there can be no real progress
without the advancement of these elements.
The lack of development can become a threat to
international prosperity, peace and security. As the means
of communication continue to develop, the distance
between different parts of the world shrinks. In the
twenty-first century we will not be able to content
ourselves with having little islands of prosperity and
opulence amid an ocean of suffering and misery. This
means that Africa's current economic backwardness
remains a major challenge to us, a challenge that we can,
and must, face together.
The stability of the world and our very survival depend
upon it.
The Secretary-General has done well to identify the
causes of this situation: the drop in official development
assistance. the excessive debt burden. the reduction in
investment and tariff barriers that block the access of our
products to international markets. The Secretary-General
has also done well to suggest some solutions to these ills.
We support his recommendation that the international
financial institutions review the conditions imposed on
countries in crisis or that have just emerged from crisis, in
order not to compromise the peace process through
measures that are too rigorous. We think that it is necessary
to go even further and to ask financial institutions to do this
for all African countries.
Of course, it is not the role of the Security Council to
finance development, but, since development is linked to
peace. the Council could call on the General Assembly, the
Economic and Social Council and the international financial
institutions to take up the report of the Secretary-General
and. in add on. to concern themselves more with the
economic situation in Africa on a priority basis.
The President: I thank the representative of
Cameroon for his kind words addressed to me and to my
predecessor.
There are no further speakers inscribed on my list. The
Security Council has thus concluded the present stage of its
consideration of the item on its agenda.
The meeting rose at 10.20 p.m.
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