S/PV.4178Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
17
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Peace processes and negotiations
Southern Africa and apartheid
Security Council deliberations
Peacekeeping support and operations
Economic development programmes
Humanitarian aid in Afghanistan
Africa
Mr. Chowdhury (Bangladesh): Madam
President, let me begin by thanking you for scheduling
this public meeting on the situation in Angola. We also
thank Ambassador Gambari, Under-Secretary-General
and Special Adviser on Africa, for introducing the
latest report of the Secretary-General and for his very
useful and comprehensive additional remarks. We
welcome also the presence of Mr. Malungo, Minister
for Social Assistance of Angola, as well as his very
informative and, I must say, encouraging statement.
The Security Council has addressed the situation
in Angola at regular intervals since hostilities resumed
in December 1998. While addressing all aspects of the
situation, we nevertheless have devoted particular
attention to ways and means of promoting the peace
process.
We continue to support the validity of the Lusaka
Protocol, as does the Government of Angola. As we
have said earlier, it is the intransigence of UNITA and
its insistence on pursuing a military campaign that has
derailed the peace process and hindered the full
implementation of the Lusaka Protocol. UNITA needs
to be reminded that there is no military option for it.
We note with satisfaction that the sanctions
imposed on UNITA in the area of arms, oil and
diamonds have taken significant effect. We reiterate
our full support for the strengthened United Nations
sanctions regime, especially as concerns illegal
diamonds. The recent World Diamond Congress
expressed the support of the diamond industry for the
efforts of the Security Council through the adoption of
a resolution. Bangladesh strongly believes that UNITA
will soon find out the futility of the military campaign
that it is pursuing. We must not, however, relent.
At this point, I would like to pay tribute to the
role played by Ambassador Fowler in this regard in his
capacity as the Chairman of the Angola sanctions
Committee. His determination and thoroughness have
yielded results and need to be emulated in other areas
as well.
The Government of Angola's military initiative
continues to meet with success in its quest to extend its
authority over areas under UNITA control. The
conventional war capability of UNITA has been further
reduced. As mentioned in the report of the Secretary-
General of 12 July, the hostilities have had a negative
impact on the law and order situation throughout the
country. We learned in his last report that the military
developments have exacerbated the humanitarian
situation and affected the free movement of people in
the country. People have been forced to leave their
homes with almost no means of subsistence.
Furthermore, help and assistance from the international
community have not been able to reach the people in
need.
We believe that these issues should be addressed
in order to alleviate the suffering of the civilian
population. We also need to encourage the Government
of Angola to continue to cooperate with the United
Nations agencies already working in the field in
addressing the humanitarian situation and in improving
the situation of those people who are at risk. As was
indicated in the report of the rapid assessment mission
of the Emergency Relief Coordinator in March, urgent
steps need to be taken so that the situation does not
deteriorate to the point of crisis. We believe that we
share the same view in the Council.
We are happy to note that the Government of
Angola took the assessment seriously and, as
mentioned in the present report of the Secretary-
General, actively participated in drawing up an
emergency plan of action. We fully support this
approach of identifying the critical needs of the at-risk
population and devising a strategy with major
objectives. We support the focus of the plan on
nutrition, sustenance for internally displaced persons
before the planting season, water and sanitation
programmes, and mother and child health-care
programmes. We also support the ongoing response to
the outbreak of disease and the vaccination campaign.
The magnitude of the situation is reflected in the
statistic that the total number of internally displaced
persons represents approximately 20 per cent of the
population of Angola. However, we believe the
measures contemplated will be useful.
We commend the Government of Angola and the
United Nations agencies, as well as the non-
governmental organizations, for their efforts in drawing
up resettlement plans in accordance with certain
minimum operational standards. It is also gratifying to
note that some return movements of displaced persons
have been noticed. We need to put in place conditions
that will sustain and eventually increase these
movements.
It need not be repeated that access to the civilian
population in dire need of assistance is pivotal to any
measurable success in containing the situation. We
encourage the Government of Angola to do all it can to
help facilitate this access. It is heartening to note that
with new locations coming under its administration,
humanitarian access has increased.
Finally, Bangladesh believes that the
humanitarian efforts in Angola represent a part of the
whole. We need to set our sights on the ultimate
objective of achieving durable peace in Angola. As we
said on an earlier occasion, the process is political. To
our mind, there is a need to create a political space for
an open dialogue with all, including UNITA. The civil
society in Angola has started voicing its opinion in
favour of cessation of hostilities and for a broad-based
dialogue for peace and genuine national reconciliation.
Mr. Listre (Argentina) (spoke in Spanish): I
would like to thank you, Madam President, for the
initiative of convening this debate. We believe that it is
very timely for the Security Council to have an open
meeting on the question of Angola in its entirety, that
is, to consider the military, political and humanitarian
aspects of the conflict. I thank Ambassador Gambari,
the Special Adviser to the Secretary-General, for his
report and for the excellent work he is doing. I would
like also to welcome the Minister for Social Affairs of
Angola, Mr. Albino Malungo.
The primary responsibility for the serious
deterioration of the military and political situation in
Angola rests with UNITA. There is no doubt that Jonas
Savimbi systematically failed to comply with the
obligations stemming from the Lusaka Protocol of
1994. He failed to rise to the challenge to live in peace
and democracy. Having said that, in our view there is
no viable long-term military solution to the situation in
Angola. Almost 25 years of fratricidal struggle have
borne out this statement. Institutional stability and
sustained economic growth in Angola can be achieved
only through broad-ranging, inclusive and candid
political dialogue, with the participation of all sectors,
particularly civil society.
In our View, the Lusaka Protocol, with the
adjustments required, continues to provide an adequate
basis for the durable resolution of the conflict. Within
the context of bolstering democratic institutions, we
note with satisfaction President Dos Santos' decision to
hold general elections in 2001.
The establishment and effective operation of the
United Nations Office in Angola is a step in the right
direction and ensures the continued presence of our
Organization in that country. With the consent of the
Government of Angola, its structure should be
strengthened gradually. We support a multidimensional
United Nations presence in Angola, because it seems to
us that this would be an important instrument in
seeking effective means of restoring peace and
consolidating the rule of law.
We believe that the sanctions regime imposed on
UNITA is an instrument that is consistent with an
approach based on a political solution, and not an
exclusively military approach, to the conflict. The
effectiveness of the sanctions regime is directly linked
to the peace process. It is a key element on which the
quest for a solution to the Angola conflict rests. In that
regard, we share the view that sanctions imposed by
the Security Council must not be punitive, but rather
must foster the creation of conditions conducive to
dialogue among the parties.
Furthermore, the effectiveness of the sanctions
regimes is directly linked to the confidence of the
Government of Angola in the United Nations. In this
regard, Argentina wishes to underscore once again the
outstanding job being done by Ambassador Robert
Fowler of Canada as Chairman of the UNITA sanctions
Committee. The panel report, contained in document
S/2000/203, is a significant effort to clarify relevant
issues, namely, how sanctions are being violated, who
is violating them and what measures can be taken to
make the sanctions a more effective instrument.
The issuance of the report had a significant
impact, and we believe that it will continue to have
positive effects. Not only has it mobilized the States
mentioned in the report, but it has also mobilized the
diamond industry, arms manufacturers, neighbouring
countries and countries of the subregion. It has also
raised the awareness, as none has in the past, of the
international community as a whole.
The ongoing armed conflict has had a devastating
effect on the civilian population. The Secretary-
General's most recent report is very eloquent in this
regard. As was pointed out in the debate, there are
more than 2.5 million internally displaced persons, and
it is estimated that 1 million people require
humanitarian assistance. Approximately 3 million
people are inaccessible to the humanitarian
organizations. We believe that one of the purposes of
this debate must be to alert world public opinion, and
particularly the donor countries, to the humanitarian
situation in Angola. The international community has
the moral duty not to abandon the Angolan people.
For more than 20 years the international
community has been struggling to find a peaceful
resolution to the Angolan conflict. Argentina can
associate itself directly with these efforts, as it began to
deploy military observers as early as 1989, with the
establishment of the United Nations Angola
Verification Mission, and it participated in mine-
clearance work through the White Helmets. As a
member of the Security Council and as the current
coordinator of the zone of peace and cooperation of the
South Atlantic, a forum of dialogue and cooperation
that brings together three South American countries
and 21 African countries, Argentina will do its utmost
to help end the conflict in Angola.
We are convinced that there is no dispute that
cannot be resolved peacefully and fairly if both parties
are motivated by a genuine will to engage in dialogue
and act reasonably and moderately. We believe that
after so much bloodshed, both parties have an
inescapable obligation to the Angolan people to find a
definitive resolution of the conflict.
Mr. Kuchynski (Ukraine): At the outset, I would
like to welcome the presence of His Excellency
Mr. Albino Malunga, the Minister for Social Assistance
of Angola.
Like my colleagues who spoke before, I too
would like to thank you, Madam President, for
convening this public meeting of the Security Council.
The situation in Angola, despite its gravity and
severity, has not been discussed in open format for
quite a long time. This may create a misleading
impression that the United Nations remains uncertain
as to its exact role in the settlement of the Angolan
conflict. We believe that any uncertainty of that kind
must be dispelled. Since the day it became a member of
the Security Council, Ukraine has been advocating a
better-devised and more energetic international policy
towards the conflict in Angola. We hope very much
that today's meeting will contribute to this momentous
task.
It is very important that the Security Council
commitment to improving the effectiveness of the
measures imposed against UNITA, and Canada's
leadership in this endeavour, are producing really
positive effects, weakening the rebel movement and
curtailing its ability to wage war.
The efforts in this area are expected to continue
with the same dynamism. In this respect, Ukraine
welcomes the recent entry into operation of the
monitoring mechanism established pursuant to
resolution 1295 (2000). My Government is prepared to
provide every support to the monitoring mechanism in
discharging its mandate. We also commend the recent
decision by the Southern Africa Development
Community (SADC) to establish a special committee to
monitor the sanctions against UNITA.
At the same time, it has been repeatedly stated
that these efforts will contribute to the establishment of
lasting peace and stability in Angola only if linked to a
wider peace process. My delegation believes that the
Angolan people will benefit only if the United Nations
takes a more assertive stance on the urgency of such a
process.
The Secretary-General's report of 12 July
confirms that although Government forces continue to
make progress in reducing the conventional war
capability of UNITA, guerrilla activities persist in
many parts of the country, perpetuating the prevailing
insecurity among the population.
Taking into account the primary responsibility of
UNITA for the resumed fighting, Ukraine agrees with
the importance attached by the Government of Angola
to its military successes in conventional war against the
rebel movement. However, the sad experience of the
twentieth century proves that, in contrast to
conventional warfare, guerrilla wars may last for long
decades and that in most cases those wars are won with
better results at the negotiating table.
The urgent need for a negotiated settlement of the
conflict is further highlighted by the precarious
humanitarian situation in Angola, which, according to
many sources, continues to deteriorate. In this
connection, my delegation subscribes entirely to the
appeal to all parties to facilitate the delivery of
emergency relief assistance to all those in need.
Certainly we do not underestimate the complexity
of the objective of stopping the war in Angola. Ukraine
understands the position of the Government of Angola
that the current UNITA leader, Jonas Savimbi, can no
longer be considered a trusted counterpart in any
eventual political negotiations.
In this respect, UNITA has to be told that it is in
its interests to put forward a new, unblemished leader,
in whom the Angolan Government can place its
confidence and who will be in a position to guarantee
compliance with any negotiated agreement. In our
view, the United Nations could play a very concrete
role in influencing internal changes within UNITA.
Ukraine also strongly supports the view that the Lusaka
Protocol remains the most viable basis for the
restoration of peace in Angola. In this connection, we
attach great importance to the recent statement by
President Jose Eduardo dos Santos about the validity of
the Lusaka Protocol.
Ukraine strongly supports and associates itself
with the request in the statement made by the United
States on behalf of the troika that intensified efforts be
made to determine the fate of the crews and the
passengers of Russian and Ukrainian commercial
aeroplanes downed under suspicious circumstances
over territory that was controlled by UNITA, as well as
the fate of the other foreign nationals missing in
Angola.
I cannot but use this opportunity to express our
satisfaction with the recent release by UNITA of five
Russian crewmen who had been taken hostage in May
1999.
In conclusion, I join previous speakers in
commending the efforts of Under-Secretary-General
Ibrahim Gambari to explore the prospects for peace in
Angola. My delegation wishes him every success in his
difficult but very important endeavour.
Mr. Kooijmans (Netherlands): The
representative of France is to speak on behalf of the
European Union. We fully endorse everything in his
statement, and I will limit myself therefore to making
the following remarks.
While we welcome the fact that the Government
has reduced UNITA's conventional war capability, this
development has not led to an improvement in the
security situation. In the absence of dialogue, Savimbi
has reverted to all-out guerrilla warfare, and since
Government control tends to be limited to urban areas
his forces are able to terrorize rural populations in
many parts of Angola.
As a result, the humanitarian situation remains
bleak. One in five Angolans is now displaced. Most of
the displaced cannot return and remain dependent on
outside assistance. Relief workers are being
deliberately targeted by UNITA. This year alone the
Netherlands has already supported relief activities with
some $7 million. But there is more that the Angolan
Government, for its part, could do as well. It should
take steps to improve security in rural areas, allow
relief workers full access to the population and
promote demining and other activities aimed at
returning the displaced.
What should now be possible, however, as a
result of the consolidation of Government authority
throughout the country, is for the Government to
engage in efforts leading to a political settlement.
Paragraph 9 of the Secretary-General's report seems to
suggest as much. It is promising that Angolan civil
society is nudging the Government in the direction of a
meaningful dialogue, and we should encourage
President dos Santos to welcome such developments.
In this context, the moment has come for the United
Nations Office in Angola to play an active role. We
therefore welcome Professor Gambari's confirmation
of the imminent appointment of the Head of that
Office.
Sadly, the human rights situation all over
Angola's territory remains as alarming as that
described in the Secretary-General's previous report.
We fully agree with the Secretary-General that respect
for human rights and good governance should be part
of any effort to bring the conflict to an end. Actions
like those taken against journalists are incompatible
with the efforts of the international community to assist
the Government in pacifying the country and, through
this, contribute to the well-being of the Angolan
people.
There are signs that at long last the efforts of the
international community to put pressure on UNITA are
beginning to have the desired effect. Sanctions really
seem to be biting, and it stands to reason that we
should step up our efforts. Therefore, we eagerly await
the first report of the second Panel of Experts tasked
with monitoring implementation of the sanctions.
Equally important are the developments within the
diamond industry, where an awareness is growing of
the unacceptability of "blood diamonds". We hope the
proposals of the recent World Diamond Congress in
Antwerp will be implemented effectively as soon as
possible.
At this point I should like to second the words of
praise addressed once again by many around this table
to Ambassador Fowler for his very important and
highly innovative work for effective implementation of
the sanctions against UNITA. I am sure that
Ambassador Fowler would agree that this is perhaps
also the appropriate moment for the Security Council
to recognize the groundbreaking work that non-
governmental organizations have done in this regard.
Finally, it is very good news that the Angolan
Government and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) have agreed to a staff monitored programme. We
see this as a first step towards the long overdue
normalization of Angola's relationship with the IMF
and other international donors. The Angolan
Government should recognize that transparency and
accountability are essential elements of further
progress down this path. We urge the Government and
the IMF to commit themselves to a successful
completion of the programme.
The President: I shall now make a statement in
my capacity as representative of Jamaica.
My delegation joins previous speakers in
thanking Under-Secretary-General, Ibrahim Gambari,
the Adviser to the Secretary-General for Special
Assignments in Africa, for his clear and comprehensive
briefing on the situation in Angola.
We also welcome Minister Malungo and thank
him for the important statement he made on behalf of
the Government of Angola.
Jamaica continues to be very concerned about the
continuing war in Angola. Ambassador Gambari's
briefing and the Secretary-General's report clearly
remind us of the adverse effects that the years of
fighting have had on all segments of Angolan society.
UNITA's leader, Jonas Savimbi, has been given
numerous opportunities to reach a political settlement
to the conflict, yet his forces continue to perpetrate
wanton violence on the people of Angola. Those who
assist UNITA to continue the fighting are equally
culpable for the perpetuation of the human tragedy in
Angola. In this context, we wish to underline the
tribute paid to Ambassador Robert Fowler for his
leadership of the sanctions Committee against UNITA
and to thank him for his efforts to bring peace to the
people of Angola.
My delegation renews its call for the leaders of
UNITA to abide by the key provisions of the Lusaka
Protocol and to instruct their forces to lay down their
weapons and allow state administration to be extended
throughout the country. It is time for responsible
leaders of UNITA to accept that a political solution is
the only route towards securing an end to Angola's
intractable and tragic civil war.
The re-emergence of civil society in Angola is an
encouraging beginning for the return to normalcy. We
are encouraged by reports that some members of
UNITA have reacted positively to the initiative of
Angolan church leaders to mediate a negotiated peace
between UNITA and the Angolan Government. We are
fully aware of past deceptions by UNITA's leadership.
However, we believe that efforts aimed at achieving
peace must be encouraged and nurtured by the
international community.
My delegation continues to be deeply disturbed
by the precarious humanitarian situation of the
population. We note that, at the end of June, the
number of internally displaced persons was estimated
at 2.5 million, or some 20 per cent of the entire
population of the country. This number, although
representing a small decrease over the number for May,
speaks to the sense of insecurity still existing in large
sections of the country. The 25 years of conflict have
had a serious negative effect on the youth in Angola,
who continue to be killed, maimed, sexually abused,
recruited as child soldiers and deprived of access to
health care and education. We support the Secretary-
General's proposals to include Child Protection
Advisers as an integral part of the mission of the
United Nations Office In Angola (UNOA).
We welcome the efforts of the Government and
United Nations agencies to draft minimum operational
standards for the resettlement of displaced persons into
safe areas and also welcome the collaboration between
the Government, United Nations agencies and non-
governmental organizations to implement a plan of
action for food security, health and nutrition, mine
action and other vital areas. Jamaica urges the donor
community to respond generously to the next United
Nations Consolidated Appeal that will be presented in
August. The implementation of the action plan is
timely, as access to populations at risk increases as
more regions come under government administration.
We are encouraged by indications that the
Government is prepared to recognize the existence of
human rights abuses and to develop regular procedures
to address these. In this regard, the invitation, reported
yesterday, of President Dos Santos to journalist
associations and unions to participate in the drafting of
a new press law is welcome news. This invitation by
the Government marks the beginning of a debate on
press freedom, the guarantee of which will go a long
way towards ensuring that the necessary checks and
balances are in place to safeguard human rights.
We must assist the fledgling civil society in
promoting dialogue between the parties and thereby
creating an energetic political structure in which
political change is affected by the ballot box. We
realize that this is an arduous task to reverse the mind-
set created by over 25 years of war.
The United Nations, in collaboration with the
Government of Angola, must increase its role in
providing guidance for institution-building and on the
practical implications of democratization. We therefore
commend the efforts of the United Nations
Development Programme to provide support for the
capacity-building of government institutions, such as
was provided to the Ministry of Social Assistance and
Reintegration for the coordination of humanitarian
assistance.
Another critical area which must be addressed is
that of infrastructure redevelopment. We agree with the
Secretary-General's observation in his report that there
is an urgent need to begin to rebuild the destroyed
physical and social infrastructures of Angola and to
afford the people of Angola the opportunity to optimize
the potential that that country's rich natural and human
resources are capable of.
My delegation, fully supported the adoption of
resolution 1294 (2000), by which the mandate of
UNOA was extended. UNOA, which was established to
liase with the political, military, police and other
civilian authorities in Angola, has an important role to
play in exploring capacity-building, humanitarian
assistance and the promotion of human rights. We
welcome the news that the Head of UNOA will be
appointed shortly and are sure that this appointment
will result in the strengthening of collaboration
between UNOA, the Government and other parties in
seeking ways to support the current efforts aimed at
achieving sustainable peace in Angola.
Finally, we cannot forget the tragic loss of life of
United Nations officials, including Mr. Blondin Beye.
We therefore welcome the assistance of the
Government in investigating the crashes of the two
United Nations aircraft in regions recently recovered
from rebel positions. In the same vein, we welcome the
release by UNITA of the five Russian crewmen who
were taken hostage in May 1999.
I now resume my functions as the President of the
Council.
Mr. Doutriaux (France) (spoke in French): I
have the honour to speak on behalf of the European
Union. The countries of Central and Eastern Europe
associated with the European Union - Bulgaria, the
Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania,
Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia - and the
associated countries Cyprus, Malta and Turkey join in
this statement.
At the outset, I wish to welcome the Minister for
Social Assistance of Angola and to thank him for the
very interesting statement he made this morning.
I also wish to thank Under-Secretary-General
Gambari for his briefing on the conflict in Angola, one
of the longest conflicts experienced by Africa and in
which progress on the road to peace has, unfortunately,
been far too slow. The most recent report of the
Secretary-General has been helpful in identifying some
of the difficulties that will have to be overcome in
order for a settlement to be achieved and for the
sufferings of the Angolan people to be alleviated.
The primary responsibility for the Angolan
conflict falls to UNITA, which has failed to respect the
commitments it had undertaken to bring about a
restoration of peace. The European Union condemns
once again in the most solemn manner the military
initiatives of UNITA and its leader, Jonas Savimbi, as
well as the acts of guerrilla warfare in which his troops
are engaged.
The European Union shares the Secretary-
General's concern about the lack of significant efforts
to achieve a political settlement to the conflict. As
recalled in its Joint Position of 19 June, the European
Union is ready to support, within the framework of its
common foreign and security policy, any initiative
likely to contribute to such a political solution on the
basis of the Lusaka Protocol and the relevant
resolutions of the Security Council. The European
Union welcomes and encourages the commendable
initiatives taken by the churches and more generally by
civil society, as demonstrated most recently by the
meeting in Luanda of the Congress for Peace this
month.
The European Union intends to continue
supporting the international community's efforts to
strengthen the effectiveness of the measures and
sanctions against UNITA. The European Union
welcomes the recent establishment of a monitoring
mechanism, by resolution 1295 (2000), and intends to
fully support it. It calls upon all States to cooperate,
and welcomes the fact that some, particularly among
those cited in the report of the Panel of Experts
published this spring, have made known their readiness
to welcome United Nations representatives in charge of
follow-up of sanctions against UNITA. The European
Union encourages them to maintain this cooperative
approach, which also has been shown in a number of
cases by their decisions to break off all relations with
UNITA. Moreover, the Union recalls that it is ready to
provide assistance to African States, in particular the
Southern African Development Community (SADC)
States, to assist them in ensuring full implementation
of the sanctions.
It is gratifying to note that the illicit trade in
diamonds, through which UNITA finances its war
effort, is now the subject of increased awareness, to
which the tireless and very active efforts of
Ambassador Fowler have contributed. The World
Diamond Congress, which has just been held in
Antwerp, provided an encouraging illustration of this
awareness. We should observe that, for its part, the
Security Council is now making an effort to identify
the links between the exploitation of and illicit
trafficking in raw materials and the continuation of
conflicts. After Angola the Council has created groups
of experts working on the situation in the Great Lakes
region, as well as in Sierra Leone. The European Union
will support these various efforts by tackling the roots
of conflict. The proposal made during the G-8 Summit
in Okinawa to create a permanent group of independent
experts, under Security Council control and appointed
by the Secretary-General, to finalize the modalities for
banning such illicit trafficking, should be carefully
studied and implemented.
The humanitarian situation in Angola today is
disastrous. The resumption of the conflict on a vast
scale has had destructive effects on populations and
resulted in new movements of refugees and internally
displaced persons. As is stated in the Secretary-
General's report, it is estimated that today there are 2.5
million displaced persons in Angola - approximately
20 per cent of the population. We should emphasize the
efforts made by the World Food Programme (WFP), the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and
the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) to support these refugees and
displaced persons, who are in need of urgent support
from the international community.
This drastic situation is exacerbated by the
continuation of the conflict. The delivery of
humanitarian assistance is running into difficulties
linked to the absence of security on numerous key
access roads. The European Union joins in the
Secretary-General's appeal that all parties involved
facilitate the delivery of emergency relief, which must
be distributed without restrictions and with full
security, in accordance with internationally recognized
humanitarian principles.
For their part, the Angolan authorities should
implement a social and economic policy for the benefit
of the populations of the areas they have taken back
from UNITA, a prerequisite for a genuine peace
process. Moreover, it is imperative that the parties, and
UNITA in particular, cease laying mines and ensure
that such weapons are duly recorded, in such a way that
they can be eliminated.
When the Council met yesterday to deal with the
issue of children and armed conflict we were obliged to
note that the situation in Angola is, from that point of
view also, tragic. Generations of children have grown
up during the conflict, and many have never known any
other reality than conflict, whether because they have
been soldiers or because they have been orphaned,
maimed or displaced.
The European Union once again pays tribute to
the efforts made by the United Nations in the service of
peace; it has already paid a heavy price in human life
in the Angola conflict. The Union hopes that light can
be shed on the conditions in which two of the
Organization's aeroplanes crashed at the end of 1998
and the beginning of 1999. The European Union
welcomes the fact that the Angolan authorities have
been able to strengthen security and are in a position to
assist the United Nations team to visit the sites to
investigate.
The European Union believes that the United
Nations has a role to play in assisting the Government
of Angola, in particular in its efforts to strengthen
democratic institutions and practices and to ensure
respect for human rights, freedom of the media and the
norms of the rule of law. As was rightly emphasized in
the Secretary-General's report, respect for human
rights and good governance are required to end the
conflict. The European Union hails and encourages the
efforts to this end made by the United Nations Office in
Angola. We thank Ambassador Gambari for having
kindly told us that perhaps as soon as tomorrow we
will know the name of the future head of the United
Nations Office in Angola.
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. Kobayashi (Japan): I thank you, Madam
President, for convening this open meeting on Angola,
giving Japan an opportunity to present its views on this
important subject. I wish to express my appreciation to
the Secretary-General, as well as to his Special Adviser
on Africa, Mr. Ibrahim Gambari, for their
comprehensive reports on the situation and for their
tireless efforts to find a peaceful settlement to the
conflict.
The chief obstacle to ending the conflict in
Angola is the continued guerrilla activity of UNITA's
rebel forces under Jonas Savimbi. We are particularly
concerned over reports of guerrilla activity near the
Namibian and Zambian borders, which is destabilizing
the situation in those countries. It is therefore
incumbent upon the international community to closely
follow the situation, lest Angola's civil war develop
into a regional conflict. In this regard, we appreciate
the efforts that Special Adviser Gambari made to
strengthen the relations of trust between the United
Nations and the Government of Angola during his visit
in May.
Since 1993 the Security Council has imposed
economic sanctions against Angola, and specifically
UNITA. These include the prohibition of trade in arms,
petroleum products, and diamonds; travel restrictions
on persons associated with UNITA; and the freezing of
UNITA's assets. Regrettably, however, as described in
the report of the Angolan sanctions Committee, these
sanctions have been blatantly violated by various
countries and individuals, and thus rendered largely
ineffective. Unless the sanctions regime is
strengthened, an early settlement of the Angolan
conflict cannot be expected. It is Japan's view,
therefore, that rather than focusing on those countries
or individuals that violate the sanctions, the Security
Council should explore ways of preventing violations.
From this viewpoint, Japan supports the establishment
of a mechanism to monitor sanctions violations, or to
improve or establish various technical systems to
prevent such violations, as recommended by the
sanctions Committee in its report.
In today's discussion we cannot overlook the dire
facts and figures that reveal the magnitude of human
suffering in Angola. Over the past 20 years, 3.7 million
people, or more than one third of the population, have
had to flee their homes. Among them are 1.5 million
internally displaced persons. It is estimated that, just
since January of this year, as many as 250,000 persons
have been displaced.
In view of this deteriorating situation, we
appreciate the efforts of the Government of Angola to
address these problems, as seen in its launching of a
national emergency assistance plan in 1999; we hope
that the plan will be carried through. However, without
international efforts to halt this grave crisis, the
situation will surely get worse. Japan therefore
welcomes the special appeal for emergency assistance
to internally displaced persons in Angola issued by the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) based on a request by the
Government of Angola. In response to that appeal,
Japan is now examining positively the way to make a
concrete contribution to address this increasingly
serious situation. We hope that the positive response of
the international community to the appeal will
contribute to ensuring the human security of those who
have been displaced, and eventually to promoting
capacity-building, a process which, in the long run,
will contribute to the prevention of conflict in Angola.
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): We would like to
thank you, Madam President, for the initiative to
convene this meeting to discuss the situation in
Angola. We thank the Secretary-General's Adviser for
Special Assignments in Africa, Ambassador Ibrahim
Gambari, for his eloquent presentation of the report of
the Secretary-General and for his dedication to the
Angolan issue.
The continuing hostilities in Angola constitute a
major setback for the people of that sisterly country,
and indeed for all peace-loving nations. The
resumption of war in Angola is a source of concern not
only for my country but also for the rest of the southern
African region, the African continent and the
international community as a whole.
The refusal of UNITA to comply with the Lusaka
Protocol, in particular its failure to demilitarize its
forces and to allow State administration to be extended
throughout the country, is the primary reason for the
escalation of the conflict in Angola. This situation has
had devastating effects on the population of Angola, in
the social, economic and humanitarian fields.
As discussed in this Chamber yesterday,
generations of children have been exposed throughout
their entire lives to just one reality, that of war. Many
of them are forced to bear arms and to participate in
hostilities, while others have been and continue to be
victimized.
Because of a lack of security in rural areas, a
large number of people have been forced to abandon
their lands, where they used to produce food and cash
crops. As a result of that situation, a population of 2.5
million internally displaced persons, representing 20
per cent of the total population of Angola, is now
concentrated in urban and semi-urban areas. This has
reduced access to piped water, health care, education
and other basic needs, drastically affecting the living
standards of the population and efforts for poverty
reduction.
The refusal by the UNITA of Jonas Savimbi to
comply with the Lusaka Protocol has plunged the
country into a serious humanitarian disaster. More than
1 million persons rely on food distribution to survive,
and a total of 2.5 million are in dire need of
humanitarian assistance. But humanitarian assistance
cannot reach all those in need, owing to UNITA
guerrilla activities in parts of the country.
The recent progress made by Government forces
in recovering areas of the country previously under
UNITA control has increased access to populations at
risk. However, the extension of State administration to
those areas has created an additional burden for the
Government. There is an urgent need to provide the
population currently under State administration, and all
others in need, with basic needs and safe resettlement
areas. We would like to commend the Government of
Angola for taking the lead in preparing an emergency
plan of action to address humanitarian needs in
collaboration with several humanitarian agencies and
the donor community.
In this regard, we welcome the presence here of
Mr. Albino Malungo, Minister for Social Assistance of
the Republic of Angola. We call on all Member States,
United Nations agencies and the donor community to
continue and strengthen their support to the people and
the Government of Angola and to respond generously
to the 2000 United Nations Consolidated Inter-Agency
Appeal for Angola.
In spite of the efforts of the Angolan Government
to address the serious macroeconomic instability and to
reduce poverty, a major obstacle lies in the way of
achieving the fundamental objective of sustainable
human and economic development: the absence of
peace. The continuing fighting and the absence of a
meaningful chance of a political settlement constitute a
serious concern. The people of Angola deserve a better
fate, and we urge the international community not to
desist from assisting the Angolans to find a solution to
the prolonged conflict that has caused untold suffering
among the war-fatigued people of that sisterly country.
We commend the reaffirmation by President Jose
Eduardo dos Santos of Angola of the validity of the
Lusaka Protocol and of his willingness to forgive
Mr. Savimbi and his supporters if they renounce war.
We urge Mr. Savimbi and his supporters to cease
hostilities and to honour their commitments under the
Lusaka Protocol, creating the necessary conditions for
broad-based dialogue for durable peace and national
reconciliation
We also urge all Member States and the
international community as a whole to comply with all
relevant Security Council resolutions on Angola, with a
view in particular to putting an end to the illicit trade in
arms and the illicit exploitation of and trade in
diamonds, which are responsible for fuelling the
conflict in Angola. In this regard, we would like to
commend the work of the Security Council Committee
on sanctions against UNITA under the dynamic
leadership of Ambassador Fowler. We wish him well in
his new posting.
The conflict in Angola impedes the attainment of
sustainable development not only in that country but
also in the whole southern African region. The leaders
of the Southern African Development Community are
fully aware that only the end of conflict in the region
can give rise to a favourable climate to enable more
investment and economic growth, leading ultimately to
the balanced and sustainable development of all the
countries of the region.
The Security Council must continue to discharge
its primary responsibility for maintaining international
peace and security and help the people of Angola and
the region to find a durable solution to the conflict.
We commend the Secretary-General's initiatives
on Angola and, in particular, the recent visit to Angola
of his Special Adviser on Africa. We encourage him to
persevere in his endeavours as further talks with the
Angolan authorities, members of political parties and
civil society proceed.
It is our fervent hope that, as a result of this
important meeting, adequate humanitarian assistance
will be provided to alleviate the suffering of the
Angolan people.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Brazil. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Moura (Brazil): I wish first of all to thank
you, Madam President, for convening this important
meeting. I should also like to thank Under-Secretary-
General Gambari for his briefing this morning. Brazil
welcomes the presence of Mr. Albino Malungu,
Minister for Social Assistance of Angola. We also
appreciated his statement this morning.
This meeting follows up on last month's briefing
by Professor Gambari on his visit to Angola. At that
time he underlined that one of the objectives of his
mission was to consolidate the growing trust between
the Government of Angola and the United Nations.
After the war resumed in late 1998 the sense of
frustration with the United Nations that was felt in
Luanda was understandable. We in Brazil perceived
that fact, and did our best to restore a good working
relationship between Angola and the United Nations.
Having been the victims of a long war against a
colonial regime and suffered the brunt of a cold-war-
era conflict, the people of Angola are yearning for
peace. Today the objective evidence gathered since the
signing of the Bicesse Accords points to the
undisputable responsibility of Jonas Savimbi's UNITA
for the failure of a 10-year-long United Nations
peacekeeping presence in Angola.
An almost continuous state of war has resulted in
the destruction of much of Angola's infrastructure, the
creation of huge deficits in education and health
services and the condemnation of a large part of its
population to untold suffering and the condition of
being refugees in their own country.
The Angolan Government made strenuous efforts
to implement the "Acordos de Paz" and the Lusaka
Protocol. The refusal of UNITA to abide by its peace
commitments forced the Angolan Government to
uphold its own authority and to limit UNITA's capacity
to wage conventional warfare.
The Security Council recognized UNITA's
responsibility and decided to establish an increasingly
complex sanctions regime. The persistence of UNITA's
war-making capacity led this Council to create the
Panel of Experts that was so skilfully coordinated by
Ambassador Fowler. As a consequence, there is now a
worldwide effort to control the illegal traffic in
diamonds that fuels wars such those waged by Jonas
Savimbi in Angola and Foday Sankoh in Sierra Leone.
Unfortunately, however, these important milestones
have not yet been translated into meaningful change for
those millions of internally displaced Angolans.
The Angolan Government faces the extremely
difficult challenge of providing for the basic needs of a
growing mass of displaced people and of fighting
against guerrilla warfare aimed at the civilian
population. In this context, the international
community must make a combined effort to strictly
implement sanctions against UNITA and provide
assistance to the Angolan people, and to do so working
closely with the Government of Luanda.
With that in mind, the third Conference of Heads
of State and Government of the Community of
Portuguese Speaking Countries (CPLP), held in
Maputo on 17 and 18 July, reviewed the situation in
Angola and reaffirmed that the absence of peace in that
country was a result of the lack of fulfilment of their
commitments by Jonas Savimbi and his followers. The
Conference also expressed support and solidarity to the
Government of Angola in its efforts to suppress armed
subversion and re-establish peace under the terms of
the Lusaka Protocol.
In Maputo the President of the Federative
Republic of Brazil stated that the seven CPLP countries
should work together to promote the implementation of
United Nations sanctions against UNITA. He said that
it was high time to send Jonas Savimbi a clear message
about the will of the international community to ensure
the end of the Angolan conflict, which he hopes will
culminate in the holding of free and fair elections at the
end of 2001.
In our view, the strategies needed to tackle
humanitarian problems, such as those which afflict
Angola, should focus on conflict prevention,
peacemaking, peacekeeping, and post-conflict peace-
building, and should take into account the multiple
dimensions of conflicts.
In the case of Angola, the peacemaking effort
embodied in the three United Nations Angola
Verification Missions and the United Nations Observer
Mission in Angola did not succeed. As the Angolans
took into their own hands the task of resolving the war
situation, the United Nations established the United
Nations Office in Angola, which has, inter alia, the
role of coordinating humanitarian actions. They must
be based on the principle of shared responsibility and
joint efforts. The mandates of the humanitarian and
development agencies involved can differ in nature, but
they are intertwined, since their goal is the full
enjoyment of basic human rights.
It is therefore essential that the United Nations,
through its various organs, including this Council and
the Economic and Social Council in their respective
spheres of competence, cooperate with the Government
of Angola with a view to producing synergy in the field
of humanitarian assistance in that country. That also
means supporting Angola's own humanitarian
programmes.
Civil society in Angola is also organizing itself,
as is the Roman Catholic Church. The task of
diminishing suffering and preparing for reconstruction
is so vast that everybody will have to do more.
Organized groups will have to pool their efforts in
order to assist local authorities and groups of
concerned citizens in upholding the most basic human
right - the right to life.
The huge needs of Angola are such that we
should think beyond the much needed provision of
immediate relief assistance and start to plan the
architecture of post-conflict recovery and capacity-
building institutions. Immediate relief-assistance
actions are essential to address the consequences of
situations in which people remain displaced or return
under precarious conditions. However, a long-standing
solution to the humanitarian situation in Angola
depends on a political process that could ensure the
transformation of UNITA from an armed opposition
movement into a party committed to the establishment
of democracy in Angola. The Security Council and the
international community should keep that fact in mind
while planning a course of action to deal with the
situation.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Lesotho. I invite her to take
a seat at the Council table and to make her statement.
Mr. Mochochoko (Lesotho): Madam President,
let me begin by commending you for your leadership
of the Council during the month of July. I welcome the
opportunity to address the Council as it considers yet
again the Secretary-General's report on Angola. We
join previous delegations in welcoming Minister
Malungo and in thanking Ambassador Gambari for his
introduction of the Secretary-General's report.
We are all aware of the situation that has
prevailed in Angola since 1998, when UNITA was
discharged from the Government of National Unity and
Reconciliation, followed by the return to conflict and
the subsequent withdrawal of the United Nations
peacekeepers from the country. Over the years, the
international community and the Council have stood by
as the people of Angola endured untold suffering and
hardship, including serious human rights violations, the
conscription of child soldiers, and the murder and
maiming by landmines of civilians at the hands of
Jonas Savimbi and UNITA. Current estimates put the
death toll in Angola at close to 1 million. There are
over 2 million internally displaced persons, and
thousands of refugees have fled to neighbouring
countries.
The single motivating factor that has caused
Savimbi to continue the civil war in Angola and to
refuse to heed the Council's numerous resolutions is
greed for power and for the economic wealth of
Angola. While the people of this richly endowed
country have suffered economically and otherwise over
the years, Savimbi and UNITA have gained from the
continuation of the conflict, which they have fuelled by
exploiting Angola's natural resources.
One would have thus expected that following the
Council's adoption of resolution 1295 (2000) in April
and the introduction of tougher measures to restrict
UNITA's access to international markets for illegal
exports of diamonds and import of fuels and
ammunition, the situation in Angola would have
changed for the better. Unfortunately, the report before
us today does not contain much evidence of a change
for the better.
This calls for even more strenuous efforts by this
Council and the international community to strengthen
the monitoring mechanism for the implementation of
resolution 1295 (2000). It was thus a matter of concern
to witness some delays in the establishment of the
monitoring mechanism envisaged in resolution 1295
(2000), as these delays assured Savimbi of his
continued resource base. We accordingly applaud the
establishment of this mechanism, the effect of which
will be to further tighten the noose around Savimbi's
neck, forcing him to return to dialogue, peace and
reconciliation.
The people of Angola have been hungry for peace
and stability for a long time, but despite their calls for
the cessation of hostilities, and despite efforts by,
among others, the Secretary-General's Adviser for
Special Assignments in Africa, Under-Secretary
Ibrahim Gambari; the Secretary-General of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), Mr. Salim
Ahmed Salim; and the Director of the Office of the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Mr. Ross
Mountain, violence and insecurity continue to prevail
in many parts of Angola, as a result of which the
humanitarian situation has deteriorated. Reports of
attacks on civilian vehicles, in particular on those of
relief agencies, resulting in deaths, injuries and the
destruction of property, have forced the World Food
Programme and other agencies to abandon distribution
of aid by land and to resort to airlifting all supplies,
which is considerably more expensive.
In this regard, we note that the response to the
United Nations Consolidated Inter-Agency Appeal has
so far been poor and that while contributions have been
made for food, very little funding has been received.
Unless the international community responds urgently
and generously by making funds available to pay for
the cost of airlifting supplies, it will not be possible to
avoid the imminent human catastrophe in Angola.
While there is no doubt that displacement and the
threat of landmines have kept farmers from producing
crops, thus exacerbating famine and intensifying the
humanitarian situation, other problems are structural in
nature and thus need to be resolved through reforms
and longer-term development programmes.
Now that the Government has regained control of
large parts of the country, prospects for the farming
community to revive the agricultural industry,
particularly the once-vibrant coffee industry, have been
enhanced. The Government of Angola thus needs to
take the necessary steps to mobilize financial resources
for the purchase of equipment and raw materials as
well as for the rehabilitation of irrigation and drainage
systems. Donor community support for revitalizing the
coffee industry in Angola will no doubt be a vital
catalyst for creating an economically sustainable
income for thousands of families in Angola, thus
bringing about much-needed change in this war-torn
country.
It should be a source of concern that health
conditions in Angola have dramatically deteriorated,
with a number of preventable diseases, such as polio,
bringing death and suffering to an ever-increasing
number of people. Efforts by the World Health
Organization (WHO) and De Beers to harness the
further spread of the polio epidemic will not bear much
fruit as long as war continues to force thousands of
people to leave the hinterland for sanctuary in already
overcrowded cities. Resettlement plans for thousands
of displaced people should be put in place at the same
time that the immunization campaign is intensified.
It should now be clear to all of us that for as long
as the war in Angola continues, the needs of the
Angolan people will continue to grow. Not only is the
Angolan economic infrastructure in turmoil as a result
of over 30 years of war, but the country has the highest
number of landmines and landmine victims. Human
rights abuses are rife, and so is poverty. We cannot but
share the View expressed by the Executive Director of
the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Ms.
Carol Bellamy, that while crises in other parts of the
world have received an immediate and generous
response from both the public and the media, relatively
little attention has been paid to a similar crisis in
Angola, one of the many in Africa, where, as the report
shows, thousands of people continue to be displaced
from their homes, tortured and killed on a daily basis.
We can thus do no more than reiterate appeals for
international assistance to the Government of Angola
to help it address the serious humanitarian and
development crises facing that country and its people.
In conclusion, we wish to pay a well-deserved
tribute to Ambassador Fowler for ably chairing the
sanctions Committee and for his efforts in ensuring the
effectiveness of sanctions against UNITA. While we
are saddened by his departure, we wish him every
success as he embarks on what will no doubt be
another challenging journey in his career.
The President: I now give the floor to the Under-
Secretary-General and Special Adviser on Africa,
Mr. Ibrahim Gambari.
Mr. Gambari: I wish first of all to thank you,
Madam President, for having convened this very
productive open meeting and for the skilful manner in
which you have conducted the proceedings. I wish also
to seize this opportunity to thank my brother, Minister
Malungo, for his excellent statement, and I wish to
express through him our appreciation to the
Government of Angola for sending him to participate
in this meeting. This is evidence of the importance that
the Government of Angola attaches to the proceedings
of this meeting.
May I also thank all members of the Council and
all of the other delegations for their important
contributions to these discussions. I wish to assure all
present that the Secretariat will intensify its efforts to
work with the Government and people of Angola in the
search for durable peace and sustainable development.
The message we have heard from the discussions
in this open meeting today is that the Secretary-
General, the Secretariat, United Nations agencies and
the international community must redouble their
efforts, first, to tighten the sanctions against UNITA;
secondly, to complement those of the Government of
Angola to respond more fully to the needs of the large
percentage of Angolans who are in distress and require
urgent humanitarian assistance; and thirdly, to support
civil society, the Government and all those who
promote the political settlement of the conflict in
Angola. The goal which we all share is to end all
fighting everywhere in Angola sooner rather than later,
and to ensure the success of the work of the United
Nations Office in Angola under the leadership of the
new head of the Office, who is expected shortly to take
up his appointment in Luanda.
Meanwhile, may I, with your permission, Madam
President, add a few words to what I said earlier with
respect to the humanitarian situation and related
matters in Angola, and the contributions being made
specifically by some United Nations agencies.
First, in response to a request from the
Government of Angola, the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
decided in May 2000 to expand UNHCR's existing
operation in Angola, which provides assistance to
13,000 refugees, mainly from the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, to include protection and humanitarian
assistance to some 300,000 internally displaced persons
and returnees, particularly in three provinces of Uige,
Zaire and Luanda.
Because UNHCR is operational it can translate
legal principles which protect the rights of internally
displaced persons into concrete actions in these three
provinces. UNHCR will also assist in meeting urgently
needed humanitarian requirements such as health care,
shelter, water, education, clothing and so on, while
working to promote a degree of self-sufficiency among
the beneficiary population.
However, the financial requirements for UNHCR
for the rest of the year 2000 for Angola amount to $8.4
million, and approximately $12 million for the year
2001. Therefore, UNHCR has made an appeal to
donors, as part of the recently launched United Nations
Consolidated Appeal, for $154 million to address the
needs of an estimated 2.7 million people. We urge the
donor community to respond positively and very
generously.
May I also say a word about security. In the last
few weeks UNITA has made additional threats to
humanitarian workers, and I believe this needs to be
strongly condemned, not only by the Secretariat but by
the Security Council.
Furthermore, UNDP and OCHA are working with
the Government on a strategy to alleviate the situation
of internally displaced persons. This needs the support
of the international community. There is need, for
example, to continue to support the Angolan people
with food aid until March-April 2001. Support is
needed to provide seeds and tools for the next
agricultural campaign. Support for the non-
governmental organizations is also needed in the very
important work of demining. As several delegations
pointed out, this is a very critical issue. Also, the
United Nations system is supporting the Government
of Angola in its strategy for poverty reduction and
alleviation.
I also am delighted to report that the Secretary-
General has directed me to go on missions to Zambia
and Namibia next week and the following week for
consultations with the authorities there on the negative
consequences of the spread of the war in Angola to
these neighbouring countries. I hope that at some point
I may be in a position to report back on my findings to
the Council and to recommend ways in which we can
respond to some of the issues.
Finally, I wish to convey, on behalf of the
Secretary-General and on my own behalf,
congratulations to Ambassador Fowler for the excellent
work which he has done not only as the Permanent
Representative of Canada but in particular for the truly
path-breaking contribution he has made to the search
for peace in Angola through his extraordinary
leadership of the sanctions Committee on Angola. We
wish him success in his new assignment in Rome, and
he can be sure that some of us will look him up as soon
as possible - not all at one time, but one after the
other. Mr. Fowler can leave here fully convinced that
he has made a difference to the work not only of the
Security Council but of the United Nations as a whole.
His valuable work on the issue of sanctions against
UNITA has greatly helped to restore the credibility of
the Security Council and of the United Nations as a
whole.
I must confess that I personally have benefited
from the good work he has done, because it has helped
in many ways in my own efforts to restore the trust and
confidence between the United Nations and the
Government of Angola. I believe there are also other
beneficiaries of his work - the people of Sierra Leone,
who will shortly be relieved to note that illegal
diamonds will now be difficult to export for sale to
finance the war activities of the Revolutionary United
Front (RUF). The Democratic Republic of the Congo
will also be a beneficiary of the work of Ambassador
Fowler in terms of monitoring and control of illegal
exploitation of mineral and other natural resources in
that country.
We all owe you a debt of gratitude, Mr. Fowler.
Good luck in your new assignment.
The President: I thank Under-Secretary-General
Gambari for his briefing today. I wish to express
appreciation for his own efforts on behalf of the United
Nations to bring about a peaceful solution to the
conflict in Angola and to restore trust and confidence
between the United Nations and the Government of
Angola. We have noted from his statement that he will
be paying visits to the region in the very near future,
and we look forward to further briefings of the Council
when he returns.
There are no further speakers inscribed on my
list. The Security Council has thus concluded the
present stage of its consideration of the item on its
agenda. The Council will remain seized of the matter.
The meeting rose at 4.50 p.m.
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