S/PV.4176Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
53
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Security Council deliberations
Conflict-related sexual violence
Women, peace, and security
Peacekeeping support and operations
War and military aggression
UN procedural rules
Thematic
The President: I should like to inform the
Council that I have received a letter from the
representative of the Sudan, 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. Rahmtalla
(Sudan), took the seat reserved for him at the side
ofthe Council chamber
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Austria. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Pfanzelter (Austria): Thank you, Madam, for
permitting me to address the Council in Austria's
capacity as Chairman-in-Office of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in order to
make a few remarks on the efforts to raise the issue of
children and armed conflict in the OSCE.
Permit me at the outset to thank the Jamaican
presidency for scheduling this important debate and for
your leadership, Madam, on this issue.
I would also like to thank the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children
and Armed Conflict and the Executive Director of the
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) for their
introduction of the report of the Secretary-General. The
report contains rich information on ongoing activities
and thinking on the protection of children in armed
conflict. Its many recommendations are most useful,
not only for the future work of the Security Council
and the United Nations, but also for regional
organizations such as the OSCE.
On behalf of the Chairman-in-Office of the
OSCE, the Austrian Foreign Minister, Benita Ferrero-
Waldner, I would like to use this opportunity to pay
tribute to the decisive role of Mr. Olara Otunnu in
advocating and recommending concrete action by the
OSCE. In the course of the past 10 months, he twice
addressed important OSCE forums on the protection of
children in armed conflict. I would also like to
acknowledge the important contribution of UNICEF to
the deliberations of the OSCE and express the interest
that Ms. Carol Bellamy will participate in an OSCE
meeting devoted to this issue in the near future. It is
our hope that the OSCE and UNICEF will develop
close partnerships and collaboration in the field. This
could also contribute to the preparations for next year's
special session of the General Assembly on the follow-
up to the World Summit for Children.
At the Istanbul OSCE Summit in November 1999,
the heads of State or Government of the participating
States of the OSCE committed themselves to actively
promoting children's rights and interests, especially in
conflict and post-conflict situations, to regularly
addressing the rights of children in the work of the
OSCE and to paying particular attention to the physical
and psychological well-being of children involved in or
affected by armed conflict. In the Charter for European
Security, signed at the Summit by heads of State or
Government, participating States express the will to
develop and implement measures to promote the rights
and interests of children in armed conflict and post-
conflict situations, including refugees and internally
displaced children, and to look at ways of preventing
forced or compulsory recruitment for use in armed
conflict of persons under 18 years of age.
As a consequence, this year's Human Dimension
Seminar of the OSCE, held in May in Warsaw, was
specifically devoted to the topic of children and armed
conflict in order to identify ways for the organization
to improve its protection framework for children and to
develop concrete policies and actions, in particular for
OSCE field operations. The Seminar was attended by
representatives of 47 participating States of the OSCE,
of international organizations and non-governmental
organizations, as well as of OSCE institutions and field
operations. For the first time in OSCE human
dimension events, the Seminar was conducted in an
interdimensional way, associating politico-military
topics and politico-military experts with its
proceedings, allowing for a useful dialogue between
the human-rights perspective and the politico-military
aspects of the issue of children and armed conflict.
A comprehensive report of the Seminar has been
published by the OSCE Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights. The main
recommendations of the Seminar can be summarized as
follows.
The OSCE and its participating States should
ensure full respect for and implementation of
international standards and instruments for the
protection of children, in particular in conflict
situations.
The OSCE should integrate the protection of the
rights of the child, in particular of children affected by
armed conflict, into its activities and continue and
enhance cooperation and coordination with other
international organizations, national institutions and
non-governmental organizations, both at the political
level at headquarters and at the practical level in the
field. To this end, the Seminar recommended in
particular the following measures: the development of
OSCE policies and actions for the protection of
children affected by armed conflict; the designation of
focal points on children affected by armed conflict,
including in relevant field operations; the monitoring
and reporting on the protection of the rights of the
child in armed conflict situations by OSCE field
operations; the strengthening of OSCE expertise and
capacities in this area, including in its Rapid Expert
Assistance and Cooperation Teams; and the inclusion
of the rights of the child in training programmes for
members of OSCE field operations. OSCE bodies, in
particular the Chairman-in-Office, the Permanent
Council and the Forum for Security Cooperation, as
well as OSCE institutions, should regularly address the
rights of the child, in particular of children affected by
armed conflict; and the Forum for Security
Cooperation should continue its efforts in developing
concrete measures to stem the illegal flow of small
arms and light weapons in the OSCE area and to
include children's issues in the planned OSCE
document on these matters.
Two major initiatives are being pursued to follow
up on these recommendations. First, the Austrian
Chairperson-in-Office has already requested OSCE
field operations, as well as Secretariat units, to pay
more systematic attention to the protection of children
affected by armed conflict and to integrate the issue
into their work. This includes the provision of human
rights officers of field operations with checklists on
children's issues in order to stimulate awareness, action
and reporting, the inclusion of the rights of the child in
mission members induction courses or, for example, in
the curriculum of the OSCE Kosovo Police Service
School.
Secondly, a broad consensus emerged from the
Human Dimensions Seminar that the OSCE should
develop a comprehensive document outlining OSCE
policies and actions for the protection of children, with
special emphasis on those affected by armed conflict.
A first orientation discussion was held recently, and
negotiations will continue with a view to formally
adopting such an OSCE document at the next meeting
of the OSCS Ministerial Council, in November in
Vienna.
The Austrian Chairman-in-Office of the OSCE
will continue to work for the implementation of the
recommendations of the Seminar and undertake further
steps to develop and improve concrete policies and
measures to benefit children in conflict situations as
well as in potential and post-conflict situations. The
next Chairman-in-Office of the OSCE, Romania, has
expressed its intention to continue these efforts.
It is clear that the OSCE and its field operations
do not have the means to effectively address all the
assistance and protection needs of children affected by
armed conflict in the OSCE region. The OSCE
therefore seeks to build and intensify partnerships with
others: international organizations, non-governmental
organizations and local initiatives. We are looking at
the United Nations and its agencies as key partners,
with long-standing experience and unique expertise in
these matters. Let us together make a concerted
effort to effectively address and thus to prevent the
serious impact of armed conflict on children.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Colombia. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Franco (Colombia) (spoke in Spanish): I
should like to express my thanks to you, Madam
President, for the initiative you have taken in
convening this meeting. My thanks also go to the
Secretary-General for the report he submitted to the
Council.
I am taking part in the discussion to offer some
very specific ideas relating to the way in which the
Security Council has handled the item before us today.
This year the Arria formula was used to permit
participation by non-governmental organizations at a
meeting with the members of the Security Council,
during which the item now before us was discussed. I
would like to underscore above all the important role
played by non-governmental organizations in this field.
However, we have some procedural points that we
would like to make.
Nowadays, thanks to intensive discussion in the
Open-ended Working Group on the Reform of the
Security Council, it has become plain that the use and
interpretation of the Arria formula continues to give
rise to disagreements among Member States. Following
yesterday's meeting it is probable that these differences
will become even more accentuated.
As we have been able to understand it, the new
Arria formula applied by the Security Council consists
in a process of confidential and informal consultations
without official records, permitting members of the
Security Council to hear views and obtain and
exchange information with non-governmental
organizations working on issues that the Council, by an
expansive process of absorption, has decided to adopt
as being within its purview. Nevertheless, it is a further
example of the way in which Member States that do
not belong to the Security Council are deprived of the
opportunity to participate in the discussion, negotiation
and further development of items peculiar to the
General Assembly.
The implementation and use of this new Arria
formula pose general questions for the work of the
United Nations. For example, will this be the beginning
of the end of the mechanisms for the acceptance and
consideration of non-governmental organizations, such
as the Committee on Non-Governmental
Organizations? To whom will the non-governmental
organizations participating in future meetings under the
new Arria formula be accountable? Why was it not
disclosed in advance which organizations would be
participating in the new Arria formula meeting?
According to what criteria were they selected? Are
there impediments for these organizations if they wish
to address Member States in an open-ended format?
Were they dealing with confidential issues that
warranted such a closed meeting?
We value the report of the Secretary-General, as
we have already noted, in particular section IV, on
integrating the protection of children in peacekeeping
operations, and section V, on post-conflict issues,
which seem to be the most relevant to the natural
purview of the Security Council's action. In this regard,
the Council might be more appropriate than the
General Assembly when it comes to achieving tangible
results in these fields. Likewise, we recognize the
important work of the office of the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children
and Armed Conflict. At the same time, we note the
outstanding work being done by UNICEF.
I think we could ask ourselves how effective the
Security Council has been in handling this issue. It is
difficult to identify management indicators whereby
this could be established. The fact is that today, while
we are discussing this issue in the abstract, many
concrete events are taking place in areas that fall within
purview of the Council. On the ninth of July, for
example, it was reported that during an attack carried
out by a hundred armed people on a school in a town in
an African country whose situation is a matter before
the Council, one child died, four others were seriously
wounded and 21 were abducted. Is the Security
Council, therefore, called upon to do something more
in a case such as this?
I would like to conclude my statement by inviting
the members of the Organization to continue the
dialogue on children affected by wars. But we should
remember that the time has come to think of them as
peace-builders. Whenever we have discussions such as
we are having today, we tend to think of children as
objects, and this is appropriate when one is regarding
them as innocent victims of armed conflict. However,
as adults, the time has come for us to think of children
as vital actors in the building of peace. Colombia will
be stressing this approach at the Millennium Assembly,
together with other important aspects such as the need
to make the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the
Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in
armed conflict applicable as soon as possible.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Japan. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Akasaka (Japan): Let me begin by
congratulating you, Madam President, on your
leadership in calling this open debate on children and
armed conflict.
Japan is happy to report to you that at the Group
of Eight economic summit, which successfully
concluded on Okinawa earlier this week, conflict
prevention was highlighted as one of the most
important issues. At their meeting at Miyazaki, the G-8
Foreign Ministers compiled the G-8 Miyazaki Initiative
for Conflict Prevention.
The issue of children in armed conflict is a matter
of special consideration for G-8 leaders, and they
agreed to take initiatives such as putting pressure on
those who involve or target children in armed conflict.
They also reaffirmed their commitment to human
security through the creation of an environment where
the dignity, well-being, safety and human rights of all
people are ensured. They also agreed that the United
Nations should continue to play a pivotal role in the
century to come.
Almost a year has passed since the Council
adopted resolution 1261 (1999), and heightened
international attention to this issue has led to several
encouraging developments. In this regard, I would like
to commend Mr. Olara Otunnu, the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children
and Armed Conflict, the United Nations Children's
Fund (UNICEF) and other relevant international
agencies, as well as civil society, for their activities
that have contributed to such positive changes.
Despite these developments, however, hundreds
of thousands of children still live in fear and suffer
from the cruel blows that war inflicts. As was made
clear at the Group of 8 summit, the plight of war-
affected children is one of the most disturbing human
security issues facing the world today. It is therefore
gratifying to note that the report of the Secretary-
General on children and armed conflict (S/2000/712)
contains concrete recommendations that will guide us
in the actions we take from here on out, actions in
which Japan intends to play its part.
First and foremost, I wish to emphasize the
importance of conflict prevention for the protection of
our children. In the open debate held in the Security
Council on 20 July, Japan stressed the importance of a
comprehensive approach to preventing conflicts that
combines political, economic, social and humanitarian
measures, and the importance of fostering a culture of
prevention. For its part, Japan has engaged in a number
of activities to advance a culture of prevention, such as
hosting a series of international conferences on
development in Africa and on the issue of small arms
and light weapons, both of which indeed have an
impact on children.
The two optional protocols to the Convention on
the Rights of Child, which were long-awaited legal
instruments essential to strengthening further the
protection of children, were finally adopted this year.
Japan participated actively in the negotiations on the
consensus texts, and believes that the Optional Protocol
on the involvement of children in armed conflict
certainly gives additional legitimacy to the idea that
children must not become the victims of armed conflict
by being made its targets or its instruments. Now that
the legal framework has been set, it is time for us to
strive to realize on the ground the principles of the
Optional Protocol.
Raising public awareness on the specific
problems that children encounter in the course armed
conflicts is also crucial to creating the international
pressure necessary to halt such suffering. I would like
to take this opportunity to introduce some of Japan's
initiatives to support the recovery of war-affected
children. The scourge of war affects the physical and
emotional status of children especially deeply in post-
conflict situations. As the Secretary-General has rightly
pointed out in his report, the rehabilitation and
education of children who are recruited as child
soldiers, sexually abused, displaced or separated from
their parents needs to be seen as a priority in the peace-
rebuilding process. To this end, the Government of
Japan has been making significant financial
contributions to humanitarian programmes of United
Nations agencies such as UNICEF and the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR), as well as to the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC). For example, in 1998 and 1999,
it contributed a total of $1.8 million to projects that
included support for children in Sierra Leone through
the United Nations trust fund and through UNICEF.
More recently, Japan has approved the release of $16
million, for financing a UNICEF project on the
reactivation of quality primary education in Kosovo,
from the human security fund that Japan established at
the United Nations to deal with threats to human life,
livelihood and dignity. In addition, on 14 July, the
Government of Japan decided to extend to UNICEF a
grant of $1.23 million for the purpose of assisting the
smooth and successful implementation of its project to
reconstruct elementary schools in East Timor.
The impact of armed conflict on children varies
with the circumstances, yet the consequences are
always the same: tremendous fear and pain for those
who are our future. Strong political will, collective
international pressure and concrete action are essential
to end the most horrendous acts against children in
armed conflicts. Japan reaffirms its commitment to
continue working with others on this issue on the basis
of a comprehensive approach, and to create a world in
which children need no longer have any fear of being
children.
Finally, I would like to introduce a further
initiative of Japan to protect children from another
serious kind of damage. Sexual exploitation of
children, such as child prostitution and pornography,
not only causes serious health hazards, including
unwanted pregnancies, HIV/AIDS and sexually
transmitted diseases, but also traps children in often
long-term psychological traumas and deprives them of
their innocence. Because of the grave concern it feels
about this problem, the Government of Japan has
decided to host a second World Congress Against
Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children, in
cooperation with the organization known as End Child
Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of
Children for Sexual Purposes (ECPAT) and with
UNICEF, in Yokohama from 17 to 20 December 2001.
We hope that the meeting will promote the full
implementation of the agenda for action adopted at the
first World Congress, held in 1996, and that it will thus
contribute to eradicating the commercial sexual
exploitation of children.
The President: 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. Gumbi (South Africa): South Africa too
would like to congratulate you, Madam President, on
your sterling stewardship of the Council for the month
of July. Your diplomatic skills and tenacity have had a
positive impact on the work of the Council.
The suffering that children experience in
situations of armed conflict is unspeakable. Children
who are increasingly drawn into combat as child
soldiers are exposed at tender and sensitive ages to the
gruesome and unbearable side-effects of war. Their
fundamental human rights are violated; they are
orphaned, maimed or uprooted from their families. Girl
children in particular are raped and sexually abused.
Ultimately, these children are left emotionally scarred
and traumatized. This in turn compounds and
complicates the task of working with children in post-
conflict situations. It is therefore imperative that the
need for special attention to protect children in United
Nations peacekeeping operations be recognized by this
body and that adequate training be provided on the
special needs and rights of children in armed conflicts.
That is of the utmost importance if we are to protect
our children now and for generations to come.
It was such circumstances that compelled the
Non-Aligned Movement, at its thirteenth ministerial
conference in April 2000, to warmly welcome the
convening of a special session of the General Assembly
in 2001 to review and assess global issues affecting
children, following the 1990 World Summit for
Children. At this conference the ministers of the Non-
Aligned Movement also expressed their deep concern
about the conditions that children face on account of
poverty and under-development, such as their use in
armed conflict, including as child mercenaries.
At the multilateral forums, South Africa strongly
supported the "straight 18" position regarding the age
limit for both voluntary and compulsory recruitment set
by the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the
Rights of the Child. We believe that this Protocol is an
important step in the right direction and goes a long
way in setting legal norms to address the plight of
children in armed conflict situations. It is therefore
important to strengthen international cooperation to
ensure the implementation of the Protocol and the
rehabilitation and social integration of children who are
victims of armed conflict.
Furthermore, South Africa supports the
provisions of the Statute of the International Criminal
Court (ICC) and the International Labour Organization
Convention. These instruments deserve our full support
because they offer internationally recognized recourse
to ensure the protection of children in armed conflict.
At the national level, soon after the transition to
democracy in 1994 the Government of South Africa
took the first steps to address the demobilization,
reintegration and re-socialization of children. Different
institutions, including the National Youth Commission
and the National Programme of Action for Children,
were created. Former South African President, Mr.
Nelson Mandela, established a children's fund bearing
his name, to which he contributes a large portion of his
own financial earnings.
On 16 July 1995 South Africa ratified the
Convention on the Rights of the Child. To ensure the
Convention's implementation, the South African
Government announced on 7 June 1999 its decision to
amend the South African national defence policy to
raise the age of enlistment into the armed forces from
17 to 18 years. In the past, a person of 17 could be
recruited into the South African Defence Force,
although he had to be 18 to be permitted to participate
in armed conflict. This has now been amended to 18
years for recruitment as well as for active combat.
South Africa's policy now conforms with the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) African Charter
on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, which we
signed on 10 October 1997 and ratified in January
2000. The African Charter defines a child as a person
below the age of 18, and stipulates that States parties
should refrain from recruiting any child into the armed
forces and that no child shall take a direct part in
hostilities.
All these measures are South Africa's response to
the appeals for worldwide protection of children from
warfare. Sadly, national initiatives alone cannot solve
the problem; hence the need for enhanced international
cooperation in dealing with the predicament of children
in armed conflict situations. The United Nations
system, especially key agencies such as the Security
Council, in partnership with the United Nations
Children's Fund, is critical in helping Governments to
address and alleviate this problem.
It is for this reason that my delegation welcomes
the comprehensive report of the Secretary-General on
children and armed conflict, as well as the convening
of this debate in the Council Chamber. In the same
vein, South Africa applauded the adoption of resolution
1261 (1999). In adopting this resolution, the Council
took the decision to protect children exposed to war
and recognized that armed conflict has long-term
consequences for peace, security and development.
In conclusion, I would like to remind this body of
the ground-breaking report (A/51/306) of Ms. Graca
Machel to the United Nations General Assembly on the
impact of armed conflict on children. In this
connection, Ms. Machel stated:
"All of us find it hard to believe that at the end of
the twentieth century children are targets,
children are expendable children are refugees,
and even perpetrators in one conflict after
another, on virtually every continent".
As we are entering a new millennium, the
recruitment and use of child soldiers should be
eliminated, since it constitutes not only an affront to
human values, but also a fundamental impediment to
socio-economic development. Our children have a high
stake and a right to live in peace and stability.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is Mrs. Sylvie Junod, head of the delegation of the
International Committee of the Red Cross to the United
Nations. I invite her to take a seat at the Council table
and to make her statement.
Mrs. Junod (International Committee of the Red Cross) (spoke in French): I should like first of all, on
behalf of the International Committee of the Red Cross,
to thank you, Madam President, as well as the other
members of the Council, for allowing me to take the
floor in this discussion of children and armed conflict.
Our grave concern about this issue is part of the larger
question of the protection of civilian populations which
lies at the heart of the Committee's mandate. The plight
of children, of all the victims of war, is undoubtedly
the most tragic. They have been maimed, orphaned and
separated from their kin; they have witnessed or even
perpetrated unspeakable atrocities; and they have been
deprived of education and traumatized for life. Entire
generations and societies have mortgaged their future
to pay for their terrible past.
We can no longer ignore the fact that one day a
representative or one of our humanitarian colleagues,
may lose his or her life because a child soldier,
brainwashed or drugged, has targeted him or her. But
who could have imagined even a few years ago that the
Security Council would be considering such problems?
Today's discussion, which follows up on the historic
resolution 1261 (1999), is a hopeful sign, because it
attests to the universal awareness of the urgent need for
concerted action on the part of the international
community to try to alleviate the consequences of war
for children. In this regard, I should like to pay tribute
to the vigorous, enthusiastic and tireless advocacy
efforts of the Special Representative of the Secretary-
General, Mr. Olara Otunnu.
Whether in its role as guardian of international
humanitarian law and legal expert, or in its operational
activities, the International Committee of the Red
Cross has for a long time paid great attention to
children during and after armed conflicts. I should like
to give the Council a brief account of the efforts that
we have been making in this area at the legal and
operational levels, and in the context of the programme
of action of the International Red Cross and Red
Crescent Movement.
At the legal level, the ICRC, as an expert in
humanitarian law, has contributed to all the work
undertaken by the conferences that have led to
significant developments in international law with
regard to the protection of children, from the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional
Protocol on the recruitment of children through the
Ottawa Treaty to the Statute of the International
Criminal Court.
I shall confine myself to a few comments on the
recently adopted Optional Protocol. The formal
embodiment of the prohibition on recruiting children
under the age of 18 or their participation in hostilities
was the most important objective. Moreover, the
Protocol would have had no great meaning if it had not
taken into account non-State actors. The ICRC
welcomes the fact that this long-term undertaking has
ultimately been successful, and we encourage States to
ratify it as soon as possible.
However, the instrument is not without defects. It
does not prohibit indirect participation, and it
authorizes voluntary recruitment of children under 18
without defining "voluntary", leaving a loophole for
abuse. Furthermore, non-State entities are bound only
by a moral obligation. In this regard, it should be noted
that the Additional Protocol II to the Geneva
Conventions applicable to non-international armed
conflicts, ratified by 149 States, goes much further in
this regard. It prohibits recruitment and participation in
hostilities of children under 14, and gives the same
legal obligations to parties to the conflict, whether
Government authorities or armed opposition. It is also
important to bear in mind that recruitment and
participation in hostilities of children under 15 are
classified as a war crime in the Statute of the
International Criminal Court.
While legal protection of children has been
greatly developed, much remains to be done with
regard to ratification and implementation. The advisory
services of the ICRC are available to States to assist
them in developing national legislation to implement
humanitarian law.
At the operational level, the specific needs of
children, particularly in nutrition and health, are taken
into account in assistance programmes directed at
civilian populations that have suffered from armed
conflict, whether they have remained in their homes or
have been displaced.
In the context of protection activities for
prisoners, the ICRC takes action to ensure that children
are detained in places where they are separated from
adults and it calls for their release whenever possible.
The ICRC's action in favour of unaccompanied
children and the search for their relatives, the exchange
of messages and the reuniting of families are the area
in which the institution's experience is richest.
Agencies such as the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) and non-governmental organizations are
also active in this field. In the report (A/54/2000) of
the Secretary-General to the Millennium Assembly
there is a proposal, at the request of the International
Rescue Committee, to establish a world network using
a database to search for disappeared children - Child
Connect. ICRC, whose working methods have evolved
with the use of computerised techniques, is now
studying the best way to cooperate in this initiative
while retaining its approach and criteria for dealing
with the constraints of situations of armed conflict.
With regard to rehabilitation and reintegration,
the various entities of the International Red Cross and
Red Crescent Movement - the ICRC, the Federation
and the national societies - began preparing in 1995 a
programme of action for children who are victims of
armed conflict. In addition to the principle of non-
recruitment before the age of 18, the purpose is to take
specific measures to protect and assist children,
including in the rehabilitation and reintegration phase.
Programmes, particularly those concerning
psychological and social rehabilitation, are now being
prepared by national societies, with the support of the
ICRC or the Federation. The States parties to the
Geneva Conventions that participate in the Movement's
conferences reaffirmed their full support for the
programme of action at the 27th international
conference last November.
I wish in conclusion to express the fervent hope
of the ICRC that significant progress will be made at
the special session of the General Assembly devoted to
the follow-up to the World Summit for Children, to
take place next year, and which your country, Madam
President, will have the honour of presiding over. The
follow-up to the major conferences obliges States to
present reports on their initiatives. We hope that the
universal awareness of the magnitude and acuteness of
the problem of the protection of children in armed
conflict will give some an uneasy conscience and
prompt them to take action.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Mozambique. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Santos (Mozambique): I join previous
speakers in congratulating you, Madam President, on
your assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council and the brilliant manner in which you have
conducted the Council's affairs during the current
month. It is fitting that you should preside over this
meeting, complementing and reinforcing the excellent
work that you are doing as Chairperson of the
Preparatory Committee for the special session on
children.
I also pay tribute to your predecessor,
Ambassador Jean-David Levitte of France, for the
exemplary manner in which he guided the Council's
work last month.
I wish to take this opportunity to express once
again our profound appreciation to the Secretary-
General, his Special Representative and the Executive
Director of the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) for their relentless efforts and dedication in
bringing the issue of children in armed conflict to the
centre of the Security Council's agenda as a concern of
the entire world.
The adoption of Security Council Resolution
1261 (1999) lent the necessary focus to the question of
children in armed conflict, as an issue with grave
implications for international peace and security,
deserving the unflinching commitment and dedication
of Member States, regional organizations and the
international community as a whole.
I commend the Secretary-General's report, which
is before us as requested by resolution 1261 (1999).
The report presents a lucid and comprehensive
assessment of the present reality and prevailing trends
with regard to children and armed conflict, and makes
concrete recommendations to address the plight of
children, both as victims and as instruments of
violence.
The world continues to be devastated by many
armed conflicts, which claim victims among children,
women and the elderly. The figures in the report depict
clearly the disproportionate effects of armed conflict
on children. It is in recognition of this sad reality that
once again the Security Council, the General Assembly
and indeed the international community as a whole
must extend their support to the cause of children in
armed conflict. We all must join efforts, dedication and
imagination in the search for ways and means to put an
end to the plight of children and prevent the recurrence
of similar situations.
Today's children are tomorrow's women and men.
We cannot have a world of peace and prosperity if we
do not spare our children today from the horrors of
war, which will haunt them for the rest of their lives.
We believe that this third open debate of the
Security Council and the two previous debates, as well
as the work of the Secretary-General and his Special
Representative and that of UNICEF, in coordination
with other United Nations organs and relevant
international organizations, are the right steps towards
finding solutions to this global concern.
Mozambique has always expressed its
commitment to the promotion and protection of the
rights of the child. Today we reaffirm that commitment
and pledge to continue our efforts to put an end to the
suffering of millions of children in the world, mostly in
Africa. It was within this context that we hosted last
year a regional meeting on children in armed conflict,
which produced important recommendations.
My own country lived the horrors of a prolonged
war in which children were not spared. Today peace
prevails in Mozambique, but great challenges still lie
ahead as a consequence of the conflict. The
sustainability of peace and of the reconciliation process
required, and still requires, the integrated effort of all
actors of Mozambican society, with the support of the
international community. My Government strongly
believes that success in that task lies largely in the
promotion, protection and education of tomorrow's
women and men - the children.
Considerable progress has been achieved in the
rehabilitation and integration into society of exploited
and traumatized children. However, the existence of
about 2 million landmines planted during the war
continues to be a major impediment to the smooth
resettlement of the population and the development of
productive activities. Children remain in greater
danger, because they are unaware of the threat posed
by anti-personnel landmines. Therefore, awareness
campaigns are as important for children as demining
itself. The plight of the Mozambican children has been
further exacerbated by the recent unprecedented floods
in the southern and central areas of the country.
We are happy to note that the process initiated by
Mrs. Graca Machel, with her landmark report
(A/51/306), is increasingly gaining momentum under
the able guidance of Mr. Olara Otunnu, the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children
and Armed Conflict.
After almost a decade of existence, the
Convention on the Rights of the Child is today a
universal legal instrument, offering a solid foundation
for the protection of children both in peacetime and
during armed conflicts. We welcome the adoption of
the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights
of the Child in January this year. This represents an
important step forward in supplementing the legal
foundation for child protection. It is now high time we
all moved to an era of effective implementation of
these and other relevant international legal instruments,
as recommended in the Secretary-General's report. Our
success in the application of all relevant instruments
will indeed make a difference in reducing the gap
between law and practice, shaping the behaviour of
parties to conflicts.
Last week the Security Council held an open
meeting on the prevention of armed conflict. During
that meeting it was emphasized that a continuing
commitment to addressing the prevention of armed
conflict in all regions of the world far outweighed the
human and material costs of addressing a full-fledged
conflict. In this regard, we reiterate our firm belief that
a comprehensive conflict prevention strategy is
ultimately the best course of action to protect children
from war.
Peace is not the mere absence of war. It
encompasses far more than that, requiring the
demonstration of a spirit of tolerance, reconciliation
and constant dialogue as a means of solving problems
or differences, as well as a total rejection of violence.
We believe that promoting a culture of peace today will
be a valuable heritage we can bestow on future
generations. We therefore reaffirm our commitment to
the effective implementation of the Declaration and
Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace, adopted
by the General Assembly on 13 September 1999.
The illicit trade in small arms and light weapons
and the illicit exploitation of, and trade in, natural
resources are among the major causes contributing to
the escalation of conflicts. The cases of UNITA, in
Angola, and of Sierra Leone are vivid examples of such
situations. In this regard, we commend the Security
Council's initiatives, and those taken by several
regional and subregional organizations, to curb the
illicit trade in both small arms and diamonds as
preventive measures.
It is also of vital importance to undertake
effective post-conflict peace-building strategies to
prevent the recurrence of conflicts. In this regard,
appropriate programmes should be developed -
including programmes for the disarmament,
demobilization, reintegration and rehabilitation of
combatants - with increased focus on the situation of
child soldiers and other children affected by armed
conflict. Special attention should also be given to
demining as a measure to facilitate the return to
normalcy and development and, above all, to spare the
innocent lives of children in many parts of the world.
It is crucial to address the root causes of conflict
worldwide. This daunting task demands from all of
us- Governments, the United Nations system,
international, regional and subregional organizations,
non-governmental organizations and civil society in
general - continued commitment and concerted
action.
The report of the Secretary-General contains
specific recommendations, some of which are already
in practice. In this regard, we commend the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for his
initiative, among others, of introducing a child
protection component into United Nations
peacekeeping operations. We are happy to note that the
United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL)
and the United Nations Organization Mission in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC) have
explicitly incorporated that component within their
mandates.
We strongly support the specific
recommendations in the report of the Secretary-
General, and urge all other Member States to support
them. We believe it is now time for all of us to lend our
support and commitment to the effective
implementation of these recommendation and other
initiatives aimed at protecting children in armed
conflict. We in Mozambique reaffirm our commitment
to the cause of children by abiding by all relevant legal
instruments promoting and protecting the rights of the
child. We remain firmly committed to work harder in
our region and subregion with other members of the
Organization of African Unity and the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) in
translating our commitments into practice.
We must act now, and in a decisive manner, to
fulfil our collective responsibilities towards children
and, through them, towards all generations. We cannot
afford to fail in this task, for our failure would be
imposed on present and future generations. Political
will is now required from all of us to face this great
challenge for a better millennium where children come
first in the world's agenda.
The President: I thank the representative of
Mozambique for his kind words addressed to me.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of New Zealand. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Powles (New Zealand): Ijoin other speakers
in thanking you personally, Madam President, for
calling this special debate - following a similar debate
last year - on the issue of children in armed conflict.
My delegation also commends the Secretary-
General for his comprehensive report. Wide-ranging
and innovative measures are recommended to address
the problem of children and armed conflict, which we
hope will receive the Council's fullest consideration.
We welcome the Secretary-General's emphasis on the
importance of preventing armed conflict as the
principal means of protecting children from its effects.
When we met to discuss this issue last August it
was clear that to enhance the United Nations central
role in the protection of the world's children Member
States needed to pursue progress in improving the
international legal standards for the protection of
children in the context of armed conflict.
The opening for signature on 25 May of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child Optional
Protocol on the involvement of children in armed
conflict is thus a very welcome development. The
success of the negotiations was due in no small part to
the perseverance and skill of the Chair of the Working
Group, Ambassador Catherine von Heidenstam of
Sweden, and we acknowledge her substantial
contribution.
We believe that the Optional Protocol, once it
enters into force, will be a significant addition to the
protection of children's human rights. We hope that the
age limit of 18 years for participation in armed conflict
will become the new international standard. For the
Optional Protocol to be effective, it will need to be
widely ratified. We urge States to accord priority to the
child soldiers issue and to work towards signature and
ratification of the Optional Protocol.
Another significant step has been the conclusion
of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court. New Zealand is currently progressing domestic
legislation that will enable it to ratify the Statute in the
near future. This will include the extension of
"universal jurisdiction" over war crimes, as defined in
article 8 of the Statute. Once established, the Court will
help end impunity for a range of war crimes, including
the use of young children in armed conflict and attacks
on civilian targets, such as schools, where children may
be harmed.
The development of new legal standards must be
supported by effective efforts in the field to ensure
their implementation. In this respect, I would like to
pay tribute once again to the work of the Secretary-
General's Special Representative, Olara Otunnu, and to
the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and its
Executive Director, Ms. Carol Bellamy. We particularly
appreciated their contributions this morning. The
United Nations, its agencies and its institutions can and
do contribute significantly to protecting children from
the effects of armed conflict and to addressing the
needs of children in the aftermath of war.
One measure already instituted by the Council
and which has our full support is the appointment of
Child Protection Advisers in United Nations
peacekeeping missions in Sierra Leone and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. This initiative is a
concrete example of the creative and practical means
which can be employed by this Organization to address
the impact of armed conflict on children.
The Secretary-General's recent report highlights
the need for comprehensive measures to address the
impact of armed conflict on children in all its aspects.
In this respect, we support him in urging the Council to
seek to minimize the unintended consequences of
sanctions on civilian populations, including children,
through effective targeting and humanitarian
exemptions. We also support the Secretary-General's
emphasis on the particular vulnerability of the girl
child, on the necessity of addressing children's needs
during peace processes, on the need to end impunity
for human rights violators, and on the important role
non-governmental organizations can play in monitoring
and minimizing the impact of armed conflict on
children.
I think we would all agree that much work needs
to be done to promote awareness of the impact of
armed conflict on children and to encourage States to
address it. Governments, non-governmental
organizations and the private sector all have important
roles to play in this process. New Zealand was pleased
to be able to provide modest financial support for the
Asia Pacific conference on the use of children as
soldiers in Nepal in May, organized by the Coalition to
Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, a non-governmental
organization. We also welcome the initiative of the
Canadian Government in planning the Winnipeg
international conference on war-affected children in
September.
We hope that initiatives such as these, coupled
with broad ratification and concerted implementation
of legal standards for the protection of children such as
the Optional Protocol on children in armed conflict and
the Statute of the International Criminal Court, will
lead to the elimination of the use of children as
soldiers. In addition, the Security Council has a key
role to play in addressing more broadly the impact of
armed conflict on children. We welcome its continued
commitment to do so.
The President: The next speaker on my list is the
representative of Barbados. I invite her to take a seat at
the Council table and to make her statement.
Miss Clarke (Barbados): My delegation
welcomes the opportunity to contribute to the debate
on children and armed conflict within the context of
efforts to promote a new international humanitarian
order. We are particularly gratified at this opportunity
to speak in this forum, and we look forward to more
debates on other issues of mutual concern within the
framework of the Security Council.
It is an honour for my delegation to address the
Security Council under the chairmanship of Jamaica, a
sister country of the Caribbean Community. This is not
the first time that Jamaica has carried the baton so
capably for the Caribbean and Latin American region,
and indeed the countries of the South, and it will
certainly not be the last.
Barbados has managed successfully to escape the
ravages of war and civil strife that have afflicted and
continue to destroy the societies of many of the States
Members of the United Nations. Barbadian children
have had the advantage of growing up in an
environment of peace, political stability and relative
prosperity. Our children have not had to endure the
horror of being forced into warfare, the physical
atrocities inflicted by landmines or the social and
psychological disaffection routinely experienced by
children in war-torn countries.
The question of children and armed conflict
extends beyond guaranteeing the physical safety and
human rights of the future citizens of the world. It
speaks to the irreparable damage to the psyche of these
children, to the point that they may also, in later life,
repeat the atrocities to which they have been subjected.
My delegation is determined that children around the
world, like the children of Barbados, should enjoy the
simplicity of childhood without the terror so many
have sadly come to know. For this very reason, the
Government of Barbados supported the establishment
of the International Criminal Court as a mechanism
through which children can be protected from armed
conflict.
As a small island developing State with few
natural resources other than its human resources,
Barbados is dependent on its reputation for political
stability, prudent economic management and social
integrity, and gives priority to questions of human
rights and social justice. We are cognizant of the
special vulnerability of children in times of conflict
and of the need for special measures taking their
peculiar concerns into consideration.
It is the firm belief of the Government of
Barbados that the United Nations should fulfil its role
to prevent conflicts and not only to seek to mitigate
them after they emerge. It is of grave concern to us that
increasingly resources must be diverted from
economic, social and infrastructural development to
deal with conflicts and other crises of a humanitarian
nature.
Out of respect for these very principles, the
Government of Barbados signed the Convention on the
Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and
Transfer of Anti-personnel Mines and on Their
Destruction in December 1997. Although the
Caribbean area is free from landmines, it is no comfort
to us that landmines kill or mutilate approximately
10,000 children yearly. Barbados, as a signatory to and
major actor in the elaboration of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, feels compelled to assist in halting
these tragic circumstances and the suffering and loss
they engender. My delegation notes with some sadness
the findings of the report of the April 2000 World
Education Forum that the number and extent of
conflicts in the last decade have constituted major
obstacles to the goal of providing education for all by
the year 2000.
Barbados wishes to place on record its
satisfaction at the fact that the General Assembly was
finally able to adopt, on 25 May of this year, the
Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of
the Child on the involvement of children in armed
conflict.
Similarly, we strenuously support the call made
by the Secretary-General in his report for the
international community to speak with one voice in
insisting that 18 be the minimum age for participation
in conflict whether in armed forces or armed groups.
As a contributing country to United Nations
peacekeeping missions, Barbados pledges its support
for the measures established by the United Nations to
enforce standards which will instil respect of and
adherence to international humanitarian law, in
particular the decision to investigate thoroughly and
prosecute any violations by its personnel, in violation
of international humanitarian and human rights law
while in the service of the United Nations. My
delegation also wishes to associate itself with the
proposals made by the Secretary-General for
integrating the protection of children into United
Nations peacekeeping operations.
Barbados wishes to recognize the efforts of the
Secretary-General's Special Representative for
Children and Armed Conflict, Mr. Olara Otunnu.
Thanks to his efforts, the Ministerial Negotiating
Conference of the African, Caribbean and Pacific
Countries (ACP) incorporated his proposals for
protection of children into the European Union-ACP
Partnership Agreement, which was recently signed in
Benin. Barbados also wishes to express its commitment
to the resolution adopted by the General Assembly of
the Organization of American States last month on
children and armed conflict. That resolution calls on all
parties to armed conflict to respect international
humanitarian law relevant to children and urges
member States to support efforts to demobilize,
reintegrate and rehabilitate children affected by armed
conflict.
My delegation takes this opportunity to reiterate
our support for the efforts of the United Nations
Children's Fund, the Offices of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights and the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, and civil
society - including such organizations as the
International Committee of the Red Cross - to
promote conflict prevention, to alleviate the suffering
of societies at war and to promote the reintegration and
rehabilitation of children involved in armed conflict.
As members are no doubt aware, the question of
protection for and attention to children who are the
victims of armed conflict will receive special attention
when the Government of Jamaica hosts the Ministerial
Meeting for the Americas later this year, in advance of
the special session of the General Assembly on the
achievement of the goals of the World Summit for
Children, to be held in September 2001.
Barbados will continue to play its part by
participating fully in all efforts of the United Nations to
promote respect for and adherence to international
humanitarian law and human rights, and the
recognition of the need to protect children and to
respect their rights and freedoms.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Iraq. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Hasan (Iraq) (spoke in Arabic): At the
outset, I wish to extend to you, Madam, and to the
friendly delegation of Jamaica our thanks and
appreciation for convening this meeting to discuss the
important subject before us.
I also thank the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, Mr. Olara Otunnu; Ms. Carol
Bellamy, Executive Director of the United Nations
Children's Fund; and the International Committee of
the Red Cross for the important work they have been
doing to protect children.
I express my special appreciation for the vigorous
campaign being waged by Mr. Otunnu to end regional
sanctions imposed on Burundi, given their unjust
repercussions on children and families. We hope that
Mr. Otunnu will undertake a similar initiative on behalf
of the children of Iraq.
Before I address the substance of the issue, I wish
to emphasize that the Security Council's discussion of
this issue should in no way prejudice the competence
and terms of reference of the General Assembly and
other United Nations organs. Given the fact that the
protection of children involves a wide range of issues,
the General Assembly and the Economic and Social
Council are the appropriate forums for conducting
more comprehensive and in-depth discussions of these
matters.
The report of the Secretary-General and the views
expressed by Member States at this meeting will
undoubtedly help to identify an approach towards a
more forward-looking, integrated strategy to end the
suffering of children in armed conflict. While there is
an urgent immediate need for modalities to alleviate
the suffering of children in conflict areas and to
reinforce commitments to international conventions in
the area of child protection, it is equally pressing to
consider a comprehensive approach to protecting
children over the long term.
Perhaps the optimal way to protect children in
armed conflict lies in preventing armed conflicts in the
first place, containing them and addressing their root
causes, foremost among which is the unstable and
unbalanced international political and economic
climate, which is characterized by hegemony and by a
deepening divide between the States of the North and
those of the South. The North has come to monopolize
wealth, power, influence and technological dominance,
leaving the States of the South with poverty, illiteracy,
starvation, unemployment and disease. All this
provides fertile ground for the growth of bigotry,
violence and conflict. Thus, the United Nations has an
important role to play in correcting these imbalances in
the current international environment.
The indiscriminate and excessive application of
sanctions by the Security Council ever since the United
States achieved dominance over it in 1990 has had
catastrophic consequences in several third world
targeted countries. Children have been the primary
victims of these sanctions. In his report on children in
armed conflict before the Council, the Secretary-
General has devoted a special section to the issue of
protecting children from the impact of sanctions. He
expressed his deep concern over the adverse impact of
sanctions on children and emphasized that
"The potential long-term benefits of sanctions
should be weighed against the immediate and
long-term costs to children, including the collapse
of health and education infrastructures, reduced
economic opportunities, increased child labour in
informal sectors and increased infant morbidity
and mortality. The suffering of Iraqi children, as
reported by UNICEF, and of children in the
Balkans are troubling cases in point."
(S/2000/712, para. 25)
The Secretary-General suggests the dispatch of
evaluation missions to the targeted States and
neighbouring countries prior to the imposition of
sanctions with a view to assessing the potential
negative impacts of sanctions. My delegation supports
this recommendation and hopes that it would
constitute, along with other recommendations
submitted by several States, a basis for restricting the
use of Article 41 of the Charter of the United Nations,
to keep it exclusively within the purposes of the
Charter and to prevent the use of sanctions as a means
of mass killing, as in the case of sanctions imposed on
Iraq, sanctions which targeted the civilian population,
chiefly children.
The claim by some that the suffering of hundreds
of thousands of Iraqi children is an unintended result
arising indirectly from the sanctions is made in total
ignorance of the facts on the ground and total disregard
of moral values. The comprehensive sanctions imposed
on Iraq were designed to kill as many Iraqi children as
possible. Since they were imposed, those sanctions
have not achieved any other objective except that. Let
me cite the following data.
First, the comprehensive sanctions imposed on
Iraq by resolution 661 (1990) of 6 August 1990 did not
exclude in reality even foodstuffs and medicines. Later,
children's textbooks, clothing, toys and even their
coffins were excluded. Until today, the United
Kingdom and the United States put on hold contracts
for the acquisition of ambulances and medicines that
would save the lives of children under the pretext of
dual-use materials.
Secondly, five months after the imposition of
comprehensive sanctions, Iraq, under the cover of
Security Council resolutions, was the target of the most
horrendous military aggression known in contemporary
history. A total of 88,000 tons of ordnance were
dropped on Iraqi cities and villages, equivalent to
seven or eight nuclear bombs similar to those dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Those bombs and missiles
destroyed, among other things, schools, playgrounds
and hospitals for children. They also destroyed an
infant-formula factory which the Americans claimed
was a biological weapons factory.
Here, let me recall what was stated by the former
United Nations Under-Secretary-General, Mr. Marti
Ahtisaari, who visited Iraq in the wake of the
aggression as head of the United Nations humanitarian
needs assessment mission. In his report, in document
S/22360, he stated that nothing that they had seen or
read had quite prepared them for the particular form of
devastation that had now befallen the country. The
recent conflict had wrought near-apocalyptic results, he
said, upon the economic infrastructure of what had
been, until January 1991, a rather highly organized and
mechanized society. Now, Mr. Ahtisaari wrote, most
means of modern life support had been destroyed or
rendered tenuous, and Iraq had for some time to come
been relegated to a pre-industrial age, but with all the
disabilities of post-industrial dependency on an
intensive use of energy and technology.
Thirdly, the United States and the United
Kingdom exploited the Security Council resolutions as
an opportunity to test a new radioactive weapon made
of depleted uranium missiles. They dropped on Iraq a
total of 300 tons of this weapon of mass destruction.
The use of this weapon resulted in the death of 50,000
Iraqi children in the first year. Furthermore, the use of
this radioactive weapon would have a long-lasting
effect on future generations in Iraq, including a higher
incidence of cancer, especially leukemia among
children, and fetus deformation and forced abortions.
This means that the primary victims are the children of
Iraq. Also, the use of depleted uranium has contributed
to environmental pollution in terms of air quality, soil,
water and plants. The rate of pollution has increased
ten-fold over normal levels.Estimates of expenses to
clean the Iraqi environment are now at some 375
billion dollars.
Fourthly, following the systematic military
destruction of Iraq, comprehensive sanctions still
remain. The cumulative impact of the sanctions has
been on the civilian population, especially children.
The field study conducted by UNICEF and issued in
August 1999 emphasized that the sanctions on Iraq
have resulted in the death of half a million Iraqi
children under the age of five. According to the
UNICEF field study, the infant mortality rates have
increased from 56 per 1,000 live births during the
period 1984-1989 to 131 per 1,000 in the period 1994-
1999. This is in addition to the death of one million
Iraqis of other age groups, especially women and
elderly.
Of the children who survive, some 25 per cent
suffer from chronic malnutrition. School enrolment has
declined. Mrs. Rossing, the UNICEF Regional Director
in Iraq, announced on 21 July 2000 that nutrition in
Iraq was not a problem in the 1980s, but this problem
appeared in the 19905 only.
She added that the sanctions had extensively hurt
children, many of whom were forced to leave school
and go on the road to earn their living, which would
have a negative impact on the country's future human
resources. Those facts and figures are further proof that
the economic sanctions that the Security Council
imposed against Iraq constitute an act of systematic
genocide.
Fifthly, since 1991, the United States and the
United Kingdom have been unilaterally enforcing
no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq, engaging in
a flagrant abuse of force against an independent State
before the very eyes of the United Nations and of the
entire international community. Indeed, to deflect
attention from their own internal crises, they stage
empty military heroics and commit military aggression
against Iraq, most recently the large-scale aggression
against Iraq that took place between 16 and 20
December 1998. The chief victims of the no-fly zones,
the aggression and the relentless daily bombing are the
children of Iraq, as has been demonstrated in reports by
United Nations representatives who visited residential
neighbourhoods in Iraq that had been the targets of
bombing. Besides the actual bombing, the noise of
supersonic military aircraft flying over Iraqi cities and
villages causes panic and other psychological problems
in children.
At the dawn of the new millennium, the time has
truly come for the international community to wake up
and reject the mind-set of imposing inhuman
comprehensive sanctions, which is a legacy of the Dark
Ages. That mind-set was manifested in the well-known
words of United States President Woodrow Wilson:
"A nation boycotted is a nation that is in sight of
surrender. Apply this economic, peaceful, silent,
deadly remedy and there will be no need for
force. It is a terrible remedy."
The same mind-set was also to be expressed in
the words of Mrs. Madeleine Albright, Secretary of
State of the United States, who famously said in 1996
that the death of half a million Iraqi children was a
price that was "worth it" in continuing the sanctions
against Iraq.
Drawing a distinction between combatants and
civilians is a key principle of international
humanitarian law. The comprehensive sanctions
imposed against Iraq target civilians. The United States
and the United Kingdom bear full responsibility for the
genocide that is being committed in gross violation of
international humanitarian law. There can be no further
doubt that this principle of international humanitarian
law has been materially and morally violated. The
principle of permitting no impunity for those who
disregard international humanitarian law must be
applied. Those who target children must be brought to
justice.
The Security Council, in whose name the
sanctions were imposed, unquestionably lost its
credibility when it agreed to lend bogus legitimacy to a
scheme in which Iraqi civilians would be considered
enemy targets. Because of the United States insistence
on maintaining the sanctions against Iraq to attain its
own vicious political objectives, and because of its
constant threat to use its veto power, the Council has
been rendered unable to rectify the situation and to lift
the sanctions against Iraq. We would therefore expect
such an initiative to come from the States of the world,
which have authorized the Security Council to act on
their behalf. Those States should reconsider that
authorization, because we now have evidence that it
has been misused to kill the children of Iraq.
The Council must be reminded that Article 25 of
the Charter stipulates that the Members of the United
Nations agree to accept and carry out the decisions of
the Security Council in accordance with the Charter.
Since the imposition of comprehensive sanctions
against Iraq was in contravention of the provisions of
the Charter - starting with its Preamble, which
stresses Members' faith in fundamental human rights
and in the dignity and worth of the human person - it
is the legal and moral duty of States Members of the
United Nations to renounce participation in the
implementation of resolutions that are inconsistent with
the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations and
that are being used to carry out a policy of genocide
against the children of Iraq.
The children of Iraq, like all other Iraqi civilians,
bear deep wounds on their hearts and their minds.
Seven thousand Iraqi children perish each month as a
result of the sanctions regime that has been imposed in
the name of the Security Council. Will the Council
remain silent?
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of the United Republic of Tanzania. I
invite him to take a seat at the Council table and to make
his statement.
Mr. Mwakawago (United Republic of Tanzania):
Permit me at the outset to express my delegation's
delight at seeing Jamaica presiding over yet another
open debate of the Security Council on a sensitive
matter critical to the well-being of children and to
peace and security. The fact that you, Madam
President, are also chairing the preparatory committee
for the 10-year review of the World Summit for
Children makes this occasion a particularly propitious
one. My delegation is convinced that the outcome of
these deliberations will impact positively on the
outcome of the 10-year review of the Children's
Summit.
This is the third consecutive year that the
Security Council has held an open meeting on children
and armed conflict. We are gratified to note that the
Security Council has kept the children's agenda alive
year after year. At last year's open meeting on this
agenda item the Council adopted resolution 1261
(1999), which gave the Security Council the mandate
to continue to deliberate on the matter as part of its
agenda, given the relevance of this issue to
international peace and security. As we meet today, the
Council should be able to take stock of the
commitments made in that resolution and explore what
further initiatives should be taken that will enhance the
security and well-being of child victims of armed
conflict worldwide.
In an ideal world, wars would have been wished
away and the security of all assured. Unfortunately,
however, we have to contend with reality, and as we
speak in this Council wars are being fought in many
parts of the world, and children are not spared. It is
incumbent upon the Council, as the primary organ
responsible for international peace and security, to
devise, advocate and recommend ways through which
the security of children in times of armed conflict will
become a matter of course, and to ensure their well-
being even after the hostilities have ended. The report
(S/2000/712) of the Secretary-General addresses the
plethora of initiatives that are required to deal
comprehensively with children in situations of armed
conflict. We commend the report and support many of
the recommendations in it.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child is by
far the most comprehensive instrument on children's
rights to date. The Convention has been ratified by
almost all Members of the United Nations. It should
therefore be the guiding beacon to all Governments in
adhering to the rights of the child and should pave the
way for the ratification of the Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and all other
relevant protocols. We consider logical the suggestion
that the Council should impose stiff penalties on those
who perpetuate the gap between law and practice by
flouting internationally agreed instruments. Having
ratified the Convention in 1991, my Government is in
the process of putting in place the necessary machinery
for the ratification of the Optional Protocol to the
Convention and the Rome Statute. But ratification on
its own will not be sufficient. Ratification needs to be
complemented by concrete action, the most important
element of which is respect for children's rights. In this
connection, my Government has gone so far as to
translate the Convention into Swahili - our national
language - so as to make the Convention known to all
Tanzanians.
The Secretary-General's proposal that
corporations develop voluntary codes of conduct
concerning trade with countries or parties responsible
for gross violations of children's rights is both timely
and necessary. My delegation would go further and
suggest that there be zero tolerance for countries found
to be responsible for such violations. We hope that the
Secretary-General's proposal will be concretized and
accountability measures instituted to deter all those
who deliberately harm or target children during armed
conflict. We look forward to the conclusion of the
Council's work in this respect.
Children who have been traumatized by war are
psychologically and, at times, physically, scarred for
life. The numbers quoted in the report of the Secretary-
General compel us to sit up and examine the way we
have been conducting warfare in recent times. Behind
the disturbing statistics there are real people - people
who represent our future. There is a compelling case
for dealing with the situation of girls who have been
victimized by war. It is quite evident from the
Secretary-General's report that in times of war girls are
invariably the most vulnerable group, as they suffer
multiple abuses, such as sexual abuse, including
systematic rape, sexual slavery and, in some cases, the
trauma of trafficking.
Refugee children are the hardest hit because,
apart from being forcibly uprooted from familiar
surroundings, they lose a substantial part of their
childhood, together with their rights. The phenomenon
of HIV/AIDS has added another disturbing dimension
to the situation: girls find themselves infected with the
virus through rape. It goes without saying that the scars
left by such experiences are deep and long-term.
Special arrangements need to be put in place to take
care of such victims if we expect them to become
useful citizens who can contribute meaningfully to
society when they are adults. We are encouraged by the
synergy that we see building up in terms of
partnerships between Governments, the international
community, non-governmental organizations and civil
society. These partnerships need to be commended and
encouraged.
I would be remiss if I did not pay tribute to the
Special Representative of the Secretary-General for his
work in the field. It is largely through his reports that
we are now addressing in the Council the issue of
children in armed conflict. We are gratified to note
that, mostly because of the Special Representative's
recommendation, girls in Rwanda can now inherit
farms and other property. This is a significant step,
taking into consideration the fact that it is girls who are
mostly left to take care of their siblings when both
parents have been killed in war, or have had to leave
their homes. The Government of Rwanda should be
commended for taking timely action in response to the
recommendations of the Special Representative. We
urge other countries in similar situations to follow suit.
In the same vein, we commend the Government
of Sierra Leone for establishing the National
Commission for War-affected Children to ensure that
the needs of children and young people are taken fully
into account in priority setting, resource allocation,
programme planning and national policy-making. This
arrangement promises to address, in a coherent and
comprehensive manner, the concerns of children
affected by armed conflict.
In our statement last year, we pointed out that
poverty, among other problems, lies at the root of most
armed conflicts. That truism has not changed in this
new century. Addressing the root causes of poverty is
one of the most conclusive ways of ending the majority
of armed conflicts. It is obvious that the issue of
children and armed conflict is a cross-cutting one, and
therefore any discussion of ending armed conflict
cannot ignore the poverty dimension. It is the hope of
my delegation that these issues will continue to receive
the attention of the Council in a coherent and
coordinated manner with a view to our finding a lasting
solution to them.
I thank you, Madam President, for giving us this
opportunity to address the Council.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of India. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Sharma (India): May I begin, Madam
President, by congratulating you on your presidency of
the Council, and by complimenting the Council on the
generosity with which it suffers little children to come
unto it from time to time, as it does non-members.
The tragic plight of children, whose "souls dwell
in the house of tomorrow", caught up in the conflicts
and savageries visited on them by their elders today,
and their lives blighted and destroyed, wrings our
hearts with anguish. There is a special pain in the
betrayal of innocence. It gives a new and poignant
meaning to the old aphorism of Francis Bacon,
"Children sweeten labour, but they make
misfortunes more bitter",
or indeed to the older Biblical prophecy:
"Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply
thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou
shalt bring forth children". (The Holy Bible, Genesis 3:16)
Olara Otunnu, the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict,
has won our admiration and appreciation for the total
and tireless dedication with which he has embraced and
pursued his mandate. The results of his efforts are in
the Secretary-General's report before us. However, the
report raises some questions, which I shall touch upon
in a constructive spirit.
First, a question. How much does it help to
discuss in isolation the problems faced by children in
armed conflict? Malaria kills more children than
conflicts do; AIDS will kill far more, leaving millions
of other children orphaned and destitute. But we do not
deal separately with children and malaria, or children
and AIDS; we tackle the larger challenge, and the
specific problem of children within it. The Preparatory
Committee for the follow-up to the World Summit on
Children, which you also so ably chair, Madam
President, considers their problems in context - of
society, of development, of the life-cycle of the girl
child. The exception is here.
By definition, a close focus blots out the larger
picture, but it is essential, in looking at a global
problem, to set it in perspective. For instance, sanctions
in one country alone, according to the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF), have caused 90,000 deaths
a year over the last decade, and left a million children
malnourished. Assuming that half the dead were
children, perhaps half a million children have been
killed by sanctions over the last decade - far more,
barring the genocide in Rwanda, than by conflicts. But
we do not have a report on children and sanctions. As a
general point, therefore, a sense of balance in
discussing children and armed conflict is in order.
Though in resolution 1261 (1999) the Council
asked the Secretary-General for an implementation
report, what we have before us is far more ambitious.
Very few of its 55 recommendations have much to do
with the maintenance of international peace and
security, and, very properly, only a handful are
addressed to the Council. On those not addressed to it,
their discussion in other forums will no doubt not be
pre-empted by the Council.
I shall speak only on some of those
recommendations made to the Council, and on a few
points in the report, starting with the claim in
paragraph 1 that
"The Security Council has now clearly
acknowledged that the harmful impact of
conflict on children has implications for peace
and security."
I think the Council would agree that, while the
breakdown of peace and security and the conflicts that
ensue have a tragic impact on children, there is no
evidence that their plight affects international peace
and security. We must soften the impact of conflict on
children, and have a duty to do so, because they are
innocent and should not suffer; we do not need to alarm
ourselves into action by summoning up a bogey that
does not exist.
The actions we take should be well thought
through, pragmatic and likely to help. Many of the
well-meaning recommendations are challenged by this
objective. A good example is recommendation 4, the
first of those addressed to the Council, which asks it to
urge armed groups to accept the Convention on the
Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocol and the
codes of international humanitarian law. Let us set
aside for a moment the fact that none of these
Conventions envisage a role for the Council in either
promoting or implementing them. Let us also forget
that most armed groups obey no laws, national or
international, and that if they are to be tried for
breaking them they must first be captured. Let us
assume that the Council acts on this recommendation.
Will this awe rogues into good behaviour? Perhaps in
the world of Harry Potter, but not of Foday Sankoh.
What then?
Targeted sanctions are the answer, according to
recommendation 9, but are they? The Council can
impose sanctions under Article 41 only if it has
established, under Article 39, that there is a sufficient
danger to international peace and security to justify
them. Bear in mind, too, that only States are parties to
Conventions; almost by definition, non-State actors
slip through the net, or, which is almost as much of a
problem, they could offer to join in order to gain a
status in international law to which they are not
entitled. Most importantly, the Council must bear in
mind that a violation of the Convention on the Rights
of the Child cannot automatically be construed as a
threat to international peace and security. In seeking to
hold others to the rule of law, the Council must be
careful not to break those that govern it.
Before acting on recommendations of this nature,
the Council must take stock, as the report could have,
of developments over the year that has passed since it
last discussed this problem. When armed groups have
shown no greater interest in abiding by law, as I think
recent experience throughout the world confirms, these
recommendations cannot be more than placebos.
The other feature of several recommendations is
that they do not delve into the larger implications.
Recommendation 6, for example, urges Member States
"to make any political, diplomatic, financial,
material and military assistance for State or non-
State parties to armed conflict contingent on
compliance with international standards that
protect children in armed conflict."
This implies, first, that Member States should be
providing such assistance to non-State parties in
conflict as a matter of course, and secondly, that, if Mr.
Jonas Savimbi, for instance, gave a sworn affidavit that
henceforth he would only kill those above the age of
16, arms and money could again be lavished upon him.
This is unintended, of course, but we have to be
sensitive to the issue of legitimacy.
A third drawback in these recommendations is
that, in trying to add on a qualifier about children to the
general problems of conflict, to which general
solutions must be found and are being sought, several
end up implying, again no doubt unintentionally, that
action should be taken only if children are at risk.
Recommendation 38 is a case in point. Responsible
States will act within their laws against those who
traffic illegally in arms, currency or natural resources
to inflame conflicts; they do not need the Council to
ask them to do so, and they will do it to root out the
generic problem, not just, as the report recommends,
"where there is gross abuse and brutalization of
children".
There is a lack of clarity in some
recommendations. It is not clear to whom they are
addressed, and the Council should resist the temptation
to claim these for its own. The analysis tends to be
sketchy, the mooring in facts loose. In the section on
peacekeeping, for instance, we are told that two current
peacekeeping operations have child protection advisers
with them, but not what good, if any, they have done.
The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone
(UNAMSIL) is one of them, and experience has shown
that nothing much has changed there over the last year.
The report would have been useful if it had audited the
mechanisms set up so far and made recommendations
that built on lessons learned. This would add to the
efficacy of these measures.
A number of recommendations ask the Council to
take actions that are well beyond its mandate.
Recommendation 10 is an example. Surely it is not for
the Security Council to ask the international corporate
sector to develop codes of conduct on economic
activity. The Economic and Social Council might do
so, but not this Council. Others, like recommendations
41 and 42, should have been made directly to Member
States rather than to the Council, which has no
jurisdiction in these matters.
Recommendations 21 to 24, on internal
displacement and the Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement, ignore the fact, established once again
by the difficult negotiations in the current session of
the Economic and Social Council, that these Principles
do not have intergovernmental approval and are not
legally binding. Within countries the law of the land
must prevail. International action, if any, must respect
sovereignty and be at the request of the country
concerned.
The import of recommendation 53 is far-reaching.
India welcomes the involvement of accredited non-
governmental organizations in the work of the United
Nations, but which are these non-governmental
organizations that the Council would consult and
whose information they would take into account? How
would they be chosen? Who would vet their
credentials? And what would the Council plan to do
with the information they provide? What is
recommended here goes well beyond the parameters of
non-governmental organizations' involvement in the
work of the United Nations and needs to be thought
through.
My very good friend Olara Otunnu, who by now I
think believes that the Massacre of the Innocents
should have taken place around the time I was born,
could justifiably ask whether we have proposals or
only a critique of his recommendations. This is what
we would recommend: where armed conflicts can be
stopped or curbed if strong peacekeeping operations
are quickly set up, the Council must do so. Quick
action saves lives, first and foremost the lives of the
children, who are the most vulnerable. We sincerely
admire his tireless advocacy as Special Representative
and would urge him to continue with it. Spreading the
word, and regularly checking if it has had any effect, is
the only sure way of making progress. We wish him
strength and success in this and are ready to support
him in pragmatic action.
Agencies that provide humanitarian aid should be
given the resources that they need, those who have the
resources should contribute generously to this cause.
A number of recommendations need to be
considered by other organs or bodies of the United
Nations. They should do so quickly.
May I take this opportunity to thank the
Permanent Representatives of Malaysia and Namibia
for having taken the time out this afternoon to listen to
their colleagues.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Senegal. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Ka (Senegal) (spoke in French): Allow me
first of all to express to you, Madam President, our
great appreciation for the Council's initiative, under
your dynamic presidency, to hold a public debate on
the issue of children and armed conflict. The Council's
increased attention to this matter should be resolutely
welcomed and encouraged.
My delegation welcomes the outstanding work
carried out by the Secretary-General's Special
Representative on Children and Armed Conflict, Mr.
Olara Otunnu. My delegation is also pleased at the
important campaign undertaken by the United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF) and its Executive Director
to end the use of child soldiers, protect children from
the effects of sanctions and to draw up special codes of
conduct on the rights of the child for all civilian,
military and peacekeeping personnel.
It is true, as Mrs. Graca Machel noted in her 1996
report on the impact of armed conflict on children, that
armed conflicts cause more deaths and injuries among
children than among military personnel. According to
available statistics, since the beginning of the 1990s
over 2 million children have been killed and over 6
million have been wounded or maimed in the course of
armed conflicts. In nearly 60 countries children are
living in mine fields, and over 10,000 of them are
killed or maimed every day largely due to anti-
personnel landmines. Beyond these statistics, we
should also take into account traumas of all types
affecting children impacted by war and the impact of
those traumas on them, their families and society as a
whole.
Africa is paying the heaviest price in this regard
as a result of the resurgence of domestic armed conflict
and regional conflicts. The situation has become even
more serious with the emergence of armed bands that
are different from regular armed forces. These bands
are proceeding systematically and without
consideration for ethnicity, morals or international
norms to recruit, train and use children in hostilities,
even beyond national boundaries. This situation cries
out to our universal conscience, to the world's political
leaders, to the international community, to the United
Nations and to the Security Council in particular.
It is gratifying that this issue has been directly
taken up by our Organization, which continues to call
for respect for the provisions of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child. My delegation therefore welcomes
the adoption by the General Assembly of the Optional
Protocol to the Convention concerning the involvement
of children in armed conflict. The Protocol demands
that all States parties see to it that members of their
armed forces under the age of 18 do not participate
directly in hostilities and that they are not the object of
obligatory recruitment.
It also raises - and it is important to emphasize
this - the principle of voluntary enrolment before the
age of 18, a principle that is subject to a number of
strict conditions designed to guard against forced
recruitment, including such recruitment by non-State
armed groups.
In Africa, the question of child soldiers remains a
major concern of the Organization of African Unity
and of subregional organizations.
In April 2000, the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) held a conference in Accra,
Ghana, on war-affected children, in cooperation with
the Canadian Government. That conference adopted a
Declaration and Plan of Action that deserve the support
of the entire international community. An appeal has
been launched to all Member States to respect the
provisions of Security Council resolutions 1261 (1999)
and 1265 (1999); the four Geneva Conventions and
their Protocols; the African Charter on the Rights and
Welfare of the Child; the Convention on the Rights of
the Child; and in particular the International Labour
Organization Convention (No. 182) on the Elimination
of the Worst Forms of Child Labour.
The Accra conference drew up a set up measures
dealing with the demobilization, disarmament,
rehabilitation and reintegration of child soldiers. It also
elaborated measures on education; preventive
measures; measures aimed at raising the awareness of
the media; and measures on early-warning systems.
Among the planned regional initiatives, I should
like to emphasize here the integration of the child
protection dimension in ECOWAS peace initiatives and
peacekeeping operations; the appointment, within
ECOWAS missions in the field, of a Child Protection
Adviser; the establishment within ECOWAS of an
office for the protection of war-affected children; and
the establishment in all States members of ECOWAS of
a West African week of truce for war-affected children.
That week coincides with 16 June - the Day of the
African Child - and is aimed at raising public
awareness of the terrible plight of children and African
children affected by war.
These regional and subregional initiatives deserve
support from the United Nations system, development
partners, international institutions, non-governmental
organizations and other interested actors from civil
society.
I am familiar with and welcome the outstanding
work done by Mr. Otunnu in this area. He should be
further supported, encouraged and backed by the
United Nations and in particular by the Security
Council.
In fact, we should give further thought to the
question of the reintegration into society of child
soldiers. This question, naturally, must be an integral
part of post-conflict rehabilitation strategies - an area
in which, it must be emphasized, United Nations action
is not yet sufficiently visible and is still characterized
by various weaknesses and even by reprehensible
shortcomings. We must all give thought on how to cope
with this issue. In that way it will be possible to avoid
the resumption of conflicts and the re-emergence of
hotbeds of tension that had been thought to be
extinguished.
In this respect, my delegation welcomes the
holding in September in Winnipeg, Canada, of an
international conference on war-affected children, as
well as the offer made by that country to cooperate
with ECOWAS in the establishment of a unit for the
protection of children. That unit would be entrusted,
inter alia, with monitoring the status of children in
conflict situations; rehabilitating and reintegrating
them during the peace-building phase; and
safeguarding their fundamental rights, in accordance
with the relevant provisions of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child.
Peace, it has often been reiterated, is not merely
the absence of war. It also means development, as
many conflicts are the result of extreme poverty and
underdevelopment. Therefore today more than ever it is
important to find the necessary solutions to the
numerous constraints that are hampering the
development of Africa. Those constraints are well
known. They have been recalled here on several
occasions. I refer in particular to the crushing debt
burden, to tariff and non-tariff obstacles to the access
of African exports to the international market, and to
the drastic decline in official development assistance.
All of these issues have negative repercussions on
political and social crises in Africa and on the
resurgence of domestic or regional armed conflicts, and
therefore on the peace and stability of the African
continent.
In conclusion, my delegation is hopeful that this
debate will produce bold and innovative responses to
the difficult question of how to protect children from
the scourge of war, so that tomorrow those children, in
the springtime of their lives, can be educated and
trained to become active participants in the
development of their countries.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Nepal. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Sharma (Nepal): Yesterday, a Concorde
plane on its flight to New York crashed in Paris, killing
all passengers, the crew and four people on the ground.
I wish to express our deep condolences to the
Governments of France and Germany on this tragic
accident. Our hearts go out to the families of the
deceased in profound pain and sympathy.
Those most affected by this terrible disaster are
the innocent children of those who died in the inferno.
Many children have lost caring fathers and loving
mothers. They have been orphaned by that terrible
accident and now must face the sea of an uncertain
future.
In many conflict-torn places, it is commonplace
for children to be orphaned, maimed or killed as the
grown-ups deliberately use them to make a point or to
settle the score. It becomes even more horrendous
when innocent children are turned into murderers. At
an age when they should be carrying books in their
schoolbags, children are forced to carry guns they can
hardly hold, and must hide in the jungle. There are
shocking instances in which the victims of conflicts
turn into victimizers themselves.
This must change. Nepal is highly encouraged by
this public debate, the third of its kind following those
of June 1998 and August 1999. This debate is indeed a
manifestation of our collective conscience and
seriousness in addressing the issue of children and
conflict. I express Nepal's sincere appreciation to you,
Madam President, for promoting this useful
deliberation.
To be sure, the international community has
covered much ground in protecting children's rights
and enhancing their welfare. The Convention on the
Rights of the Child has already been ratified or acceded
to by 191 countries. The Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict has been
opened for signature. Security Council resolution 1261
(1999) should be praised highly as an appropriate
culmination of our collective will and effort to help
prevent the growing use of children as shields or as
child soldiers as internecine conflicts proliferate
around the world.
The Secretary-General's report presents heart-
wrenching cold facts on millions of refugee children,
on several thousand child soldiers and on children
killed, injured, traumatized, raped and orphaned by the
millions. No doubt, as the Secretary-General states,
"children are disproportionately affected by
armed conflict and their needs merit our
concerted attention". (S/2000/712, para. 4)
Even at the dawn of the third millennium, we are
witnessing much of the same. Clearly, what we have
done so far is not enough. We need to do more and do
it quickly. The peace and prosperity of tomorrow
largely depend on our children. We must act together to
provide our children with a normal, innocent childhood
and the opportunity to blossom to their fullest
potential. While we should redouble our endeavours to
implement the globally agreed compacts and decisions
for a quick turn-around in the plight of children,
additional measures, as necessary, should be put in
place, too. This debate contributes to that process. The
implementation of international law and United
Nations resolutions is always the hardest part. What we
have achieved on paper has yet to be translated into
concrete improvement in the lives of billions of
children.
Undoubtedly, the primary responsibility for
protecting children and promoting their rights rests
with the countries concerned. Prolonged armed
conflicts, however, are rarely sustained without outside
aiding and abetting. Nepal therefore believes in the
unity of purpose and in the pooling of our efforts for
complementarities and synergies to achieve our shared
goal.
The question of children in conflict is an involved
one. It has its political, economic and social
dimensions. The treatment of the symptoms of a deeper
ailment is not an appropriate response. We need to get
to the root of the problem. Political exclusion, poverty
and social injustice are at the root of most
contemporary conflicts. We believe that the issue of
children in conflict situations must be seen in its proper
perspective. To my delegation, measures at the global,
regional, national, community and civil-society levels
are essential to moving forward in this area.
At the international level, we must continue to
bridge the widening gap between the rich and the poor.
Only a world marked by sovereign equality, mutual
respect, non-interference and shared economic
prosperity will help narrow the gulf and promote
peaceful coexistence. Endeavours must also be made to
constantly follow up on the implementation of the
internationally agreed measures for protecting children
from conflict. Early-warning systems deployed to
detect signs of an evolving conflict and the prompt pre-
emptive response capability of the United Nations to
snuff it out before it flares up also need to be instituted.
This would obviate the necessity for and impulse
towards conflicts. Corollary regional efforts to promote
much of the same would definitely be helpful, as they
would be closer to the theatre of conflict.
Nationally, political participation and the
narrowing of differences between the haves and have-
nots are as called for as the imperative for social justice
in order to enhance mutual understanding across racial
and cultural fault lines. The implementation of
international agreements designed to protect children
from conflict should be the primary responsibility of
each country, while the international community should
exhibit its readiness to support those countries, which
have difficulty managing the necessary resources.
It is at the community level that harmonious
social relations can be fostered to aggregate competing
priorities and claims on resources. Community
organizations, together with civil society, which can
work as a bridge between Governments and rebels, as
well as across racial and cultural divides, should be the
most effective instrument to inculcate a new culture of
peace and prevention of conflicts in society. Inclusive
governance, together with an expanding economy, can
go a long way towards weaving together all people in
tolerant mosaics on the social landscape. The challenge
before us is to bring awareness to rebels and
revolutionaries of the need to respect the rights of
children. Civil society would be best suited to taking
up such a role.
Nepal was one of the first countries to sign and
ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Our
commitment to the provisions of the Convention is
fully reflected in the Constitution of the Kingdom of
Nepal and in the subsequent enabling legislation to
implement those provisions. The two Optional
Protocols to the Convention are under active
consideration for signing. The National Human Rights
Commission has been constituted.
Ours is a tolerant society where, so far, people of
different religion and ethnic origin have lived together
in harmony. The multi-party system of governance
offers equal opportunity to all for political
participation. Being a least developed country, we need
resources for both our social and economic
development and our efforts to protect as well as to
further promote children's rights.
I wish to share the fact that Nepal has a voluntary
recruitment policy in all its uniformed services and no
one under the age of 18 is sent to the front line.
Before I conclude, as I have taken the floor in the
Security Council for the first time since I assumed my
post as Permanent Representative of Nepal, let me
congratulate you, Madam President, for successfully
presiding over the Council in the month of July. I also
take this opportunity to express my appreciation to the
Secretary-General for his excellent report on children
and armed conflict. I also congratulate Ms. Carol
Bellamy for her insightful statement this morning. Mr.
Olara Otunnu's lucid presentation of the report to the
Council also deserves our appreciation and
commendation.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Lesotho. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mangoaela (Lesotho): When this Council
took up the issue of children and armed conflict as one
of its thematic debates and subsequently adopted
resolution 1261 (1999) in August 1999, it signalled the
renewed international commitment to reverse the
growing and tragic victimization of more than 300,000
children under the age of 18, some as young as 7, who
are currently fighting in conflicts around the world, as
well as thousands of others who have been recruited
into armed forces and who could thus be sent into
combat at any time.
Those who recruit children do not distinguish
between boys and girls, both of whom are used not
only to commit atrocities but also serve as sexual
slaves of military commanders. Many are physically
abused and driven to suicide when they cannot cope
with the stressful demands put on them. Those who
survive some of these harrowing experiences pose
serious challenges with regard to their rehabilitation
and reintegration into civilian life. What future can
these children hope to have when they were denied
educational opportunities and left physically and
mentally scarred and disabled, thus posing a danger not
only to themselves but to other children?
The time has come for the international
community - this Council and other agencies - to
join hands in taking appropriate measures to address
the problem of the recruitment of children, particularly
girls, into armed forces.
It is in this context that we welcome the
opportunity to share our views on these issues and to
commend you, Madam President, for your leadership
of the Council during the month of July and for your
efforts in arranging for this timely debate. It is
particularly timely following the recent adoption by the
General Assembly of two protocols - on the
involvement of children in armed conflict, and on the
sale of children, child prostitution and child
pornography - both of which are important tools in
fighting the exploitation of children.
This Council's strong endorsement of the
protocol on the involvement of children in armed
conflict will no doubt enhance international efforts
aimed at curbing this scourge, which has become a
feature of armed conflicts in every region of the world.
There is no doubt that international law
governing the use of children as soldiers has advanced
over the years. In addition to the Convention on the
Rights of the Child - which, inter alia, defines a child
as anyone below the age of 18 years - other
conventions which set 18 as the age limit for
recruitment and participation in conflict include the
African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child
and the ILO Convention No. 182, which characterizes
forced and compulsory recruitment of children under
18 as being amongst the worst forms of child labour.
This Council has previously condemned targeting
children in armed conflict and called for the speedy
conclusion of the Optional Protocol aimed at
strengthening the Convention on the Rights of the
Child.
With the recent adoption of the Optional Protocol
to the Convention and the confirmation of 18 as the
minimum age for participation in armed conflict, the
stage has been set for this Council to take proactive
measures in its areas of competence to ensure that
international humanitarian standards and human rights
instruments that regulate the recruitment of children as
soldiers are vigorously enforced. In addition to
endorsing the protocol on children in armed conflict
and calling for its signature and ratification, this
Council has the moral, political and legal duty to call
on States to ban all recruitment of children under 18
and to require all States to put in place appropriate
safeguards for proof of age and voluntarism in
recruitment. No effort should be spared in rectifying
the situation on the ground and ensuring that this
protocol and other international humanitarian and
human rights laws fulfil the purposes for which they
were drafted, that is, to protect the rights of the child
and to eradicate the use of children as soldiers.
What is needed is our collective effort and
commitment to end the abuse of children as soldiers, to
demobilize any children already serving in armed
forces and to ensure their reintegration into civilian
life.
This delegation is amongst those who remain
particularly concerned about the plight of women and
girl soldiers in armed conflict, an issue which does not
seem to attract as much attention as we believe it
deserves. Recently, this Council took steps to address
the scourge of HIV/AIDS in general, and in particular
as it relates to peacekeeping. Closely linked to this are
the special needs of girl soldiers, whose role is not
limited to combat, but who in many cases are recruited
primarily to perform sexual services as sex slaves or
concubines.
These abuses not only result in the spread of
sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS, but
also lead to pregnancies and births of infected children
and/or uncontrolled abortions. Unless the special needs
of girl soldiers are recognized and concrete steps taken
to address them, the girl child of today will never grow
up to be a woman of tomorrow.
Resolutions of this Council should call for
concrete measures to redress discriminatory policies in
the armed forces, to address problems of sexual
harassment and to ensure that demobilization,
rehabilitation and reintegration programmes take the
special needs of girl soldiers into account.
While conflict prevention is no doubt the best
way to protect children, the link between poverty and
the recruitment of children cannot be overlooked. A
disturbing dimension of this scourge is that the
majority of the most vulnerable are the poor - the
least educated and the most marginalized members of
society, who have either experienced abuses or have
come from disrupted families either as refugees or
internally displaced persons. The need for a holistic
approach and for common strategies for prevention and
protection, particularly in the application of
international norms and standards, has thus become a
priority.
To this end, the commendable efforts of the
Special Representative of the Secretary General, Mr.
Olaru Otunnu, and of UNICEF under its very able
leader, Ms. Carol Bellamy, require this Council's full
recognition and support by, inter alia, facilitating
stronger coordination through the establishment of an
inter-agency task force to undertake field visits and to
prepare reports for Council debate with a view to
putting countries on notice and, where necessary,
naming and shaming them.
The Special Representative is to be particularly
commended and supported in his efforts to open lines
of communication with all the stakeholders and to
impress upon them their primary responsibilities for
the protection of children in conformity with
international human rights and humanitarian law.
In conclusion, I wish to commend all relevant
actors at the national and international levels, and in
particular our partners in civil society, for their
commitment to the issue of children and armed
conflict. Through their experience, expertise and
continued involvement, possibilities for solutions to the
problem of children in armed conflict have been
greatly enhanced.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Indonesia. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Wibisono (Indonesia): I should like to begin
by extending the appreciation of the Indonesian
delegation to you, Madam President, for convening the
meeting today on the item before us, which reflects the
renewed determination of the Council to protect
children from the ravages of armed conflict.
My delegation also commends the Secretary-
General for his timely report in document S/2000/712.
It portrays a poignant picture of the devastating impact
of the ongoing conflicts on children, in terms of both
their magnitude and their long-term impact. It contains
a series of recommendations the implementation of
which will remove children from harm's way and from
being deliberately targeted, in gross violation of
universally accepted norms, precepts and principles.
My delegation has noted with deep concern the
increasing use of children in armed conflict. It has been
estimated that more than 300,000 children under the
age of 18 are now being used as soldiers in conflicts in
various regions of the world. Those conflicts have
claimed the lives of more than 2 million children,
maimed or injured 6 million, orphaned 1 million and
traumatized countless others; they have resulted in
children accounting for more than half of the world's
24 million refugees.
My delegation has in the past supported concerted
international efforts to alleviate the suffering of
children dragged into conflicts. Indonesia is a signatory
of the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which upholds the political, socio-economic and civil
rights of children, and it strongly supports the Optional
Protocol which strengthens that Convention by calling
for a minimum age of 18 for participation in hostilities.
Regrettably, however, even today the recruitment and
deployment of children as soldiers continues. Hence,
the international community should speak with one
voice and insist on 18 as the minimum acceptable age
for participation in armed conflicts, which would make
a tangible difference to the fate of children exposed to
danger on the ground, where more than 250,000
children under that age have taken part in more than 30
armed conflicts in various parts of the world and where
children have represented 40 per cent of all victims of
such conflicts.
The failure to curb the clandestine flow of small
arms and light weapons across borders has taken a
disproportionate toll on children in intra-State strife,
and has ultimately led to greater insecurity and
destabilization. The proliferation and easy availability
of these arms have made it possible even for young
children to become perpetrators of violence. This
ominous situation calls for concerted efforts at the
national, regional and global levels to curb the illicit
transfer of these arms. Indonesia remains hopeful that
the forthcoming United Nations Conference on the
Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All
Its Aspects, to be held next year, will adopt measures
that will fully take into account the interests and the
protection of children.
The rights of children in armed conflicts should
also be acknowledged as an explicit priority, and
should be firmly entrenched in peacemaking, peace-
building and conflict-resolution processes, as well as in
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration plans.
Such a programme of assistance is critically important
to consolidate peace and to support rehabilitation
capacity.
The wilful denial of humanitarian assistance to
children has a devastating impact on such children,
who have a fundamental right to aid under international
humanitarian law. Children are not only the
instruments of warfare, but also its victims. They are
not fully aware of the reasons for and the objectives of
the armed conflicts in which they are often forced to
participate. It therefore stands to reason that parties
involved in conflicts should facilitate unhindered
access by personnel involved in humanitarian missions
to children unwittingly caught up in armed conflicts.
Landmines are indiscriminate weapons which do
not distinguish between soldier and civilian, friend and
foe, adult and child. It is an irony that those who suffer
most are not the active combatants, but civilians,
especially women and children. While demining is the
only alternative for eliminating the dangers posed by
landmines, effective and comprehensive mine
awareness programmes focusing on children should be
vigorously pursued.
Furthermore, sanctions imposed on Governments
or on armed factions have a disproportionately negative
impact on children in terms of weakening essential
infrastructures, especially those relating to education,
health and employment opportunities. While it is
difficult to quantify the short-term and long-term costs
for the future of children, my delegation agrees with
the suggestion put forward by Malaysia, New Zealand
and India, that efforts should be made to relieve the
suffering of children living under sanctions regimes by
providing for humanitarian exemptions so that children
will not be deprived of access to basic necessities of
life throughout a conflict.
In sum, the future of humanity depends on
children. The use of children in armed conflicts casts a
shadow on their future, for children who are exposed to
violence often carry fear and hatred in their hearts and
minds, which has profound long-term effects. Due to
the large number of children involved in and victimized
by conflicts around the world, the children's future is at
stake owing to their limited opportunity to embark
upon productive careers. Hence, much needs to be done
to alleviate their suffering and to ensure their rightful
place in their societies through adequate support
programmes. The grim alternative would be a
potentially serious situation if the international
community failed to take timely and adequate steps to
deal with this problem.
I would be remiss in my duty ifI concluded this
statement without commending the role played by the
Secretary-General's Special Representative for
Children and Armed Conflict, Mr. Olara Otunnu, and
by the Executive Director of the United Nations
Children's Fund, Ms. Carol Bellamy, who have made
significant contributions to uplifting the lives of less
fortunate children, for many of whom life will now be
worth living. Member States are duty-bound to extend
their cooperation in fulfilling the mandate entrusted to
them.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Ecuador. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Aleman (Ecuador) (spoke in Spanish): As a
member of the Group of Latin American and Caribbean
States, I have first-hand knowledge, Madam President,
of your indisputable talent and diplomatic skill. For
that reason, I am pleased to see you presiding over the
work of the Security Council, the United Nations body
that bears primary responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security.
I also wish to express my gratitude for the
valuable and important work on the issue before the
Council today by the Executive Director of the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Ms. Carol
Bellamy, and by the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict,
Mr. Olara Otunnu.
Over the past decade, more than ever before,
children have deliberately been made the innocent
victims of wars and armed aggression. They have been
forced or persuaded to join armies or armed groups.
On the first point, the Security Council has
adopted a series of resolutions and measures on the
protection of civilians in armed conflict, highlighting
the need to pay special attention to the sectors of the
population that are most in need: women, children and
the elderly. The international community at large has
also reacted positively, adopting a set of international
instruments that constitute a binding legal framework,
especially for safeguarding and protecting the rights of
boys and girls against the reprehensible acts of
violence that arise out of armed confrontation.
On the second point, the Security Council has
progressed from a presidential statement to an
important resolution, while the international
community has adopted the Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict, and
International Labour Organization Convention 182,
concerning the prohibition and immediate action for
the elimination of the worst forms of child labour.
Minors under 18 years of age are neither mentally
nor physically equipped to take part in armed conflict.
Forcing them to wear a combatant's uniform harms
their development and uproots them from their families
and their social environment. Furthermore, it may have
grave consequences for their physical and
psychological health, requiring in some circumstances
lengthy and costly rehabilitation processes.
Adolescents enrolled in armed forces or groups cease
their studies and many do not complete their secondary
education. This may have a negative impact on their
personal development and, indeed, on the national
development of the country.
The use of child soldiers thus undermines the
principles established in international law and in
Ecuadorian legislation, which sets 18 as the minimum
age for obtaining citizenship and for mandatory
military service. There is no doubt that States, in their
domestic legislation, and the Council itself, in
accordance with the United Nations Charter, must take
the appropriate measures, including imposing sanctions
as necessary, in order to prevent businesses or
individuals from taking advantage of armed conflicts to
obtain economic advantages by trafficking in natural
resources and small arms, which fuel conflicts, in
which children are the first to be harmed.
I am certain that this discussion will prompt the
Council to take a further major step forward in the
ongoing humane task of preventing the participation of
children in armed conflict, always taking into account
the fact that their interests must take pride of place in
all the decisions that relate to them. Children need to
be trained to tackle the great adventure of life and not
be driven into premature acquaintance with the mystery
of death.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Kenya. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Kuindwa (Kenya): On behalf of the Kenyan
delegation, I would like to take this opportunity to
thank you, Madam President, for convening this debate
and to convey my delegation's appreciation to your
predecessor, the Ambassador of France, who presided
with great distinction over the Council's work for the
month of June. Your own enthusiasm in presiding over
the deliberations of the Security Council during the
month of July gives us all reason to feel much pride
and gratitude. Your personal commitment to the issue
that has brought us together today is commendable.
I would also like to take this opportunity to thank
the Secretary-General for the report before the Security
Council; Ms. Carol Bellamy, the Executive Director of
the United Nations Children's Fund, for her briefing;
and, in particular, the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, our brother Olara Otunnu, who
comes from the East African region, for his most
thought-provoking introductory statement. The debate
that we are engaged in is of particular interest to
Africa, where there is an increase in the number of
atrocities to which children are subjected and, indeed,
in which they participate.
We all know the statistics of those involved in
armed conflicts, and the number is colossal. The
proliferation of small arms and drug trafficking in the
past decade, involving billions of dollars, has
contributed to the escalation of these conflicts. We are
living in an era of many conflicts and wars, which are
used by some to achieve their own political and
economic agendas. Sadly, it is women, children and
families as a whole that suffer. Effective intervention
that reduces and eventually eliminates the involvement
of children in all forms of conflict will make a lasting
impression. The report we are considering today
presents a number of recommendations to address this
crisis, recommendations which the Secretary-General
believes fall within the ambit of this Council. My
delegation would like to comment on just a few.
With regard to the normative foundation, my
delegation would like to state that Kenya has ratified
the Convention on the Rights of the Child and
promulgated an Act of Parliament making it effective
nationally. Indeed, legislation specifically for children
was adopted in the National Assembly. It is also clear
to us that the Millennium Summit will provide a
suitable opportunity for us to sign the Optional
Protocol.
On the issue of curbing the illicit flow of arms,
Kenya believes that there is an urgency to this aspect of
the problem. This urgency is based on the recognition
that, while the world is changing rapidly, developing
countries are neither able to keep pace with the
changes, nor in a position to tackle the backlog of
economic injustice and social inequities. We must
continue to be vigilant and become even more
conscious of the danger so that children's issues are
given high priority when economic and social issues
are being determined.
I wish to refer to several declarations which have
played a big role in addressing the issue of children and
armed conflict in Africa. The Assembly of Heads of
State and Government of the Organization of African
Unity (OAU) has repeatedly reaffirmed the
determination of the Organization to strive relentlessly
towards the promotion of the rights and welfare of the
child and to combat all forms of child exploitation and,
in particular, to end the phenomenon of child soldiers.
Heads of Government of the Commonwealth, at their
meeting in Durban in November last year, strongly
condemned the targeting, abuse, recruitment and
deployment of children in armed conflict. Indeed, the
advocacy campaign of the coalition to stop the use of
child soldiers was instrumental in building worldwide
momentum for reaching agreement on the Optional
Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child
on the involvement of children in armed conflict. My
delegation believes that all these will provide the basis
for Governments to move quickly to effective action
programmes, as called for in the Secretary-General's
report.
The Great Lakes and Horn of Africa Conference
on the Proliferation of Small Arms, held in March
2000, in which 10 countries in the region participated
at the ministerial level, adopted the Nairobi
Declaration, in which a number of regional cooperative
measures to curb illegal small arms flows were
proposed. The Declaration has been distributed as a
General Assembly and Security Council document.
In conclusion, enormous challenges face mankind
at the beginning of the twenty-first century, marked by
deepening poverty and a widening gap between rich
and poor, increasing conflict and violence, the deadly
spread of HIV/AIDS and continuing discrimination,
particularly against women and girls. Tremendous
changes are required in societies everywhere if the
vision for children, who are our future, is to be
realized. We hope that the existing laws governing the
participation of children in armed conflict will be
reviewed to provide essential protection to these
vulnerable members of society. Early-warning systems
are also needed, including better ongoing monitoring
and reporting, if the worst abuses are to be avoided.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the Permanent Observer of the Organization of
the Islamic Conference to the United Nations, Mr.
Mokhtar Lamani, to whom the Council has extended an
invitation under rule 39 of its provisional rules of
procedure. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Lamani (Organization of the Islamic Conference) (spoke in French): I would like to begin
my remarks by extending my sincere congratulations to
you, Madam President, on presiding over this meeting.
My congratulations and gratitude also go out to Ms.
Louise Frechette, the Deputy Secretary-General, Ms.
Carol Bellamy, the Executive Director of the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and to Mr. Olara
Otunnu for their inspiring interventions this morning.
Armed conflicts always cause suffering, above all
for children and women. The adverse and lasting
effects of such conflicts directly affect the possibilities
for creating an environment of peace and stability. It
goes without saying that the ultimate solution is to deal
with the underlying causes of conflict, be they socio-
economic, racial, religious or otherwise.
The report of the Secretary-General points out
that children have increasingly become the victims of
internal conflicts in which they are both protagonists
and targets. While these children - who are the future
of the international community - are covered by an
array of legal instruments established by the
international community to protect them, unfortunately
the numerous conflicts that have broken out in various
regions throughout the world in recent years have been
characterized by continued violations of the
fundamental rights of children and of international
humanitarian law generally.
The holding of this debate today illustrates that
the awareness that began to make itself felt at the
beginning of the 1990s, after the adoption of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, has become a
genuine factor in the management of international
affairs, thereby giving rise to a considerable number of
measures designed to save children from the kinds of
violence to which they are often subjected. New ways
and means must be found, and efforts must be further
intensified to avoid the worst kinds of brutality. This is
why we think that the recommendations and measures
designed to encourage respect for the obligations and
commitments contained in the report of the Secretary-
General currently before the Council must be the
subject of special attention. The Security Council is the
body competent to take an explicit stand to promote
law and the respect for law.
Section VI of the report of the Secretary-General
deals with regional initiatives on behalf of children
affected by armed conflict and with the role of regional
organizations. I would like in this connection first to
welcome the tireless efforts of Mr. Olara Otunnu,
Special Representative of the Secretary-General.
Secondly, I would like to stress that it is critical for
regional organizations to continue to devote intensive
attention to the question of children.
In this connection, the twenty-seventh Islamic
Conference of Ministers for Foreign Affairs, which met
from 27 to 30 June 2000 at Kuala Lumpur, recalled the
firm positions of the members of the Organization of
the Islamic Conference to take necessary measures to
ensure that accepted norms of conduct be better
respected.
Finally, I would like to reiterate the firm and sincere
desire of the Organization of the Islamic Conference to
work together with other international institutions,
UNICEF in particular, as well as with the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General to share
experiences so that those experiences can be of the
greatest benefit to children affected by conflict.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Nigeria. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mbanefo (Nigeria): The Nigerian delegation
wishes to express its appreciation to you, Madam
President, for convening this very important meeting
on children and armed conflict. Its is essential and
indeed right for the Security Council to focus on the
plight of children in armed conflict in view of the
recent escalation of intra-State conflicts in the different
regions of the world, particularly in Africa. This
meeting is also a testimony of the commitment of the
Security Council, under your presidency, to intensify
efforts to bring to an end the exploitation of innocent
children by warlords to achieve their goals through
armed conflict. It will also, one hopes, mobilize
international public opinion against all those who have
wrought horrendous havoc on innocent children of the
world.
In the past years, the world has watched with
horror the carnage of wars in the continent of Africa in
which civilian populations have endured unimaginable
suffering and hardship. Particularly gruesome is the
image of the brutal activities of the Revolutionary
United Front (RUF) rebels in Sierra Leone who
blatantly offended the decency of humanity by
indiscriminately cutting off the limbs of hundreds of
men, women and children in the face of a helpless
Government. It is sad to note that some of those who
participated in committing these heinous crimes were
children recruited by the various belligerent groups.
Those children, between 7 and 14 years of age, are
robbed of their innocence and exposed to hard drugs.
They are manipulated to become the perfect killing
machines. Instead of playing with toys and other
children in their communities, they are armed with
AK-47 rifles. Rather than go to school, their classroom
is the battlefield where they are taught to kill.
Besides the phenomenon of the child soldier,
these societies are further traumatized by the
horrendous injuries inflicted on these innocent
children. Sierra Leone typifies an unacceptable phase
of brutality in a conflict situation. How do families
cope with a situation where all the children have no
arms or limbs? How do communities cope with a
population of armless citizens? These are very
pertinent questions the Security Council and indeed the
international community need to address in fashioning
measures to deal with those who perpetrate these
atrocities.
Another regrettable aspect of this situation is the
fact that a dependency syndrome has been unwittingly
created in these societies. Because these societies are
ravaged by war, they are not in a position to fashion
any meaningful and well-funded programme of
rehabilitation. In this regard my delegation wishes to
pay special tribute to non-governmental organizations,
which have been very active in assisting these helpless
children.
It is also necessary to commend Mr. Olara Otunu,
the Secretary-General's Special Representative for
Children and Armed Conflict, for all he has been able
to do to focus world attention on this unacceptable
phenomenon.
Obviously, a permanent solution to this problem
is the prevention of conflict. African leaders are
deploying their best efforts not only to resolve the
raging conflicts on our continent but also to prevent
them. A major effort in this regard is being nurtured
within the framework of the Conference on Security,
Stability, Development and Cooperation in Africa
(CSSDA). Its major thrust is to build African capacity
for the prevention, management and resolution of
conflicts.
Since we all acknowledge that the traumatic
experiences of children which I characterized earlier
are unacceptable, it therefore behoves the Security
Council and the international community to devise
ways and means of preventing the recurrence of this
phenomenon. There must be rules to protect our
children in conflict or war zones from becoming
instruments of war. Their involvement in wars is much
more worrisome than their involvement in productive
labour. The Security Council should therefore work out
procedures and mechanisms for bringing the
perpetrators, who must be seen as criminals, to justice.
If we fail to do this in a decisive manner, we will be
surrendering the future of the world's children to the
whims and caprices of warlords.
The Security Council must act now.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Uganda. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mukongo Ngay (Uganda): Uganda
congratulates you, Madam, for presiding over this very
important open debate in the Security Council on the
subject of children in armed conflict.
My delegation thanks the Secretary-General for
his comprehensive report on children. We commend the
Security Council for its continued engagement on
issues that concern human security. We pay special
tribute to the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF); to the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict,
Mr. Olara Otunnu; to the International Committee of
the Red Cross; to the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees; to the World Food
Programme; and to numerous non-governmental
organizations for their continued commitment to the
plight of children in armed conflict.
The adoption of the Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict is one of the
important milestones in the history of the United
Nations. We welcome the provision which stipulates 18
to be the minimum age for participation in armed
conflict. This Protocol, together with Security Council
resolution 1261 (1999), are major advances in the area
of children's rights and welfare.
Notwithstanding these advances, the real world,
in many parts of the globe, is still full of appalling
practices. Children are still used as soldiers with
impunity in many countries. They are used to kill and
to commit untold atrocities. They are frequently
threatened with death, mutilation or injury. Girls are
raped and sold as concubines.
Uganda wishes to seize this opportunity to inform
the Council of the continued and tragic plight of
Ugandan children who have been abducted to the
Sudan. Since 1997, the rebel group based in the Sudan
called the Lord's Resistance Army has abducted an
estimated 10,000 children from northern Uganda.
These abductions are brutal, and many children are
forced to witness the killing of family members and
friends and the destruction of their homes. The Lord's
Resistance Army abducts children to serve the needs of
these brutal men - as child solders, as sexual slaves,
as porters and as cooks.
The ongoing abduction, forced conscription and
killing of children by this rebel group is one of the
worst violations of children's rights anywhere in the
world. It is estimated that over half of the children
abducted by the Lord's Resistance Army are as young
as 8 years of age. These bandits prefer young children
because they are more easily manipulated, intimidated
and indoctrinated than older adolescents and adults.
The abductees are punished for trying to escape. They
are frequently forced to beat and hack to death other
children caught trying to escape. It is estimated today
that as many as 8,000 children are still missing. Their
parents in Uganda do not know their whereabouts.
Some figures indicate that perhaps half of them have
died of disease or hunger or have been killed.
The involvement of children in armed conflicts
has disrupted the cultural behaviour and practices of
our people, because those children are frequently sent
back to their villages and districts and carry out
systematic and atrocious mutilations of people,
including their relatives.
In November last year, an non-governmental
organization called the Leadership Council on Children
in Armed Conflict issued a report on Uganda with the
headline "Our Children Are Still Missing". Yes,
Ugandan children are still missing in the Sudan.
During the past five years, the Government of
Uganda has made many attempts to reach an agreement
with the Sudanese Government. Indeed, agreements
have been signed. One of them was brokered by the
President of Malawi, another by Iran. This morning Mr.
Olara Otunnu urged the Council to lean heavily on
those countries and Governments that wantonly subject
children to armed conflicts. The Government of
Uganda cannot overemphasize the gravity of the failure
by our neighbours to honour agreements which they
have signed.
My delegation urges the Council, at the
conclusion of this debate, to demand an end to the
impunity of the brutal Lord's Resistance Army and to
demand that the Sudan deny territory, cover and
support to that group. The Council is urged to be
unambiguous in its condemnation of the continued
abduction of thousands upon thousands of our children.
Before I end, I would like to express my
delegation's appreciation to the European Union for its
recent resolution which condemned the activities of the
Lord's Resistance Army and demanded that it be
denied cover on Sudanese territory.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of the Democratic Republic of
the Congo. I invite him to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Mukongo Ngay (Democratic Republic of the Congo) (spoke in French): As Jamaica nears the end of
its term in the presidency of the Security Council for
the month of July, my delegation believes that it is time
to congratulate you, Madam, on the work you have
accomplished. We are extremely honoured to take part
in this important discussion, which we are certain will
be successful.
We especially welcome the concern that the
Security Council has always shown for the tragic plight
of children affected by armed conflict. We believe that
this heightened awareness will prompt the Council to
propose the solutions that are required by war
situations in which children are the first victims. We
also welcome the conclusions and recommendations
contained in the Secretary-General's report of 19 July,
issued in document S/2000/712, and the measures
relating to integrating the protection of children into
peacemaking and peacekeeping.
For some time now, the world has witnessed a
phenomenon whose grave consequences trample on
universally recognized values, namely, the tragedy
experienced daily by tens of millions of children as a
result of war.
Very fortunately, the international community has
become aware of this tragedy. The Convention on the
Rights of the Child has been adopted; a Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children
and Armed Conflict has been appointed; the
International Labour Organization has adopted
Convention No. 182 concerning the prohibition and
immediate action for the elimination of the worst forms
of child labour; and the Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict was adopted
last May.
Increasingly, protests are being heard and steps
taken to put an end to the tragedy of children caught up
in armed conflict. The Rome Statute of the
International Criminal Court, adopted in July 1999,
classifies the enlistment of children under 15 in
national armed forces as a war crime. In its resolution
1261 (1999) of 25 August 1999, the Security Council
openly urged States and all relevant parts of the United
Nations system to intensify their efforts to ensure an
end to the recruitment and use of children in armed
conflict. It especially urged States and the agencies
concerned to facilitate the disarmament,
demobilization, rehabilitation and reintegration of
children used as soldiers.
States are mobilizing to achieve this lofty
objective and Africa has shown the way. Following the
examples of South Africa and Malawi, the Government
of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which has
long striven to make human rights the key focus of its
national reconstruction police, demonstrated its
determination to solve the problem of children in
armed conflict. The Democratic Republic of the Congo
became the third African country to establish a national
plan of action pursuant to the resolution adopted at the
1993 Vienna World Conference on Human Rights.
The Congo's legal arsenal will soon be complete
in terms of significant legal provisions protecting the
rights of children. Through its legislative edict No. 90-
048 of 21 August 1999, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo has already ratified the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child. It is in the
process of ratifying the related African Charter. It is
almost ready to ratify the Optional Protocol to the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, which was
opened for signature and ratification on 5 June. It
intends to ratify all pertinent instruments relating to
that Convention.
I need hardly recall that, wherever countries are
at war, even those that have signed all conventions
relating to the rights of the child, children can be found
on the front lines when they should, in theory, be found
at their school desks. The Democratic Republic of the
Congo is no exception to this rule. When the armed
aggression against it began, 6,000 to 7,000 children
were members of the government forces. However, the
number enlisted in the armed groups in the East and in
Equateur province is still hard to assess.
In response to this situation, the Government
quickly understood that the place of children was not in
the army but in their families, at school or in
communities where their youth and vulnerability would
be fully respected. The Government began by taking
certain conservative measures to end the recruitment of
children into the Congolese armed forces and to begin
the process of demobilizing former combatants.
Starting with the prohibition of the recruitment of
children in the armed forces, in accordance with the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, and then
assigning them tasks not involving the use of weapons
and prohibiting the dispatch of minors to the front in
case fighting resumed, my Government moved forward
at high speed.
A truly decisive turning point was reached when,
despite the ongoing state of war, the Government
convened in Kinshasa, from 6 to 10 December 1999, an
important forum on the demobilization and
reintegration of child soldiers. The main objectives of
the forum were, first, to confirm the commitment of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo to the peace process
and to complying with the international conventions to
which it is a party; secondly, to share the experiences
of other countries in the demobilization and
reintegration of minors into family and society; and,
thirdly, to alert donors, partners in bilateral and
multilateral cooperation, and national and international
non-governmental organizations specialized in this area
to the need to become heavily involved in supporting
the process.
The Kinshasa forum was a total success. It
enjoyed the participation of experts from several
Africa, European, Asian and American countries.
Delegations were present from, inter alia, Angola,
Kenya, Liberia, Mozambique and Chad for Africa; the
United States of America, El Salvador and Nicaragua
for America; Belgium, France and Switzerland in
Europe; and Cambodia and Sri Lanka for Asia.
At the close of their work, the participants in the
Kinshasa forum paid tribute to the political resolve of
the Government of the Democratic Republic of the
Congo to recognize the phenomenon of the child
soldier and its determination to demobilize these
children. They took note of the decision to establish an
intergovernmental arrangement for coordinating and
addressing all aspects of demobilization and
reintegration.
They also expressed the view that the
demobilization of children should be included as a
priority objective of any peace process and that
keeping children out of wars is an act to prevent
conflict and uphold human rights ideals. They called on
African States to incorporate in their national
legislation the principle of setting 18 as the minimum
age for enlistment in their armed forces. They appealed
to the international community for effective support for
domestic processes to demobilize and reintegrate child
soldiers, in particular in the Democratic Republic of
the Congo. They invited the media to launch a
campaign to promote demobilization and reintegration
among children themselves and in societies at large,
and to refrain from broadcasting pictures and reports
that could encourage children to enlist in armies.
They called on States to pay particular attention
to disabled children, to so-called witch children and to
children who are under the protection of the law. They
encouraged reintegration, especially by returning
individuals to their family units, to their jobs, to
education and to training, bearing in mind the specific
needs of various groups. They called on international
advocacy groups to refrain from looking at the problem
of child soldiers from a political standpoint and from
using the phenomenon for political purposes, pointing
out that this would run counter to the clear interests of
the children and of human rights.
On 9 June 2000, as a culmination of all these
efforts, the President of the Republic, His Excellency
Mr. Laurent-Desire Kabila, promulgated decree-law 66
on the demobilization and reintegration of child
soldiers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. That
law provides the Democratic Republic of the Congo
with an intergovernmental coordination arrangement -
or even better, with concerted action to address all
aspects of the demobilization and reintegration of
children who had been recruited as soldiers.
In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the
convening of the Kinshasa forum on the demobilization
and reintegration of child soldiers was welcomed as a
source of great hope and as a response entirely
commensurate with the expectations of Congolese
families and communities ravaged by the suffering and
trauma of the war of aggression. If these efforts are not
sustained, we are could see the dream of protecting our
children vanish into thin air.
My Government appreciates the activities carried
out in the Democratic Republic of the Congo by
representatives of the United Nations system,
especially by the country office of the United Nations
Children's Fund, whose deep interest in this matter we
hail. We also appreciate the activities of the Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
and that of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights in support of Government efforts in the
process of demobilizing child soldiers. We thank the
humanitarian agencies for their constant assistance to
refugees and those displaced by the war in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, of whom children
constitute the most vulnerable group. But this is just
one way for the United Nations to ease the effects of
armed conflict on children.
If Government efforts to protect children, inter
alia by completing the demobilization and
reintegration of child soldiers, are to yield the desired
results, the Security Council, which bears primary
responsibility for the maintenance of international
peace and security, must shoulder its responsibilities to
the full. It must rigorously apply Council resolutions
that call for the total, complete and unconditional
withdrawal of Ugandan and Rwandan troops from the
territory of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
which they are occupying in violation of the very
Charter of the United Nations.
I take this opportunity to ask whether the $500
million allocated last year for victims of conflicts and
natural disasters in Africa might not be of some benefit
to Congolese children who have been the victims of the
aggression by Rwanda, Uganda and Burundi.
I take this opportunity also to ask all cooperation
and development agencies to join the action of the
Congolese Government, which has led the way, and to
support its efforts in the framework of the National
Commission on Demobilization and Reintegration,
which is mandated to carry out the successive phases of
these activities both in Kinshasa and in all the
provinces of our country.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Sierra Leone. I invite him to take a
seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Kamara (Sierra Leone): My delegation
would like to thank you, Madam President, for
convening this open debate on the issue of children and
armed conflict. We would also like to thank the
Secretary-General for his well constructed, well
documented and comprehensive report. My delegation
also commends Mr. Olara Otunnu, the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for Children
and Armed Conflict, and Ms. Carol Bellamy, Executive
Director of the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF), for their perseverance and for their
excellent work. We in Sierra Leone know that those
two officials are a credit to our global institution.
The Security Council has clearly acknowledged
that the impact of conflict on children has a variety of
implications for international peace and security. The
adoption of resolution 1261 (1999) gave rise to special
measures aimed at the protection of children exposed
to conflict, thus enhancing the political, civil,
economic, social and cultural rights of the child within
the framework of the Convention on the Rights of the
Child.
We have also noted that the protection of
children, especially those who have found themselves
conscripted or enlisted as child soldiers, has received
ample consideration and a degree of specific
recognition in certain international instruments, such as
the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, International Labour Organization Convention
182 of 1999 concerning the prohibition and immediate
action for the elimination of the worst forms of child
labour, and the African Charter on the Rights and
Welfare of the Child. In furtherance of this cause, the
General Assembly has also adopted the Optional
Protocol on the Convention of the Rights of the Child
on the involvement of children in armed conflict. In
paying heed to the call of the Secretary-General, the
Sierra Leone Parliament, on 23 May this year, ratified
the Rome Statute establishing the International
Criminal Court. The instrument of ratification will
soon be deposited with the Secretary-General.
In that regard, we appeal to all members of the
international community to sign and ratify all
instruments relating to the protection of children in
armed conflict.
The question of children and armed conflict is of
particular interest to my country. That phenomenon has
been a tragic feature of the rebel war since it started in
March 1991. Our conflict has been dubbed the
"children's war" because, tragically, children were not
only the victims of the armed conflict in which they
were caught up, but were also perpetrators of some of
the atrocities that were committed. Children are those
most affected by the growing number of armed
conflicts, of which they are the targets, the victims and
the instruments. These children should have no part to
play in armed conflicts. They need to be protected.
My delegation commends the Security Council
for having adopted resolution 1306 (2000) on Sierra
Leone - the resolution on diamonds - and also
welcomes the resolution adopted last week, on
Wednesday, 20 July, by the world's two main diamond
trading associations to curb the illicit trade in conflict
diamonds. Both resolutions focused on the nexus
between the illicit trade in diamonds and in arms and
on their joint role in fuelling some of the most brutal
and devastating wars in our African continent.
My delegation agrees also with references to
inadequate awareness of the extreme suffering of
women and, especially, girl children, during conflicts.
My Government has responded appropriately to the
special needs of the girl child as well as to those of all
other war-affected children in its disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration programmes.
Educational and vocational training opportunities are to
be organized and made accessible to the girl child
accordingly. In April this year my Government
established the National Commission for War-affected
Children as a means of ensuring that the concerns and
well-being of children and young people are taken fully
into account in resource allocation, programme
planning and national policy-making.
One of the greatest challenges facing post-
conflict Sierra Leone is the crisis of young people. If
former child soldiers are to become productive
members of post-conflict societies, alternatives to
fighting and effective programmes for their
reintegration must be put in place. The Lome Peace
Agreement stipulates that particular attention be paid to
the special needs of these child soldiers in the existing
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration
programmes.
In conclusion, my delegation would like to
express its thanks to the troop-contributing countries,
to congratulate the United Nations Mission in Sierra
Leone on its recent successes and to express its
heartfelt condolences to the countries and families of
the wounded soldiers and those that have lost their
lives.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Norway. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Larsen (Norway): The delegation of Norway
would like to thank the Secretary-General for his
substantive report and for the important work
undertaken by Mr. Olara Otunnu, the Special
Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, as
well as by the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) and other actors within the United Nations
system. My Government supports the recommendations
in the Secretary-General's report.
Norway played an active role in the drafting of
the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights
of the Child on the involvement of children in armed
conflict, as well as the International Labour
Organization Convention (No. 182) that lists forced or
compulsory recruitment of children under 18 for use in
armed conflict as one of the worst forms of child
labour. We are providing financial and other support to
the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, which
was actively engaged in promoting the Protocol. With
the adoption of the Optional Protocol, our focus will
now turn to obtaining support for implementing its
provisions.
The Machel report helped set the stage for our
policies on the protection of war-affected children
during the past five years. With a view to making
operational the recommendations set out in the report,
Norway has assisted a variety of actors in their efforts
to develop policies in this field.
We have been involved in several conferences on
children and armed conflict in the past few years,
including regional conferences in Africa, in 1999, and
in Asia and Europe, this year, organized by the
Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, with the
objective of rallying support for the Optional Protocol
and to exchange views on programming for war-
affected children. At the African conference it became
apparent that there is a need for closer collaboration
between actors in the subregions. Together with
Canada, we have taken steps to mobilize actors in the
subregions. Last April Canada supported the successful
conference in Accra arranged by the Government of
Ghana on war-affected children in West Africa. Later
this year a meeting will be held in Kampala for the
Great Lakes region and the Sudan, with the support of
the Norwegian Government. The focus will be on the
need for closer collaboration and networking between
non-governmental organizations in the field.
Norway has provided support and funding to the
Special Representative of the Secretary-General for the
follow-up of the Special Representative's visits to
Guatemala, Sri Lanka and the Sudan.
My country has suggested the demobilization of
child soldiers as a confidence-building measure in the
Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD)
Partners Forum peace process. Preparations for such a
measure are under way. UNICEF is involved in its
planning.
In our humanitarian policy, we have given a
prominent place to protecting children and other
civilians from landmines, including the need to deal
with the long-term consequences in the aftermath of
conflict and war. As a follow-up to the mine ban
Convention, the Norwegian Government has made a
commitment to contribute the equivalent of $120
million over five years to mine action programmes.
The spread of small arms and light weapons has
exacerbated inter-State and intra-State conflict,
undermined political and economic development,
destabilized communities and devastated the lives of
millions of people. Norway has given priority to
seeking pragmatic and realistic solutions to this grave
problem, which affects children in many ways, as
victims of and participants in hostilities. The
Norwegian experience is that close cooperation among
a broad set of actors is crucial if our efforts are to yield
sustainable results. For our part, Norway will continue
to provide support for efforts at small arms control,
humanitarian assistance and reintegration programmes
that benefit children, including in West Africa. We
have supported the important work of Mali and others
in the Economic Community of West African States on
the issue of small arms. Like other speakers, Norway
believes that the needs of Sierra Leone deserve the
particular attention of the Council and the international
donor community.
Efforts aimed at improving the plight of children
in armed conflict are effective on different levels.
Some of them are undertaken to protect civilians in
general, others to protect children in particular.
Certainly, the Machel report has played an important
role in placing the special protection of war-affected
children high on the Norwegian policy agenda.
Children's rights, and not least the protection of the
rights of children in armed conflict, have gained
increased attention. Much has been done to address
actors at the international level. There is now a
growing realization that in order for change to take
place, subregional and local actors need to be more
involved and further empowered. We are pleased that
this debate confirms the willingness of the international
community to continue to support action at those
levels, too.
Before concluding, my delegation would like to
warmly commend you, Madam President, for your
personal efforts regarding children's rights and for
focusing the Council on this crucial issue. This is
highly valued by my Government.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of the Sudan. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Rahmtalla (Sudan): I should like to
congratulate you, Madam President, on your
outstanding presidency of the Council during this
month. I clearly recall your outstanding chairmanship
of the Preparatory Committee for the World Summit
for Children. I should also like to thank your
predecessor, the representative of France, for his
distinguished performance as President last month, and
the French delegation for their work during the French
presidency.
Sudan attaches particular interest to the question
under consideration today in the Council. We have
participated in all the public meetings held by the
Council on the question of children in armed conflict
and all other questions dealing with the subject.
Before getting to the heart of the matter, I would
like to extend my thanks and appreciation to Mr. Olara
Otunnu, Special Representative of the Secretary-
General for Children and Armed Conflict, for his
tireless and ongoing efforts to raise global public
awareness regarding this issue, which threatens
generations to come. In the same context, we pay
tribute to the work of the Secretary-General and thank
him for his report submitted to the Council and to the
General Assembly on children and armed conflict.
We believe that this meeting will be followed by
other meetings in the General Assembly and the
specialized agencies of the United Nations to consider
the report and its recommendations, so that all States
Members of the United Nations will be able to take a
stand on this highly important issue, which we believe
is of interest to all Member States without exception.
Sudan was among the first States to sign the
Convention on the Rights of the Child. Because of the
interest we attach to children, we have recently
established a superior council on children that falls
directly under the presidency of the Republic. We have
also created a commission to put an end to the
phenomenon of child kidnappings. That commission
was established with the participation and support of
the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the
European Union, as well as of a number of States and
national and international non-governmental
organizations.
The authorities in my country are currently giving
serious consideration to signing the Optional Protocol
to the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Sudan's
signing of the Ottawa Convention on anti-personnel
landmines reaffirms its commitment to enable all
civilians, and children in particular, to free themselves
of those dangerous weapons.
The Government of Sudan has also cooperated
with Mr. Otunnu, the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict,
during the course of his visits to Sudan by reaffirming
its commitment not to enlist children under the age of
18 into the military or to expose their lives to danger.
The Government of Sudan reaffirmed its support for
the efforts made with regard to local and traditional
norms and values. Those efforts will help to promote
the rights of the child. My Government has also
assured Mr. Otunnu of its full cooperation, a fact that
Mr. Otunnu has lauded in his reports following his
visits to Sudan.
My delegation would like to make a few
preliminary comments on the report of the Secretary-
General, which includes a number of
recommendations. As we have said, those
recommendations require close study by the Council
and the General Assembly.
First, we welcome the recommendation that the
Council work to prompt armed groups to respect
standards on the protection of children, in accordance
with the Convention on the Rights of the Child and its
Optional Protocol, and to respect international
humanitarian law concerning the situation of children
in regions of armed conflict. My country believes that
armed rebel groups in Africa are directly responsible
for violations of children's rights in areas of conflict.
We believe the time has come to condemn such armed
groups, to call things by their true names and make
distinctions between the responsibilities of States, on
the one hand, and those of armed groups, on the other.
It is also time to put an end to violations by those
groups of international and humanitarian laws.
Secondly, recommendation 53, which calls on the
Council to work systematically to obtain information
from non-governmental organizations regarding respect
by parties to a conflict of their obligations and
commitments regarding the protection of children, also
says that the Council should take that information into
consideration. This recommendation will take time.
With all due appreciation of the important role assumed
by non-governmental organizations in mobilizing the
international community about situations in which
children face dangers and other humanitarian problems,
we also want to emphasize clearly and categorically
that there have been violations of national laws by a
number of non-governmental organizations working to
provide humanitarian assistance. There have also been
flagrant violations of principles of international and
humanitarian law, as well as of the purposes and
principles of the United Nations Charter.
It has been definitively proved that a great
number of non-governmental organizations have
participated in actions that exacerbate violence and
conflict in Africa. We would like to recall what was
pointed out concerning the involvement of certain non-
governmental organizations in the transfer of munitions
and personnel to the rebel movement in southern
Sudan. That involvement incited the rebel movement to
violate the humanitarian ceasefire in the Bahr El-
Ghazal region and to place the lives of civilians in
danger, especially those of women and children.
The Council is therefore urged, first of all, to
cooperate with States and Governments in gathering
information regarding respect by States of their
commitments in protecting children. The Council is
also asked to deal with credible and serious
organizations, to consecrate the principle of
transparency in its dealing with organizations, to render
its opinions clearly, and to verify the truth of these
violations to relevant States.
In conclusion, as we have already emphasized,
the comments we have made here are only preliminary
observations on the comprehensive report of the
Secretary-General. We hope that report will receive all
the interest it merits from all Member States when it is
debated in the General Assembly. The Council needs to
take into consideration the opinions of all States before
taking any decision on the report. We hope that in the
very near future we will once again be able to discuss
the report in a detailed manner.
However, it is extremely important that the
international community demonstrate real interest in
finding fundamental solutions to the underlying causes
of armed conflict, namely, poverty and
underdevelopment. It should also seek to put an end to
the suffering of children who are victims of those
conflicts. People must make all efforts for sustainable
development.
Finally, at this late hour, I would like to say to the
representative of Uganda that what he said in his
accusatory statement is unfounded. The problem in
Uganda has to do with a conflict between the tribes of
Uganda. President Museveni visited the country's
northern region three months ago and said clearly that
Sudan was not involved with Uganda's problems and
that those problems stemmed from conflict and dissent
within Uganda. President Museveni is therefore
perfectly well aware that Sudan did not interfere in the
situation in northern Uganda. As I have already said,
this is a question of conflict among tribes regarding
minority rule. It is an internal problem for the people of
Uganda.
I would like to close by stressing that dialogue
and contact between Uganda and Sudan continue to
seek to remedy all the problems between the two
countries. Sudan will continue to make every attempt
to ensure the success of its efforts because we wish to
have good-neighbourly relations with Uganda, as we
have with all other neighbouring countries. We affirm
here that we want to implement all African and
international initiatives. I believe the representative of
Uganda mentioned the Zambian and Iranian initiatives.
We note that an initiative has also been launched by the
Carter Centre. Very important meetings were held over
a week ago at the ministerial level between Sudan and
Uganda, within the framework of a dialogue for the
application of the agreements we concluded. Those
meetings were held in Atlanta.
Finally, we reaffirm that differences between
peoples must be settled in accordance with the Charter
of the United Nations, through constructive dialogue
and with the necessary credibility in order to apply all
these agreements.
The President: We have come to the end of our
debate.
I now give the floor to the Special Representative
of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed
Conflict, Mr. Olara Otunnu, to make brief comments.
He will be followed by the Executive Director of the
United Nations Children's Fund, Ms. Bellamy.
Mr. Otunnu: I wish to thank very much all of the
members of the Council as well as the broad
membership of the United Nations, especially those
that participated in this open debate. My colleagues
and I have taken very careful note of all the
observations and critiques that have been made. We
will do our best, together with the Council, to
incorporate them into the development of the mandate
of the Special Representative. I very much look
forward to continuing to work closely with the Council
and to the outcome of this debate and of the report
before the Council.
Allow me one other comment. I wish very
sincerely to congratulate my very good friend
Ambassador Kamalesh Sharma of India for a
characteristically rigorous and brilliant critique of the
mandate of the Special Representative and of the report
before the Security Council. He will be happy to hear
that I do not wish that the Massacre of the Innocents
had taken place around the time of his birth. On the
contrary, the United Nations would be so much poorer
without the systematic and serious perspectives that the
delegation of India brings to our discussions and
dialogue. I very much regret that due to the constraint
of time we cannot have a constructive dialogue on the
issues he raised, but I am sure that he and I and others
will find opportunities outside this Chamber to
continue this dialogue.
The President: I give the floor to Ms. Bellamy.
Ms. Bellamy: We agreed that Mr. Otunnu would
get two seconds and I would get one second, so I will
try to keep my statement even briefer than his.
I would like to express my appreciation, on
behalf of the United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) and our colleagues in the United Nations,
for the Council's leadership in taking up this issue
again, for your leadership, Madam President, and
indeed for the really quite impressive turnout by the
many representatives who spoke today, in terms of
their commitment.
I would simply say the following, apart from
committing ourselves to continuing to work with the
Council. The Security Council is a powerful body. The
report before it contains some very important
recommendations, a good number of which are
appropriate to the Council. I ask the Council please not
to study this report to death. As I said in my opening
remarks, and as the Council is aware, childhood is
quite fleeting. It does not come back, so with every
moment that passes, children are moving on. The time
to act is now, and we urge the Council to do so.
The President: I thank Ms. Bellamy and Mr.
Otunnu for their participation in our debate today, and
certainly we look forward to continuing to work with
them.
I also wish to thank all of those who have
participated in the Council's open debate. Their
contribution will certainly enrich the Council's
consideration of the item "Children and armed
conflict".
The next meeting of the Security Council to
continue the consideration of the item on its agenda
will be fixed in consultation with the members of the
Council.
The meeting rose at 7.30 p.m.
▶ Cite this page
UN Project. “S/PV.4176Resumption1.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/meeting/S-PV-4176Resumption1/. Accessed .