S/PV.4049Resumption2 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
24
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Security Council deliberations
Foreign ministers' statements
Peacekeeping support and operations
African Union peace and security
Sustainable development and climate
Economic development programmes
Africa
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my list
is the Secretary for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of the
Philippines, His Excellency Mr. Domingo L. Siazon, Jr. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Siazon (Philippines): First of all, allow me to
commend you, Sir, and your country in particular for your
commitment to peace and sustainable development in
Africa.
I appreciate the candidness with which the Secretary-
General has reported on Africa. His reports have held
nothing back. His are reports that call on all of us to give
our all in turn.
The Philippines shares with Africa similar colonial
pasts, the diversities of our people, the mistakes of our
leaders and the manipulations of world Powers. I do not
seek to oversimplify the problems of Africa by creating
analogies. Rather, I would like to emphasize the
commitment of my country, though distant and facing its
own challenges, to joining all others in working towards a
durable peace and for sustainable development in Africa.
The Philippines commends the decision by the
Foreign Ministers of the members of the Security Council
on 25 September 1997 to consider the need for a concerted
international effort in promoting peace and security in
Africa. We are also pleased to note that the Security
Council has pursued appropriate action with respect to the
recommendations of the Secretary-General in document
A/52/87l on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa.
Efforts aimed at preventing armed conflicts must
continue to be directed towards those parts of Africa where
the potential for conflict remains high. At the same time,
the international community must accord the fullest support
to Security Council resolutions 1196 (1998) and 1197
(1998) aimed at strengthening both the effectiveness of
arms embargoes on conflict areas and the peacekeeping
capacity of the African countries themselves. These are
steps in the right direction. These initiatives have had some
success, but more must be done.
We must be prepared to establish legal regimes that
will penalize - through sanctions, for example - those
who continue to transfer arms into conflict areas in Africa
in excess of the legitimate defence needs of African
countries. We have to put all our creative energies to
work to stop the flow of small arms. Often, the illicit
small arms trade and its flow of finances and profits are
facilitated by bribery and corruption. We must be ready
to resort to every means, to take every measure to stop
the flow of small arms and the profane profits from its
trade. Initiatives similar to that taken by the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development to reduce the
scope for corruption in aid-funded procurement should be
seriously considered and applied to the illicit trade in
small arms.
I believe that the Security Council itself should
consider these measures. The international conference on
small arms and lights weapons scheduled for 2001 must
also consider these approaches as possible measures to
prevent the proliferation of small arms.
Stopping the proliferation of arms will have the
greatest chance of success if accompanied by confidence-
building initiatives. The United Nations should pursue a
strategy that brings into focus all interrelated elements,
encouraging concerned African countries to place at
centre stage the commonality of their interests for a stable
and prosperous Africa.
Principal regional actors must be involved in
measures being contemplated for action as well as in the
actual implementation of the measures themselves. In this
regard, we fully agree with what the Secretary-General
has said: that where a peace process is needed, it is the
role of the United Nations, with the Organization of
African Unity (OAU), to help create one. The role of the
OAU and regional bodies in Africa, such as the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the
Southern African Development Community (SADC), in
the resolution of the conflicts in Africa and its
development and prosperity cannot be overemphasized.
Providing assistance to the victims of conflict is a
moral imperative, and must be pursued as a complement
to measures aimed at conflict resolution. While
humanitarian assistance is an immediate response, it is at
the same time a necessary step towards full recovery,
rehabilitation and development. Humanitarian aid should
not only be devoid of any semblance of politics, but must
also, as much as possible, lay the initial but firm
foundation for post-conflict growth.
Another critical component is the strengthening of
economic foundations for sustainable development of the
African countries. The mobilization of adequate resources
for development is essential. Many African countries
continue to rely substantially on official development
assistance for development financing.
There should be no disruption of or reduction in the
provision of such external financial resources to the
countries in Africa. I agree completely with the Secretary-
General when he said that the dramatic cuts in assistance to
Africa in recent years have hurt rather than helped Africa's
efforts to implement the difficult economic and political
reforms which are now under way across the continent.
The challenges in Africa are challenges to all of us in
the international community. But the people of Africa
should be the first to resolutely respond to these challenges.
Good governance is a key foundation for building an
enduring peace and promoting progress in Africa. Good
governance should be the only element in considering the
political legitimacy of rulers among the governed. Good
governance must be based on the important principles of
democracy, freedom and the rule of law.
I have worked with many Africans and I have seen
their dedication and commitment to the peace and
development of their continent. I knew that the African
people were ready to take their future decisively into their
hands. With this in mind, when I was Director-General of
the United Nations Industrial Development Organization
(UNIDO) from 1985 to 1993, I supported a special
programme for the industrial development of Africa and I
made sure that the programme recognized the important
role of the African people themselves.
As part of this programme, next month, in cooperation
with the Organization of African Unity, the Economic
Commission for Africa, the World Bank, the United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the African
Development Bank, UNIDO will gather African leaders and
business groups in Dakar, Senegal, to meet with
Government and private sector representatives of investor
nations. It is hoped that this meeting will further strengthen
the basis for viable industrial partnerships and investments
in Africa.
For democracy and good governance to succeed, it is
important for the international community and the United
Nations to provide adequate development resources to
Africa. We must reinvigorate all the development initiatives
in favour of African countries, such the United Nations
New Agenda for the Development of Africa, among
others.
The United Nations family of agencies should
intensify its activities for Africa. I commend, among
others, the UNDP regional initiative, "Enterprise Africa",
for facilitating and coordinating support for small- and
medium-scale enterprises; the International Labour
Organization's employment-generating opportunities in
many parts of the continent; the assistance of the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development and the
International Trade Centre in the trade sector; UNIDO's
assistance on cleaner production centres in Tanzania and
Zimbabwe; and UNIDO's Alliance for Africa's
Industrialization.
While the majority of Africans now live under
democratic systems, much more needs to be done to
ensure that democracy continues to thrive and grow.
Democratic nations in the world can show the way by
taking initiatives that will prime Africa's economy. I
commend the initiatives before the United States Congress
to pass the African trade bill, which will provide Africa
with privileges similar to those contained in the Caribbean
Basin Initiative. Crucial votes will be taken in the United
States Senate next month on this bill, and I hope that
much of what we do and say here today will somehow
serve to encourage the eventual passing of the African
trade bill into law.
It is likewise important that the international
community find a resolution of Africa's unsustainable
external debt burden. The Secretary-General has noted
that any significant move to lift Africa's crippling debt
burden will require concerted political action at the
highest levels.
The international community has shown a
willingness to address this issue. In particular, I hope that
the Cologne initiative will translate itself into concrete
action that provides a durable solution to the debt
problem of highly indebted developing countries.
Any international action must, however, take into
consideration the OAU's framework for action on debt,
which called for an international agreement to clear the
entire debt stock for the poorest countries in Africa within
a reasonably short period of time and in the context of
Africa's overall economic reforms.
As individual States, we must encourage stability and
development in Africa by engaging them as fellow
members of the community of nations.
On our part, the Philippines has heightened its
engagement in Africa. We continue to maintain our
presence through diplomatic posts, and we have continued
to establish and formalize relations with more countries in
Africa. We hope that in strengthening our relations we will
not only encourage mutual growth, but will also share our
democratic and liberal traditions. The Philippines has been
at the forefront of the movement of new and restored
democracies. We know at first hand how difficult it is to
move forward when much of the past holds us down.
We know, however, that together new and restored
democracies can achieve much. Our movement must now
strengthen its engagement in Africa. The Philippines will do
all it can to see this through.
The President: I thank the Secretary for Foreign
Affairs of the Republic of the Philippines for his kind
words addressed to my country.
The next speaker is the Minister for Foreign Affairs
and Regional Cooperation of Rwanda, His Excellency
Mr. Augustin Iyamuremye. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Iyamuremye (Rwanda) (spoke in French): Allow
me, Mr. President, on behalf of my delegation, to commend
you and through you pay a tribute to your country, the
Netherlands, for the attention you are giving our continent.
We in Rwanda can testify to the enormous assistance your
country gave Rwanda to help it emerge from genocide.
Other evidence is this meeting of the Council, which your
country convened.
I also congratulate the Secretary-General of the United
Nations on the excellent, very comprehensive report he has
submitted.
In addition, I pay tribute to the Secretary-General of
the Organization of African Unity (OAU), Mr. Salim
Ahmed Salim, for his statement yesterday.
I am delighted to be able on behalf of my country to
give the Council a brief survey of the progress we have
made so far and to ask the international community to
support our efforts to establish lasting peace and give
decisive momentum to the sustainable development of our
country.
What is the situation in Rwanda regarding security
and peace? I am proud to tell the Security Council that
our country has overcome two major problems affecting
its security: genocide has ended, and almost 3 million
refugees have returned, with the assistance of the Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
and the International Committee of the Red Cross. We are
extremely grateful to all the friendly countries that have
displayed solidarity towards our country.
I take this opportunity to inform the international
community that peace and security now reign throughout
Rwanda. Nonetheless, the forces of genocide, the
Interhamwe militia and the former armed forces, are more
active than ever. They are heavily armed by their allies
and directed by former politicians and high-ranking
officers of the EX-FAR, all adherents of an ideology of
genocide. These forces of evil have only one objective -
acknowledged and known to all: to complete the genocide
in Rwanda, establish it throughout the subregion and
exterminate all those who do not share their ideology.
In the past, we have on many occasions referred to
the existence of this ideology. We have repeatedly put
forward the facts, but the international community has not
listened to us. Once again today we inform the
international community that those same forces of evil are
hovering around Rwanda at this very moment, ready to
resume their odious work of extermination and
destabilization in the Great Lakes region.
I urgently appeal to the Security Council to see that
the Ceasefire Agreement signed in Lusaka is strictly
respected by all the parties concerned. That Agreement
has as its backbone two important clauses. One relates to
the inter-Congolese political negotiations on a new
political order in the Democratic Republic of the Congo;
the other relates to tracking down and disarming the
armed groups, including the militias that have been
integrated into the army of the Democratic Republic of
the Congo. Rwanda will be vigilant with regard to
implementation of that Agreement, and we hope the
international community will help us. The Lusaka
Agreement brings peace; its failure would have disastrous
implications.
May I quote a clause from that Agreement, as a
reminder of what the heads of State and Government and
the other signatories expect of the United Nations:
"The United Nations Security Council, acting
under Chapter VII of the UN Charter and in
collaboration with the OAU shall be requested
to constitute, facilitate and deploy an appropriate
peacekeeping force in the DRC to ensure
implementation of this Agreement; and taking
into account the peculiar situation of the DRC,
mandate the peacekeeping force to track down
all armed groups in the DRC. In this respect,
the UN Security Council shall provide the
requisite mandate for the peacekeeping force."
(5/1999/815, annex, para. 11a)
As far as my country is concerned, "armed groups" mean,
inter alia, the genocidal forces and the Interhamwe militia.
How is Rwanda handling such a delicate and tragic
situation, in which victims live side by side with the
executioners? The people of Rwanda have learned very
quickly to live together again, as they used to, in spite of
the fresh memory of genocide. This is explained basically
by the determination of the new political leaders and others
responsible at all levels to advocate mutual tolerance,
reconciliation and respect for others. Our slogan is: "No
one has the right to take justice into his own hands. There
is no place for impunity in Rwanda. Never again."
Those who are familiar with the history of Rwanda,
dating back several centuries, know that the three
components of the Rwandan population have always lived
together in peace and harmony, sharing the same beliefs,
the same language, the same practices and customs, living
side by side on the same hillsides, intermarrying - in
short, a people with the same culture. Instead of
strengthening that valuable asset, colonialism contributed to
the disintegration of our society and institutionalized ethnic
divisions.
In the past the idea of genocide had never occurred to
any of the three components of our population. We are
saying this not to dredge up the past, but, rather, to
emphasize that Rwanda is in the process of rebuilding its
social fabric, of being reborn from its own ashes, thanks to
the good leadership it now has and the help of the
international community. Considerable progress has been
made towards reconciliation and national unity. In this
context, a Commission on Unity and National
Reconciliation has been established and is already
operating.
My country has also made significant progress in
many other areas, such as justice, the social sphere, human
rights, the status of women, democracy, the economy and
development.
As for our presence in the Congo, I would like, in
conclusion, to tell the Security Council about the causes
of conflict in our subregion. The only cause of the
destabilization of the countries of the Great Lakes region
is very well known and is completely recognized by the
heads of State and Government of the countries of the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) and
the Great Lakes. The Lusaka Ceasefire Agreement
recognizes unequivocally that the various militias,
including the Interhamwe and the EX-FAR, which
advocate and practise the ideology of genocide, are the
source of the insecurity throughout the region. The best
action the international community can take is to
contribute to the complete implementation of that
Agreement.
The international community knows that if it does
not contribute energetically to the fight against the
ideology of genocide in the subregion, and against the
intellectual revisionism looming on the horizon that would
downplay the genocide in Rwanda, the peace and security
of the entire region will be jeopardized. Rwanda therefore
once again calls to the attention of the international
community the need for, and relevance of, implementation
of that Lusaka Agreement.
The President: I thank the Minister for Foreign
Affairs and Regional Cooperation of Rwanda for his kind
words addressed to my country.
The next speaker is the Minister for Foreign Affairs
and International Cooperation of the United Republic of
Tanzania, His Excellency the Honourable J akaya Mrisho
Kikwete. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Kikwete (United Republic of Tanzania): My
delegation welcomes the opportunity to address the
Security Council on a matter of vital concern to Africa.
Tanzania regards it as a special honour, Sir, to have had
your Prime Minister lead our discussions yesterday.
His presence served to underline the interest and
commitment of your country to the development of
Africa. It should, hopefully, also serve to re-energize our
collective commitment to the pursuit of peace, stability
and development for Africa. We also want to commend
the Secretary-General for his current progress report on
the implementation of the earlier report on the causes of
conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa.
An opportunity to take stock of developments that
have taken place since the Secretary-General issued his
earlier report in 1998 is timely and urgent. Today Africa
continues to face a host of challenges. But the greatest of
these remains the preservation of peace and stability and
the pursuit of human-centred economic development,
targeting in particular the imperative of eradicating poverty.
Notwithstanding the odds, Africa has not succumbed
to its fate. Lately African leaders have increasingly taken
the lead in dealing with the development question and
conflicts. Under the umbrella of the Mechanism for Conflict
Prevention, Management and Resolution of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), subregional
groupings have established their respective mechanisms for
conflict prevention, management and resolution. While this
is not meant to absolve the United Nations - and, more
important, the Security Council - of its responsibility for
international peace and security, it is a growing recognition
of the fact that Africa has to bear some responsibility for
finding solutions to African problems.
It is in this regard that the Lusaka Ceasefire
Agreement of 10 July 1999 on the Democratic Republic of
the Congo - brokered by the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) - was concluded. In the
same vein, our collective support is required if the people
of the Congo and its neighbours are to obtain enduring
peace, security and stability. The continued support of the
Council is therefore not only expected, but critical. We
therefore commend the commitment of the Council to
support the process by providing a peacekeeping force as
envisaged under the Lusaka Agreement. It is vital that the
momentum of cooperation with, and support for, the sub-
region and the parties involved in the conflict be sustained
in order to avert the collapse of the process.
Now that we have secured the concurrence of all
parties, as embodied in the Agreement, the Council must
move with speed to deploy the monitors, observers and
peacekeepers. We recognize that some internal
arrangements on the implementation modalities remain to
be finalized. This, however, need not - and, indeed, must
not - stand in the way of the United Nations fulfilling its
role. These matters will be worked out as we proceed in the
implementation phase, which will require substantial
resource outlay. We urge the Council to provide the
requisite financial support, and we hope that it will.
Last week, in his address to the General Assembly,
my President, His Excellency Mr. Benjamin W. Mkapa,
noted that the Burundi peace process, initiated by the region
and now being pursued with the facilitation of Mwalimu
Julius Nyerere, was proceeding well in Arusha. He also
expressed the hope that the coming round of talks to start
on 1 November would resolve some of the sticky issues
so that a peace agreement could be reached and
implemented as soon as possible. I reiterate my
President's appeal to the international community to
continue to urge the full participation of all the key
players in the peace process. This is a call we continue to
make even to the Council.
In Angola, what was once a promising peace
process has collapsed. Jonas Savimbi has defied not only
the will of the Angolan people, but that of the
international community as a whole and of this Council
in particular. In the meantime, innocent civilians, mostly
women and children, continue to die and suffer as a result
of the intransigence of one person. The humanitarian
tragedy in Angola requires getting serious with Savimbi
and his clique. Why, and for how long, will Savimbi be
allowed to defy the world, and in particular the Council?
We appeal to the Security Council and the international
community as a whole to assist in bringing his
intransigence to an end. As a result of his atrocities,
Africa has condemned Savimbi as a war criminal. The
Council should do likewise and resolve to take specific
measures to bring him to account for his actions and his
continued intransigence. It is indeed an affront to the
United Nations, and the Council in particular.
Elsewhere, the Organization of African Unity has
played a very critical role in the conflict between Ethiopia
and Eritrea. Even as we continue to urge the parties to
exercise restraint and implement the OAU peace plan, it
is our hope that the OAU framework agreement will be
a catalyst for durable peace between the two sisterly
States. Likewise, the roles played by the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) in the
peace process in Sierra Leone and the Intergovernmental
Authority on Development (IGAD) in the conflict in
Somalia are to be welcomed, as we welcome a
breakthrough in the long-standing Lockerbie crisis, which
has brought so much hurt and suffering to the people of
Libya. We commend the flexibility of the Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya, France, the United Kingdom and the United
States, as well as the facilitative role of the then President
of South Africa, Mr. Nelson Mandela. We therefore hope
that the Security Council will consider the appeal by the
OAU for the lifting of sanctions against Libya.
While Africa has put effort and resources into
peacemaking, it has been demonstrably clear that it faces
a serious challenge regarding its peacekeeping capability.
Undoubtedly, therefore, Africa requires far more concrete
support in building its capacity to enable it to play a more
meaningful role in the prevention of conflicts and, where
necessary, peacekeeping. We would like to underscore the
need for the Security Council to look into better ways and
modalities of working with and supporting African regional
initiatives. Experience has demonstrated that existing
support mechanisms, such as the trust funds and the
standby arrangements, are inadequate and increasingly
ineffective. The Council should therefore seriously look into
how better, efficient and more resourced arrangements can
be worked out. Such arrangements should also permit
broader participation, especially of the African countries
and peoples.
It would appear that African conflicts have created a
ready market for arms merchants. More than that, it is also
clear that the intensity of these conflicts would have been
restrained if the flow of arms were more restricted. These
arms have ravaged countries and peoples. They have
usurped resources to breed death, pain and suffering instead
of prosperity. Innocent civilians continue to suffer because
of this immoral trade, which has wrought nothing but
anarchy and instability. We must condemn the arms
merchants, as we do those who sustain war in Africa.
The relationship between conflict situations and
refugees is painfully obvious to Tanzania. The
predominance of conflicts in Africa, according to the
January 1999 report of the Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees, has generated 7.2 million
refugees. This figure does not include millions of internally
displaced persons. This is a sad human tragedy. Tanzania
is currently hosting at least 890,000 refugees. This number
includes those hosted by the UNHCR in the camps, those
taken care of in refugee settlements and those being hosted
by the local population. This is an enormous burden on a
poor country like mine in economic, social, political and
environmental terms. It is especially so as we struggle to
cope with this daunting task while weighed down by a
colossal debt burden and important debt challenges.
Even in the face of such monumental challenges, we
continue to patiently carry the burden of refugees, with its
far-reaching consequences on the host local communities.
While we have never refused entry and refuge to anyone
running to save his or her life, and have not negotiated
refugee quotas for those that seek refuge in our country, our
people are becoming increasingly concerned about the
inordinate burden we shoulder. We, however, continue to
take them in, not because they are Africans, but as a
humanitarian gesture, in the African way, and we also
take them in as our international obligation.
But we are also becoming concerned that we cannot
sustain the sacrifice we have been making without
increased international support. I should here again
reiterate the appeal made by my President for greater
support for the efforts and resources expended by our
Government, as well as for UNHCR and other relief
agencies working in Tanzania.
Tanzania is very conscious that while refugees are
a product of conflict, they are also often potential causes
of a vicious cycle of conflict. We have at times learned
in dismay of charges about our country being a hotbed of
elements within refugee camps bent on overthrowing
authorities in their mother country: a case of abused
hospitality.
The refugee aspect is important, because it is our
belief that the problem has not obtained sufficient
attention as a humanitarian problem, at least not in Africa.
And yet this remains a problem with a severe
destabilizing effect, both internally for the host country
and in the region as a contributing factor to conflicts in
the continent. We cannot afford to pick and choose those
to whom we should render assistance. The legitimacy of
our collective effort rests in our shared faith in the dignity
and worth of the human person.
While there is no denying that only good
governance, human rights and genuine democracy can
stem the haemorrhage of citizens from one's country, with
its attendant problems, support for the necessary
structures of governance and the rule of law continue to
be an important factor for success, peace and stability.
But it also needs to be underscored that Africa is not, and
must not be seen to be, inherently unstable and riven by
conflict. The Secretary-General notes in the current
progress report that good governance, accountability,
transparency and the rule of law are gaining ground in
each region of Africa. We fully agree with his View
expressed in paragraph 97 of the report (S/l999/1008)
that
"What the outside world may not have noticed is
that much of what it has been calling for is now
happening."
Africa does not need more exhortations. It needs support
in strengthening its structures of governance and the rule
of law. What it needs is more concrete resources to
enable it to pursue meaningfully the course of action it has
chosen for itself.
In his report on the causes of conflict in Africa, the
Secretary-General quite rightly identified poverty as a
source of conflict. It is no coincidence that most of the
conflicts in sub-Saharan Africa are confined to countries
with a high illiteracy rate and a per capita income of no
more than $260. It is important that as we devise strategies
to assist Africa overcome its present difficulties we should
be mindful of its debt burden as one of the obstacles to
poverty alleviation. While we welcome the various debt
relief initiatives undertaken by the donor community, far-
reaching measures need to be taken if an impact on poverty
is to be made.
The importance of addressing poverty eradication as
a part of the strategy to prevent conflicts is obvious to all
of us. Needless to say, a lot of effort is being made in our
own countries as a contribution to this endeavour. This has
ranged from specific measures designed to increase
domestic resources earmarked for development to the
empowerment of our people and communities to participate
in designing and managing programmes for sustainable
development. The pursuit of this endeavour has often been
taken at great political risk, but it is taken in the belief that
creating favourable domestic conditions to spur investment
and development is primarily our own responsibility.
Our hope is, however, that the conducive material
conditions we create locally will be a catalyst to spur
investment and assistance that will, in the long run, render
that assistance unnecessary. This should also help generate
economies in Africa that will act as models for conflict-
prone regions. But Africa cannot undertake this Herculean
task unaided. We recognize with magnanimity the best
intentions made here and in other well-meaning forums. It
has often, however, been noted that the best of intentions
and goodwill have to be matched with the provision of
adequate resources for an effective fight against poverty in
the continent. The Secretary-General rightly observes, in
paragraph 104 of his report, that
"More decisive action on debt is an urgent
requirement."
This is the challenge we face.
In conclusion, Tanzania welcomes concerns about
Africa at the level of the Security Council. It is our hope
that this present dialogue will live up to the expectations it
is generating. We also believe Africa is bound to turn
around, and that the prosperity of Africa will create
opportunity not only for Africa, but for the international
community at large. Most of us are today labouring hard
to heal ethnic divisions, care for refugees, build a civil
society and establish structures for genuine democracy.
Most of our leaders and peoples now understand that the
future of our countries depends on trade, science and
technology. Many are labouring to ensure good
governance and transparency and to introduce structural
reforms. Progress towards this end may not come as
swiftly as we may wish, but we owe it to Africa and the
humanity we all share to assist as much as we can.
This is Africa's hour of need. The help rendered to
Africa would be a credible investment for all of us.
Africa has great promise as well as potential. Dismissing
this promise and potential is to act to the detriment not
only of Africa, but also of the international community.
The President: I thank the Minister for Foreign
Affairs and International Cooperation of the United
Republic of Tanzania for his kind words addressed to my
country.
I should like to inform the Council that I have
received a letter from the representative of Jamaica 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. Mullings
(Jamaica) took a seat at the side of the Council
table.
The President: The next speaker is the Minister for
Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Togo, His Excellency
Mr. Joseph Kokou Koffigoh. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Koffigoh (Togo) (spoke in French): It is a
great honour for me to speak before the Security Council
as it once again considers the situation in Africa, in the
light of the report on the state of that continent introduced
yesterday morning by the Secretary-General.
Allow me first to congratulate you most warmly,
Mr. President, on the most outstanding way in which your
country, the Netherlands, has been handling the presidency
of the Council at this particularly busy time.
I likewise pay special tribute to the Secretary-General
for his progress report, which tells of the steps that have
been taken in the course of a little over a year. This
exercise once again illustrates his ongoing interest in
Africa, which is unfortunately still grappling with all kinds
of difficulties.
In his first report (5/1998/318) on the causes of
conflict and the promotion of durable peace and sustainable
development in Africa the Secretary-General set out the
great problems confronting our continent and the
fundamental principles that should provide a basis for
resolving them.
He called on African States to take the steps needed
to bring about democracy and the rule of law and to enter
into reforms to promote good governance and good
management of public affairs. He also urged the
international community to cooperate with regional and
subregional organizations by supporting their initiatives on
the maintenance and consolidation of peace.
After the report was issued, the Security Council
undertook an in-depth analysis of the recommendations
contained in it, inter alia with the assistance of a working
group set up for that purpose. That process led to some
soul-searching about various problems and to major
statements of commitment on the part of members of the
Council. Thus we welcomed the Council's backing of
regional and subregional initiatives and its strong support
for strengthening the ability of African States to combat
illicit flows of small arms and light weapons into and
within Africa.
In the presidential statement issued following its
ministerial meeting of 24 September 1998, the Council
called on all Member States and organizations concerned to
provide the necessary financial and technical support so as
to strengthen existing African regional and subregional
arrangements for conflict prevention, the maintenance of
peace and security, and the settlement of disputes.
In addition, the Council advocated strengthening the
partnerships between the United Nations and regional and
subregional organizations. As one can see, the process that
is now under way is an encouraging one and offers some
grounds for optimism. It is to be hoped that it will lead to
concrete steps that will enable Africa resolutely to set
forth on the road to progress and development.
In this connection, we should remember that under
the provisions of its resolution 1170 (1998), the Security
Council was to assess the progress made in the promotion
of peace and security in Africa only next year. The recent
progress report of the Secretary-General and the
convening under your presidency, Sir, of this meeting, is
proof of the heightened awareness of our continent,
Africa, and we would express our appreciation.
Much has been said since yesterday about African
States, so I would like simply to pay tribute to the
Secretary-General of the Organization of African Unity
and to its Chairman, through his representative, who
spoke yesterday on his behalf, as well as to the other
representatives who fully assessed the situation and
proposed solutions in support of initiatives currently under
way.
In many parts of Africa, democratic elections are
gradually becoming the rule, not the exception. Good
governance, transparency and a state based on the rule of
law are now slowly but surely becoming established in all
parts of our continent. African conflict-settlement
mechanisms have also developed significantly in the last
few years.
Here I would mention the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS), since more authoritative
voices than mine spoke yesterday about the continent as
a whole. ECOWAS, for its part, is striving to strengthen
its Mechanism for Conflict Prevention, Management and
Resolution, whose establishment was a major milestone
in the strengthening of West Africa's capacities for
preventive diplomacy and the re-establishment and
maintenance of peace.
The ECOWAS Monitoring Group (ECOMOG)
enabled ECOWAS to cope - with varying degrees of
success, admittedly, but nevertheless fairly effectively -
with the crisis situations in Liberia, Sierra Leone and
Guinea-Bissau.
Let me take this opportunity to express once again
the appreciation of the current Chairman of the
Conference of Heads of State and Government of
ECOWAS - the President of my country,
Mr. Gnassingbe Eyadema - for the sustained attention
given by the Security Council to the preservation of peace
and security in our subregion.
Managing post-conflict situations is another matter
that we should focus on, because often the post-war period
has not been managed adequately in Africa. In many cases,
parties to a conflict have stockpiled large reserves of
weapons, which are often distributed in an uncontrolled
manner and can thus contribute to the resumption of
hostilities.
It is therefore imperative that the international
community, on the basis of the relevant recommendations
of the Secretary-General of the United Nations, support the
countries concerned in carrying out their programmes for
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration. It should
also respond immediately to their long-term needs in the
areas of reconstruction and recovery.
In this connection, I welcome the proposal by the
Secretary-General in his recent report on Sierra Leone to
establish a United Nations force in that country, pursuant to
the Lome Peace Agreement. I believe that the Security
Council will authorize the prompt deployment of that force,
which, in accordance with the mandate to be given it, will
help the Sierra Leonean Government to implement the plan
for disarmament, demobilization and reintegration.
Let me recall that a delay in the deployment of troops
had significant repercussions on the development of the
situation last May in Guinea-Bissau. We strongly hope that,
having learned from that experience, and with the
commitments just made to strengthen, with the support of
the Security Council, the peacekeeping force in Sierra
Leone, the deployment will take place in that country as
soon as possible.
Guinea-Bissau had been expecting at least 1,500
troops. With France's help, 600 men were deployed, but
with tensions high the poorly equipped troops were not,
unfortunately, able to do anything when the situation
deteriorated. There is no doubt, therefore, that the initiative
currently under way with respect to Sierra Leone will help
to ease the justified concern recently expressed by the
Sierra Leonean Government with respect to the
implementation of that programme. Peace in Sierra Leone
is indispensable, because any delay in this respect would
have a negative impact on the situation in Guinea, which
has shouldered a heavy burden in terms of refugee flows,
and on Liberia, for which great sacrifices have already been
made.
While the efforts made to date to strengthen African
peacekeeping capacity are commendable, they of course do
not absolve the international community or the Security
Council from their responsibilities, particularly in that the
Charter of the United Nations gives the Security Council
primary responsibility for the maintenance of international
peace and security.
Public opinion in West Africa is that the
international community is tending to rely primarily on
the regional efforts that are under way and not providing
sufficient support. Our countries are still economically
and socially weak, and the burden of trying to resolve
regional conflicts has a very negative impact on our
national budgets, on our education programmes, and so
on. The international community should not use its
financial and logistical assistance to African States,
modest as it is, as a pretext to disengage from the
continent. It seems likely that Africa will continue to need
logistical support and financial resources for a long time
to come, particularly if it is to succeed in re-establishing
and maintaining peace.
Furthermore, the recent conflicts more or less
throughout Africa have shown how historical or even
linguistic considerations can complicate regional efforts to
settle conflicts. In such situations, the direct involvement
of the United Nations is sometimes essential if peace is to
be preserved.
Given these requirements, it is regrettable that equal
attention has not been given to all crises and conflict
situations. I listened with great interest yesterday to the
comment of the representative of Algeria, who said that
"suffering knows no colour".
On 21 September, President Chiluba underlined that
same point in his briefing to the Council on the situation
in the Great Lakes region when he quite rightly said that
when the international community deals with issues
relating to Africa, cost is always the decisive factor and
almost becomes an obstacle to effective United Nations
participation. It is to be hoped that the current operations
and future initiatives will help correct this tendency to
marginalize Africa, which asks only that it be
accompanied in its efforts to promote durable peace and
sustainable development.
The President: I thank the Minister for Foreign
Affairs and Cooperation of Togo for the kind words he
addressed to my delegation.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the Minister
of State for External Affairs of India, Her Excellency
Mrs. Vasundhara Raje. I invite her to take a seat at the
Council table and to make her statement now.
Mrs. Raje (India): Even though the ministerial
meeting proposed by the Secretary-General will be held
next year, I welcome this opportunity to speak to the
Council about Africa, a continent with which we in India
have close and historical bonds. The Secretary-General's
report on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa, issued
in April 1998, made a series of recommendations to the
United Nations system and to Member States. A year has
elapsed and it is time to take stock, as the Secretary-
General has done in his progress report.
As we said last year, most of the problems that the
Secretary-General identified in his report are outside the
mandate of the Security Council to address. However, since
in this debate we will look at the totality of the challenges
facing Africa - if only to set the problems of conflict and
security in perspective - I will refer also to those issues
highlighted in the report where responsibility for action lies
elsewhere than with the Council.
We note with interest the modest, practical steps that
the report suggests in the section on responding to
situations of conflict. We would all agree that it is always
sensible, as a general principle not limited to Africa, to
avoid rival mediation efforts; sometimes, this has led to
tensions between the mediators which feed back into the
conflict. Contact groups and special conferences may be
helpful, though by definition they become useful - and
should be set up - only when the parties to a conflict are
prepared to talk.
We have participated in the Interlaken process, and
would be interested to see targeted sanctions work. We
believe that the focus of the exercise should be to lessen
the impact of the sanctions on the innocent, in Africa and
elsewhere, rather than on easing the administrative burden
for the international banks through which financial
sanctions are imposed. A related but crucial point needs to
be made here: as one of the reports (E/ 1999/ 16) submitted
to the Economic and Social Council earlier this year noted,
Africa has suffered massive capital flight, estimated at
about $22 billion between 1982 and 1991; these outflows,
which have grown even larger since then, represent the
fruits of corruption and have been invested in banks in
developed countries. The Secretary-General's report calls
for steps to check corruption in Africa, but as the report to
the Economic and Social Council made clear, Africa
urgently and rather desperately needs these funds back, and
to achieve that aim it needs the help of the foreign
Governments where these banks are based. Corruption
cannot be staunched at source if bribes can be safely
squirrelled away abroad.
We note that the Secretariat is working with African
States to make the violation of Security Council arms
embargoes a criminal offence under national legislation.
This is an interesting tack to take, but since most of the
arms used in African conflicts are made on other
continents and exported there, quite often in the full
knowledge that they will be used by those on whom
embargoes have been placed, any legislation that African
States enact will be ineffective unless there are equally
strict legal checks in the arms-exporting countries.
On reducing arms purchases to below 1.5 per cent
of gross domestic product, the report notes that many
countries in Africa were of the view that this would be
difficult to implement. Again, almost by definition, this is
not a figure that can be given general sanctity.
We are surprised that the report is silent on
mercenaries. It is well established that mercenaries are
sustaining several ongoing conflicts, have committed
horrible violations of human rights and humanitarian law
and actively market their services to antagonists in Africa.
Most of them come from countries outside the continent
that have recently pruned their armies. Again, this is a
problem for Africa whose solution does not lie in African
hands.
The other important omission is terrorism, which
has bedeviled Africa and African security as it has many
other parts of the world. At the recent Organization of
African Unity (OAU) summit in Algiers, African leaders
pledged themselves to work for an international and
global convention for the struggle against all forms of
terrorism. We welcome and support this call.
We welcome international efforts to strengthen
Africa's capacity for peacekeeping. The international
conference on United Nations peacekeeping, which we
hosted in New Delhi in March this year, had a major
emphasis on peacekeeping in Africa. We made a special
effort to ensure wide African participation, and trust that
those who attended found the experience useful. We have
contributed to almost every peacekeeping operation
mounted by the United Nations in Africa, and will remain
committed to peacekeeping efforts there.
African peacekeeping capacities are being developed,
but this should not become an excuse for the Security
Council to abdicate its responsibilities for the maintenance
of international peace and security and refuse to set up
peacekeeping operations in Africa on the basis that they
would require extra resources, involve physical risks to
peacekeepers or could be long-drawn-out. All regions of the
world should be dealt with equally, and equally
transparently, and Africa deserves not just the Council's
attention in debates like these, but the prompt dispatch of
United Nations peacekeeping operations whenever they are
required.
Most of the points made in the section on
humanitarian assistance recapitulate the recommendations
made in the recent report to the Security Council on the
protection of civilians in armed conflict (S/1999/957). I
shall say only that in a statement to the Council earlier this
month (S/PV.4046 (Resumption 1)) we explained in detail
why we believe that those recommendations need much
closer examination and should not be accepted as a basis
for action.
In general, anything the Security Council does for
Africa is likely to be insufficient unless there are concrete
international efforts to address its underlying problems
effectively; as the Secretary General has said, development
is an essential condition for the maintenance of peace and
security. How has Africa done over the last year? The
figures we have from the United Nations system are
confusing.
The annual summary of the economic and social
situation in Africa submitted this year to the Economic and
Social Council put the figure for gross domestic product
growth in 1998 at 3.3 per cent, up from 2.9 per cent in
1997, the highest growth rate of any region in the world; it
reported that the 33 African least developed countries
increased their growth rate from 2.4 per cent in 1997 to
4.1 per cent in 1998. This is heartening, but the World
Economic and Social Survey 1999, prepared by the
Department of Economic and Social Affairs, claims that
African growth has declined from 2.7 per cent in 1997 to
2.5 per cent in 1998. We hope that United Nations
assessments will not vary so widely; it becomes difficult
otherwise for Member States to judge what the objective
situation is.
Also, we need to break down the problem if we are
to make meaningful recommendations; western, eastern and
southern Africa have had a particularly difficult time, but
within those regions, according to the Survey, countries in
the CFA franc zone have done rather well, some growing
by 4.9 per cent in 1998 and others by 5.5 per cent. It is
clear that we need to address in other forums the specific
needs of countries and subregions in Africa and help them
craft appropriate solutions based on local endowments.
We are disappointed that section III of the report, on
building a durable peace and promoting economic growth,
considers aspects of good governance in far more detail
than it does practical measures to promote growth.
Effective, transparent and accountable governance
responsive to the needs and priorities of the governed is
important, but linking assistance and investment to
arbitrary norms not related to economic parameters will
promote neither human rights nor prosperity. In contrast,
the report to the Economic and Social Council clearly
establishes the close relationship between income and
well-being. Eight of the 10 best performers in the Borda
rankings in Africa were also among the top 10 in terms
of per capita income, countering that claim often made
that human development is not necessarily dependent on
income growth.
The report urges African countries to create a
positive environment for investment, including through
greater attention to human resources and public health,
but other reports from the United Nations system fill out
the picture. On investment, the World Investment Report,
published by the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development, pointed out last year that foreign direct
investment in Africa yielded greater returns than that in
any other region. That report also found that, above all,
foreign investors looked for African countries with an
open, well-regulated macroeconomic environment; the
recommendation in the Secretary-Generals report that
African countries should create an enabling environment
to attract investment is therefore a sound one.
However, the World Investment Report also found
that almost all foreign direct investment into Africa was
sunk into the quick exploitation of natural resources. In
other words, if two African countries had natural
resources, such as oil or gas, of immediate interest to
foreign investors, the one with the more stable
environment would stand a better chance of getting the
investment. However, those African countries that do not
have commercially attractive natural resources, no matter
how well they are governed or how stable their
macroeconomic environments may be, are unlikely to get
substantial foreign investment. Since these are the
countries that often need foreign direct investment most,
there is a clear disjunction between need and supply,
which needs to be addressed. Across the continent, to
illustrate this point, industrial-sector growth, which has
driven development in all regions, has declined from
3.8 per cent in 1997 to 3.2 per cent in 1998, largely
because investments are absent.
Even more telling, the Economic Commission for
Africa has reminded us that the gap that needs to be
financed by external resources if Africa is to reduce poverty
is 9 per cent of African gross domestic product, which is
almost the same figure as for official development
assistance. In most developing economies that have taken
off, that gap was hardly ever more than between 2 per cent
and 3 per cent. The figure for Africa demonstrates the
qualitatively different nature of African need; the decline in
net inflows and the limited scope of foreign interest are
therefore even more disturbing.
On public health, the report refers to the challenges of
both HIV/AIDS and malaria, again perhaps without spelling
out the magnitude of the problem Africa faces. The World
Health Report 1999, published by the World Health
Organization, describes the challenge of malaria in Africa
as a social and economic development issue, not just a
health concern, and it also goes on to say that because the
adverse economic impact of malaria in Africa has been
estimated to be greater than 1 per cent of gross domestic
product, it could be considered a cause, and not just a
consequence, of underdevelopment. Determined
international action to eradicate malaria could thus add at
least 1 per cent to African gross domestic product; this is
far more doable than putting an arbitrary cap, for instance,
on defence spending.
On AIDS, the latest World Health Organization
figures for Africa are 54 million infected, and the Human
Development Report published by the United Nations
Development Programme informs us that the cost of the
medication developed by Glaxo Wellcome has come down
from $10,000 to $3,000 per patient per annum, which is
still well beyond African means. If all 54 million Africans
are to be treated, the cost to the continent per annum could
well be $162 billion. Where is this money to come from?
This touches upon the general question of neglect and non-
application in the developing world of cutting-edge
scientific and technological research in the areas of health
and upon the need for urgently exploring innovative ways
of financing the application of this research, particularly in
Africa.
India has contributed to the best of its ability to the
promotion of peace and sustainable development in Africa.
We attach the highest priority to economic cooperation
with Africa. A primary instrument of our technical
cooperation with Africa has been the Indian Technical
and Economic Cooperation Programme, which has trained
some 20,000 African nationals so far in fields including
banking, foreign trade, hydrology and water resources,
communications, electronics, satellite imaging, agriculture,
small and medium industry, software, renewable energy
sources and the like. Over 15,000 African students study
in India. We provide 1,350 training slots every year in
our best educational institutions, of which nearly
60 per cent are reserved for nominees from Africa. The
Programme also implements a variety of technical
assistance projects in Africa. Training and mutual
cooperation in human rights, in the conduct of elections,
in parliamentary procedures and in public sector
administration are important components of our
multifaceted relationship.
Several Indian companies have established joint
ventures in Africa, infusing capital, upgrading technology
levels and promoting job creation. Indian industry is
involved in a significant way in the development of
African infrastructure in sectors such as railways. In 1998,
we set up a revolving fund for Africa for promoting trade,
investment and technology sharing, as well as for
revitalizing our bilateral trade with Africa and for
investing in Africa's development.
Africa will remain the highest priority for us as a
partner in cooperation. We hope it will be a priority for
the United Nations system as well.
The President: The next speaker is the State
Secretary for Foreign Affairs of Slovakia, His Excellency
Mr. Jaroslav Chlebo. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Chlebo (Slovakia): I wish to begin by
congratulating the Netherlands, and you personally, Sir,
on your excellent conduct of the presidency of the
Security Council for this month. I would like also to
thank your predecessor, the representative of the Republic
of Namibia, for his effective leadership of the Security
Council during the month of August.
Slovakia welcomes the initiative of the Netherlands
to convene this important meeting on Africa in a timely
manner, and considers it to be a very promising step
towards a final solution of the pending problems of
Africa.
Slovakia warmly welcomes the Secretary-Generals
recent report on progress in promoting durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa. We also appreciate the
briefing held last week by Mr. Frederick Chiluba, President
of the Republic of Zambia, on the situation in Africa, and
all other activities which have taken place in order to help
Africa seek peace and development.
There is no doubt that in recent years the continent of
Africa has made significant progress on its way to stability
and prosperity. Despite certain achievements, however, at
the threshold of the new millennium, Africa still remains
afflicted and threatened by a great number of conflicts and
tensions. Without an appropriate approach, those tensions
can quickly be turned into new, devastating conflicts.
Timely responses to and peaceful resolutions of
disputes are essential for promoting durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa. It is clear that an active
and functional partnership between Africa and the
international community is one of the key priorities for
preventing and resolving conflicts and for helping Africa
create an environment for the economic growth of its
countries. The continued and increased assistance of the
international community is also important for building and
enhancing African peacekeeping capacity to handle crises.
However, this cannot be a substitute for the responsibility
of Africa itself. Africa must show the political will to seek
political rather than military responses to problems and
commit itself to the principles of good governance with
strict respect for human rights and the rule of law. In this
respect, we have welcomed the determination of African
leaders to promote democracy and the rule of law, as was
recently stated at the thirty-fifth summit of the Organization
of African Unity (OAU) in Algiers. Only in an environment
of good governance can countries ensure their stability and
prosperity.
Regional arrangements have already become an
integral part of the common effort of the international
community for maintaining peace and security in Africa.
Slovakia welcomes and fully supports increasing
cooperation and coordination between the United Nations
and Africa with regard to peacekeeping. Peacekeeping
operations still continue to play an indispensable role in
resolving ongoing conflicts. We should recognize the
important role that the African regional and subregional
organizations - such as the OAU, the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) -
have played in addressing particular disputes and in
carrying out peacekeeping missions in several African
countries. We should provide them with the necessary
financial and material resources.
In this regard, Slovakia commends the activities of
ECOWAS and, in particular, of the President of Togo
leading to the signing of the Lome Peace Agreement,
which has given new hope to the people of Sierra Leone.
We also greatly appreciate the diplomatic and mediation
efforts of the President of Zambia, which facilitated the
signing of the Ceasefire Agreement in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, which has helped create positive
conditions for a restoration of peace in the Great Lakes
region.
No doubt the peace process is not complete, and the
cooperation and the assistance of the international
community cannot stop after a restoration of peace.
Durable results - lasting peace and development -
cannot be achieved or maintained without adequate
follow-up. A clear and smooth transition from
peacekeeping operations to post-conflict peace-building is
required. All factors needed for reconciliation,
reconstruction and the creation of conditions for economic
growth should be addressed and strengthened in order to
prevent a resumption of the conflict. A valuable example,
in my view, has been set by Mozambique, not only in
resolving its internal conflict but also in its determination
to fight one of the most widespread diseases of conflicts
on this continent, anti-personnel landmines.
Since its establishment as an independent State in
January 1993, Slovakia has participated in a number of
United Nations peacekeeping operations in Africa, as well
as in other parts of the world. To date, nearly 3,000
Slovak peacekeepers have served under the United
Nations flag in peacekeeping missions. On the continent
of Africa, Slovakia has been actively involved in the
United Nations Missions in Angola, Rwanda, the Uganda-
Rwanda border region, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Furthermore, Slovakia is ready to contribute an
engineering unit of 150 personnel for mine clearance
activities in the United Nations Mission for the
Referendum in Western Sahara and has also recently
expressed its readiness to dispatch Slovak peacekeepers to
a possible United Nations mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea.
Speaking in terms of the number of troops per capita,
Slovakia is among the leading troop-contributing
countries.
Moreover, in order to improve Africa's capacity for
conflict prevention and resolution, Slovakia stands ready
to contribute to this effort and to offer facilities at its
Training Centre for Peacekeeping Operations, in particular
providing training for engineering units.
We recognize the problem of anti-personnel mines as
a great burden to post-conflict rehabilitation and the
promotion of sustainable development in afflicted regions.
The commitment of Slovakia to the resolution of this issue
is demonstrated not only by its ratification of the Ottawa
Convention this year but also by its active participation in
demining activities in peacekeeping operations. Slovakia is
prepared to continue providing its skills, techniques and
equipment in this regard.
Specific situations require the application of specific
measures, including sanctions imposed by the Security
Council. The imposition of sanctions can be used as a
measure of enforcement, but it should rather be used as a
measure of prevention. We share the View that better
targeting of sanctions is needed in order to ensure that they
will achieve their purpose with greater impact on political
leaders and decision makers.
In this regard, special attention should be paid to arms
embargoes which can be a key instruments in the
prevention of the flow of illicit arms and related materiel
into zones of conflict or tension in Africa. Therefore, the
United Nations and the international community must take
all measures available to enforce effective implementation
of a Security Council arms embargo, inter alia, through the
identification of the sources of arms flows.
A bitter example of the violation of an arms embargo
is seen in Angola. In that country the United Nations
peacekeeping operation has failed, and the effort of the
international community has also been brought to naught
because of continued supply of weapons to UNITA.
We are concerned that the sanctions of the Security
Council are mostly violated by non-African countries, some
of which even want to be recognized as contributors to
international peace and security. Slovakia firmly adheres to
all of the Security Council's decisions, including those on
sanctions. As a future Chairman of the Wassenaar
Arrangement for the control of the export of dual-use
materials and technologies and conventional weapons,
Slovakia would like to contribute to the effective work of
the Arrangement and thus strengthen international and
regional stability.
We recognize the importance of building and
enhancing a close relationship with African countries. We
fully support the intention of the European Union (EU) to
hold a summit with African countries next year, and we
align ourselves with the positions of the EU which will be
presented by the representative of Finland later in this
debate.
Slovakia appreciates traditionally good relations and
mutual cooperation with African countries. Entering the
new millennium, we will continue enhancing our
partnership with those countries in order to help Africa
build its future. Slovakia stands ready to contribute to any
efforts of the international community to respond
positively and constructively to Africa's needs and to
promote peace, sustainable development, human rights
and good governance on this beautiful continent. For that
noble task, we must identify proper means and sufficient
resources without delay.
The President: I thank the State Secretary for
Foreign Affairs of Slovakia for his kind words addressed
to me and to my predecessor.
The next speaker is the Minister for External
Relations of the Republic of the Sudan, His Excellency
Mr. Mustafa Osman Ismail. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Ismail (Sudan) (spoke in Arabic): My
delegation would like to congratulate you, Sir, on your
assumption of the presidency of the Security Council for
this month, which abounds with activity and international
meetings. We would also like to express our appreciation
to you for holding so many open debates on many current
subjects of ongoing concern and interest for the
international community. Our appreciation and thanks also
go to the Secretary-General for his progress report on the
implementation of his recommendations regarding the
main causes of conflict in Africa - the subject of this
debate.
My delegation studied carefully the report of the
Secretary-General contained in document S/1999/ 1008.
We would like to make the following brief remarks in the
hope that they will advance the discussion.
Paragraph 2 of the report states that
"The Security Council established its own
ad hoc Working Group to review the
recommendations in the report pertaining to peace
and security. The Working Group developed
concrete proposals for action on: (a) support for
regional and subregional initiatives in the areas of
conflict prevention and maintenance of peace;
(b) establishment of an international mechanism to
assist host Governments in maintaining the security
and neutrality of refugee camps; (c) strengthening of
Africa's peacekeeping capacity; (d) strengthening the
effectiveness of arms sanctions regimes imposed by
the Security Council".
In this connection we would like to thank the Council
for its interest in establishing the ad hoc Working Group to
study and submit proposals on the aforementioned points.
We would have liked to see the text of these proposals in
the body of the Secretary-Generals follow-up report. We
would also have liked to see to what extent this report has
taken into consideration the views of the States that are not
members of the Council, particularly those views expressed
during earlier debates on the causes of conflict in Africa
and those that contained valuable ideas on the sanctions
system and on the role of regional organizations and other
issues.
As for the part on targeting sanctions, the report of
the Secretary-General refers to the efforts of non-
governmental organizations and to the symposiums that
some countries have sponsored on this particular topic. The
Secretariat provided technical support to this symposium, as
is mentioned in paragraph 12 of the report.
In this respect we would like to reaffirm the necessity
of taking into consideration the Views of the Member States
of the United Nations on sanctions because, in the final
analysis, they are directly concerned. In this regard, the
report does not take into consideration the resolution
adopted by the General Assembly by consensus in relation
to "An Agenda for Peace".
As for the problem of the illicit flow of small arms
and light weapons, my delegation would like to recall the
necessity of finding a solution to this problem, by dealing
with it through a mechanism that, by means of effective
supervision, would stop rebel movements and gangs from
getting hold of these arms and weapons.
As for paragraph 18 of the report, on identifying
international arms merchants, we believe that our efforts
would be better served if we identified manufacturing and
exporting businesses and their means of export, in order to
lay the foundations for an international regime to control
the manufacture and export of such weapons and the trade
in them.
Last year, when the Secretary-General submitted his
first report on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa, he
mentioned many of the causes of these conflicts. These
included the legacy of colonialism, economic reasons and
other external factors that led to these conflicts and their
continuation. He also highlighted the relationship between
peace and development.
In this context I would like to refer to paragraph
102 in the follow-up report issued by the Secretary-
General on 25 September, which refers to the conflict in
southern Sudan. Let me note that everyone knows that
there is an ongoing conflict in the south of my country.
This is one of the crises bequeathed to us by colonization.
Its flames were fanned by the warlords and the rebels,
and this conflict has now gone on for more than 50 years.
Since it came to power, the present Government has
made serious, tireless efforts to achieve peace in the
south. It has welcomed all good offices and initiatives in
this respect. It has also accepted the Declaration of
Principles as a basis for negotiations between it and the
rebels within the context of Inter-Governmental Authority
on Drought and Development (IGADD). It recently
proclaimed a comprehensive ceasefire in preparation for
peace and reaffirmed its commitment to provide basic
human rights for all its citizens in the war-torn areas.
Today, from this rostrum I declare - and I will
repeat this declaration in my statement before the General
Assembly this evening - that the Government of the
Sudan is willing to declare a permanent ceasefire for the
whole of the south of the Sudan. If the rebels accept this,
we will then ask the relevant organizations to separate the
warring forces, to supervise the ceasefire for humanitarian
reasons and to allow the initiative of IGADD to succeed
in achieving a peaceful solution to the problem.
The rebel movement has rejected a ceasefire, is
obstructing the routes for humanitarian assistance, and is
killing relief workers. The killing of four staff members
of the International Committee of the Red Cross last
April - an incident condemned by the international
community and the Secretary-General - is still fresh in
our minds.
From this rostrum we appeal to the international
community and to the Security Council to pressure the
rebel movement to join the peace process and to adopt
sanctions similar to those that have been adopted against
the rebel Savimbi in Angola. The Non-Aligned
Movement, at the ministerial meeting that took place during
this session of the General Assembly, declared Savimbi a
war criminal.
The Secretary-General's current report stresses the
importance of socio-economic development in dealing with
the causes of conflict. However, we feel that not enough
attention has been paid to this aspect. Assistance has not
equalled the level required, nor have enough resources been
made available for the projects of rehabilitation,
development and reconstruction. We would like to reaffirm
that if insufficient attention is paid to this aspect, the door
for renewed conflicts will remain open.
Experience has proved beyond any doubt the urgent
need to pay attention to socio-economic projects during the
transitional period in areas where relative stability has been
established. There is no need to wait for a comprehensive
peace; development would thereby be playing a supportive
role in bringing about such peace.
I have taken note with interest the statement made by
the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Canada, which contained
a reference to my country. I thank him for his interest in
the affairs of the Sudan and would not wish to end my
statement without addressing his reference to the slave trade
in my country, which was surprising and amazing indeed.
Canada is almost the sole country to make these
allegations against the Sudan in the Council. Canada has no
resident diplomatic representation in the Sudan and has sent
no official delegation to our country in recent years to
uncover the facts. I would also mention that my country
hosts over 50 foreign diplomatic missions, including 20
Arab and 10 European embassies, a resident envoy of the
European Union and a similar number of African and Asian
embassies.
The Ministerial Council of the Arab League met this
month in Cairo and looked into the misleading malicious
media campaigns launched by certain suspect organizations,
such as Christian Solidarity International (CS1), against my
country, as well as the falsehoods and allegations that have
been made concerning the slave trade in the Sudan. CS1 is
an organization that seeks to foment sectarian strife among
the Sudanese - Christians and Muslims alike - and to
incite hatred. The Council unanimously decided that the
misleading campaign is aimed at destroying the Sudan's
image, destabilizing the country and arousing sectarian
strife. It called for opposition to this campaign. A copy of
the resolution has been sent to the President of the Security
Council. As members know, the Economic and Social
Council Committee on N on-Governmental Organizations
has adopted a resolution recommending the withdrawal of
the consultative status of CS1, in view of that
organization's excesses and violations of the rules
governing its relationship with the United Nations.
A draft resolution submitted by the members of the
European Union to the Commission on Human Rights in
Geneva last March on the situation of human rights in the
Sudan, which included a tribute to the progress made by
my country in that respect, made no mention of
allegations concerning the slave trade. It referred to
kidnappings that occur during tribal conflicts over water,
pasture and agricultural land, which occasionally erupt in
some remote regions of the Sudan regardless of the ethnic
similarities or differences of the tribes concerned. This is
a phenomenon that we are working hard to overcome and
eliminate. In that respect, I would call the Council's
attention to the convening, in Khartoum last July, of a
workshop on the ways and means of stopping and
preventing such conflicts. It was attended by
representatives of certain United Nations bodies and non-
governmental organizations and by civil and governmental
leaders. The workshop's recommendations have been
implemented by my government and forwarded to the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.
The Government of the Sudan has treated these
allegations very seriously. We believe that slave-trading
is a heinous crime against humanity and a horrendous
violation of all values and of all revealed religions.
Article 20 the 1998 Sudanese Constitution provides that
every human being has the right to life, freedom, the
security of his own person, dignity and honour in
accordance with the law. He is free and cannot be
enslaved, forced to work, humiliated or tortured. Article
163 of the 1991 Sudanese Criminal Code provides for the
punishment by imprisonment and fine of all who attempt
to force others to work.
In the wake of the allegations made in some
European capitals, I met with European ambassadors in
Khartoum and asked them to provide us with any
information at their disposal on the existence of this
practice in my country. They all denied that they had any
such information and that this practice exists in the
Sudan. When these allegations were repeated, we
appealed to the Organization of African Unity (OAU)
through its Secretary-General, who is present at this
meeting, to dispatch a fact-finding mission to seek
information on the subject of these allegations concerning
the slave trade.
I cannot help but wonder how dozens of senior
officials from the southern part of my country, where these
practices are alleged to occur, can all be unaware of their
occurrence? These officials include the Vice-President, a
southern Christian; four federal ministers, including the
only woman on the Council of Ministers, a southern
Christian who is Minister of Labour and Humanitarian
Affairs; the Deputy Foreign Minister, who is an Anglican
Bishop; over 60 members of the federal Parliament; all the
governors and ministers of the 10 southern States; hundreds
of senior officers of the Army and the police force;
academicians; ambassadors and diplomats. The Sudanese
ambassadors to Rome, Oslo, Bonn and Dar es-Salaam are
all Christians from the southern Sudan, as are dozens of
other diplomats. Even the Deputy Chief of Mission to
Ottawa is a southern Christian.
The tragic war in southern Sudan is due to the
rejection of the repeated ceasefires by the rebel movement.
It has displaced over half the population of that region to
the North, particularly Khartoum, where all the diplomatic
missions and the offices of the United Nations and of non-
governmental organizations are located. Anyone who lives
in or has visited our country knows that all religious and
ethnic groups live in peaceful coexistence there. Christians
and Muslims, southerners and northerners are all treated
equally. Many senior personalities and officials of regional
and international organizations who have visited our
country can vouch for that. Foremost among these is the
Secretary-General of the OAU, who is among us now and
who visited southern Sudan and its capital, Juba. He was
witness to the peaceful coexistence of all inhabitants there.
I ask the Canadian Minister to give me the name of just
one person who was enslaved and the names of those who
bought him.
In view of the gravity of the accusations made in the
statement of the Foreign Minister of Canada against my
country and taking into consideration that Canada is a
member of the Security Council and that this matter can
seriously harm the Sudan's reputation and destroy the image
of the Sudanese people, I ask the Canadian Government to
send a fact-finding mission so that it can ascertain the
falsity of these allegations and restore respect to my
country.
This grave phenomenon, if found in any society, is
the worst insult against that society. We cannot deal with
this through clamorous media or such unfounded
accusations, but through close cooperation that will
eliminate it. The Sudan opens its doors to any country or
organization that believes that this practice or this
phenomenon exists on its territory. It is perfectly willing
to cooperate in fighting this phenomenon. Let me reiterate
that we welcome a Canadian delegation that would visit
the Sudan in this connection. We again ask the Security
Council to send a fact-finding mission to investigate the
strike against the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical plant, which
was launched by the United States. We hope that Canada
will set an example by upholding values and principles
and that it will support that request.
In conclusion, in view of the gravity of the
accusations levelled against the Sudan these days, which
are fuelled by some who work against my country, let me
repeat that the Sudan does not have any objection to
receiving a mission of the United Nations and the
European Union, the Organization of African Unity, the
Arab League or the Organization of the Islamic
Conference to investigate these accusations levelled
against the Sudan regarding the slave trade. We are
perfectly willing and ready to cooperate with such a
mission and to deal positively with the results it might
obtain.
The President: The next speaker on my list is the
Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Senegal,
His Excellency Mr. Jacques Baudin. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement
now.
Mr. Baudin (Senegal)(spoke in French):
Mr. President, allow me to congratulate you on your well-
deserved election. We in Senegal attach particular
importance to it as we know both you and, of course,
your country.
Peace, security, political stability, the democratic
rule of law and respect for fundamental human rights and
liberties are all, I believe, necessary conditions for
development. Senegal and its head of State, President
Abdou Diouf, are committed to these principles on which
we base our foreign policy choices and directions.
My delegation welcomes the high quality of the
report of the Secretary-General (S/ 1999/ 1008) and we are
delighted at the remarkable follow-up work by the
Security Council, the General Assembly, the Economic
and Social Council and the other organs and institutions
of the United Nations on the recommendations contained
in his earlier report (S/1998/318). We welcome also the
important statement made within this forum by the
Secretary-General of the Organization of African Unity
(OAU), Dr. Salim Ahmed Salim, on the situation in Africa.
It is of utmost priority that we should continue our
consideration of the potential sources of conflict in Africa
because the situation on the continent is evolving very
rapidly. In addition to the conventional types of conflict
which still persist, there are conflicts of a new type; they
are a new generation of more complex conflicts, with new
protagonists, stemming from domestic contradictions.
Examples of this latter type are: fratricidal, political
struggles between the opposition and those in power, with
the militias in between, in defiance of the democratic rules
of the game and the legally established constitutional order;
mutinies by factions of national armed forces which start
out as simple material or financial claims and mutate into
political demands; the ethnicization of political and social
life; the heightening of identity-related conflicts; and the
problems stemming from the difficulties involved in
managing armed ethnic bands, especially in refugee camps.
I must mention also the dangerous attempts by some
countries to revise their border policies and their relations
with neighbours. Revising borders calls into question the
principle that the borders inherited from the colonial period
must not be touched.
These conflicts are made even more difficult by the
huge rise in banditry, illicit trafficking in narcotics and
psychotropic substances and the uncontrolled circulation of
arms, especially small arms and light weapons, in a
continent characterized by porous borders.
Obviously the list cannot be exhaustive because there
are so many explanations of the sources of tension and
conflicts are multiple, complex and interacting. My
delegation is pleased that the Secretary-General has taken
the specificity of the African situation in his analysis and
recommendations into account. It is pleased also that the
Security Council has decided: to strengthen its support for
regional and subregional initiatives for the prevention,
management and settlement of crises in Africa; create a
support mechanism for the governments of host countries
to enable them to maintain and preserve the security and
neutrality of refugee camps; and to strengthen African
peacekeeping capabilities.
The provisions of Security Council resolution 1197
(1998), concerning the establishment within OAU of an
early warning system based on the model currently being
used by the United Nations and the strengthening of the
OAU conflict management centre, must be implemented
with all the required resources. Similarly, contributions
should be made to finance the United Nations Trust Fund
for that purpose and the OAU Peace Fund. Mechanisms
for the exchange of information between the United
Nations and OAU and between the United Nations and
subregional organizations - the Economic Community of
West African States (ECOWAS) and the Southern African
Development Community (SADC), for example - should
be considerably improved.
Even though the primary responsibility of
maintaining security and the civilian and humanitarian
character of refugee camps and areas always lies with the
host State, the international community is duty bound to
assist governments in this task and, above all, to bear the
bulk of the costs to African States whose financial and
logistic capacities are limited. To this end, my country
wishes to appeal to our development partners for a
considerable increase in the resources available to the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), given the immensity and complexity
of the UNHCR's tasks and responsibilities. My country,
which actively participated in the adoption of the
ECOWAS Moratorium on the Import, Export and
Manufacturing of Small Arms, remains prepared to
participate in the United Nations Register of Conventional
Arms and to contribute to the establishment of appropriate
regional and subregional registries. In the same spirit, we
will be contributing to the success of the OAU regional
conference on small arms decided upon by the Algiers
summit.
Equal importance should be attached to post-conflict
peace-building. How many crises did we considered
resolved, only to see them re-emerge because of a lack of
vigorous support for Governments to build peace and
reconstruct what had been destroyed. If truth be told,
post-conflict management remains one of the weak points
of our joint action. It is hard to understand that countries
emerging from a conflict should be treated routinely when
it comes to assistance, financing or debt management, for
example. They ought to enjoy special treatment; this is a
fundamental prerequisite to ensure the success of efforts
at reconstruction, reintegration of ex-combatants and
national reconciliation.
I also commend the Secretary-General's proposal to
create a group composed of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), the World Bank and the United Nations to
study special support mechanisms for countries in a post-
conflict situation, or those countries that are overwhelmed
by waves of refugees created by instability in their region.
It is of the utmost importance, in this framework, to take
into account the situation of child soldiers.
My delegation will have the opportunity to return to
the question of the follow-up of recommendations of an
economic and social nature in the report of the Secretary-
General when it is examined in the General Assembly.
Nonetheless, I want to emphasize the serious development
constraints facing our countries. Given the drastic decline
in official development assistance, the low level of financial
flows towards Africa - approximately 3 per cent of global
flows - the intolerable debt and debt servicing burden,
which erodes the erratic and steadily declining income from
exports, and the many obstacles to access of African
exports to world markets, it is important that the United
Nations and the international community strengthen their
support for the continent and that exceptional efforts be
made for the African countries involved in the twofold
process of economic and political reform.
Before concluding, I wish to restate sincerely my
country's gratitude to our partners and friends - France,
the United States and the United Kingdom - for their joint
initiative in supporting our peacekeeping and conflict
management efforts in Africa. Thanks to their cooperation,
and the efforts of Japan and other friendly countries in this
field, we have succeeded in training thousands of
peacekeeping troops and in improving and increasing our
logistic resources. Significant progress has been made in
this field, thanks to the commitment of African countries
and the support of our partners. Joint military manoeuvres
have been organized among the armed forces of the
countries of our subregion in order to train for possible
future crises.
The United States initiative to respond to crises in
Africa, and the tripartite initiative of France, the United
States and the United Kingdom to strengthen African
peacekeeping capacities, known by the acronym RECAMP,
have made African countries better equipped to participate
in peacekeeping operations and in crisis prevention and
management. We are continuing our work in this field, with
the support of friendly countries, and in cooperation with
the United Nations and the OAU.
As the Council knows, since its independence Senegal
has been contributing contingents to United Nations
peacekeeping operations in Africa and elsewhere. We are
determined to continue our excellent cooperation with the
United Nations in this framework in order to ensure peace
and security in the world.
The resilience of African aspirations is such that the
international community must act quickly and well. While
we are of necessity convinced of this need, since
everyone knows the facts of the African problems, some
must move beyond the simple reflex reaction of posing
the problems, without any real will to find the proper
solutions.
I had almost finished, but some student memories
keep coming to mind. One is particularly persistent; I was
thinking about it all night and again this morning. It leads
me to remind the Council of a famous sentence by
Mirabeau, one of the great orators of the French
revolution, who said that in this world a defence can be
found for anything - except inconsistency. I hope that as
the twentieth century reaches its end we can together
reflect on that truth.
The President: I thank the Minister for Foreign
Affairs of the Republic of Senegal for his kind words
addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the Minister
for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of the Republic of
Mozambique, His Excellency Mr. Leonardo Santos
Simao. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and
to make his statement.
Mr. Simao (Mozambique): Let me begin by
congratulating you, Sir, upon your assumption of the
presidency of the Council for the current month, and pay
a well-deserved tribute to your predecessor, the
Permanent Representative of Namibia, for the diligent
manner in which he discharged his duties during the
month of August.
I would also like to express my appreciation, Sir, for
your initiative in convening this debate on the situation in
Africa. As we approach the new millennium, we think it
is high time to reflect on the developments and challenges
confronting our continent. I thank all countries which
have expressed kind and encouraging words to my
country.
Africa is well known as the cradle of ancient
civilizations that contributed to the scientific advance of
the world. It is also endowed with huge human and
natural resources. These positive aspects have been
gradually undermined by a combination of factors which
have had a negative impact on the continent's
development. The colonial legacy, poverty, the
deterioration of the terms of trade and the debt burden are
among the main obstacles to the attainment of peace and
economic and political stability in Africa.
However, we are proud to note that African States,
including the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) countries, are introducing political, social and
economic reforms, such as the adoption of multi-party
political systems and free market economies. This in our
view signals the Africans' commitment to seek solutions to
their own problems, aiming at achieving sustainable
development and stability as well as the well-being of the
peoples of the continent.
While recognizing that the fate of our continent lies
in our hands, we strongly believe that the international
community must provide the necessary support to ensure
the continuity of the progress so far achieved. Africa is still
marginalized. Therefore, the international community must
take practical steps to complement the efforts of Africa
towards regional integration, thus allowing the continent to
be fully integrated into the world economy. In this regard,
developed countries must reverse the decline in official
development assistance for Africa, provide debt relief or
cancellation and mitigate the impact of the deterioration in
terms of trade while allowing access of African goods to
world markets. The 1999 United Nations Development
Programme Human Development Report contains
staggering statistics on African countries.
Regrettably, conflicts in Africa continue to be a
source of concern for all of us on the continent as well as
for all peace- loving countries. We are all involved in the
search for solutions for those conflicts which are
undermining the development of the African countries. We
are conscious that in Southern Africa our concern remains
Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Without
peace there is neither stability nor development.
With regard to the situation in Angola we deeply
regret the resumption of war, caused by UNITA, which is
denying Angola the well deserved peace and stability which
are so long overdue. Hence, the sanctions imposed by the
Security Council against UNITA as a way to force
Mr. Savimbi to comply with resolutions 864 (1993), 1127
(1997) and 1173 (1998) must be both reinforced and
implemented. It is also urgently necessary to ensure that
humanitarian assistance is provided to mitigate the plight of
the people of Angola and avoid a human catastrophe.
We commend the work done by the Security Council
Committee established pursuant to resolution 864 (1993),
chaired by Ambassador Robert Fowler of Canada, which
recommended effective measures for the implementation
of Security Council sanctions imposed against UNITA.
We encourage the Committee to continue with its work.
The maintenance of peace and security is the main
responsibility of the Security Council. However, regional
arrangements must also contribute to ensuring the
attainment of that objective. After all, in the particular
case of SADC, instability in Angola and in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo also affects that whole
region. Taking this into account, the SADC countries are
ready to collaborate with the United Nations to monitor
the implementation of sanctions against UNITA. We think
that this will complement the efforts of the Security
Council, and indeed of the whole international
community, to achieve lasting peace in Angola.
The situation in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo has seen some positive progress, with the signature
of the Lusaka Agreement by all parties involved in the
conflict. However, the slow pace of implementation of
this Agreement constitutes a major concern for the whole
region. In this regard, we call upon the Security Council
to adopt practical measures to ensure an effective
ceasefire. To that end, the early and timely deployment of
peacekeeping forces, with an appropriate mandate under
Chapter VII of the Charter, and with enough manpower
and resources, is imperative for the achievement of lasting
peace and stability in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo. All SADC countries, and indeed many African
and other nations, are ready to contribute troops for this
peacekeeping mission.
It is our hope that, unlike previous occasions
elsewhere, solving the security issue will not be a
precondition for the deployment of peacekeeping forces.
We are concerned that a step-by-step approach by the
Security Council may jeopardize the smooth
implementation of the Lusaka Agreement.
It is regrettable that whenever the international
community is faced with taking action to solve a conflict
in Africa the issue of cost is always raised. Cost should
not be a determining factor because it has never been a
determining factor in dealing with conflicts in other parts
of the world.
In the case of the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, what SADC is proposing is a strong and
structured partnership with the United Nations in order to
guarantee the implementation of the Lusaka Agreement.
Africa has the potential to solve its own problems as
has been demonstrated on many occasions. Our continental
organization, the Organization of African Unity (OAU), has
been involved in the search for solutions for the many
conflicts devastating the continent. Through its Central
Organ of the OAU Mechanism for Conflict Prevention,
Management and Resolution, Africa can indeed play a
pivotal role in the maintenance of peace and security.
Similar regional mechanisms, such as our SADC Organ on
Politics, Defence and Security, the Economic Community
of West African States (ECOWAS) and other regional
mechanisms, are also capable of playing a meaningful role.
What we need is to endow these arrangements with
adequate financial and technical resources so that they also
can launch and participate in peacekeeping missions in
Africa. We call on the United Nations to collaborate closely
with Africa to enhance Africa's capacity to shoulder its own
responsibility to help maintain peace and security within
Africa. We call also on the international community to
provide the necessary resources in amounts sufficient to
allow these objectives to be realized.
The success of the Security Council, and of the
United Nations as a whole, will be judged by the degree of
success it achieves in the least developed of all our planet's
continents. Together we shall succeed.
The President: I thank the Minister for Foreign
Affairs and Cooperation of the Republic of Mozambique
for his kind words addressed to me and to my predecessor.
The next speaker on my list is the Minister for
Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Ghana, His Excellency
The Honourable James Victor Gbeho.
I invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement now.
Mr. Gbeho (Ghana): I am happy and privileged to
participate in this crucial Security Council debate on the
situation in Africa, and I wish to begin by joining in the
warm sentiments expressed to you, Sir, and to other
members of the Council by previous speakers.
I must also highly commend the Secretary-General for
the comprehensive progress report (S/1999/ 1008) on the
implementation of the recommendations contained in his
earlier report (S/1998/318). The progress report highlights
key issues that need to be addressed in dealing with the
problems confronting Africa.
The case for proving Africa's readiness to pull itself
up by its bootstraps when it comes to challenges to peace
and security there has been well established by all who
spoke before me. The statement made in the Council
yesterday by the Secretary-General of the Organization of
African Unity (OAU) regarding the two OAU summit
meetings held in Algiers and Sirte, and the statement by
the Permanent Representative of Algeria, also portray
Africa's resolve to take its destiny into its own hands and
make the next millennium one of peace and stability on
the continent.
As was noted by an earlier speaker, there can be no
peace without development, nor can there be development
without peace. My contribution, therefore, is calculated to
underscore some of the points already made and to
suggest how the Security Council may help Africa. In so
doing I will go straight to the point and try to avoid
repeating the many important points that my colleagues
have already made with greater force than I can muster.
The Charter gives ultimate responsibility for
international peace and security to this body, and yet the
continent of Africa is desperately in the throes of conflict.
By holding this debate, the Security Council itself
acknowledges the critical role that it has to play in
improving the environment for development in that region
of the world. The Security Council therefore has to
assume its full responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security in Africa. Regional
peacekeeping missions and other efforts by Africa can
therefore be no excuse for the Security Council to shirk
its responsibilities to African countries.
We have had to bear such a responsibility in West
Africa, for instance, not only because we feel a sense of
ownership for confronting and managing conflict, but also
because the response by the international community has
recently been either muted or lukewarm, and in a few
instances too little, too late. It is the conviction of my
Government that the Council's duty to maintain peace
without any prevarication or ambivalence must be upheld
and emphasized.
In this regard, I wish to reiterate the point I made to
the General Assembly last week: that the time has come
for the international community to do in Africa as much
as it has done in other areas in guaranteeing peace. We
have seen in the past few months the kind of resources
that the international community has been willing and
able to mobilize in Kosovo and East Timor at short
notice. We are pleased with the effort and would like to
congratulate the countries involved. Africa urges the
Security Council, therefore, to move with similar dispatch
concerning the tragedies of Africa in order to dispel any
perceptions of discrimination or lack of even-handedness.
If the words of comfort, support and solidarity that
have been offered Africa in this debate were half-translated
into commitments we would spend less time lamenting the
plight of the continent. In our View, Africa's case has often
required less onerous assistance in terms of human lives
and military dispositions than is necessary in post-conflict
management. In fact, as the Secretary-General's report
makes clear, the root of many conflicts in Africa lies in the
difficult socio-economic situation that the continent finds
itself in. There will thus be no peace or security until the
issue of poverty is seriously addressed.
We are compelled to point out that the achievement
of the objectives of peace and security requires an
integrated approach, even in areas outside the narrow
confines of peace and security. While we appreciate the
assistance by developed countries for enhancing Africa's
peacekeeping efforts, this, in our View, should be
coordinated to avoid a situation in which parallel bodies
compete for attention, and thereby waste energy.
The international community must also support efforts
at stemming the illicit trafficking in small arms and light
weapons in West Africa. My Government, in recognition of
the need to address the serious problem of arms
proliferation in our subregion and the related issue of the
forced participation of children in armed conflicts, intends
soon to jointly host with the Government of Canada a
subregional workshop aimed at building on the Mali
moratorium and establishing a framework to keep children
out of conflict. We look forward to the support of the
international community for this forthcoming event,
especially that of the member States of the Council. In this
regard, we also call on countries whose companies and
nationals support the supply of arms and the provision of
soldiers of fortune or mercenaries to fight in wars for the
sake of diamonds or similar resources to assist these noble
regional efforts aimed at halting this trend.
Africa recognizes its responsibility to take steps to
create a viable environment for sustainable development.
Good governance, accountability and measures towards
poverty alleviation are part of this process, and the
Secretary-General's report acknowledges the efforts of
African countries in this direction. We count on the support,
therefore, and the cooperation of the developed countries
for success.
The President: I thank the Minister for Foreign
Affairs of Ghana for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is
representative of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. I invite him
to take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Dorda (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya) (spoke in Arabic): Allow me first of all, Mr. President, to extend
my thanks to you and to your delegation for your efforts
in presiding over the Council this month, which has seen
so much activity.
We have twice seen the Council hold public
meetings this month and we hope that it will not go back
to holding meetings behind closed doors as if it were
hatching something unacceptable to the international
community. The Council works on behalf of the
international community, at least in theory.
We would also like to pay tribute to the
representative of Namibia, Ambassador Andjaba, for his
successful presidency over the Council last month.
We also thank the Secretary-General, who single-
handedly performed his duties on behalf of Africa in the
best possible way and within his competence and terms of
reference.
We have heard many things from those who have
taken the floor at this meeting. We will therefore be very
brief and not repeat what has already been said. The
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya will not go into the details of
what it has done for the continent of which it is a part.
My country feels that what it has done in Africa -
whether during the struggles for liberation from
occupation, in the area of reconstruction and development,
in stopping bloodshed in all areas of conflict or in
preparing Africa to enter the next century unified and on
the road to recovery - has been nothing more than its
duty. These actions are for us daily acts and are an
integral part of our shared responsibility.
At these sorts of meetings, some see an opportunity
to continue, to a boring degree, to remind Africa of what
they have offered to and spent on the continent. We
Africans are not very happy about being constantly
reminded that we owe those countries a debt of gratitude,
and we are not very happy that those countries have no
objective other than winning African votes. We would be
happier if an end could be put to recalling this debt of
gratitude, which so provokes our feelings and our
dignity - in particular as we have not forgotten the fact
that what has been taken from us is almost impossible to
compensate for.
It is unnerving for Africa that the United Nations and
the rich and powerful States do not give it anything other
than words. We see them take boisterous action when other
regions are concerned while they spend without limit. Even
worse, African countries are forced to pay for this spending
lest they be deprived of the right to vote. There are many
well-known examples, and the Secretary-General mentioned
some of them at yesterday's meeting.
The Secretary-General has done his duty according to
his terms of reference. He has sent emissaries and
representatives and has established ad hoc groups. He has
submitted reports and made suggestions and even demands.
But he does not have competence to issue resolutions.
The United Nations withdrew from Somalia and let it
drown in its conflicts and fade into oblivion. The Somali
people are being killed and displaced and their territory is
being divided. Angola also is abandoned, except for the
provision of weapons and ammunition to the intransigent
warring parties. Where is the United Nations when it comes
to the Great Lakes, the Horn of Africa and West Africa,
except, of course, for the representatives of the United
Nations and their reports? The Council has never adopted
any resolutions that had any practical effect on them.
Africa's wounds cannot be healed by good intentions,
statements, public debates or even closed sessions. Africa
looks to the United Nations to take concrete action on the
urgent and persistent issues. Let me briefly address these.
First, with respect to conflicts, it should endorse the
studies or decisions that the Organization of African Unity
(OAU) has arrived at through the efforts or mediation by
African countries. This should be done in accordance with
the formula adopted by the OAU without any fundamental
or substantive changes, as has happened in regional
conflicts where the Council adopted draft resolutions
submitted to it by the geographical groups where these
conflicts took place. The United Nations should also
finance what is needed for the implementation of these
resolutions.
Second, with respect to health, an urgent international
programme should be set up under the auspices of the
United Nations and the OAU, supervised by the World
Health Organization, to deal with AIDS treatment,
prevention and awareness. This disease threatens the
entire continent and must be swiftly dealt with through an
international plan of action. It should also adopt a similar
international programme against malaria and other
endemic diseases. In addition to the United Nations, all
countries and international organizations, governmental
and non-governmental, foundations, companies and
individuals should provide contributions, financial and in
kind, to this humanitarian work.
Third, turning to democracy, I would like to note
that the meaning of that word, according to its Greek
origin, is government by the people. Peoples have the
right to govern themselves. Indeed, it is their duty. This
means that no one has the right to impose on Africa their
own formula for democracy. To achieve democracy, we
must take into consideration many objective
considerations: political, economic, social, educational and
cultural. Some of these considerations are historical and
others are still relevant today. There is absolutely no
question about the importance and necessity of
democracy, but where disagreements arise is when we try
to impose a particular model on societies, no matter how
alien such a model is to them from the perspective of
history or practicality.
To ignore the level and degree of cultural and
historical development of societies is to ignore reality and
the objective considerations that have formed the
particularities of these societies. To try to make reality fit
a prefabricated formula is akin to forcing someone into a
suit made for someone else. If we were to recall what
happened in most industrial societies or so-called
democracies only a few decades ago, we would realize
that those generations that survived two of the largest
wars in this century had not known or even expected the
freedoms and rights that exist now.
Only recently generals ruled Portugal, Spain, Greece
and other countries in the European Continent. The
attempts to impose multiparty systems or parliamentary
democracies were among the reasons for the many
conflicts that have taken place in African countries. In
Africa, belonging to a tribe or a religious sect is much
stronger than belonging to a political party or having any
intellectual or political affiliation. Political parties in
Africa are made up of tribes, religious sects or geographic
groups - in Somalia, Rwanda and other countries where
there are internal or regional conflicts.
Therefore, if the United Nations wishes to help
Africa with respect to democracy, it can do the following:
first, refrain from imposing a particular model of
democracy and respect the choice of peoples, their history,
their particularities and their level of development; second,
affirm that any formula to be followed must guarantee
freedom, the rule of law, rights and rotation by free popular
choice at the local and central level; and, third, invite all
Member States to respect these fundamentals and deal with
African and other countries economically and politically
without the imposition of any formulas or conditions. In
addition, international financial institutions and others must
not impose any conditions that would prejudice the choice
of peoples in governing themselves.
Fourth, with respect to development, the following
steps should be taken. First, Africa's debts should be
cancelled. Second, an international technical training
programme should be set up. Third, the United Nations
Development Programme must prepare studies on
agricultural projects that would maximize food and
agricultural production. Africa would contribute to these
projects through its natural and human resources, and
international investment firms would provide financing and
technical know-how. Fourth, the United Nations
Development Programme must prepare studies on industrial
projects for manufacturing basic commodities -
agricultural and mineral - where Africa again would
contribute raw materials and human resources, and the
international investment firms would provide financing and
technical know-how in a fair manner applied to all. Fifth,
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
must finance infrastructure projects in Africa, such as
railroads and highways, and also develop port systems and
electrical grids. Sixth, support should be given to the
present economic groupings and the economic institutions
that the special African summit in Sirte has decided to
establish.
Seventh, abandonment of the market economy system.
Most of the countries on the continent do not have an
economy or a market that conforms to current economic
concepts. We must also abandon the cliched policies of the
IMF, which were created and distributed to all countries
without taking into account differences. Eighth, the Security
Council must not be subjected to pressure from some
countries to adopt resolutions imposing sanctions, and it
must end such sanctions, as in the case of my country,
which has been unjustly treated.
Africa needs concrete actions to be taken to help it
heal its wounds and achieve economic, political and social
progress. We hope that this discussion will lead to that
outcome without any delay.
The President: I thank the representative of the
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya for the kind words he addressed
to me and to my predecessor.
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. Kumalo (South Africa): Thank you,
Mr. President, for giving me the opportunity to appear
before this body.
I want to associate my delegation with the statement
made by the Secretary-General of the Organization of
African Unity (OAU). Reading that statement alongside
the statement made by the Secretary-General of the
United Nations helps us to become more enlightened
about the situation in Africa as it is today.
Last week, at the opening of the General Assembly
general debate of the fifty-fourth session, the Secretary-
General gave an important address in which he sharply
raised the issue of humanitarian intervention in conflict
areas. One of the many challenges he posed to the United
Nations was contained in the following statement:
"As we seek ways to combat the ancient enemies of
war and poverty, we will succeed only if we all
adapt our Organization to a world with new actors,
new responsibilities and new possibilities for peace
and progress." (A/54/PV.4)
That entire address by the Secretary-General
deserves serious discussion in a different forum. It raised
issues that are fundamental to the work of our
Organization and even relevant to this open meeting on
conflicts in Africa.
Today we are here to take stock of developments
that have taken place since the Secretary-General issued
his report on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in Africa. This
report distinguishes itself because of its holistic approach
to the sources of conflict in Africa and the valuable
guidelines it provides on conflict prevention, management
and resolution.
We believe that those guidelines can make profound
contributions to the efforts of African countries to assert
their sovereignty, rediscover their meaningful role as
independent nation States, define their role within the
international community and, indeed, rid the continent of
the scourge of conflict. My delegation would again like to
associate itself with the statement delivered on behalf of the
OAU and also with other statements that have been made.
African countries such as ours, which have fought for
liberation and against colonial rule with the help and
support of the United Nations, believe that it is important
for multilateral institutions to provide a forum at which the
international community can continue to debate positive
ways of articulating and advancing the interests of
developing countries in crisis. We note that this debate is
taking place on the threshold of a new millennium, and we
urge that it spell out concrete steps to be taken to enhance
peace, security and development in Africa.
While noting with appreciation that the Security
Council remains seized of matters of peace and security in
Africa, we believe that similar debates in the General
Assembly would add to the collective wisdom needed to
address these issues. We further commend the Security
Council for its consideration of the Secretary-General's
report, which culminated in its adoption of resolution 1197
(1998), specifying areas of cooperation with the
Organization of African Unity that need strengthening so
that the OAU is better equipped to play a supportive role
with regard to United Nations activities aimed at achieving
peace and stability in the continent.
We are equally appreciative of the fact that the
Secretary-General's report resulted in the adoption of
General Assembly resolution 53/92 in December 1998.
Most important, we strongly support the idea of establishing
a follow-up mechanism to implement recommendations
contained in the report of the Secretary-General. This is a
bold, meaningful, and action-oriented step that goes beyond
mere declarations. It sends a long-overdue, positive
message that the United Nations is indeed ready to act on
this crucial matter.
Much as we welcome the momentum these resolutions
introduced to the debate on peace, stability and
development in Africa, it is disheartening to note that little
has been done to keep that momentum and to establish an
open-ended ad hoc working group of the General Assembly
to monitor the implementation of resolution 53/92, or, in
particular, to implement the recommendations contained in
the report of the Secretary-General. It is incumbent on the
United Nations and Member States to rededicate their
efforts to the implementation of the provisions of resolution
53/92. Our inaction in this regard, largely due to the lack of
political will, is a manifestation of a fundamental problem
that continues to impede the United Nations in taking
resolute and immediate action. We should not allow this
lack of political will to continue to hinder the United
Nations from playing its rightful role in the pursuit of
international peace and security and thus preventing it
from getting closer to the people it should serve.
Whereas the United Nations continues to be the
foremost Organization in the maintenance of international
peace and security, we African countries would like to
declare that we are ready to address issues of conflict in
the continent - in fact, we are already doing so. But for
us to consolidate our modest successes and increase the
authority of the decisions we have taken so far, we will
need support from the international community, especially
the Security Council.
It is for this reason that most of the leaders who
addressed the General Assembly in the general debate last
week, including President Mbeki, underscored the
importance of creating a more democratic system of
international governance, as would be reflected by a
restructuring of the multilateral institutions, including the
United Nations and the Security Council.
South Africa believes that there exists an intrinsic
link between peace and development which requires an
integrated approach to conflict prevention, resolution and
management. In this regard, we commend all global
advocacy for African development and efforts to mobilize
the international community further in support of our
continent and, in particular, to bring the United Nations
system, including the Bretton Woods institutions, to
support African development within a coordinated
framework. Continued support by the international
community for this endeavour is of the utmost importance
to the efforts of African countries to create an enabling
environment for sustainable development as well as for
the restructuring of their economies in order to improve
their economic situation. The Secretary-General reached
the same conclusion when he wrote in paragraph 5 of his
report (S/1998/318) on the causes of conflict in Africa:
"By not averting these colossal human
tragedies, African leaders have failed the peoples of
Africa; the international community has failed them;
the United Nations has failed them. We have failed
them by not doing enough to ensure peace; and
by our repeated inability to create the conditions for
sustainable development. This is the reality of
Africa's recent past. It is a reality that must be
confronted honestly and constructively by all
concerned if the people of Africa are to enjoy the
human security and economic opportunities they seek
and deserve."
Another frustration experienced by developing
countries is the lack of timely and decisive United Nations
response to conflict situations in Africa; this has resulted in
sharp criticism being levelled at the Organization. Swift
United Nations involvement in places such as Kosovo and
elsewhere is cited as a typical example epitomizing the lack
of enthusiasm for the United Nations responding with
similar zeal to African conflicts such as the tragic situation
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is urgent for
the Security Council to move swiftly in deploying the
necessary peacekeeping force in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo so as to allow the peace process to take hold.
In Africa - and elsewhere for that matter - the dangerous
notion is beginning to develop that the United Nations is
increasingly abrogating its primary responsibility for the
maintenance of international peace and security and ceding
it to regional arrangements. Needless to say, it is of
utmost importance that the United Nations should
improve its record with regard to response to conflict
situations. The United Nations has an obligation to be
seen by the peoples of the world as a truly even-handed
interlocutor and peacemaker.
The trend for the international community to wait
for conflicts to develop into violence and even war, and
subsequently to intervene through costly peacekeeping
operations, no longer reflects a worthy method of
intervention. The demand for the United Nations to
become involved in preventing the outbreak of hostilities
in countries that are caught in conflict, or to clean up
after wars, imposes a difficult and expensive mandate on
this Organization. At this rate, peacekeeping missions are
becoming instruments for freezing conflict, perpetuating
polarization and making timely conflict-resolution more
difficult. The men and women of violence simply have to
wait long enough for United Nations peacekeeping
missions to depart from areas of conflict before resuming
shooting at each other.
My delegation has already said that we look forward
to a debate that will result in concrete steps to inform our
activities to enhance peace, stability and development in
Africa. Eighteen months after the issuance of the
Secretary-General's report, it cannot escape us that it has
become something more concrete. We are pleased that the
report has not been forgotten. We realize that the task of
putting more life into the report cannot be accomplished
by this meeting. However, we hope that by discussing it
here we are taking a modest step towards meeting the
need for a different format to evaluate and review United
Nations measures that can be undertaken to resolve
conflicts.
The meeting was suspended at 1.05 pm.
▶ Cite this page
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