S/PV.4538Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
52
Speeches
0
Countries
0
Resolutions
Topics
Peacekeeping support and operations
Security Council deliberations
African Union peace and security
Sustainable development and climate
General debate rhetoric
General statements and positions
Africa
The President: I should like to inform the
Council that I have received letters from the
representatives of Cape Verde, the Central African
Republic, Ethiopia and Malaysia, in which they request
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 those representatives to participate in the
discussion without the right to vote, in accordance with
the relevant provisions ofthe Charter and rule 37 ofthe
Council's provisional rules of procedure.
There being no objection, it is so decided.
At the invitation of the President, Mr. Da Fonseca
(Cape Verde), Mr. Poukre-Kono (Central African Republic), Mr. Hussein (Ethiopia) and Mr. Hasmy
(Malaysia) took the seats reserved for them at the
side ofthe Council Chamber.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Sierra Leone. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Kanu (Sierra Leone): I would like to thank
the Security Council, and in particular you yourself,
Sir, for organizing today's debate and for inviting
Sierra Leone to participate in it, and to express my
delegation's satisfaction at seeing you preside over
such an important meeting.
Our appreciation also goes to the Chairman of the
ad hoc Working Group, the Ambassador of Mauritius,
for his initiative.
Since this is the first time my delegation is taking
the floor since the election of the new members of the
Council - Bulgaria, Cameroon, Guinea, Mexico and
the Syrian Arab Republic - we would also like to
salute their election and to wish them all success in the
fulfilment of their arduous mandate.
Today's debate certainly attests to the Security
Council's commitment to seeking long-term solutions
to the problems of Africa. The report of the Secretary-
General on the causes of conflict and the promotion of
durable peace and sustainable development in
Africa - which was considered by the General
Assembly, the Security Council and the Economic and
Social Council - contains a series of specific as well
as broad recommendations on issues ranging from
post-conflict peace-building to the mobilization of
resources for development. We also salute the
importance of the follow-up work of the Open-Ended
Ad Hoc Working Group of the General Assembly on
the Causes of Conflict and the Promotion of Durable
Peace and Sustainable Development in Africa.
The causes and solutions to conflicts in African
countries are nearly always linked to a wider, regional
problem of instability. The Council needs to maintain
its attention, as it has done in the past, on the overall
regional problems. West Africa, in particular, is a
region where the intricate net of individual conflicts,
fed by poverty, has heightened the risk of the region
becoming the world's first failed region.
Sierra Leone has preoccupied the Council over
the past few years, but today I can assure you that,
thanks to the constant involvement of the United
Nations, the Sierra Leonean people have been given
hope. The imminent establishment of the Special Court
and the peacefully held presidential and legislative
elections are testimony enough to encourage the
Council to further support the peace process.
However, as long as the situation in neighbouring
countries, such as Liberia and Guinea-Bissau, remains
dire, the threat of instability spilling back into Sierra
Leone is still very real. Equally, the huge number of
refugees and internally displaced persons still on the
move in a number of countries in West Africa troubles
us.
In that sense, it has always been our view that the
efforts of subregional organizations, such as the
Economic Community of West African States, in the
context of Chapter VIII of the Charter are absolutely
essential and that cooperation should be given a very
practical focus. Indeed, the subregional organization's
efforts must continue to be enhanced. The Council
should not, however, concentrate only on conflict. It
ought to properly integrate all the economic, social and
political problems that create conflict and poverty.
Sierra Leone wishes to acknowledge the support
provided for certain African initiatives to resolve
disputes. In this respect, we would like to pay tribute to
the United Nations Development Program for its
contribution to the Mano River Women's Peace
Network.
Another example is the work of the United
Nations Development Fund for Women towards gender
mainstreaming in its peace programme in East Africa,
Central Africa and the Horn of Africa, facilitating
women's participation in peace and reconciliation
meetings and negotiations, and supporting their
involvement in advocacy for peace. We strongly
encourage its further development in the rest of the
African region.
The report of the Secretary-General on the causes
of conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa highlighted the
critical nexus between peace and development and
advanced a comprehensive and integrated approach to
conflict prevention, poverty eradication and
development. That approach has been accepted by the
international community, including African countries
themselves, as a framework for the provision of
support to Africa.
Indeed, Sierra Leone, based on its own painful
experience, confirms that peace, democracy and good
governance are prerequisites for sustainable
development in any African country.
One of the elements contributing to violent
conflict in Africa is the rapid accumulation, illicit sale
and indiscriminate use of small arms, which aggravate
conflict situations. Indeed, in Sierra Leone, the illicit
trade in arms and diamonds has shown to be a major
element fuelling the conflict.
An effective way for the United Nations to assist
African countries in the area of peace-building is to
combine measures in support of peace-building and
longer-term development in a comprehensive and
coherent response. A critical element of forging
national reconciliation and social cohesion is to
promote a culture of peace, and the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization has a
leading role in that field. We can only agree with the
importance of disseminating the culture of peace
among parliamentarians and members of the armed and
police forces as well, in particular when many of them
were ex-combatants and joined a reintegration
programme.
The public service is weak in a country that has
experienced years of civil war, not to say sometimes
non-existent, and strengthening those countries'
capacity is one of the critical contributions that the
United Nations - especially this Working Group -
can make in assisting these countries to direct and
manage their own development. The work of the
Economic Commission for Africa in enhancing the
administrative capacity of African countries is
commendable.
Building the capacity required for the
consolidation of democratic practices and institutions
is also of crucial importance.
The importance of creating small- and medium-
sized enterprises in Africa in order to increase the
employment prospects of the underemployed and
unemployed needs to be given continued attention.
While special school feeding programmes are
very positive initiatives that help both boy and girl
students to learn in better conditions, special efforts are
still needed to get more girls to enter school and to
improve their attendance, thereby eliminating a form of
discrimination.
In conclusion, the Sierra Leone delegation wishes
to emphasize again its belief that the regional approach
to the prevention and resolution of conflicts is an
efficient one that requires thorough cooperation with
the subregional and international community.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of the Gambia. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Grey-Johnson (Gambia): I congratulate you,
Sir, for convening this important meeting, to allow us
share our ideas with you on what the Security Council,
the Economic and Social Council and the ad hoc
Working Group might do severally and collectively, to
more effectively address the problems of peace,
security and development in Africa. They are the real
challenges that face the continent and the ones on
which we feel the United Nations must concentrate if it
is to be of meaningful service to African countries. We
must also recognize that the problems of peace and
security and the problems of development are in fact
two sides of the very same coin. That is why we are
gratified that the Economic and Social Council and the
Security Council have decided to come together to
address themjointly. We also know that it is mainly for
that reason that it has been decided to set up the United
Nations Office for West Africa under the dynamic
leadership of Ibrahima Fall, whom we wish well as he
takes up his duties in Dakar.
At this very moment, there is jubilation in Sierra
Leone for the smooth conduct of presidential and
parliamentary elections, signalling a full transition
from conflict to peace and democracy. We extend our
congratulations to the Government and people of Sierra
Leone. The Security Council also deserves our
commendation for the role it played in stabilizing the
situation and in getting the warring factions to choose
the political rather than the military route in the pursuit
of their objectives. We also congratulate the
Department of Peacekeeping Operations, as well as the
United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL)
and its dynamic leadership, for staying focused on the
ground, despite the adverse odds and many challenges
that they faced, and for prosecuting their mandate to a
successful outcome in record time - a not-too-
common occurrence in United Nations peacekeeping.
I should very quickly like to raise a number of
issues that might cut across some of the areas proposed
for consideration at this meeting.
Let me start with the situation in the Mano River
Union. There is a need for the United Nations
perspective on the Mano River question to be
broadened in order to realistically address the problem.
Accordingly, not only should the offices of the two
Special Representatives of the Secretary-General in
Monrovia and in Freetown be rationalized, but also
moves should be made to incorporate the Guinean
dimensions of the problem into present programmes.
Perhaps the time has come for there to be one
Representative office for the Mano River Union. An
expanded mandate for UNAMSIL along those lines
might best meet that need.
On a related matter, I should like to address the
issue of mercenaries in West Africa. A large number of
mercenaries from all over the subregion have been
involved in the conflicts in West Africa. They
participated very actively in Sierra Leone and Guinea
and are now back in Liberia. There is a need for the
United Nations to formally recognize the existence of
this group of actors in the various conflicts, with a
View to designing and implementing appropriate
programmes to address them as an important factor in
our search for a durable peace in the subregion. At
present nothing is being done to demobilize them, as
was the case with the combatants in Sierra Leone. In
fact, we have evidence to show that when the situation
calmed down in Sierra Leone many of the mercenaries
fighting with the RUF moved over into Liberia to join
the various militias in the fighting that picked up
recently in that country. When this conflict does come
to an end, is it not likely that this army of mercenaries
will move over to another country in the subregion to
ply its trade? My Government has been drawing
attention to this problem for a long time now and
would sincerely wish that something be done without
any further delay to address it.
We firmly believe that the United Nations,
perhaps along with ECOWAS, must take up this issue
seriously. It must first begin by finding out who these
people are, how many of them there are, where they
came from, who recruited them and for what purpose.
Then the United Nations should proceed to design
appropriate interventions to have them effectively
demobilized and eventually fully reintegrated into their
various communities. These interventions should
include a more concerted effort to deny them and the
militias they fight for access to the arms that keep them
in business. In this regard, arms manufacturers and
exporters in the West should be held more to account
and be made to be more selective, more judgmental and
more responsive in their arms and ammunition
transactions with African buyers.
The time has come for United Nations
peacekeeping to be more proactive so as to prevent
conflicts before they flare up. At present the United
Nations appears more equipped to react to conflict
situations, much like closing the doors after the horses
have left the stables. The case of Guinea a couple of
years ago amply demonstrates this shortcoming.
Although everyone knew for many months before it
happened that Guinea was poised to fall victim to rebel
attack, there were no perceptible efforts on the part of
the United Nations to prevent that from happening. The
current situation in Madagascar, and the Security
Council's reaction to it, is another good case in point.
At present, there are many countries throughout Africa
that are displaying all the signs of a flare-up. The
United Nations must strengthen its ability to keep a
close watch on those countries and to intervene in
order to reduce, and eventually, diffuse the existing
tensions.
As part of its peacekeeping activities, the United
Nations should seek to encourage and support
initiatives by individual Member States to prevent or
resolve conflicts. It is true that the United Nations
supported the intervention of ECOWAS in Liberia and
Sierra Leone. It should strengthen its partnership with
that intergovernmental organization, as well as with
others, such as the Community of Sahel-Saharan
States, the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development and so on. It should show solidarity with
them and increase their confidence and capacity to
handle conflict in their respective areas.
Equally, bilateral initiatives taken by certain
States to address conflict situations in their
neighbourhood deserve to be supported in concrete
ways. For example, my country's peace programmes
for Guinea-Bissau and for Cassamance in southern
Senegal could be significantly bolstered, given the
many resource constraints that we face, if systematic
material and financial support of the United Nations
were more forthcoming.
Post-conflict support has been something of an
enigma for the United Nations. It would appear that in
many cases, we seem to be in a hurry to move out, once
there are signs that the conflict may be coming to an
end. The Central African Republic some years ago is a
good case in point. I know that there are those who
would be in a hurry to begin pulling the United Nations
Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) out of Sierra
Leone, now that a smooth transition from conflict to
democracy has been made in that country. That would
be a grave error. Post-conflict Governments must be
assisted with confidence-building measures, as well as
with the requisite deterrents, to ensure that the situation
does not slide back into chaos. Peacekeeping mandates
should, therefore, not cease with the cessation of
hostilities. Rather, they should be sustained well into
peacetime and be adjusted as necessary to fit the
prevailing circumstances and needs for sustainability in
each country.
Finally, post-conflict interventions must include
strong capacity-building programmes. Typically,
countries emerging from conflict are left with
significantly weakened capacities. Institutions are
destroyed and human resources are decimated. Perhaps
the greatest damage done to a country in conflict is the
erosion of its skills base through the brain drain - the
flight of skilled people. Whereas physical
infrastructure can be rebuilt in a relatively short period
of time, replacing lost skills requires a lot of time. The
absence of that vital input very often stalls recovery
and frustrates development. Perhaps the Economic and
Social Council should come up with innovative
measures to replace the large pool of skilled manpower
lost to African countries, not only as a result of
conflict, but also as a consequence of the adverse
economic conditions prevailing in many parts of the
continent. Technical cooperation among developing
countries may be one way to address the need. Another
would be a focused programme of assisted voluntary
return to bring back the many professionals and highly
skilled people who have left the African continent and
now live in the West.
These were the few points I wanted to contribute
to this discussion.
The President: I call on the representative of
Tunisia. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Mejdoub (Tunisia) (spoke in French): The
Tunisian delegation wishes to thank you, Sir, for
planning and presided over this formal meeting of the
Security Council devoted to Africa.
I also wish to congratulate Ambassador Koonjul,
Chairman of the ad hoc Working Group on conflict
prevention and resolution in Africa, for his
commitment to Africa. We are convinced that, thanks
to his professional and human qualities, the work of
this Group will be crowned with success.
My delegation supports the mandate of the ad hoc
Working Group on conflict prevention and resolution
in Africa. Of course, the statement of the President of
the Security Council of 31 January 2002 contains very
interesting recommendations and suggestions that pave
the way for the future action of the Working Group. We
also believe that the activities of the Group should be
part of the implementation of the recommendations
contained in the Secretary-General's report on the
causes of conflicts and the promotion of sustainable
peace and development in Africa. The analysis and the
recommendations in that report are still very relevant
four years later.
While expressing our gratitude for the document
that was prepared in order to facilitate this discussion,
allow me to stress the following points.
We attach great importance to cooperation
between the Security Council and the Economic and
Social Council. Their participation in the Security
Council meeting held on 29 January 2002 on the
situation in Africa shows how beneficial the interaction
between these two main organs of the United Nations
is when we are talking about the maintenance of
international peace and security in their political,
economic and social dimensions, which themselves
generate development within a context of stability.
Cooperation and interaction between these two organs
can fit perfectly into efforts to prevent armed conflicts
and to build peace before and after conflicts.
In the course of its presidency of the Council in
February 2001, Tunisia suggested for the Council a
discussion on peace-building, being convinced that
peace is not simply the absence of armed conflicts or
declared hostility. Peace is rather something that has to
be built, with the combined efforts of all United
Nations bodies, in order to establish with foresight the
foundations for peace or to build peace following a
conflict.
I would like to express our support for the
establishment of an Economic and Social Council
advisory group on African countries emerging from
conflict and express the hope that the Security Council
ad hoc Working Group will cooperate closely with the
Economic and Social Council advisory group.
The Special Representatives of the Secretary-
General play a very important role when it comes to
preventing conflicts and also in the field of peace-
building. Often placed at the head of support offices of
the United Nations for peace-building, the Special
Representatives of the Secretary-General already have
a certain number of achievements to their credit. These
include support given to Governments to build peace,
fostering national reconciliation, strengthening
democratic institutions, providing a framework to
harmonize the United Nations peace-building activities
in the field and facilitating the mobilization of
international political support. There is also the
collection of arms and assistance for their destruction,
and facilitating communication between Governments,
neighbouring States, regional organizations and
bilateral donors. Within this context, my delegation
supports the adoption of new institutional
arrangements, with a View to making the role of the
Special Representatives of the Secretary-General in
Africa more effective.
Regional and subregional organizations have an
important role to play in the area of conflict prevention
and peace-building after conflicts. Chapter VIII of the
Charter provides an ideal framework for cooperation
and coordination between the regional organizations
and the United Nations, in particular the Security
Council and the Secretary-General. Because of their
geographic proximity and their better knowledge of the
unique situations that they cover, regional
organizations could be a rapid early warning centre for
the United Nations. They are sometimes better
equipped in order to determine the right time for the
Council to act. Most of the conflicts that take place in
Africa in this post-cold-war period are domestic
conflicts; and thus we feel that it is crucial to
strengthen the institutional abilities of the Organization
of African Unity (OAU), support its Mechanism for
Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution and
help the OAU in the area of training, increasing its
participation in United Nations activities and initiatives
and promoting joint United Nations-OAU initiatives.
Modalities for this cooperation have to be strengthened
through the implementation of appropriate strategies in
the area of cooperation and permanent mechanisms,
including early warning, conflict prevention,
peacekeeping and peace-building. It is also important
to include the subregional organizations, such as the
Community of Sahel-Saharan States (CENSAD), the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD),
the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) and the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS). It is undeniable that these
subregional organizations constantly contribute directly
to resolving internal conflicts and inter-State conflicts
in Africa; and therefore they must be heeded by the
Security Council whenever dealing with a conflict or
tension in the regions that they represent.
The efforts and initiatives of ECOWAS in the
Sierra Leone conflict and in Liberia are well known.
The CENSAD has also contributed greatly to resolving
the conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea and the
internal conflict in the Central African Republic. This
regional organization has also undertaken mediation
between the Central African Republic and Chad, as
well as among the different Somali factions. This
experience needs to be acknowledged by the Security
Council, as these are mechanisms able to contribute to
conflict resolution.
Lastly, we must point out in this context the
matter of the lack of resources within the OAU and
subregional organizations ~ namely, when it comes to
being able to play their role in conflict prevention,
peacekeeping and peace-building. The role of regional
organizations can be crucial, especially when it comes
to designing exit strategies after peacekeeping
operations. Once the conflict is resolved, the long-term
plan and peace-building could be entrusted in the field
to subregional mechanisms that the United Nations
must assist politically and financially.
Peace depends on economic and social
development. Despite the unquestionable progress that
we have seen in recent years, the situation in many
regions in Africa remains alarming. Africa has not been
able to radically break with all matter of ills that still
plague it. The continent has the largest number of least
developed countries: 34 out of 49. This critical
situation is worsened by the burden of a severe debt,
low levels of savings and investment, the depreciation
of the prices of commodities, reductions in official
development aid, as well as insufficient levels of
foreign direct investment.
The New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD) reflects the Africans' desire to take the future
of their continent in hand. NEPAD clearly expresses
how Africa, in association with the rest of the world,
could finally begin to tackle the enormous challenges
that face it. The implementation of NEPAD is of great
importance, and we are convinced that, if we want to
put an end to the vicious circle of conflicts, violence
and instability in Africa, the Working Group must seek
to make itself aware of the economic and social causes
of conflict whenever it looks at a given situation on the
African continent.
It is this relationship between peace, security,
stability and development that should, in our opinion,
always be at the very basis of every treatment of a
conflict in developing countries, and in Africa in
particular, where it has been amply shown that every
intra-State or inter-State conflict also has economic and
social causes and implications. This is a reality with
which we have to contend from now on.
Now I would like to quote a wonderful statement
by Mohatma Gandhi, who said that "Poverty is the
worst form of Violence and insecurity". The Security
Council has the right and the duty to recall this to the
international community.
The President: As I said this morning, it is my
intention to allow a Council Member to respond after
several non-Council member statements. Accordingly, I
now give the floor to the representative of Ireland.
Mr. Corr (Ireland): May I first thank you,
Mr. Minister, as other colleagues have, for presiding
over our meeting and thank Singapore for convening
this important meeting of the Council on Africa. It is
important, because, following our earlier meeting in
January, a discussion such as this offers to Council
members, to the wider United Nations membership,
and to the United Nations family of institutions,
including the Economic and Social Council, the
opportunity to stand back from day-to-day
consideration of issues and engage in a genuine
dialogue and exchange of views on Wider issues and
give a strategic focus to the policies we have both in
the Council and within the United Nations.
First, before responding to some of the points
made in the course of our discussion, I want to warmly
thank on behalf of my delegation Ambassador Koonjul
for his work in establishing the Council's ad hoc
Working Group - a theme picked up by most speakers
so far. We have made a very good start in the Working
Group. We have a very good programme of work. Over
the coming period, I think that the Working Group can
bring both focus and richness to the work of the
Council in terms of the way we approach issues, but
also in terms of a wider sense of engagement with
institutions within the United Nations, with African
organizations, with the non-governmental organization
community and with other actors involved.
I would also like to welcome Ambassador
Simonovic', the President of the Economic and Social
Council, since it is important that the Security Council,
given the extent to which its engagement with African
issues is critical to its work, have the chance for
partnership and dialogue with the Economic and Social
Council.
Therefore, the establishment by the Council of
the ad hoc Working Group on conflict prevention and
resolution and the envisaged Economic and Social
Council advisory group on African countries emerging
from conflict can play a very important role in
partnership with each other. This will be important in
bringing an extra dimension to the work of both the
Economic and Social Council and the Security Council.
The establishment of both groups will, one hopes,
strengthen not just the level of United Nations
engagement on African issues but also international
engagement.
These themes are important for a number of
reasons. I think they came from many speakers this
morning because of the critical need for the United
Nations, the Council and the international community
generally to focus on Africa and the challenges facing
it.
There is a phrase in the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (NEPAD) on the need for bold
and imaginative thinking. This is something on which
we in the United Nations, after many years, need to
adjust our thinking as we approach issues in Africa. In
the context of NEPAD and of new thinking in the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and throughout
Africa, we need to look again at the way we approach
issues of conflict, peacemaking and peace-building to
see how we can bring strength and coordination, but
also new thinking.
Several speakers have rightly made the point this
morning that each situation in Africa is different. The
situations in Ethiopia-Eritrea, Burundi, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, as we saw during the Council
mission to the Great Lakes region, and Madagascar all
have their own particular circumstances, and each
therefore calls for a strong emphasis on regional
cooperation, not just in the context of the OAU but the
subregional organizations.
The Council Working Group - and the same is
true, I think, of the Economic and Social Council
group- can, in dialogue with the OAU and the
regional organizations in Africa, bring an extra
dimension of reflective thinking to the situation as we
approach it.
Ambassador Dauth of Australia made the point
earlier not only that peace and development are two
sides of one coin, but also that there is much new
thinking. It is reflected in the OAU. It is reflected in
the Cotonou Agreement between the European Union
and our African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) partners.
They have helped bring together security, economic,
humanitarian and military issues. We approach the
different requirements of regional conflicts in a way
that brings together the different dimensions that are
needed in addressing the conflict and also the
instruments of development cooperation that are later
needed to help resolve it and ease tension.
I think there were three or four themes that I did
want to look at briefly, because they came out very
strongly in the contributions made this morning.
The first is institutional issues. It is clear that one
of the weaknesses in the United Nations approach over
recent years has been that there has been a failure of
partnership at times between the United Nations and
the OAU and regional organizations. There is blame on
all sides for that, but there is now a very real
opportunity in terms of the OAU structures and the
new ideas that will be going to Durban that we heard of
this morning to look at ways in which we can seriously
engage, jointly, in approaching both pre-conflict and
conflict situations in Africa. There are various ideas
put forward on how to do this: joint missions between
the Council and the OAU, the sharing of information
and documents, special briefings, joint special envoys,
and bringing in subregional organizations such as the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development, the
Economic Community of West African States and the
Southern African Development Community into this
framework.
What is certainly true is that there is very
substantial room for working together, and this is an
area where the new Council Working Group will be
able to play a major role in a way that has not been
possible up to now. So when the Council does look at
different situations it will do so with deep knowledge
of where African countries themselves are coming
from and where, as Ambassador Kanu of Sierra Leone
just said, we have a serious knowledge of the regional
implications and what this means.
The Mano River countries are a very good
example where, as several speakers have emphasized,
it is very difficult to consider one country - Sierra
Leone, for example - in isolation from what is
happening in the neighbouring countries. This is true of
many of the countries in Africa where conflict or the
potential for conflict may exist.
The second point on the institutions is to look at
ways of strengthening the mediation capacity of the
United Nations, including fact-finding missions and
special representatives. We can look at various new
mechanisms for doing this, but there is an important
requirement to look at new possibilities to add to the
range of instruments that the Council and the United
Nations have at their disposal.
The point on the Economic and Social Council
has already been made strongly by several speakers and
is absolutely true. Up to now, over the past 5 to 15
years, as the Council has become increasingly engaged
in African issues, it has at times appeared to lack a
serious partner and interlocutor on the economic and
development side. There were always, of course, the
funds and programmes and specialized agencies, but
the importance of the Economic and Social Council in
this is to bring that extra dimension of pulling threads
together and providing a concept of partnership both to
the Council and to the OAU and regional organizations
in Africa as to what is possible and the range of actions
that can be jointly undertaken.
One point that did come up this morning, raised
by Assistant Secretary-General Fall and which I also
wanted to mention, is the issue of sanctions. That is an
important issue for the Council at the moment, partly
because of the number of countries in Africa where
there are targeted sanctions in operation through
Council action. The point on this, which I think has
been made by several speakers this morning, is, first,
the need for sanctions not only to be targeted but to be
focused so that their humanitarian impact is limited,
but also, as Assistant Secretary-General Fall said, so
that there is the possibility of an exit strategy when
circumstances are appropriate. There is a phrase to the
effect that when change is not necessary, it is not
necessary to change. That conservative dynamic can
sometimes apply to institutions as well.
It is therefore important to remember that when,
for political reasons - in terms of the impact of
sanctions regionally and on particular countries - and
for reasons ofjustice, a decision has to be taken about
sanctions, it should be remembered that, even when
applied in a very limited way, sanctions can sometimes
be a blunt instrument. There I think the partnership and
dialogue that the Working Group and the Economic and
Social Council can advance with the OAU and regional
organizations would be important.
The New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD) makes the point on development issues that
the challenge facing Africa in this area is enormous. It
is not simply the inability to harness globalization. It is
not simply the technology gap that has developed. But,
as several speakers have said in our discussion, it is the
range of problems such as lack of trade access and,
despite the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries initiative,
the problem of debt. These are two sides of one coin. It
is very difficult to address underlying causes of
conflict without offering people the opportunity for
economic and social development.
Therefore, as is emphasized in NEPAD and has
been emphasized by most speakers today, the issue of
development, while it is not a direct responsibility of
the Council, is of critical importance to Council action
in terms of pre-conflict or conflict situations or of
peacemaking operations. There the dialogue with the
Economic and Social Council will be of critical
importance to the work of the Working Group in
looking at implications of Council actions on
development and vice versa.
The issue is especially important, I think, because
one of the themes that struck me during the Council
mission to the Great Lakes region was the disconnect
between what happens in development and the actions
undertaken by the Council. For example, in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, where we had a
briefing on the economic and social situation, we heard
about the results of the Consolidated Appeals by the
United Nations agencies. I think that something like
one-sixth of what is required has been provided so far
for the current year. That makes it extraordinarily
difficult.
On the one hand, you have the United Nations
Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of
the Congo (MONUC) and the prospects for
disarmament, demobilization, rehabilitation and
reintegration, and you have the role of the Council in
fostering and encouraging peace and dialogue, while on
the other hand you have enormous problems of
economic and social development. Logically, in terms
of action by the United Nations family, these have to be
considered as two sides of one coin.
There are two final points that I also want briefly
to pick up on. One is arms, which has been emphasized
by several speakers. Clearly, in Sierra Leone there is a
very good example of this. We need to continue to
highlight the importance of disarmament and arms
control initiatives in conflict prevention. This is
something that in the Working Group we can seriously
look at in the period ahead.
The final point is the role of NEPAD, which of
course will be considered at the G-9 Summit, at the
World Economic Forum in Durban and beyond. The
issues at stake with NEPAD are, without exaggeration,
of fundamental importance to the future of Africa.
They will affect every aspect of policy, of
development, of conflict prevention. They will require
the closest cooperation and coordination by the
international community. They will require the
engagement of all United Nations institutions,
including the Council in terms of its own role. It will
also require a sense of focus and clarity so that, as
African countries themselves put in place structures of
cooperation that advance good governance, economic
policies in terms of trade, and new codes of action, the
international community will respond in a reciprocal
way so that the challenge that is now being undertaken
by African countries is met fully and adequately by the
international community. If it is not, as NEPAD
emphasizes, it would be extremely difficult for the
people of Africa or African countries to do this on their
own.
In conclusion, I think that all the points made this
morning emphasize the need for greater focus on
partnership and cooperation among the Security
Council, the Economic and Social Council and African
regional and subregional organizations, African
countries and civil society. But it is also a critical point
that in advancing this goal we also need to ensure that,
with respect to the development component, the United
Nations, the Bretton Woods institutions and the
international donor community are brought together so
that, as we tackle challenges in one critical area, we
provide the people of Africa and African organizations
with the resources to advance both goals at the same
time.
The President: I now call on the representative
of South Africa. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Kumalo (South Africa): Allow me, Sir, to
begin by thanking you for presiding over this meeting
today. It is no accident that this issue has come before
you, because your Ambassador Kishore Mahbubani
was a Vice-Chairman of the General Assembly's Open-
Ended Ad Hoc Working Group on the Causes of
Conflict and the Promotion of Durable Peace and
Sustainable Development in Africa, and he did us
proud even then.
I also wish to express my delegation's
appreciation and thanks to Ambassador Koonjul of
Mauritius, Chairman of the Security Council's ad hoc
Working Group on Africa, for the terms of reference
and other proposals before us and for his commitment
to the issues of African peace and development. It is
also gratifying that the President of the Economic and
Social Council and the Permanent Observer of the
Organization of African Unity were also invited to
participate in this meeting.
It is realistic to accept that the Security Council
will always be faced with issues that are beyond its
mandate. My delegation has on previous occasions
urged that the Security Council review its relationship
with the Economic and Social Council. We are pleased
that this effort is continuing, and we remain convinced
that how these two main councils ofthe United Nations
work together will go a long way towards addressing
some ofthe challenges that we face in Africa.
We endorse the recommendation that the Security
Council's ad hoc Working Group on Africa should
maintain effective interaction with the Economic and
Social Council ad hoc Advisory Group on African
Countries Emerging from Conflict to be established
during the substantive session of the Economic and
Social Council this July. The cooperation between
these two Working Groups will help create a useful
instrument for addressing conflicts in Africa.
Article 24 of the United Nations Charter confers
on the Security Council primary responsibility for the
maintenance of international peace and security. But
conflicts in Africa are complicated and cannot be
resolved only by using the tool of peace and security.
These conflicts in Africa are rooted in poverty and
underdevelopment, and they result in the displacement
of millions of people and the destruction of the social
infrastructure within those countries. These are just two
issues which fall outside the mandate of the Council.
However, we believe that the mandate ofthe Council is
premised on the broader framework of the United
Nations and not in isolation from it. That mandate
includes maintaining peace and security through
arrangements with regions and subregions as specified
in Chapter VIII of the Charter.
It is for that reason that the primary objective of
the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD), as a central programme of the Organization
of African Unity/African Union, is to eradicate poverty
in Africa and to place African countries, both
individually and collectively, on a path of sustainable
growth and development, thus reversing the
marginalization of Africa in the globalization process.
In other words, NEPAD is about Africans resolving
African problems.
NEPAD has identified three elements of
achieving comprehensive peace and security in Africa.
They are: promoting long-term conditions for
development and security; building the capacity of
African institutions for early warning, and enhancing
Africa's institutional capacity for the prevention,
management and resolution of conflicts; and
institutionalizing the commitment to the core values of
NEPAD, which are peace, security, democracy, human
rights and sound economic management.
My delegation believes that, if effectively
managed, the ad hoc Working Group on Africa has the
potential to facilitate interaction between the Security
Council, the Economic and Social Council and, indeed,
the entire United Nations system in helping Africa
rebuild its capacity to manage all aspects of conflict.
Africa has the structures in place to provide effective
support to the Security Council's ad hoc Working
Group on Africa when it is ready to engage. The
proposals already made by Ambassador Koonjul are
providing the international community with a good
basis for further work in developing adequate strategies
for conflict prevention, resolution and management in
Africa.
In conclusion, I recall that in the earlier part of
this meeting, the representative of France raised the
important issue of partnership between the Security
Council and African countries with respect to conflict
resolution and peace-building. We agree with the
representative of France that very sensitive issues are
often raised in this relationship. However, we would
encourage the Security Council to continue to be open
to the views not only of the countries in conflict, or
even of those that have taken sides in a conflict: the
Council, in carrying out its mandate for peace and
security, must continue to be willing to hear the views
- no matter how contrary - of the countries that have
an interest in conflicts or are affected by their spread.
In the past few years, the Council has begun a very
commendable practice of visiting countries and regions
that are engulfed in conflict. We believe that that is a
good practice that should be followed wherever there is
conflict. We believe that such Visits allow Council
members to observe first-hand the impact of the
decisions and the resolutions that are adopted in New
York. That, indeed, is a good thing.
The President: I thank the representative of
South Africa for his kind words addressed to my
delegation.
I now give the floor to the representative of
Nepal, whom I invite to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Sharma (Nepal): Thank you, Mr. Minister,
for convening this open Security Council meeting on
the work of the ad hoc Working Group on Conflict
Prevention and Resolution in Africa and for presiding
over the debate. Singapore deserves our appreciation
for this innovative debate, in which Africa's peace and
security problems are put in perspective, in which
Council members speak only occasionally and in which
most of the speaking is done by non-members of the
Council.
The Secretary-General's report on the causes of
conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa, contained in
document 8/1998/318, puts the issue before us in
context. Today, Africa is in deep crisis. While its
natural bounty has attracted colonizers and prospectors
from far and wide and has made some of them
fabulously rich, most of its people are caught in a
vicious circle of poverty, illiteracy, disease and
conflict. That, together with the colonial legacy, bad
governance, injustice and greed, offers a potent recipe
for instability and underdevelopment in Africa. It is
untenable, and we must collectively change it.
First and foremost, African leaders will have to
show leadership in transforming Africa from a land of
conflict into a land of construction. It is a happy
development that they have already taken two major
steps that are vital for Africa's lasting peace and
progress: they have pledged themselves to promoting
peace, democracy and freedom, and they have launched
the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD) to reduce poverty and to bring renewal and
growth to Africa.
Never before have African nations had so much
faith in freedom and democracy and so much
awareness and resolve to invest in their people and in
their development. As the African countries spearhead
their respective specific efforts to resolve conflicts, to
improve governance, to mobilize resources and to
strengthen service delivery systems, they have also
formed regional and subregional mechanisms to pool
their resources for collective peace and progress. But
their problems are too complex and their poverty too
deep for them to be able to address those problems
individually and regionally. Therefore, the United
Nations, along with other stakeholders in the
international community, ought to continue to
encourage African countries to initiate regional and
subregional cooperation where there is none and to
reinforce it where it exists, so that they can
increasingly shape their own destiny.
The United Nations has already been extensively
engaged in Africa through its peacemaking and
peacekeeping missions, its humanitarian assistance and
its New Agenda for the Development of Africa in the
19905. Its peace missions, barring a few, have helped to
manage conflict and to bring peace in many lands, and
its humanitarian assistance has benefited millions of
refugees and other needy Africans. Likewise, the New
Agenda and the United Nations System-wide Special
Initiative on Africa have placed Africa firmly at the top
ofthe global development agenda.
However, Africa, like other needy areas
elsewhere, requires more United Nations involvement.
Nepal therefore urges the world body to mobilize more
of its own resources and to play a stronger advocacy
role to help African States to achieve durable peace, to
protect their people and to invest in tackling poverty,
illiteracy and disease, including HIV/AIDS and
malaria, which are now devastating the whole
continent. To come to grips with those problems,
African countries - particularly the least developed
among them - need more aid, deeper debt relief and
more investment. They also require improved access to
global markets so that they can join the process of
globalization.
The Security Council deserves full appreciation
for establishing the ad hoc Working Group, chaired by
the very competent Mauritian Ambassador Koonjul, to
respond to some of the pressing imperatives of Africa.
The Group has shown its commitment and competence
by convening a brainstorming session and by drawing
up its broad programme of work. This is certainly an
encouraging beginning and I congratulate Ambassador
Koonjul on it.
Yet, formidable challenges remain for the
Working Group. The issues identified by the
Ambassadors of Singapore and Mauritius in their letter
of 13 May 2002 are useful and relevant, but on the one
hand, they entail close cooperation and partnership
between the General Assembly, the Security Council
and the Economic and Social Council, which are
largely lacking at the moment, as well as between the
United Nations and regional and subregional
organizations; and on the other hand, they do not cover
the entire gamut of issues, which include the
humanitarian assistance and sustainable development
necessary to ensure effective conflict prevention and
resolution in Africa.
Indeed, durable peace and security for Africa, as
we have reiterated umpteen times in the hallowed
chambers of the United Nations, call for a
comprehensive approach that includes all these
elements. Hence, there is no doubt that United Nations
organs and other relevant bodies must seamlessly
cooperate to fulfil the overall goals of the United
Nations.
If the United Nations is to be able to grapple with
the problems of peace and security, we will have to
look at these issues in a more holistic manner. We must
ask how we can revitalize each United Nations organ
so that it can fulfil its own specific mandate better and,
at the same time, work together with other organs on
the cross-cutting issues, as the founding fathers of the
United Nations envisaged. This basically entails
agreement, first, among the United Nations organs on
the modality of cooperation, coordination and
coherence that will ensure full understanding of each
other's sensitivities and respect for each other's
mandate in a collective effort. Critical to the success
of such an arrangement will be the involvement of all
key stakeholders in all phases of the planning and
execution of a comprehensive plan of work of which
conflict resolution would be only one element, albeit a
very important one.
We encourage the Security Council to pay careful
attention to these rather sensitive aspects and to work
in such a way that other organs do not feel excluded or
marginalized. To address this issue, the Presidents of
the General Assembly, the Security Council and the
Economic and Social Council, supported by regional
group chairmen and the Secretariat, could agree on a
modus operandi that, if necessary, could be firmed up
by the adoption by those organs of identical
resolutions. Perhaps similar arrangements might be in
order later between the United Nations and regional
and subregional organizations.
The conclusion of the brainstorming session and
the programme of work presented by the Working
Group provide a sound basis for developing such a
framework within the United Nations, as well as across
the regional and subregional bodies. While too much
detail is likely to entangle us in procedure, adequate
conceptual and procedural clarity will be essential to
erecting a stable edifice of inter-organ cooperation on
complex issues of a multidisciplinary nature, such as
conflict prevention and resolution.
Nepal is committed to working for such greater
cooperation and coordination between the General
Assembly, the Security Council and the Economic and
Social Council, as well as between the United Nations
and regional and subregional organizations. We are
also in favour of clearly, though not cumbersomely
defined rules of the game so that the stakeholders can
all engage in seamless cooperation to help Africa and
to achieve the United Nations goals without our being
drawn into turf battles.
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. Apata (Nigeria): Nigeria conveys its
gratitude to you, Sir, for personally presiding over the
deliberations ofthe Council this afternoon. We want to
thank the delegation of Singapore and Ambassador
Mahbubani, whose interest in Africa has always been
outstanding. Up until last January, he was the Co-
Chairman of the Open-Ended Ad Hoc Working Group
of the General Assembly on the Causes of Conflict and
the Promotion of Durable Peace and Sustainable
Development in Africa, and he has brought that
commitment into the work of the Security Council. We
thank him very much.
We also want to thank the Ambassador of
Mauritius for the outstanding work he has been
carrying on in the Council since the election of his
country to membership, and in particular in his
capacity as Chairman of the ad hoc Working Group on
Conflict Prevention and Resolution in Africa.
This morning, we listened to Ambassador Ke'be'
speak about the involvement and role of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and cooperation
with the United Nations. We heard his proposals and
briefing about what the OAU is trying to do in the
establishment of peace and security. We agree with the
thrust of his statement.
These issues are not new to Assistant Secretary-
General Ibrahima Fall. For over 30 years, he has been
very active on all these issues in Africa Hall in Addis
Ababa, in Geneva and here in New York. He has
always brought clarity and focus to all the issues he has
dealt with and we are sure that he will bring all this to
his new responsibilities as Special Representative of
the Secretary-General for West Africa. There could be
no better appointment, because he is known in West
Africa. The doors will open to him in all capitals and
that will facilitate his assignment.
I want to depart from my written statement in
order to react to some of the comments that were made
this morning, particularly by Assistant Secretary-
General Ibrahima Fall, Ambassador Koonjul and the
Ambassador of France. Let me start by saying that the
format that the Council has adopted today is extremely
useful to our deliberations in order for us to listen to
non-Council members and, as appropriate, for Council
members to react. In this manner, we can have a
dialogue and exchange of views, which will hopefully
reach the Council's informal consultations and its
future decisions in matters relating to conflict
prevention and resolution in Africa.
Therefore, let me focus on a few issues that
Ambassador Koonjul asked us in his letter to focus on.
The first issue I want to deal with is the role of
subregional leaders and organizations. I am separating
them into two categories - regional and subregional
leaders and regional organizations - because they are
not one and the same. They interlock but they are
different. The Ambassador of France, Ambassador
Kebe and Assistant Secretary-General Fall extensively
covered this issue in its different aspects this morning.
Let us say first that most conflicts are resolved by
the efforts of African leaders themselves, without
prompting by anybody. This has been going on for
years; it is going on now and will continue. A number
of regional leaders in Africa - Presidents Mbeki,
Konare and Bongo and even my own President - have
always been active in continuously trying to solve
different problems in Africa. Some of them are
resolved without anyone noticing, without even
reaching the public's eye. Because of the nature of this
open meeting, one cannot name countries, soldiers or
the nature of such conflicts, but these leaders have been
successful in persuading other leaders before elections
that they should not run for office but should instead
allow for an easy transition in their country. That is
part ofthe ongoing efforts that they are making.
With respect to their quiet interventions, the
challenge we need to face is how do we feed
information on such interventions into the work of the
Council? How do we get what they are doing on an
ongoing basis fed back to the Council. I amjust raising
these questions for the reflection of Council members.
One role the ad hoc Working Group on Africa will
have is to feed ongoing work in Africa into the work of
the Council.
If we do this, we can avoid the type of problem
that Ambassador Levitte mentioned this morning,
where African leaders are active, planning efforts in
one particular direction, and the Council is acting in
another. We then have to resolve the contradiction. So,
the challenge for the ad hoc Working Group is to work
in collaboration with the Secretary-General and to
identify the particular leaders across Africa who are
actively engaged in some of these issues and feed
whatever they are doing into the work of the Council.
Nigeria is willing to assist the ad hoc Working Group,
at least in regard to what we are doing, to feed the
Council information ofthis kind.
The second point is in relation to the
collaboration between the United Nations and
subregional organizations. Ambassador Ke'be' focused
on the OAU. I will not focus on that. We are happy that
the United Nations has been able to establish a
framework for cooperation with the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS). It is
working very well. Only a couple of weeks ago, the
Executive Secretary of ECOWAS was here to hold
discussions with members of the United Nations
Secretariat. What one would have loved to see is for
the leaders of these organizations to be involved in this
type of meeting today because they play a role. If, in
the future, the Executive Secretaries of ECOWAS,
SADC and others can be invited to participate in this
type of deliberation, it will be extremely useful.
Let us briefly discuss the question of preventing
conflict following elections. Ambassador Levitte raised
that question this morning. He stated that the
immediate cause of conflict can be the holding of
elections and the acceptance or non-acceptance of
election results. He suggested that perhaps it is
necessary for the United Nations and the OAU to have
joint election monitoring units in place. I would
support that initiative. I would even suggest that we
start not three months but six months before the
election and increase the number of United Nations and
OAU officials we send into the field as the election
approaches. Let us start working on that because it is
surely cheaper for us to spend the type of money
needed to prevent conflict than to mount a
peacekeeping operation in the aftermath of an election.
We do not know what will happen in Madagascar.
Because peacekeeping operations are full-fledged
operations, if we mount one, we will spend an
enormous amount of resources doing so. It is crucial
for the ad hoc Working Group of the Security Council
and the advisory group of the Economic and Social
Council to work together in planning this type of
election monitoring support and observation,
particularly as some of the aspects will impact on
human rights, freedom ofthe press and so forth.
On the question of drawing down peacekeeping
operations, in places where we have peacekeeping
operations, peacekeeping forces have been rapidly
drawn down immediately after elections were held. We
need to exercise caution and be patient because the
holding of elections does not guarantee peace. It is just
the beginning of a process: a process of peace-building.
We must try to avoid war in the Central African
Republic. I say this also with reference to Sierra Leone,
where an election was recently concluded. We in
Nigeria see that as the beginning of a process. We urge
the Council not to precipitately withdraw or draw down
forces. One should draw them down as the situation
improves, while doing so in consultation with national
and subregional leaders, who are involved in the peace-
building process there. We urge you do so. To use a
British saying, we should not be penny wise and pound
foolish.
On the question of the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (NEPAD), to which Ambassador
Baali and Ambassador Kumalo of South Africa
referred earlier on, I will flag only one aspect of
NEPAD. The African leaders have committed
themselves to not accepting in their midst those who
take power by unconstitutional means. They will only
accept democratic leaders. In this regard, they have
established what they call peer review: if you do not
behave well, you are not welcome in our midst. I think
they have introduced an important concept. They have
also said that African leaders will not be accepted if
they are seen to be manipulating the constitutional
process in order to extend their time in office. That is
one of the problems that brings about the conflicts that
the Council is concerned with. African leaders need to
be commended for that initiative.
Lastly, on the role of the Special Representative
of the Secretary-General in resolving conflict, the
choice of Assistant Secretary-General Ibrahima Fall, as
I stated earlier, is commendable because he knows the
terrain. All doors will be open to him. He will be able
to interact with the various heads of State in our
subregion. He will, therefore, be able to propose
solutions to some ofthe conflicts.
I want to make some practical suggestions to the
Council. There are a number of Representatives and
Special Representatives of the Secretary-General in
West Africa: in Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea-Bissau,
and of course the Office recently established in West
Africa. It would be useful for all of them to meet
occasionally to compare notes on what is happening
there, because the conflicts seem to be interrelated. The
situation in Sierra Leone is related to the situation in
Liberia. Liberia is related to Sierra Leone and to the
Mano River Union. The Representatives can bring their
collective wisdom to bear, share information and then
decide what needs to be done. I think it will be useful.
I also believe it is necessary for the Special
Representative for West Africa to regularly consult, not
only with the ECOWAS secretariat and the chairman of
the authority of ECOWAS, but also with ECOWAS
leaders who have plans to act on a particular conflict. I
am referring to timely intervention. As I said earlier,
the Special Representative has many contacts, which
will help him accomplish these tasks for the Council.
Let me briefly explain what I thought should be
part of the role of the ad hoc Working Group. I am not
trying to define its mandate, but I think we should draw
a lesson from the Counter-Terrorism Committee, whose
working methods would be useful for the ad hoc
Working Group. Because we cannot meet all the time
with Council members in this type of forum, it would
be useful for the ad hoc Working Group to meet
occasionally outside the Chamber with members of the
African Group and with the general membership of the
United Nations as the situation demands.
Sir Jeremy Greenstock (United Kingdom):
Thank you, Mr. President, for guiding us again today in
what I think is proving a very interesting debate. I
congratulate first those who have participated in it. I
think that we are moving the subject forward in a way
that would be not nearly as productive if we were
sticking to our written text. I congratulate Ambassador
Apata of Nigeria for abandoning his written text,
leaving it with us because it makes some good points,
and making even better ones in his ad lib intervention.
A lot of good points have been made. We got off to a
good start with the interventions of Ambassadors
Koonjul, Simonovie, Kebe and Assistant Secretary-
General Fall. There was a lot of meat in all their
interventions. I want to draw out one or two points,
perhaps touching, as Ambassador Levitte did, on one or
two sensitive areas.
First of all, the ad hoc Working Group is a good
idea. Ambassador Koonjul is taking it forward in
exactly the right sort of way. But the proof of it has got
to be that it makes a difference, just as the proof of a
better relationship between the Security Council and
the Economic and Social Council - which is another
area that has got warm support from everybody who
has spoken so far - has to be that coordination in New
York and indeed with Geneva, where it matters, makes
a difference on the ground. Sierra Leone is a very good
example of this, a peacekeeping operation that has
covered much wider areas than straight peace and
security. But it has needed the input of different
agencies.
The way we work in New York has to reflect the
results that we need in the field; that is the point of
doing it. I think a good example is one which
Ambassador Simonovie and others have drawn
attention to - Sierra Leone and Gambia were quite
clear on this - and that is the gap between the end of a
crisis and the beginning of normal development. It is
an area that we have begun to point to, but it was only
when the Secretary-General established a particular
office for Afghanistan that we had somebody
responsible for the recovery period. This is something
that the United Kingdom has been looking for and
which we have been talking about in theoretical terms
for a long time, and indeed starting to seminar on. But
10 and behold, it has begun to happen in Afghanistan.
Why is it not yet happening in Africa?
I think our relationship with the regional and
subregional organizations has rightly come out as a
very necessary theme. I am very glad that the African
Union is going to establish a Peace and Security
Council, which will give the kind of links that we want
to have with the African Union - a very practical
utility. I very much like the approach in Ambassador
Kebe's speech, where he makes points A to D on his
page four of what the mechanism of coordination
between the Security Council and the African Union or
the Peace and Security Council should actually cover.
We should note his focus, because it is first of all
rightly typical of the African approach, but it is also
something we must pay attention to on funding and on
the evaluation of humanitarian needs and of recovery
and reconstruction needs - all areas on which the
Security Council is not necessarily the primary player.
So we need horizontal coordination. We need vertical
coordination with other bodies that are our sisters in
this and with the main players, the regional players, the
subregional players. That is the grist to the mill of
cooperation between the Security Council and the
Economic and Social Council.
I am very pleased that there is warm support for
that. As everyone knows, we the United Kingdom have
been pushing for it for a long time, and the
establishment of an ad hoc advisory group of the
Economic and Social Council is going to make that
much more practical. I do not see why we should not
have - I would have no objection - in at least some
meetings of those ad hoc or advisory groups members
or one member of the other sitting in the sessions so
that there is immediate cross-seeding of the ideas in
both groups.
I continue to be very interested in the whole area
of governance, which Ibrahima Fall spoke of at some
length, as have others. It is remarkable how Africans
themselves are now talking about governance. It is the
key to a new era of progress, in my view, on dealing
with African problems. I want to point to a little
contrast that I noticed between what Ambassador
Kumalo said about the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD), that this is about Africans
solving African problems, and what Ambassador
Sharma of Nepal said as an interested outsider looking
at Africa, that - I paraphrase - the weight of African
problems all coming together is too great for Africans
alone to bear.
How do we put those two things together? I
suppose that one answer is to say, as we often feel on
the Security Council, that we are all Africans now. But
there is a political sense in which Africans must take
the lead in solving African problems. The important
thing about NEPAD is not only that the document
recognizes for Africans the whole gamut of things that
need to be done, but that Africans are also, as African
leaders, inviting outsiders to come in on a partnership
to solve those problems. If we follow Ambassador
Kumalo's formulation, we are being invited to become
Africans in solving the problems of Africa. I think that
is the frame of mind in which the Security Council
established the ad hoc Working Group.
But there is also this trade-off, if you like, or
interface between conflict and development. I was
particularly struck by Sierra Leone's intervention on
this, strongly put from a strong recent experience.
Peace, democracy and good governance are
prerequisites for sustainable development, and the
causes of conflict and their solutions are nearly always
linked to aspects of wider regional stability.
The fact is that it is only since the Security
Council has taken on board that conflict resolution is
an aspect of development that we have begun to
develop working methods that have a chance of solving
the concatenation of problems that conflict and
development produce. This is why it is not only just a
good thing, as a matter of coordination, that we should
be working with the Economic and Social Council and
with other organs ofthe United Nations; it is absolutely
essential if we are to have an effect on the ground in
resolving the problems that hit both conflict resolution
and development. What the Ambassador of Benin said
for the African Group on this is relevant. Frankly, what
the European Union has done by way of analysis and
action on this - as the interventions of Spain and Hans
Dahlgren, the Special Representative of the European
Union to the Mano River Union demonstrate - is
extremely important and is an area with which we will
continue.
To sum up, what the United Kingdom is
interested in out of all of this is results on the ground,
better coordination to that end, continuing the
institutional progress that we are making in debates of
this kind, and learning the lessons not just of our
failures, but also of our success stories. We must do a
"lessons learned" exercise on Sierra Leone, the latest
success story to date, and apply those lessons, if
necessary, to the Great Lakes region, which for Africa
must now be gotten right, first of all by Africans, but
also with us supporting them.
We must take up the cross-cutting issues. AIDS is
one such issue. AIDS was not our subject first of all,
yet it was the Security Council that gave political
impetus to the fight against HIV/AIDS, something we
may have to come back to when the Economic and
Social Council takes it up later this summer. Also,
there is the matter of support for the New Partnership
for Africa's Development (NEPAD), which we are all
talking about. But, as Ibrahima Fall said so clearly in
his intervention, what matters now is follow-up.
Disarmament, demobilization, reintegration and
repatriation or resettlement (DDRRR) is a matter of
follow-up and is something we have not yet got right in
Africa, because we do not look at the "RRR" aspects of
demobilization. Many other delegations have
underlined this, because they are looking for
implementation of the analysis that we have all done.
They are looking for results.
So we will follow up this debate. We are setting
aside time during the United Kingdom presidency in
July for an Africa workshop which will build on what
we learn in this debate, so that it does not just get left
in reports on Council members' shelves or in their
capitals as something ephemeral. Rather, it will lead to
something that we take up, implement the sensible
elements of, move forward in coordination about and
produce results on, so long as we are working under the
leadership of Africans who know what they want and
invite those who want to help to do it with them. That
is what we are talking about.
The President: Before giving the floor to the
next speaker, I would like to note that we have 19
remaining non-members inscribed to speak. In
addition, several Council members have indicated their
desire to respond. This is an important topic that we are
debating, and it is my intention to give every speaker
the opportunity to put across his or her views. But,
given the long list of speakers, I am sure that everyone
will agree with me that we have a common interest in
not finishing our discussion too late. If possible, I hope
that speakers will attempt to be as brief and focused as
possible, without, of course, leaving out any important
points that they may wish to put across.
The next speaker is the representative of Senegal,
whom I invite to take a seat at the Council table and to
make his statement.
Mr. Fall (Senegal) (spoke in French): Senegal
welcomed the Security Council decision taken
following its public meeting last 29 and 30 January to
set up an ad hoc Working Group on Conflict Prevention
and Resolution in Africa. The Group is fortunate to
have the Permanent Representative of Mauritius as its
Chairman.
Sir, I should like to congratulate you warmly on
assuming the presidency of the Council. We greatly
appreciate your personal commitment to continue the
work of your predecessors in the presidency. I should
also like sincerely to thank all other Council members
for doing their utmost to make the issues of Africa
their mission.
Regrettably, it has now become a ritual that
whenever we discuss the situation in Africa we hear the
same hackneyed descriptions: it is a poor
neighbourhood on the edge of the planetary village; it
is a small, forgotten spot in the world, where the worst
horrors pile up one on top of the other - armed
conflicts, countless refugees and displaced persons and
the apocalyptic ravages of HIV/AIDS. Faced with these
tragedies and their dreadful consequences - and the
Africans themselves are primarily at fault - the
United Nations has to reflect, together with us, on
"new and innovative initiatives" - to use a favorite
expression of the Secretary-General - because this
could eliminate or at least significantly reduce the
suffering of people in Africa.
Turning more specifically to the issue of conflict
in Africa, regional institutions are firmly committed to
seeking political situations with, of course, the
irreplaceable assistance of the United Nations. Thus, in
Angola, Burundi and the Great Lakes region, for
example, there are encouraging prospects, and those
countries may soon regain the joy of stability, peace
and development.
The role of the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) in maintaining peace and
stability is well known, and is recognized even here in
the Security Council. Here, the most eloquent case is
that of Sierra Leone, where elections have just been
held with the support of the international community,
and to its great satisfaction.
Turning to the work of the ad hoc Working
Group - fortunately chaired, as I said by the
Permanent Representative of Mauritius - we
congratulate its members on the alacrity and serious-
mindedness with which they began their work, thus
opening up new prospects for the Security Council to
reduce tension and to ensure the intelligent
management of conflicts. In that spirit, Senegal fully
endorses the approach taken by the Group: that it
should look in depth at how to integrate the Economic
and Social Council, the new United Nations Office in
West Africa, in Dakar, the Organization of African
Unity (OAU) and civil society in working on strategies
for a new kind of productive partnership.
The vital cooperation and coordination between
the Working Group and the ad hoc Advisory Group on
African Countries Emerging from Conflict will be
crucial in bringing about an improvement in the
working methods of the various United Nations
structures and in enhancing the coordination of their
activities. My country attaches the greatest importance
to diligent consideration of the Secretary-General's
recommendations in the relevant reports, particularly
with respect to Guinea-Bissau and the Central African
Republic.
On the subject of conflict prevention, I would
like, just as the Foreign Minister of Senegal has done,
to highlight the enlightening example of Guinea-
Bissau. This is a typical case of a country where there
is every indication of social chaos. Yet, the
international community, sitting by as spectator, is
waiting for the criteria of good governance and
transparency to be met before taking action. The
Government and the people of Guinea-Bissau are
making enormous efforts to get their country out of
crisis. We reiterate our urgent appeal to the entire
international community, including the Bretton Woods
institutions, to quickly provide the necessary assistance
to Guinea-Bissau, as well as to the Central African
Republic, to the Democratic Republic of the Congo and
soon to Madagascar, to help them solve problems
relating to the functioning of their institutions and to
the implementation of the disarmament, demobilization
and reintegration process. Also, Senegal truly believes
that, with valuable input from the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General for West
Africa, Mr. Ibrahima Fall, Guinea-Bissau can soon find
its way back to the path of growth and development.
Senegal would like to draw the attention of the ad
hoc Working Group, and of the Special Representative
of the Secretary-General for West Africa to a scourge
that has become endemic in many African countries,
particularly in West Africa. I refer to the proliferation
and illegal trafficking in small arms; this is very
widespread and has an impact on the stability, security
and development of countries in the subregion. The ad
hoc Working Group, working with the Office of the
Special Representative for West Africa, could really
help countries more effectively to mount the various
initiatives under way at the national and subregional
levels, if not at a continent-wide level.
Senegal supports setting up a working partnership
with the main subregional players in priority areas such
as early warning, strengthening human resources,
capacity building, development and the processes of
disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration.
While the Working Group works to implement its
programme of work, it is essential that there should
also be functional support and participation on the part
of all partners in civil society. The international
community believes that civil society is extremely
important here as a fully fledged partner. It ensures a
breadth of representation that must be encouraged.
Senegal believes that conflict settlement and the
eradication of poverty in Africa is not something that
can be done by governments or public institutions
alone. The international community has to take account
of, and more deeply involve, other groups and sectors,
such as women, youth, the elderly, non-governmental
organizations, trade unions, private enterprises,
transnational corporations, and so forth.
Experience shows that the only way out of
conflict is to enable people to fully and freely enjoy
peace, socio-economic security and human rights. This
means that political leaders and others at the decision-
making levels must respect the principles of a state of
law based on democracy and good governance.
The Organization of African Unity (OAU) is now
becoming the African Union and with the adoption of
the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD) there are hopes for the future. These hopes
have three anchors: the credo of the crucial
responsibility of Africans themselves, the essence of
the partnership and the belief in mutual respect.
NEPAD, in addition to economic, financial and
commercial opportunities, is also a globally integrated
strategic framework for freeing Africa from the
disasters that it suffers from: endemic poverty, bad
governance, fratricidal conflict, and so forth.
This is why Senegal fully endorses continually
strengthening the cooperation among the United
Nations, the OAU the and subregional organizations in
the areas of conflict prevention, management and
settlement. Once the Dakar office is up and running,
we hope the ad hoc Working Group will visit West
Africa to learn at first-hand about the situation there.
I now conclude by repeating what the Secretary-
General said: "Armed conflict is the worst enemy of
development." Further, His Holiness, Pope John
Paul II, reminded us that "development" is the other
name of"peace".
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Ukraine. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Kuchinsky (Ukraine): My delegation
warmly welcomes you, Sir, to the presidency of the
Security Council. We would like to thank the
delegation of Singapore for organizing this important
debate. We commend its unremitting efforts to
introduce an outreach approach in the work of the
Security Council in order to increase its transparency
and credibility by seeking input from all of the United
Nations membership. The background documents,
which have been helpfully prepared by the presidency
to facilitate today's constructive discussion, deserve
our high appreciation.
I wish also to thank Ambassador Koonjul of
Mauritius, a devoted initiator and the chairman of the
Working Group, for his very useful briefing on the
Group's activities. Our thanks also go to Assistant
Secretary-General Ibrahima Fall for his very important
and forthright statement today.
I would also particularly like to welcome the
presence at this meeting of the President of the
Economic and Social Council, Ambassador Ivan
Simonovie, and the Permanent Observer of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), Ambassador
Amadou Ke'be', as they represent major partners of the
Security Council in the areas of conflict prevention,
resolution and peace-building in Africa.
We support the ideas that were presented to us
concerning ways of enhancing cooperation with the
Working Group in pursuing common objectives within
each body's mandate.
I have the honour today to speak on behalf of a
country that has always been committed to
strengthening relations of true partnership with Africa.
This commitment of ours was confirmed by substantial
participation on the part of from Ukraine in the United
Nations peacekeeping operations in Africa, by our
consistent position in the Security Council, and by our
ongoing efforts to expand and foster bilateral relations
with African countries and to strengthen interactions
with regional organizations.
Today, our attention is devoted to the activities of
the ad hoc Working Group on Africa, which we
consider a useful, proactive mechanism of the Security
Council. My delegation endorses the concept that the
Working Group on Africa should assist the Security
Council in addressing the conflict situations on that
continent. With regards to specific elements of the
terms of reference and the programme of work, I would
like to make some brief comments.
As far as the participation at the meetings of the
Group, we support the importance of inviting major
institutional, financial and academic views to address
specific conflict situations. At the same time, we
believe it would be useful if participation could be
extended, as appropriate, specifically to the parties to
the conflict and to troop-contributing countries.
Welcoming in principle the establishment of
groups of friends for specific conflict situations, we
consider that such groups should be open to anyone
who does make and can make a constructive
contribution to the resolution of conflict. With regard
to the setting up of groups of friends for African
conflict situations, we support a greater involvement of
African actors in such endeavours.
We also recognize the importance of effective
cooperation and coordination between the Working
Group and other existing, relevant mechanisms within
the United Nations, in particular those in the General
Assembly and in the Economic and Social Council.
Now that the Group is focusing on confidence
building in the Mano River Union, it is vitally
important that closer contacts be established between
the United Nations Office in West Africa and the
Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) in order to consider ways of strengthening
cooperation between the countries of the Mano River
Union and supporting ongoing subregional peace
initiatives. We wish every success in promoting these
objectives to Assistant Secretary-General Ibrahima
Fall, who is going to take up responsibilities as the
head ofthe United Nations Office in West Africa.
In conclusion, I wish to express the hope that this
brainstorming session today will provide additional
impetus to the activities of the ad hoc Working Group
on Africa and ensure an effective role for the Security
Council in the maintenance of international peace and
security in Africa.
The President: I now call on the representative
of Morocco, whom I invite to take a seat at the Council
table and to make his statement.
Mr. Loulichki (Morocco) (spoke in French): I
should like to begin by thanking you, Sir, for having
taken the initiative of organizing this debate under your
competent presidency, a debate in which Africa is once
again at the centre of the Security Council's attention.
I should also like to welcome the presence of
Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul, Chairman of the ad hoc
Working Group; of Mr. Ibrahima Fall, Assistant
Secretary-General in charge of the United Nations
Office in Dakar; and of Ambassador Ivan Simonovic',
President of the Economic and Social Council, whose
contributions will enrich and enlighten our current and
future discussions.
The sustained attention of the Security Council
and ofthe United Nations system in general that Africa
now enjoys is all the more reassuring in that it is now
shared by the entire Council. That is also the result of
the daily and persistent action ofthe Secretary-General,
who has fostered an international awareness of Africa
and who spares no effort in giving the continent hope
for a better future.
We are pleased that this debate is taking place at a
juncture marked by encouraging prospects for conflict
settlement, particularly in Angola and Sierra Leone and
between Eritrea and Ethiopia. As a member of the
African family, my delegation is glad to participate in
this debate, which concerns the role, the functions, and
the programme of work of the ad hoc Working Group
on conflict prevention and resolution in Africa. That
Group, established three months ago, was given the
mandate of monitoring the implementation of the
successive recommendations of the President of the
Council with regard to conflict prevention and
resolution in Africa. The nature and the scope of that
mandate poses, at first glance, the problem of a
possible overlap between the Group's activities and
those of the General Assembly's working group
charged with the application of the recommendations
contained in the Secretary-General's report on the
causes of conflicts (S/l998/318).
Despite the informal nature of the ad hoc
Working Group, a delineation of the fields of action of
both bodies seems desirable in order to ensure the
rationality and the effectiveness of United Nations
action in this area. We believe it is indispensable that
there be complementarity between the tasks of the ad
hoc Working Group, those of the General Assembly
and those ofthe Economic and Social Council.
For any action undertaken by the Council in the
area of conflict prevention and management in Africa,
the Secretary-General's report of 13 April 1998
remains the indisputable reference, inasmuch as it
contains a detailed analysis of conflicts and of their
deep-rooted causes, and it proposes realistic and
achievable recommendations to put an end to them.
This basic document remains, therefore, the point of
departure for any discussion or action designed to
suppress or prevent African conflicts. It is only fitting
that the programme proposed by the Ambassador of
Mauritius draws its references from that same report.
As you have requested, Mr. President, my
delegation will focus its observations and comments on
four items. I shall begin with relations with the
Economic and Social Council.
Given the well-established interaction between
peace-building and the socio-economic development of
the African countries emerging from conflicts, the
coordination of the Economic and Social Council's
activities and those of the Security Council goes
without saying. The same logic calls for the
establishment of links between the Economic and
Social Council advisory group and the Security
Council ad hoc Working Group, thus giving concrete
form to the integrated approach described in the
Secretary-General's report on the causes of conflict.
Indeed, such coordination is not an end in itself; it will
be worthwhile only if it is pragmatic and oriented
towards achieving results. It would have the merit of
offering more visibility to the Government of a country
involved in a conflict, as well as to its partners,
whether they be donor countries, international financial
institutions or private investors.
Within the context of the coordination sought by
the Council in order to prevent the aggravation of
conflict or to prevent the outbreak of new conflict, we
feel that particular mention should be accorded to
cooperation and coordination with the High
Commissioner for Refugees and with the International
Committee ofthe Red Cross.
Conflicts in Africa are a constant source of untold
human suffering. Millions of persons have been
displaced from their homes, separated from their
families and forced to live in deplorable conditions. In
that regard, the High Commissioner for Refugees and
the International Committee of the Red Cross play a
valuable and irreplaceable role in the treatment of the
humanitarian aspects of African conflicts and should
therefore be able to fulfil their mandate with regard to
refugees and detained persons, regardless of the final
political settlement. In that respect, it is essential that
the United Nations adopt concrete measures with a
view to ensuring strict respect for the norms of
international humanitarian law by all of the parties to
conflicts. As we know, these are imperative norms that
must be respected by all.
I should now like to discuss the second item,
concerning confidence-building measures in the Mano
River region. The Mano River region deserves all the
attention that the Council can accord it in this debate.
My country, which, upon the invitation of His Majesty
the King, hosted on 27 February a summit of the heads
of State of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, can
testify to the commitment of the leaders of those
countries to re-establish peace in the Mano River
region. The summit in Rabat launched a quest for peace
with the adoption of a set of measures to make
common borders safer, to repatriate refugees and to
provide assistance to displaced persons.
In the framework of the follow-up to the summit,
a meeting of foreign ministers was held in Morocco on
7 and 8 April. At that meeting, confidence-building
measures were drafted and adopted by the participants.
They included the rapid deployment of joint border-
security units; the control of the proliferation of small
arms and light weapons; the establishment of an
environment conducive to the repatriation of refugees;
the organization of a caravan to restore confidence
along the common borders, to include dignitaries from
the three countries; and the official opening of borders
to permit the free movement of people and goods. The
implementation of those measures warrants all the
support that the international community can muster
with a view to restoring peace to the region.
With respect to the role of the Special
Representatives of the Secretary-General, my
delegation wishes to stress the following elements.
First, the role of the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, entrusted with the primary
responsibility for a peacekeeping operation, is crucial
to the fulfilment of the Organization's mandate with
respect to a given dispute or conflict. That mandate
logically begins with a guarantee of strict respect for a
ceasefire by all parties. That respect is the starting
point and fundamental basis of any process leading to a
definitive political solution to the conflict.
Secondly, ongoing coordination between the
various United Nations agencies involved in a
peacekeeping operation is of significant added value
and a principal asset towards the success of a given
mission.
Lastly, as we know, the Secretary-General
occasionally and periodically holds coordination
meetings with the various Special Representatives,
either in New York or in Geneva. It might be desirable
for similar regular meetings to be held within an
African region or subregion or even at the African
continental level. Such regular meetings could
encourage an exchange of experiences and information
that could prove useful in improving mission
performance.
I wish now to discuss cooperation with regional
and subregional organizations and with States. Such
cooperation, set forth in the United Nations Charter
and institutionalized by General Assembly resolutions,
should be extended to such subregional organizations
as the Southern Africa Development Community, the
Economic Community of West African States, the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development and the
Community of Sahel-Saharan States, which, it must be
said, play an active role in reducing tensions in several
African regions. Interaction between the ad hoc
Working Group of the Security Council and these state
groupings could only be beneficial to United Nations
efforts to resolve conflicts. Similarly, States whose
proximity to or relations with parties to a conflict
recommend them for a role in promoting
rapprochement and reconciliation would benefit by
being included regularly and whenever necessary or
useful in the work ofthe ad hoc Working Group.
Lastly, I wish to say that my delegation is pleased
to note that peace-building and the implementation of
preventive diplomacy, particularly in Africa, continue
to be a focus of the Security Council. This debate,
however, should not lead us to forget that peace in
Africa remains linked to development and that the
United Nations and the international community must
pursue both of these objectives at the same time and,
with the same determination and energy, assist Africa
in its efforts towards democratic, economic and social
recovery and to eradicate, in particular, poverty and
AIDS.
Mr. Valdivieso (Colombia) (spoke in Spanish):
Once again, I am pleased to see you, Sir, presiding over
this important meeting, just as you did the other day on
an another item of tremendous relevance to you and to
all of us.
The Council's programme of work will surely be
considerably enriched by this debate; by the
contributions of all delegations and Council members;
by the very important statements of Ambassador
Simonovie, speaking on behalf of the Economic and
Social Council, and Ambassador Kebe, speaking on
behalf of the Organization of African Unity (OAU);
and, most especially, by all the efforts of the ad hoc
Working Group on Conflict Prevention and Resolution
in Africa, under the guidance of Ambassador Koonjul.
Following the agreed procedure for this meeting,
I wish to refer to some of the points raised today. First
of all, it has been made quite clear by the vast majority
of speakers that the Council devotes a very significant
share of its time to addressing problems of peace and
security in Africa. I should like to note the emphasis
that has been placed on the quantitative aspect of our
work on African issues, whereas it seems to me that the
qualitative dimension of our work has yet to be defined
and agreed. This leads me to conclude that today's
debate and the activities of the Working Group may
serve to redress the deficit in the quality of the
attention dedicated to the African agenda by the
Council, which stands to be improved.
Secondly, we note and have heard a number of
references to the fact that the other main organs of the
United Nations, each in its own field, are developing
initiatives linking peace and security to development
problems in Africa. The General Assembly is soon to
hold a final review and appraisal of the United Nations
New Agenda for the Development of Africa in the
19905. The working group of the Economic and Social
Council has also continued to function. The Economic
and Social Council dedicated a segment of its annual
session on coordination to the question of Africa in
1999. It later dedicated a high-level ministerial
segment to Africa. The creation of this new advisory
body on countries emerging from conflicts is a new
contribution. Lately, the Secretariat has concentrated
on giving validity and effectiveness to the regional
focus in the resolution of conflicts, starting by applying
this concept - attributed to Ambassador Fall - to
West Africa, where he will be working.
Nevertheless - it must be frequently repeated -
we feel that this broad effort will not lead to
conclusions and recommendations that can be easily
coordinated in the Council's work of seeking to
maintain international peace and security. Often, one
has the impression that the General Assembly or the
Economic and Social Council or even the Secretariat
belonged to an organization separate from the United
Nations based on their contribution to the work of the
Security Council. In other words, this lack of
conceptual and operational cohesiveness in the
treatment of African issues among the various principal
organs of the United Nations should be resolved.
Therefore, it is important, as several delegations have
mentioned, that the various contacts and the meetings
on Africa of the main organs and even the subsidiary
organs, whether in the Security Council or the General
Assembly, should be mutually reinforcing. The
Working Group is very important in this respect.
I wished to refer to one of the points of the
programme of work as described by Ambassador
Koonjul at the start of the meeting and in the support
documentation. There is general agreement on the
relevance of those points. There is unanimous
agreement, in particular, on the question of cooperation
of the Security Council with the Organization of
African Unity and with the subregional organizations.
As for the functioning of groups of friends for specific
conflict situations, those groups should include African
and non-African countries. I listened with interest to
the remarks on the prudence with which the Working
Group should proceed in studying the electoral
processes, precisely because of the risk that it might
weaken the competencies of the General Assembly or
the Secretariat in that field. In general, we believe that
the United Nations should advocate the formation of a
greater regional capacity for electoral monitoring, so
that it can be present in the African continent, where
the electoral process will ultimately be managed most,
and thus strengthen democracy in the African
continent.
Finally, my delegation wishes to support the
recommendation expressed by Assistant Secretary-
General Fall, supported by various speakers, to include
the issue of the proliferation of and trade in small arms
in the agenda of the ad hoc Working Group. He
mentioned that it was necessary to more strictly
enforce the moratoriums and regional actions to
prevent the proliferation of arms. It must also be said,
on the issue of the trade in small arms, that it is
indispensable that we expend greater efforts. It is well
known that there are well-organized and even well-
known criminal organizations that continue to function
without the Council deciding to confront them in a
more direct manner. Mr. Fall mentioned the importance
of going to the sources of the weapons. In that context,
he mentioned that the Chairman of the Working Group
could meet with the weapons-manufacturing countries
to request their greater contribution to the solution of
this problem, which is overwhelming many countries
and destroys thousands of lives in Africa and in many
parts of the world. It is therefore an important issue.
We will well consider that point in order to elaborate
on the suggestion of Mr. Fall in the programme of
work.
Recently, we have spoken of the importance of
the Security Council building collective positions on
the question of Africa. I wish to say that the need of
building collective positions exists at the level of the
overall system of the United Nations. That is why I
believe that this Working Group can contribute to the
creation of such collective positions in the United
Nations system.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list 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):
We are honoured to see you, Sir, preside over the
Council's meeting. I would like to start by
commending Ambassador Kishore Mahbubani of
Singapore, the current President of the Council, and
Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul of Mauritius, the
Chairman of the Working Group, for organizing this
special meeting devoted, yet again, to the situation in
Africa. It is our intention to make a modest
contribution to the workings of the Working Group.
But before I do that, I would like to congratulate the
people of East Timor for achieving statehood. The
United Nations, and the Security Council in particular,
deserve our commendation.
As we are meeting, my delegation would like to
register our appreciation and delight at the good news
emanating from The Hague with respect to the border
conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea, from Luanda,
the capital of Angola, and from Freetown in Sierra
Leone. The Ethiopia-Eritrea border conflict has been
settled, and the two countries have accepted the
arbitration of the Boundary Commission. In Angola, a
general amnesty has been proclaimed to UNITA
fighters and a Memorandum of Understanding has been
signed between the Government and UNITA. A few
days ago, the Council lifted sanctions on UNITA for 90
days. The latest good news is the peaceful outcome of
the presidential and parliamentary elections in Sierra
Leone. In all these cases, the peoples of those countries
deserve our very hearty congratulations. But it would
be remiss not to recognize the positive and active
participation of the United Nations and of the Security
Council, in particular.
It is against that backdrop that these deliberations
are being held today. In all three cases war situations
have been resolved through the use of different
mechanisms. But one thing is certain and evident, and
that is that the Security Council worked in close
collaboration with regional and local entities. Perhaps
the Working Group could go over the elements that
were positive and isolate the negatives in order to
expedite conflict resolution.
In the light of the above positive developments,
we may wish to ask whether there is a need to revisit
all resolutions pertaining to the three resolved conflicts
and determine what elements are still outstanding so
that they can be programmed for resolution.
In the case of the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, from where the Security Council Mission has
just returned, it is heartening to note that the inter-
Congolese dialogue took place in Sun City, South
Africa. From the reports we have seen, substantial
progress was made. We expect that the Council will
stay engaged until all the outstanding issues are sorted
out and ownership of the process returns squarely to
Congolese hands. However, at this stage it is important
to commend the Congolese people on the achievements
registered. Along with that, we took note with
appreciation of the destruction of 1,000 firearms during
the Security Council Mission's visit to Kisangani.
Trafficking in illegal small arms and light
weapons is the worst scourge in African conflicts. It
will be recalled that the Council has had occasion to
address the issue. I need not over-emphasize here that
African conflicts cannot be resolved without also
addressing the perennial problem of illegal trafficking
in small arms and light weapons.
Peace is central to addressing the development
equation of Africa. African leaders are determined to
bring positive change to the continent. The people are
yearning for peace so that poverty, ignorance and
disease can be confronted head on. It is, therefore,
important that the Council become an active partner for
change. At this juncture, I would like to underscore the
postulates ofthe 2000 Millennium Summit with respect
to the plight of Africa. We hope that the Working
Group will not try to reinvent the wheel. Rather, we
hope that it will analyse the various proposals and
come up with workable solutions.
I need also to state here that some progress was
achieved in Burundi by the end of last year. After four
years of protracted negotiations, an agreement was
reached and one of the recommendations was an
interim power-sharing arrangement. The transitional
Government was installed on 1 November last year. In
12 months there will be a changeover. Fighting,
unfortunately, is still continuing, but the regional
leaders are working very hard to secure a ceasefire. At
the international level, it would appear that there is a
wait-and-see attitude. That is not helpful.
The pledges made in Paris have not been
honoured. The Transitional Government needs the aid
that was promised. It is our conviction that, if
assistance were given to the Transitional Government,
it would greatly help cement peace by isolating the
rebels for what they are. I cannot overstate the fact that
conflict resolution has elements of "the carrot and the
stick". It is vitally important that the two elements are
carefully calibrated. Otherwise, all the efforts will
come to naught.
Let me conclude my statement with a few general
observations, which I hope the Working Group will
address as well.
One of the unintended consequences of conflicts
is the movement of peoples, either as refugees or as
internally displaced persons. Tanzania has been host to
refugees since long before its independence. Currently,
we host over 500,000 refugees from Burundi and over
170,000 from the Democratic Republic ofthe Congo. It
is a huge responsibility. We submit, therefore, that
conflict resolution mechanisms should at all times be
factored into the plight of refugees. I am aware that
disarmament, demobilization, reinsertion, repatriation
and resettlement are an integral part of the conflict
resolution mechanism. I am, therefore, flagging the
issue of refugees, so that it is does remain an
afterthought.
The second issue is the question of the
relationship between the Council and local actors. I
raise this because of three considerations. The Council
is entrusted with the overall authority for securing
international peace and security. Along with that
mandate is the power to impose sanctions. Given the
fact that it is the neighbours of a conflict area who bear
the brunt of the fallout of the conflict, it is our View
that sound coordination is vital. The region is closer to
the scene on a daily basis and punitive measures by
neighbours have managed to cajole an obstinate
Government to negotiate. Yet, in the light of past
experience, the Working Group could discuss the issue
and come up with recommendations as to how best to
use regional mechanisms to enforce Council mandates.
Last but not least, I would like to address the
issue of peacekeeping operations in Africa. There have
been misgivings with regard to the handling by the
Security Council of African peacekeeping operations.
There is a perception out there that there has been a lot
of hesitation and under-subscription. The Sierra Leone
experience is instructive. There were, indeed, two
peacekeeping operations: one by the United Nations
under the Security Council and the other by a leading
member of the Council. It is quite obvious that that
model cannot be replicated elsewhere in the continent,
but the Working Group could examine the implications
and the ramifications of such an experiment. I have
referred only to the presence of two operations in the
same area with different command structures. I did not
tackle the firepower at the disposal of each of the
forces. That can be analysed by the Working Group.
In conclusion, I will only make brief reference to
the importance of the peace dividend in any conflict
resolution. The African drama has been documented
extensively. Indeed, all analyses emphasize the
preponderance of poverty. It is our hope that in
working on blueprints for conflict resolution, the
question of humanitarian assistance and overall
development will be given pride of place.
This initiative is welcome. But I would like to
conclude by hoping that special sessions do not replace
African initiatives; at the end of the day very little is
achieved on the ground. With the good will of all, I am
quite sure that peace can prevail in the continent and
that African development can become a reality.
The President: I call on the representative of
Bahrain. I invite him to take a seat at the Council table
and to make his statement.
Mr. Saleh (Bahrain) (spoke in Arabic): Allow me
at the outset to express our thanks and gratitude to you,
Sir, for organizing this public meeting on this
important issue. We fully appreciate your transparent
method, which includes the involvement of non-
members of the Council in its deliberations and the
deliberations of the ad hoc Working Group of the
Security Council. It is our hope that these deliberations
will be crowned with success and will contribute
constructive ideas that will assist in conflict prevention
and resolution in the African continent.
I also wish to express our appreciation to the
Chairman of the Working Group, the Permanent
Representative of Mauritius, for his comprehensive
report to the Council today and his ambitious
programme. We wish him every success in his
endeavours.
Mr. President, allow me to speak about three
important points that I believe need further
deliberation. The first of these is the strengthening of
coordination between the Security Council and the
Economic and Social Council. In Chapter I of the
United Nations Charter, entitled "Purposes and
Principles", paragraph 1 of Article 1 lists the
maintenance of international peace and security as one
of the most important purposes of the United Nations.
It proceeds stating that the United Nations should "take
effective collective measures for the prevention and
removal of threats" to international peace and security.
Taking these collective measures, as we understand it,
requires the coordination of efforts of all actors in the
international community and within the United Nations
organs themselves.
Chapter X of the United Nations Charter states in
its Article 65 that the Economic and Social Council
"may furnish information to the Security Council
and shall assist the Security Council upon its
request".
Hence, we can see that there is a clear and unequivocal
legal basis for cooperation and coordination between
the Security Council and the Economic and Social
Council. Furthermore, the Secretary-General has
emphasized this objective in his report on the
prevention of armed conflicts, in which he says:
"A successful prevention strategy depends on the
cooperation of many United Nations actors,
including the Secretary-General, the Security
Council, the General Assembly, the Economic
and Social Council, the International Court of
Justice and United Nations agencies, offices,
funds and programmes, as well as the Bretton
Woods institutions." (A/55/985, Executive Summary)
In this report, the Secretary-General refers to the
importance of the role of regional organizations, non-
governmental organizations and organizations of civil
society. Since the mandate of the Economic and Social
Council includes humanitarian affairs, it is our View
that there is wide scope for cooperation and
coordination to realize the purposes and principles of
the United Nations Charter.
Since the beginning of the 1990s, we also have
witnessed increased attention paid by the Security
Council to humanitarian situations and their impact on
international peace and security. This is attested to by
several resolutions adopted by the Security Council;
some of them were adopted under Chapter VII of the
United Nations Charter.
We can draw a similarity in the relations between
the Security Council and the Economic and Social
Council and those between development and peace.
The relationship between these two terms is quite close
and a lot can be said in this respect. We believe that
investment in human capital contributes effectively
towards avoiding armed conflict. Development cannot
be achieved unless there is peace; peace is endangered
if there is a problem with development. Consequently,
we believe that the roles of the Economic and Social
Council and the Security Council are complementary.
In this respect, I would like to refer to the high-level
segment ofthe Economic and Social Council. This year
it will be taken up as a subject at the Council's
substantive session. Next July it will discuss the
contribution of the development of human resources in
the process of development, including in the fields of
health and education. Furthermore, the proposal by the
Economic and Social Council to establish an ad hoc
advisory group on African countries emerging from
conflict, if adopted, will be a positive and effective
contribution by the Economic and Social Council to the
prevention of conflict on the African continent through
long-term development programmes or what we call
peacebuilding in the post-conflict era. It is our hope
that a specific mechanism for coordination and
cooperation between this advisory group and the ad hoc
Working Group of the Security Council on the
prevention of conflicts in Africa will be established.
We believe in the importance of effective
coordination between the two Councils in order to
realize the noble objectives in the United Nations
Charter. This cooperation and coordination may take
different forms and could be strengthened through
periodic meetings between the Presidents of the two
Councils. The President of each Council could be
invited to participate in the meetings of the other to
discuss issues of mutual interest. There can also be
strengthening through meetings between the two
Councils; and we hope that will be realized very soon.
In this respect, my country welcomes the initiative
taken by the Security Council under the Mauritian
presidency to address an invitation to the President of
the Economic and Social Council to participate for the
first time in a Security Council meeting dated 29
January 2002 regarding the situation in Africa. An
invitation was extended for this meeting, too. We
appreciate this constructive approach, because we
believe that both Councils can do a lot, especially in
the area of peace-building in the post-conflict era.
In view of the continent's suffering throughout
the previous decades and the serious implications of its
civil wars, we believe that the Security Council and the
Economic and Social Council together can do more for
this continent if cooperation and coordination are
strengthened.
My second point concerns the role of the Special
Representatives of the Secretary-General. The
experiment of previous years has shown the important
role played by these Special Representatives,
especially in the hotbeds of armed conflict. They
played a mediatory role between the parties to the
conflict and have provided the Secretary-General and
the Security Council with detailed information on the
situation in the field. This information is very
important for the decision makers. It would be
appropriate if some of the Secretary-General's Special
Representatives in Africa could be invited to attend
meetings on this item with the Council to exchange
views with them, to learn of the difficulties and
obstacles facing them now or those they faced in the
past and to find ways and means for alleviating and
solving those problems and difficulties.
My third point refers to cooperation with the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and other
subregional organizations. It is indeed important for the
Working Group to continue cooperation and
coordination with the OAU, which has specific visions
and ideas and is close to the parties and the armed
conflicts in Africa. This applies to other subregional
organizations, such as the Intergovernmental Authority
on Development (IGAD), which plays an active role
regarding the question of Somalia. The Council and the
Working Group itself can enhance this role through
coordination and cooperation with these organizations
and exchanges of views on these problems.
The Community of Sahel-Saharan States
(CENSAD) is also playing an important role, as stated
by the Permanent Representative of the Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya this morning. There is a need for better
coordination of efforts both among the organizations
themselves and with the United Nations.
Finally, I would like to express my support for the
statement by the President of the Economic and Social
Council, Ambassador Simonovie, regarding the
importance of considering the root causes of armed
conflict, because understanding them will facilitate the
task of finding appropriate solutions. It is our hope that
this meeting will yield ideas that will help the Working
Group to implement its ambitious programme.
Mr. Aguilar Zinser (Mexico) (spoke in Spanish):
My delegation welcomes the fact that you, Sir, are
presiding over this meeting of the Security Council as
your country's Minister for Foreign Affairs. This
clearly demonstrates the importance that Singapore
attaches to the work of the Security Council on African
issues, and to our Organization's peacekeeping
activities.
The Security Council is responsible for resolving
conflicts and maintaining peace and security. At the
international level this task is particularly meaningful
for Africa. In association with the other bodies of the
United Nations and with the joint support of the
international community, this implies a capacity, when
conflicts loom, to engage in conflict prevention,
conflict resolution and above all to erect an
architecture of peace that will promote development for
the peoples of Africa in spite of whatever conflicts
there may be in the region.
It is of particular importance to the work of the
Council that the ad hoc Working Group on Africa has
been created, because it reflects a commitment to
dedicate to African affairs the attention, priority and
continuity that they deserve within the Council and the
United Nations. The Working Group on Africa has
enabled the Council to focus and integrate its efforts on
Africa. In the immediate future it must continue to be a
focal point for meetings between the Security Council
and African countries, regional organizations and other
groups within that region.
The Security Council's responsibility for Africa is
one of its greatest challenges and it strains the
Council's ability to discharge its Charter mandate. The
perspective from which the Council should work
jointly with Africans in maintaining peace and security
in the region is to consider in an integrated way peace
as a continuous effort that must be pursued in a well
defined manner and in strategic association with the
international community as a whole and in close
coordination with the other organs of the United
Nations.
The starting point for this activity must be
consultations with the African countries and with their
regional organizations. The guidelines for Security
Council action in Africa must be provided by the
Africans themselves. The Security Council must be
receptive and must apply criteria based on the
understanding that the Africans themselves have of
their situation and their possibilities. The effectiveness
of the Security Council therefore depends on its ability
to communicate its tasks and nourish its activities with
the points of view that the Africans themselves bring,
and also with the existence of strong and solid regional
institutions.
It is therefore of particular importance to my
country to stress the need for the Security Council to
continuously promote the participation of the African
organizations as being immediately and primarily
responsible for the maintenance of international peace
and security in that area. The Security Council must
support those organizations and assist them in
discharging their missions.
The Security Council, given its restricted powers
and the way they are described in the Charter, cannot
ignore the close linkage between economic and social
development, and peace and security in Africa.
Therefore, it is incumbent upon it to forge close links
with the Economic and Social Council so that a
genuine strategic association enables the two organs to
work together, each within the scope of its
responsibilities, to build lasting peace in the region.
From that perspective, and viewing the Working
Group on Africa led by Ambassador Koonjul of
Mauritius as the focus of Council action, my country
considers that the Council must immediately target its
activities regarding initiatives that can be considered
by the Working Group on four immediate regional and
subregional priorities.
The first is the task of enabling peace through
political arrangements that guarantee the territorial
integrity, sovereignty and independence of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. Any democratic
transition that could result from political agreements
reached through the inter-Congolese dialogue must
immediately lead to the withdrawal of foreign troops
from the territory of the Democratic Republic of the
Congo. Success by the United Nations and the African
community, in keeping with the promises and
commitments set out in the Lusaka Agreement, is the
foundation for peace, progress and development in the
Great Lakes region. The Democratic Republic of the
Congo, in view of its size and its wealth of resources,
could become a tremendous engine for development in
the whole Great Lakes area and an invaluable factor for
stability. It could just as easily, however, remain a
factor of instability and conflict. Therefore the Security
Council must attach a high level of priority, as it has to
the search for peace in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo. That is what prompted the recent visit of
members of the Security Council to the Great Lakes
region.
We must work with the Africans within the
framework of existing agreements. We must contribute
to the success of the inter-Congolese dialogue by
means ofthe instruments designed for that purpose.
Mexico fully trusts the capacities of the
signatories of the agreements on which the inter-
Congolese dialogue is based. We are fully confident in
the capacity of the Congolese to quickly arrive at an
inclusive arrangement on a political solution that will
guarantee the integrity of the Democratic Republic of
the Congo. We trust that it will also be achieved with
the active participation of the Organization of African
Unity and interested countries, in particular South
Africa. My country greatly appreciates the efforts of
South Africa in seeking peace for the Great Lakes
region.
Whatever success we achieve in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo will be a starting point from
which to stabilize the entire region and to find a way
out ofthe internal conflict in Burundi and full recovery
of peace and security in Rwanda. It is from this
perspective that we believe that the Working Group on
Africa is responsible for continuing to focus the
interest and the political will of the members of the
Council on finding, in cooperation with the African
countries and organizations, a quick solution to the
very risky and volatile situation in the Democratic
Republic ofthe Congo.
The second topic that we feel should have priority
in the work of the Security Council is consolidating the
achievements in the region of the Mano River Union,
especially in Sierra Leone. There should be an effort to
ensure that the commitments undertaken by the
countries of the Mano River region become a reality
and that they live within secure boundaries, in an
atmosphere of mutual respect. These objectives should
also be analysed very carefully and thoroughly by the
Council's ad hoc Working Group on Africa.
The third issue to which my country attaches high
priority in the short term is the situation in the Western
Sahara. The right of the Saharan people to self-
determination must be guaranteed, whether through
political negotiations or through the active
participation of the Security Council in the search for a
definitive solution to this conflict, which is one of the
oldest issues addressed by the Council. We have
mandatory deadlines, and we have a situation that
cannot go on any further. The ad hoc Working Group
on Africa is the proper forum in which to hold
consultations between the members of the Security
Council and interested African countries in order to
arrive at an agreement. The Security Council obviously
cannot unilaterally impose a resolution to the conflict,
but it can certainly further the possibility for the parties
concerned to find a way out.
The fourth priority which my delegation
considers a fundamental task of the Council in its
current agenda is to continue working for a satisfactory
and definitive demarcation of the border between
Ethiopia and Eritrea in order to put an end to their
conflict.
The Working Group should serve as a forum in
which to analyse the effectiveness of United Nations
peace missions in Africa and their ability to discharge
the tasks they have been entrusted with. We should
look at their resources and the commitments
undertaken by the international community. The
collective thinking of the Working Group on the
lessons learned in the different experiences of the
existing peace missions in Africa can help and make a
contribution to enhancing their effectiveness. The
Working Group should also examine the efficiency and
the timeliness of existing sanctions and should examine
the future of sanctions regimes as an instrument which
could contribute to the creation of conditions of peace
and security in the regions.
The Working Group has an express mandate to
facilitate and promote strategic interaction among
organs and bodies both in the United Nations and in
regional countries to reach the Council's peace and
security objectives.
I would like to conclude by saying that among the
tasks that we consider essential for the Council, we
cannot ignore the importance of humanitarian action
undertaken by the United Nations and the international
community in Africa. A fundamental element of
conflicts that so threaten peace in the area relates to
refugees, human rights violations, problems of
intolerance - whether interracial or inter-ethnic -
and the building of mechanisms for mutual confidence.
The Security Council also has at its disposal and
should make maximum use of, the knowledge of
international non-governmental organizations in Africa
itself and outside Africa. It should rely on them for
valuable information in order to make its decision-
making more sound.
This working meeting shows the Security
Council's interest in deepening its presence in Africa
with a greater sense of responsibility and purpose,
which must always and above all be done with the
inclusion of the points of View of the African countries
and following their initiatives.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Zambia. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Musambachime (Zambia): At the outset,
allow me, on behalf of the current Chairman of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), President
Mwanawasa of Zambia, to congratulate the delegation
of Singapore on its assumption of the presidency of the
Security Council for the month of May. My delegation
also wishes to thank you, Mr. President, for initiating
this meeting, which will undoubtedly go a long way in
helping to resolve conflicts in Africa. In the same vein,
let me commend your predecessor, Ambassador Lavrov
ofthe Russian Federation, for the able manner in which
he guided the affairs of the Council during the month
of April.
We also wish to pay a special tribute to
Ambassador Koonjul of Mauritius for his tireless work.
We are confident that, under his chairmanship, the ad
hoc Working Group will enhance and supplement
efforts to bring about lasting peace on the African
continent. We also thank him for the statement that he
made this morning on the mandate of the ad hoc
Working Group.
My delegation further wishes to thank the
Chairman of the Economic and Social Council and the
Permanent Observer of the OAU for their important
statements this morning. Special thanks go also to
Assistant Secretary-General Ibrahima Fall for his
contribution to the establishment ofthe ad hoc Working
Group and for the support he has given to it. We also
thank him for the thought-provoking statement that he
made this morning. I should like to mention here that
we welcome his appointment as Special Representative
of the Secretary-General for West Africa. As he leaves
to take up his new post in Dakar, we wish him well.
The decision to convene this meeting to discuss
the ad hoc Working Group on Conflict Prevention and
Resolution in Africa is to be highly commended. The
meeting is a timely and welcome development in that it
allows members and non-members of the Council to
review the situation in Africa and to propose a new
course of action. My delegation would like to express
its appreciation to the Security Council for devoting so
much time to issues concerning Africa. This debate,
and the visits made by Council members to our
continent to get a first-hand impression of the situation
and to have the opportunity to discuss issues with our
leaders and with other parties to conflicts, have
highlighted the extent of the Council's interest in
resolving issues and in finding solutions to conflicts in
Africa.
In view of the complex nature of the conflicts in
Africa, the ad hoc Working Group has a huge
responsibility to find innovative ways of addressing
their underlying causes in order to foster sustainable
peace and security on our continent. The holding of
this meeting is a step towards realizing the objectives
ofthe ad hoc Working Group.
The Secretary-General's report on the causes of
conflict and the promotion of durable peace and
sustainable development in Africa (S/1998/318) was
published in 1998 and was considered by the General
Assembly, the Security Council and the Economic and
Social Council as highlighting the causes of conflict,
which include poverty; local, national and regional
instability; and widespread and easy access to small
arms and light weapons. The report also contains a
series of both specific and broad recommendations on
the issues of conflict resolution, post-conflict peace-
building and the mobilization of resources for
development. My delegation has total confidence in the
report's recommendations.
The holding ofthis meeting comes at a time when
a number of positive developments are taking place in
Africa. We want to congratulate the people of Sierra
Leone on the steps that they have taken towards peace
in their country. The successful holding of elections
there, in an atmosphere of peace and tranquillity during
the entire exercise, demonstrated that the people of
Sierra Leone were tired of war and desired peace.
We salute the people of the Democratic Republic
of the Congo for the significant progress of the inter-
Congolese dialogue in Sun City, South Africa, under
the wise counsel ofthe facilitator, Sir Ketumile Masire,
former President of Botswana, and President Mbeki of
South Africa. The Congolese people deserve praise for
their serious approach to their responsibilities and for
securing agreement on 87 points, which constituted
approximately 85 per cent of what was to be discussed.
We hope that the remaining issues will not prove to be
obstacles to moving the peace process forward. We also
hope that, under the aegis of the Lusaka Agreement,
which is accepted by all parties to the conflict, the
agreement between the Government and the Movement
for the Liberation of the Congo will be used as a
framework to broaden and incorporate all other groups
as they work towards a final agreement. It is important
that the final agreement be owned by all groups in the
Congo.
We also congratulate the people of Angola for the
giant strides they have taken towards the cessation of
conflict since February this year. We note with
satisfaction the rapid progress of the peace process, the
demobilization of former rebel soldiers and the gradual
resettlement of displaced persons. It is our hope that
those developments will be permanent and that the
people of Angola will not return to war. The Angolan
people need peace; we hope that it is now within their
grasp. The international community should continue to
give them support as they strive towards the attainment
of peace in their country.
My delegation would also like to congratulate
Eritrea and Ethiopia on accepting the report of the
Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission without
reservation. That development is a demonstration of
two neighbouring countries resolving the conflict
between them in a peaceful and friendly manner.
We wish to note that some progress has also been
registered in Burundi. A transitional Government is in
place, and we hope that the international community
will continue to give support to the peace process in
that country.
At this juncture, we would like to commend the
leaders of Africa for producing an economic initiative,
the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD). It is a blueprint for the development of
Africa, and it stresses such aspects as the importance of
the prevention, management and resolution of
conflicts; peace enforcement, peacekeeping and
peacemaking; and post-conflict reconciliation,
rehabilitation and reconstruction. More important, it
focuses on the utilization of Africa's own resources for
development with the support of partners.
The developments taking place in Madagascar,
the Republic of the Congo, Somalia and Liberia are,
however, less comforting. The situations in those
countries demand concerted action by all concerned -
including the international community - to restore
peace and to avoid further loss of life and suffering
among the people. We commend the efforts of the
Security Council, the OAU, the regional groups and the
various African leaders to bring peace to these sister
countries. We pray and hope that they will bear fruit
soon.
In conclusion, I wish to take this opportunity to
pledge the full support and commitment of my
delegation to the activities of the ad hoc Working
Group. Its objectives to find solutions to the problems
of Africa have our support. It is my hope that, together,
we can make a difference and find workable solutions
for Africa.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Cote d'Ivoire. I invite him
to take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Djangone-Bi (Cote d'Ivoire) (spoke in French): My delegation welcomes you, Sir, and is
pleased to see you presiding over this important
meeting of interactive dialogue, so opportunely
convened by the Security Council, on the problem of
preventing and resolving the conflicts undermining the
African continent and jeopardizing the future well-
being ofits peoples.
We are indeed very happy and satisfied with this
new method of work of the Security Council, which not
only has given pride of place to Africa in its schedule,
but has also decided to listen to the Africans at regular
intervals. It is very true that a man cannot be made
happy against his will.
We also wish to thank and congratulate
Ambassador Koonjul, the Permanent Representative of
Mauritius and Chairman of the ad hoc Working Group
on Conflict Prevention and Resolution in Africa, for
the great work he has done to date. My delegation
urges him to continue on his course with the courage,
resolve and competence with which we are so familiar.
Allow me to illustrate my points by using medical
terms that, in my View, are well suited to the
circumstances. The issue at hand is indeed one of
disease and cure.
During the exchange of views that took place on
29 January between the Security Council and African
representatives, the latter emphasized the need for
prevention rather than for cure, because once a disease
has taken hold, recovery may be difficult, lengthy and
sometimes uncertain, leaving a trail of death and
suffering in its wake. The Africans therefore recognize
the importance of preventive diplomacy, although the
need to resolve pressing issues requires the
implementation of remedial diplomacy as well.
During the debate of 29 January, the main causes
of conflict in Africa were identified, inter alia, along
the following lines: the absence of democracy, good
governance and the rule of law indispensable to
democracy; poverty, illiteracy and disease, especially
HIV/AIDS; and the proliferation and illicit trafficking
of small arms. In order to treat a disease, one must first
and above all begin to diagnose it.
Some time ago, Secretary-General Kofi Annan
essentially said that if the resolutions,
recommendations and decisions of the United Nations
could solve problems in and of themselves, Africa
would have overcome its difficulties a long time ago.
In brief, as the Latins said: "Facta non verba". On the
basis of the Secretary-General's statement, on 29
January the Africans spoke with one voice to say that,
with respect to Africa's development, including
conflict prevention and resolution, it is high time for
concrete deeds based on the need for results.
Backing up his words with action, the Secretary-
General recently opened a regional United Nations
Office for West Africa and named Mr. Ibrahima Fall as
his Special Representative. My delegation is grateful to
him for that and takes this opportunity warmly to
congratulate Mr. Fall, whose hardest work, it must be
said, has only just begun. In any case, he may be
assured ofthe full cooperation of Cote d'Ivoire.
On another matter, my delegation welcomes the
very recent entry into force of the International
Criminal Court, which we view as the main instrument
not only for preventing, but also for resolving conflicts
throughout the world and, most particularly, in Africa.
The International Criminal Court completes the array
of legal instruments aimed at establishing the rule of
law worldwide.
In that context, my delegation believes that the
conclusions proposed by Ambassador Koonjul at the
first meeting of the Working Group on 22 March with
Mr. Fall effectively reflect the letter and spirit of the
meeting between the African Group and the Security
Council on 29 January. My delegation particularly
welcomes the third, sixth, seventh and tenth points of
the informal report, in which the Working Group
emphasizes the need for a pragmatic approach to guide
its actions and envisages the possibility of involving
the Bretton Woods institutions in its activities.
In this regard, my delegation believes that, unless
we are careful, instead of contributing to an effective
struggle against poverty, the activities of the donors -
including the European Union and the G-8 - could
actually exacerbate poverty. Indeed, the money loaned
would be used only by a small group of elites, whereas
the debt burden would be borne by taxpayers. It would
be desirable for any new approach to involve the
donors in the entire process of economic development,
including the creation of a socio-political environment
conducive to the measured repayment of loans, follow-
up to the use of funds and, ultimately, the settlement of
the debt.
To us, far from representing any kind of
interference in the domestic affairs of States, an
approach involving donors, even in electoral processes,
could be an impetus to good governance. In any case,
such an approach involves support for peoples' choices
and not imposition. Moreover, the Working Group
envisages working in synergy with regional and
subregional organizations and involving itself in the
implementation of the New Partnership for Africa's
Development.
My delegation has no significant comments to
make on the basis of its analysis of the Working
Group's programme of work. Indeed, as we have said,
conflicts are rooted in poverty, illiteracy, intolerance
and fear of the other. Furthermore, one of the main
sources of misunderstanding in Africa is very often the
endless contestation of elections, rightly or wrongly, by
suspicious protagonists. In such circumstances, my
delegation would like to see special attention given to
electoral processes in Africa. In order to ensure the
stability of the continent, the Security Council should
help to systematize, universalize and strengthen
genuinely independent electoral commissions in Africa.
It is well known that the accumulation,
proliferation and illicit trafficking of small arms are
major destabilizing factors that, inter alia, exacerbate
conflicts and legitimize the rule of the strongest and
best armed. My delegation believes that, along with the
First Committee of the General Assembly and the
Department of Peacekeeping Operations, the ad hoc
Working Group on Conflict Prevention and Resolution
in Africa should devote particular attention to the
problem of the proliferation and illicit trafficking of
weapons in Africa. An arms moratorium should be
respected not only on the ground but also at the source.
Finally, it has been generally said that, to a
significant extent, African conflicts are the result ofthe
nature of the relations between the world's great
Powers. Thus, after having witnessed with concern the
annulment of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty of 1972,
the C6te d'Ivoire welcomes the recent agreement on
the limitation of strategic nuclear weapons between the
United States of America and the Russian Federation.
We encourage the two parties to pursue a dialogue in
order to favour a future world free of the danger of
nuclear weapons.
These are, in a few words, the reflections that the
delegation of Cote d'Ivoire wished to share on the
subject of the prevention and resolution of conflicts in
Africa.
Mr. Zhang Yishan (China) (spoke in Chinese):
Due to the lateness of the hour, I will be very brief in
my statement. We welcome your presence, Sir, and
your chairing our meeting today. Your presence fully
testifies to the fact that you, your country and other
members of the Council, including China, attach great
importance to the question of Africa. I would like to
thank the Assistant Secretary-General, Mr. Fall,
Ambassador Koonjul, Ambassador Kolby, Ambassador
Simonovic' and all previous speakers for their
statements.
First, I would like to congratulate Ambassador
Koonjul. Thanks to his outstanding leadership, the
work of the ad hoc Working Group is gradually
unfolding. He has come up with the future programme
of work. Our meeting today is an important one.
Listening to the views of the wider membership,
especially the African countries, will greatly help the
Working Group in the discharge of its mandate. We
hope and demand that the Working Group, following
this meeting, seriously consider the various
recommendations and incorporate them into its future
work.
The challenge of resolving African conflicts is,
needless to say, daunting and complicated. It calls for
the joint efforts of the international community,
including the Security Council. A case in point is
Sierra Leone, which has made remarkable progress in
the peace process. We should draw lessons from the
experiences gained in that country. We also believe that
the international community should continue to help
Sierra Leone and other countries in their post-conflict
economic reconstruction and in the reintegration of
former combatants into society in order to consolidate
the peace that has been achieved.
Resolving the African conflicts remains an
arduous task. We believe the key to better solving this
issue lies in the proper handling of the following
aspects. First, we should reaffirm that the international
community attaches the highest priority to the question
of Africa. It should ensure that, in terms of political
will and resources, Africa should be awarded top
priority on our agenda.
Secondly, any attempts to end conflicts in Africa
should address both the symptoms and the root causes.
While trying to solve conflicts in Africa, we should pay
more attention to tackling the root causes by taking
effective measures to help African countries to
eliminate poverty and to develop their economies.
Thirdly, the various efforts of the international
community should be combined to form a driving
force. In this respect, we should fully take into account
the views of the parties to the conflict, as well as those
of neighbouring States.
Fourthly, parties to the conflict should also
demonstrate their political will by responding and
cooperating with international efforts. Only in this way
can international organizations, including the United
Nations, play a better role.
In the last century, we saw the African continent
besieged by turmoil, conflicts, poverty and famine. It is
also the continent with the largest number of least
developed countries. That situation cannot continue in
the new century. Building a peaceful, stable and
prosperous Africa is a task to be shouldered by not
only Africa. It is a common task for the international
community. China stands ready to continue offering its
support to the Working Group, the Security Council,
the Economic and Social Council, the Organization of
African Unity and the subregional organizations in
their work. At the same time, we are also willing to
make our own contribution to the earliest possible
achievement of peace and development in the African
continent.
Before I conclude, I would like to mention
Assistant Secretary-General Fall. I had the honour of
working with him for an extended period of time when
I was in Geneva. I am fully acquainted with his skills
and dedication. Before he assumes his new post of head
of the United Nations Office for West Africa, I would
like to wish him all the best and great success in his
future endeavour. I hope that he will be able to make
great contributions to the African countries.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Malawi. I invite him to take
a seat at the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Lamba (Malawi): My delegation wishes to
commend the delegation of Singapore for its sustained
commitment to issues confronting Africa, which is
demonstrated by the convening of this very important
meeting during its presidency of the Council. I would
also like to commend the Security Council for offering
us yet another opportunity for an interactive debate on
Africa, this time specifically related to the Security
Council's ad hoc Working Group on Africa. The
creation of the Group is yet another important
endeavour of the Council in its progression towards
increased openness and active engagement in Africa.
Although the establishment of the ad hoc Working
Group represents a collective effort, permit me to pay
special tribute to Ambassador Koonjul of Mauritius for
his singular contribution to the idea that led to its
formation. My delegation congratulates him on his
lucid and comprehensive presentation of the
programme of work of the ad hoc Working Group and
its objectives.
Since the establishment of the Working Group on
27 February 2002, my delegation has viewed it as a
potentially important medium for interaction and the
exchange of useful ideas between the Security Council
and delegations on the issue of conflict prevention and
resolution in Africa. The Working Group has come at
an opportune time because, although the turbulence in
Africa may be showing signs of abating, as is now the
case in Angola, Sierra Leone, Ethiopia and Eritrea and,
to a certain extent, in the Democratic Republic of
Congo, any temptation to believe that the end of the
hard political road for Africa is now in sight would be
rather premature and dangerous because potential hot
spots remain in several areas of the continent. The ad
hoc Working Group will therefore have the enormous
task of evaluating political crises in Africa to
determine the extent of possible intervention by the
Security Council before the eruption of an armed
conflict.
A number of areas indeed exist for useful liaison
by the Working Group's with other bodies of the
United Nations. In this regard, my delegation supports
the Group's outlined approaches to its work, especially
its planned operational relationship and cooperation
with the Economic and Social Council and with the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) aimed at
dovetailing their work. The involvement of the
Economic and Social Council in the rehabilitation of
societies emerging from war should certainly elicit
increased interest in the work of the Security Council
through the ad hoc Working Group.
For the Working Group to remain in touch with
Africa, its interaction with the Organization of African
Unity and subregional organizations such as the
Southern African Development Community, the
Economic Community of West African States, the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development and
others is imperative. Those organizations can provide
benefit to the Working Group with their hands-on
experience and their knowledge of ongoing conflicts in
Africa.
The OAU and the United Nations have all along
operated in cooperation within the legal framework of
the United Nations Charter, strengthened by resolutions
of the General Assembly. The functional interface
between the two organizations remains a desirable
meeting point of ideas related to conflict prevention
and resolution in Africa. A new era of field missions of
the Security Council and the OAU would mark a
welcome and more practical approach to Africa's
problems.
Besides supporting the suggested close
cooperation among the Group, the Permanent Observer
OAU/African Union (AU) to the United Nations and
subregional organizations, my delegation also fully
endorses the idea of occasionally inviting
representatives from academia and the community of
non-governmental organizations to interact with the
Working Group. Ideas flowing from those sources can
only be rejuvenating and enriching, ultimately leading
to useful redefinition of some of the strategies of the
Security Council.
The suggestion that the Working Group could
play a role in the implementation of the New
Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) is by
no means far-fetched. The vast nature of NEPAD's
structure and objectives would assure the Group a
useful place in the operation of this gigantic African
initiative for economic development. NEPAD was
conceived as and is being launched as an OAU/AU
brainchild. Obviously, many elements of NEPAD will
neatly relate to the aspirations and ideals of the United
Nations and the Security Council, especially in the
political aspects of democracy and good governance.
Those features, which are at the core of NEPAD's
thrust, will no doubt be of interest to the Security
Council. NEPAD therefore provides not only an
instrument, but also a yardstick of Africa's renaissance.
Talking of synergy, it will be necessary to avoid
duplication between the Group's mandated work and
that of the ad hoc Advisory Group on African
Countries Emerging from Conflict of the Economic and
Social Council; a carefully planned interface of the
efforts of the two groups will achieve important and
productive collaboration in tackling conflict situations,
from prevention to post-war activities and confidence-
building.
The ad hoc Working Group's proposed
programme of work represents a fairly comprehensive
challenge and the Group will need support from
various United Nations organs for its implementation,
especially where funding is crucial to the execution of
the proposed functions. My delegation feels strongly
that assessing conflict situations in Africa without field
visits for on-the-spot evaluations cannot yield a truly
realistic picture that will facilitate the formulation of
realistic strategies. The promotion of confidence-
building in the countries of the Mano River Union and
the enhancement of the role of the Special
Representatives of the Secretary-General will always
require financial support.
At this point allow me to congratulate the
Security Council on its recent field mission to the
Great Lakes region, during which it visited several
conflict spots in the area for a realistic assessment of
the situation. In my delegation's view, the expenditure
on that mission was well worth it as it went towards a
noble cause.
That kind of expenditure will also apply to United
Nations involvement in election observation from the
preparatory stages to the conclusion ofthe process. The
terms of reference of such involvement will, of course,
require careful formulation to avert possible backlash
in the host county. This important aspect in the pursuit
of election transparency and accountability will
strengthen the ability of the United Nations to make a
proper evaluation of a country's election results. The
involvement of the Commonwealth or the European
Union in such situations has proved useful in the
appraisal of the performance of the democratization
process in countries where those organizations have
played an observer role.
In conclusion, my delegation would like to
reiterate its congratulations to the Security Council on
its innovation in the form of the ad hoc Working Group
as a practical demonstration of its commitment to
meaningful, progressive openness and transparency in
the work of this crucial organ at the United Nations.
These initiatives deserve encouragement from all of us
as they characterize a new era. Malawi's request is that
the Group become a permanent feature of the Council.
But for the Working Group to become sufficiently
productive and useful, delegations will have to play the
important role of engaging it in frequent dialogue about
conflicts in Africa. My delegation commits itself to
staying fully engaged with the ad hoc Working Group
in order for its formation to be worthwhile.
The President: the next speaker is the
representative of Mali. I invite him to take a seat at the
Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Ouane (Mali) (spoke in French): The
delegation of Mali is gratified to see the Council being
guided by you, Mr. Minister, as it considers the
situation in Africa. My delegation highly appreciates
the many initiatives of the delegation of Singapore,
under the leadership of Ambassador Mahbubani, to
rationalize the work of the Security Council and bring
it into line with its prime responsibility: the
maintenance ofinternational peace and security.
Today's debate is part of that dynamic. It is my
pleasure to thank Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul,
Chairman of the ad hoc Working Group on Conflict
Prevention and Resolution in Africa, for having
reported on the work of the Group with his usual
thoroughness.
Speaking at this point in the debate, I would like
to concentrate on two points which, in the opinion of
my delegation, deserve particular attention.
First, I would like to emphasize that for the
delegation of Mali conflict prevention and resolution in
Africa require a comprehensive, integrated approach
that takes into account the complexity of the
underlying causes of conflicts in Africa and their
devastating consequences. In that connection, my
delegation welcomes the Secretary-General's analysis
in his report of 7 June 2001 on the prevention of armed
conflict (S/2001/574), as well as the adoption of
resolution 1366 (2001) of 30 August 2001 and the
presidential statement of 31 January 2002
(S/PRST/2002/2).
In that connection, we believe that the ad hoc
Working Group on Conflict Prevention and Resolution
could derive benefit from the capacities of the entire
United Nations system in devising and carrying out
studies on remedying the underlying causes of conflict.
That is why my delegation advocates strengthening the
relationship between the Security Council and the
Economic and Social Council. We say this because,
despite their distinct roles, the two bodies are
complementary when it comes to action in the areas of
peace, security and economic and social development.
Furthermore, it is important to give concrete form to
the Secretary-General's intention periodically to report
to the Council on regional and subregional threats to
international peace and security, in particular border
problems, illicit trafficking in small arms, the illegal
exploitation of natural resources, refugee issues,
mercenaries, child soldiers, paramilitary forces and the
consequences of the interaction of these factors with
security.
The second point that I would like to emphasize
relates to the need to strengthen cooperation between
the United Nations and regional and subregional
organizations, non-governmental organizations, civil
society and business circles. In that connection, we
should recall that the Organization of African Unity
(OAU), as well as subregional organizations such as
the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) and the Southern African Development
Community (SADC), have recently been endowed with
institutional capacity for early warning activities and
conflict prevention, in particular through their own
mechanisms for conflict prevention, management and
resolution. It is indispensable that we support those
mechanisms, and the ad hoc Group could usefully work
in this domain.
This morning, Ambassador Kebe and Mr. Fall
presented some ideas on this matter, which my
delegation fully supports. I would like to recall that
during our term on the Security Council, Mali engaged
in this exercise with some success. The relations
between ECOWAS and the Council have been
developing since then in a genuine spirit of partnership
which should be further reinforced and expanded. The
forthcoming inauguration of a United Nations Office in
West Africa is also part of this movement, and Mali
will contribute all the required support.
In conclusion, I would like to associate the
Malian delegation with the well-deserved tribute that
has been paid throughout the meeting to my mentor
and friend, Mr. Ibrahima Fall, who is about to take up
his duties as Assistant Secretary-General, Special
Representative of the Secretary-General and head of
the United Nations Office in West Africa. Our best
wishes for success go with him, and we hope he will
make a real success story of the United Nations Office
in West Africa. He owes no less to our subregion, to
the United Nations and to himself.
Mr. Kolby (Norway): First of all, Mr. President, I
would like to commend your delegation and yourself
for the initiative to have this important debate on the
Working Group on Africa. Your presence here
throughout the day is certainly a testimony to your own
commitment. I would also like to commend my friend
Ambassador Koonjul for his initiative in establishing
and chairing the Working Group. The Working Group
has had a number of meetings. I think the idea of
listening at this meeting to non-members of the
Council, particularly our African friends, is highly
appropriate. I think we have had a very rich discussion.
The hour is late, and I shall not make very
specific points. A number of very interesting proposals
have been put forward, and it will now be up to the
Working Group to act on them. I would just like to
highlight a few approaches that Norway thinks are
important.
We strongly agree with the many speakers who
urged closer consultation, interaction and cooperation
both within the Security Council and with the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and subregional
organizations. In what concrete form should this take
place? That is something I think we need to think
about. But I think it should be clear to all of us that we
need to pursue this avenue.
The second approach I would like to highlight is
the need for closer interaction between the Security
Council and the Economic and Social Council. I feel
that for conflicts in Africa we need a very broad
approach. As Ambassador Kumalo stated this morning,
these conflicts cannot be resolved by only using the
tool of peace and security. We need to add other
components. We need to deal with the root causes if we
are to achieve durable peace.
The third approach I would like to mention is that
we need to work for regional solutions. This was
highlighted by several speakers from West African
countries, and I think it is appropriate for other parts of
Africa also.
In conclusion, I have one specific point. The
representative of Mali and many other speakers made
specific reference to the role of small arms. There is no
doubt that small arms are fuelling these conflicts, so
we really need to find a way to come to grips with that
problem.
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. Dos Santos (Mozambique): We congratulate
you, Sir, and your country, Singapore, on your
assumption of the presidency of the Security Council
for the month of May in such a committed manner.
Your presence and the dedicated work of your
Permanent Representative, Ambassador Kishore
Mahbubani, and his able team merit our recognition
and appreciation. Allow me, on behalf of the
Government of the Republic of Mozambique, to
warmly welcome your initiative to hold this public and
interactive debate on the prevention and resolution of
conflicts in Africa.
I wish to make a few general remarks on the issue
before the Council today and then to address some of
the specific issues you, Sir, have asked us to discuss.
When the Security Council met on 29 and 30 January
2002, it had an extensive and fruitful debate on the
situation in Africa that was blessed by the presence of a
number of ministers and the Secretary-General of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU). As a result of
that meeting, the President of the Security Council
issued a statement (S/2002/2) on behalf of the Council
in which he summed up the debate and enunciated a set
of recommendations on future United Nations work to
address the situation in Africa. To monitor the
implementation of those recommendations the setting
up of an ad hoc Working Group on Conflict Prevention
and Resolution in Africa was proposed. Today's
meeting is therefore timely and important in terms of
assessing the work done by the Working Group so far.
At this juncture, allow me to sincerely thank
Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul, Chairman of the ad hoc
Working Group, for the comprehensive briefing he
presented today on the work carried out so far. We fully
commend his remarkable leadership of the Group and
pledge our full support to his endeavours.
As we have indicated in previous statements in
the Security Council and elsewhere, our analysis of
conflicts in Africa must be comprehensive, pragmatic
and result-oriented; it should encompass a clear
understanding of their root causes, the actors involved
and the issues at stake.
Success in the prevention and resolution of
conflicts in Africa can be achieved only through a
proactive approach based primarily on prevention - a
strategy that is effective, forward-looking and less
costly.
Prevention requires addressing the root causes of
conflict, which in Africa are synonymous with the
pressing needs and concerns of the people, which
include poverty, underdevelopment, poor governance,
endemic diseases, exclusion, State legitimacy, ethnic
divisions and the proliferation of arms. With regard to
arms, I would like here to support the statement made
by the Assistant Secretary-General, Ibrahima Fall, and
his proposals. I would like to add that we need to
implement the United Nations Programme of Action to
Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in
Small Arms and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects,
which we all adopted in July last year, and which the
Council welcomed.
Prevention entails a strong nexus between peace
and development. The Secretary-General's report on
the causes of conflict and promotion of durable peace
and sustainable development in Africa (S/1998/318)
rightly highlights that nexus and advances a
comprehensive and integrated approach to conflict
prevention, poverty eradication and development. We
are hopeful that this approach will help to meet the
special needs of many African countries, and it is in
that connection that we see closer and enhanced
coordination among the Security Council, the
Economic and Social Council and other United Nations
bodies and agencies.
The United Nations must also increase its support
to Africa's own peace and development initiatives.
African countries have continued their efforts to build
African capacity for the prevention, management and
resolution of conflicts and for development.
African countries, individually or through their
regional and subregional organizations such as the
Organization of African Unity (OAU), the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) and
Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS), are becoming more active and important
players in these endeavours, as has been already
suggested this morning and this afternoon. The creation
of the OAU Mechanism for Conflict Prevention,
Management and Resolution bears testimony to the
continent's determination to settle conflicts in Africa.
At the subregional level, the Heads of State or
Government of the Southern African Development
Community, at their ordinary summit in August 2001,
in Blantyre, Malawi, signed a protocol for the
operationalizing the SADC Organ on Politics, Defence
and Security Cooperation, and, more recently,
established an inter-State politics and diplomacy
committee to enhance the effectiveness ofthe Organ.
All these initiatives attest to the strong
commitment of Africans to solving their problems and
to the reversal of the appalling situation of conflicts in
Africa. These confidence-building measures need to be
nurtured with the support of the international
community to ensure their success.
Failure of preventive measures brings us to
conflict resolution and management. For the success of
conflict resolution and management, we need to review
the mandates of peacekeeping operations and the
conventional approaches to them. Due to their
multidimensional nature, current conflicts require a
comprehensive approach and the involvement of all
stakeholders at the national, regional and international
levels.
Allow me now to briefly touch on some of the
specific issues of concern to our delegation. First, we
are happy to see that the Economic and Social Council
has also taken an important decision expressing a
commitment to support Africa by establishing an ad
hoc Working Group on African Countries Emerging
from Conflicts. We wish to see greater collaboration
and coordination of efforts among the Security
Council, the Economic and Social Council and other
United Nations bodies and agencies in their work on
Africa, and we welcome the presence of the President
ofthe Economic and Social Council at this meeting.
Secondly, we believe that success in conflict
resolution is closely linked to the level of
understanding of the conflict itself. Those involved in
the mediation of conflicts should possess a profound
knowledge of the nature and dynamics of the conflict,
which can allow them to exercise the best judgement,
undertake effective action and provide critical
assurances to all parties to the conflict that they are
also parties to the solution. We therefore believe that
those tasked with mediation, including the Special
Representatives of the Secretary-General, should
possess all those attributes if they are to enjoy the
much needed trust of all parties, and to work with the
highest level of impartiality and commitment. In that
regard, we congratulate His Excellency Mr. Ibrahima
Fall on his appointment as head of the United Nations
Office in West Africa. He is the kind of representative
that we are talking about.
Thirdly, we also find the establishment of groups
of friends for specific conflict situations very useful.
We are of the View that these groups can be
fundamental in the solution of conflicts by providing
an excellent forum for debating the dynamics of the
conflict itself as well as for advancing peace initiatives.
Such groups should be more inclusive and
representative.
Fourthly, we further believe that every initiative
for conflict prevention and resolution can only benefit
from the involvement of civil society, including non-
governmental organizations, universities and academia:
actors that can bring added value to the process
through their deep knowledge of the relevant conflicts,
as well as their often easy access to the parties
involved.
Fifthly, we are concerned that our continent
continues to register conflicts related to the exercise of
democracy as candidates and their supporters often call
into question election results perceived to be unjust and
unfair, as was referred to earlier on in this meeting.
This situation is a clear demonstration of the need for
support for good governance and democratic
institutions in African countries. We thus find it critical
to increase international assistance in the fields of
governance and the strengthening of democratic
institutions, including those related to electoral
processes. It is clear that elections by themselves,
however successful, are not sufficient to ensure
stability and progress.
Finally, the prevention and resolution of conflicts
and movement towards peace, stability and
development in Africa can be crowned with success
only with the active involvement of the Africans
themselves. In Africa there is already an institutional
capacity, both at the continental and the regional levels,
for the prevention and resolution of conflicts.
If these issues are taken up seriously by the ad
hoc Working Group and by the Council, and if the
conclusions are followed up, then we believe that we
have a greater chance to succeed.
A lot has been said about the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (NEPAD). I will not develop
additional ideas on this, except to mention the
importance that it has for Africa and for the
international community.
We encourage the United Nations to foster its
cooperation and collaboration with continental and
subregional institutions in the search for durable
solutions to the problems affecting our continent. The
level of human, material and financial resources
committed to assisting Africa will remain an essential
barometer in measuring the level of political will and
commitment to the continent.
We are fully aware of the efforts of the United
Nations, the Security Council and the Secretary-
General to promote peace, security and development in
our continent. We commend those efforts, and we wish
to express our gratitude and to stress once again our
strong determination to work together for the noble
cause of bringing about peace and development in
Africa.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Somalia. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Hashi (Somalia): Mr. President, let me join
my colleagues in expressing my profound thanks to
you for chairing this meeting of the Security Council.
This is indicative of your personal commitment and
that of your government to African issues. Let me also
express our appreciation to Ambassador Mahbubani for
his stewardship of this Council for this month. My
highest regard is also extended to Ambassador Koonjul
for sowing the idea of a Security Council ad hoc
Working Group on Conflict Prevention and Resolution
in Africa. I also take this opportunity to thank Ibrahima
Fall and Ambassadors Kebe and Simonovie for their
very enlightening contributions.
Today's meeting is timely because it is taking
place on the eve of the anniversary of the founding of
the Organization of African Unity (OAU) and of its
coming transition to the African Union. More
particularly, and in view of the fact that conflicts
continue to be a major obstacle to Africa's economic
and social development, for us, who have come from
countries where conflicts continue to prevail, this
meeting has a singular significance.
It is our hope that the ad hoc Working Group on
Conflict Prevention and Resolution will be an
important engine for the search for peace and stability
in Africa's areas of conflict. In this regard, we will
welcome the establishment of the Economic and Social
Council's ad hoc Advisory Group on African Countries
Emerging from Conflict. That new vehicle will no
doubt enable African countries emerging from conflict
to embark on the necessary road of recovery and
reconstruction.
We believe that, while the mandate of the ad hoc
Working Group is comprehensive enough to cover
many areas, it should also cover the broader spectrum
of conflict management, including enhancing early
warning systems, timely sharing of information
gathered at the early warning stages, peacemaking,
peace-building and post-conflict peace-building and the
prevention of recurrence and relapse into conflict. That
holistic approach would enable the ad hoc Working
Group to engage more proactively in the quest for
conflict management in Africa.
Let me say at this juncture that subregional
organizations have been successful in conflict
resolution and management. I have a number of them
in mind. For example, the Community of Sahel-
Saharan States has taken steps to resolve conflicts and
crises in the Central African Republic and in Chad and
continues to search for a resolution to conflicts in
Sudan and in Somalia.
Likewise, the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) has been successful in that
regard. The success in ending the conflict in Sierra
Leone should be lauded. The experience gained will be
invaluable to the ad hoc Working Group; it is essential
to tap into these positive experiences with a View to
exploring whether they can be useful models to be
emulated in future conflicts. For that purpose, we
submit that the ad hoc Working Group from time to
time should invite leaders of these subregional
organizations and other eminent personalities to share
their experiences with the ad hoc Working Group.
In our view, it is equally important that the ad hoc
Working Group should continuously monitor other
initiatives aimed at national reconciliation that may
have stalled or faltered; this is in order to examine the
reasons for such lack of success with a View to
preventing the recurrence of stalled or faltered attempts
in future conflict management in Africa. In that regard,
I have in mind the Somalia peace process mandated by
the Intergovernmental Authority on Development
(IGAD), which my Government fully supports. The
obstacles to that process need to be removed, and the
ad hoc Working Group could use its good offices to
give an urgently needed boost to the process.
As members are aware, conflicts result in massive
destruction of life and property. Large groups of people
are dislocated. Some become displaced, while others
seek refuge in safer havens. The ad hoc Working Group
needs to see first hand the plight of people in conflict,
particularly the most vulnerable in society: the elderly,
women and children. It may therefore be useful for the
ad hoc Working Group to undertake field visits to areas
of conflict where circumstances permit.
In the work programme of the ad hoc Working
Group, only some areas of conflict are mentioned. We
understand that this is not to the exclusion of other
areas in conflict. While all conflicts demand due
attention, the ad hoc Working Group has to set
priorities within priorities. The conflict in Somalia is a
case in point. The ad hoc Working Group should give a
special focus to forgotten conflicts in Africa.
In order to move the national reconciliation
process forward, Somalia needs the unqualified
attention of the ad hoc Working Group and of the
international community at large. While we appreciate
all of the efforts that have been undertaken, Somalia is
reaching out to the international community to ask it to
re-engage more vocally and energetically. For our part,
we are willing to cooperate with the ad hoc Working
Group in any manner that can accelerate peace
throughout Africa.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Rwanda. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Gasana (Rwanda) (spoke in French): On the
occasion of this open meeting of the Security Council,
I would like, on behalf of my Government, to thank the
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Singapore and his
Permanent Representative to the United Nations for
having taken this auspicious initiative of organizing a
Security Council debate on Africa. We congratulate all
speakers for their relevant statements, which have
contributed a great deal to our understanding.
Rwanda has just commemorated the eighth
anniversary of the genocide that it suffered in 1994,
which caused incalculable human and material losses.
My country would like to offer our experience to the
international community to make the world aware of
the danger inherent in all philosophies of hatred and
exclusion and to ensure that the principle of "never
again" declared after the Second World War will be
realized as a universal principle for all the peoples of
the world through the philosophy of collective security.
Since we are discussing Africa today, I should
like pay tribute to all freedom fighters - to all those
heroes who died as pioneers in the fight for the
freedom and dignity of their peoples. Africa not only
lost its sons and daughters, but also suffered monstrous
humiliation and immense material damage as a result
of the systematic plunder of its natural resources
without compensation. Africa, therefore, should not
have to bear and suffer alone the consequences of
history and of the passing ofthe colonial era.
Since we are having a substantive debate on
Africa, we might ask ourselves the question: which
Africa are we discussing? There are various Africas,
which constitute facets of the physical Africa depicted
on maps or of the physical Africa that we fly over in
aeroplanes. When we recall the way in which Africa
was carved up, we can discuss the reality of the
multitude of Africas: the Africa of slavery, the Africa
of colonialism and of neocolonialism, the so-called
black Africa and white Africa, the Africa of apartheid,
the Africa of tribes and of ethnicities, the Africa of
hatred and of exclusion, the "Bantu" Africa, the mythic
Africa, the Africa of soldiers and of coups d'etat, the
Africa of militias and mutinies, the Africa of
nationalities and of unbridled nationalism, the Africa of
demons and of evil spirits, the Africa of the illiterate
and the functionally illiterate, the Africa of the poor, of
misery and of the miserable, the Africa of diamonds
and of black and yellow gold - it is all there. But
there is also the Africa of Nkrumah, the Africa of
Lumumba, the Africa of Benbella, the Africa of Nasser,
the Africa of Um Nyobe of Cameroon, the Africa of
Se'kou Toure and the Africa of Mandela. Fortunately,
that Africa too has existed, and it exists today in our
awareness.
The Africa that we are discussing today is
ravaged by ignorance, dire poverty, bad governance,
military coups d'etat, manipulations, struggles and
Western and other foreign influences. What can we do
to pull it back out of the dark pit of slavery and
colonialism into which it sank? How can we say today
that the debate on slavery and colonialism in Africa is
no longer relevant when their disastrous consequences
still exist in Africa - when the damage done then still
afflicts it today? All the harm caused on the African
continent by slavery and colonialism must be told.
The conflicts that ravage Africa have deep causes
related mostly to colonialism and its ravages and also
to the neocolonialism that followed the period of so-
called political independence of African countries of
the 1960s. Since then, each African country that has
attempted to organize and to experience true political
independence has been blocked by neocolonialists and
their allies, either directly or indirectly through the
intermediary of certain international bodies. What is to
be done when neocolonialism remains invisible,
wearing kid gloves, and when sometimes the glove is
the United Nations, which blocks Africa and prevents it
from experiencing a true rebirth, over and above all
slogans?
There was a genocide in Africa for the first time
in our continent's history, and unfortunately that
genocide occurred in Rwanda. The planners and
authors of that genocide fled to the Democratic
Republic ofthe Congo in July 1994, under the cover of
the operation involving the so-called Turquoise Zone.
There, they continued to launch attacks on Rwanda and
to massacre innocent people. The Government of
Rwanda shouldered its responsibility and fought them
right into their Congolese sanctuaries. But had it not
been for the military, political, material and financial
support of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and
its allies for these genocidal forces, the Rwandan army
would long ago have been able to find a solution to the
problem.
What are the underlying causes of the Great
Lakes conflict? Who is pulling the strings? Why does
the conflict persist? Who is behind the curtains? Who
is at the backstage? Why does the spirit of genocide -
of exterminating "the other" - spread through the
whole Great Lakes region before our very eyes, as we
all stand by helplessly?
With regard to the genocide in Rwanda, at the
request of the Security Council, the independent
inquiry led by former Prime Minister Carlsson of
Sweden submitted a report to the Council. That report,
having assigned responsibilities for the African-
Rwandese tragedy, recommended the establishment of
a special post-genocide economic and social assistance
programme for Rwanda. Why has that
recommendation - favourable to a needy Member of
the United Nations - not been implemented?
I should like to take this opportunity to welcome
the recent report of the Security Council mission to the
Great Lakes region, which recognized Rwanda's
security concerns. We recall that the Rwandese troops
who are present in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo are there only because of the security problems
of Rwanda and its people. I should also like to reaffirm
my Government's commitment to supporting all
provisions of the Lusaka Agreement, as well as its
commitment to withdraw its troops from the
Democratic Republic of the Congo once the question of
disarmament, demobilization, reintegration and
repatriation or resettlement (DDRRR) is settled. This
morning, the representative of Bangladesh referred to
the withdrawal of Namibian troops from the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Namibian
presence was merely symbolic. Namibia has no border
with the Democratic Republic of the Congo, has no
security problems with the Democratic Republic of the
Congo and therefore is not concerned with the DDRRR
programme, which is one of the sine qua non
conditions for the withdrawal of foreign troops from
the Democratic Republic ofthe Congo.
In conclusion, I should like to congratulate our
brother and friend, Assistant Secretary-General
Ibrahima Fall, on his new duties. We wish him every
success.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Costa Rica. I invite her to take a seat
at the Council table and to make her statement.
Mrs. Chassoul (Costa Rica) (spoke in Spanish):
Allow me to start by congratulating you, Sir, on your
well-deserved presidency of the Council for the month
of May. Costa Rica admires the work carried out by
Singapore over the past 18 months as a non-permanent
member of this organ. We have noted Ambassador
Mahbubani's leadership and the constructive and
critical role played by his delegation. We believe that
his work clearly demonstrates the importance of the
presence within this organ of smaller countries in
guaranteeing its effectiveness and legitimacy.
We welcome the convening of this interactive
meeting on the work of the ad hoc Working Group on
Conflict Prevention and Resolution in Africa as an
opportunity to have a candid exchange of views with
its Chairman, Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul, and the
other members of the Security Council. We are also
grateful for the 13 May letter of Ambassadors
Mahbubani and Koonjul, setting out clear guidelines
for this debate. That useful document, which has
helped us to focus our statements and to define the
contents of the debate, is a sound precedent that should
be maintained.
Costa Rica fully supports United Nations
monitoring of electoral processes in Africa. We
recognize that this activity has facilitated the peaceful
settlement of various conflicts, not only in Africa, but
also on all the continents. Suffice it to recall the
examples of El Salvador, Cambodia, Kosovo and the
Central African Republic, where the United Nations
played an indispensable role in preparing and
coordinating elections held following the end of the
respective armed conflicts.
We must, however, be realistic about this task.
Democracy cannot be built in a day. The existence of
electoral mechanisms does not guarantee the existence
of genuine democracy, which is a long-term and
continuous process, requiring ongoing efforts of
coordination and concertation, respect for the will of
the majority and for the rights of minorities,
understanding and negotiation. Genuine democracy
exists only within a flourishing culture of mutual
respect and when there is general acceptance of both
the existence of common principles and objectives and
of legitimate differences of opinion and legal avenues
for dissent.
The United Nations can cooperate in holding
clean and fair elections in post-conflict situation in
three different ways. First, the Organization can
cooperate directly in the preparation and holding of
elections. Its experience in this field is considerable,
ranging from the provision of security for electoral
centres to the preparation of electoral roles. Secondly,
the United Nations can cooperate in demilitarizing the
electoral process in order to avert fraud, voter
intimidation and violence during the voting process. To
that end, it is necessary to demobilize and disarm ex-
combatants. Thirdly, the Organization can help
political leaders to respect the outcome of the electoral
process. To that end, it is essential to create
institutional mechanisms to guarantee the legitimacy of
elections and to provide peaceful resolutions of
ideological, political and economic differences. These
tasks require careful preparation and implementation.
United Nations involvement during the transitional
period is crucial in this respect.
Moreover, assistance in and monitoring of
electoral processes should not be confined solely to the
first series of elections in a post-conflict period, but
should extend throughout the period of democratic
consolidation. Holding one election does not indicate a
return to normalcy; on the contrary, it is only the first
step towards a democratic existence. Unfortunately, the
international community often considers that its work
is done once the first elections are over. Experience has
shown that this conclusion is wrong.
We believe that the United Nations should
provide assistance to consolidate democracy on an
ongoing basis. Our Organization should promote both
the strengthening of social and political mechanisms
that promote free competition through periodic
elections, as well as transparent, responsible and open
governance. It should promote the dissemination and
deepening of democracy in all spheres of society. It is
necessary in parallel to ensure that the democratic
process is not distorted or corrupted by leaders who
foment discord in order to promote their private
ambitions at the expense of the well-being of the
community.
As regards coordination between the Security
Council and the Economic and Social Council, we feel
that it is essential to improve the activities of each
organ in conflict prevention and resolution on the
African continent. Their respective mandates press
them to adopt specific measures and recommendations
to improve the political, economic, social and military
situations of the continent. Nonetheless, we must not
forget that those two bodies have clearly distinct
attributions and competencies.
The Security Council has a mandate to maintain
international peace and security in the face of political
and legal disputes and armed threats to peace. The
Economic and Social Council, however, is mandated to
promote economic and social development and
universal respect for human rights. To the extent that
each organ carries out its respective tasks in full, their
efforts will reinforce each other and bear optimal fruit.
If economic and social development and full respect
for human rights are not achieved, however, a lasting
peace will not be achieved in Africa. At the same time,
while armed conflict persists, it will be impossible to
achieve true economic and social development on the
continent. That is why it would be desirable to increase
the level of cooperation and coordination between the
two organs, thereby effectively implementing Article
65 of the Charter.
The question is, therefore, how to enhance that
interrelationship. In recent years, various initiatives
have been undertaken to allow some members of the
Economic and Social Council to attend meetings of the
Security Council and vice versa. Last year, a plenary
meeting of the two organs on an equal footing was
unsuccessfully mooted. Were those proposals to be
implemented, they would improve communication
between the two organs, although they would not, per
se, guarantee better coordination of their operational
activities. Regrettably, the mere exchange of
information or coordination of independently
developed activities is insufficient.
In order to develop true synergy between the
efforts of the Economic and Social Council and the
Security Council, their activities must be coordinated
from the very moment when they are first developed
and proposed. A common and detailed strategy must be
crafted within which the activities of the two organs
will coincide and complement each other. Decisions
cannot continue to be adopted in isolation. We must
create a framework within which members of the two
organs can jointly assess the situation in Africa in all
its aspects and can together design a common strategy
in response. Further, the members of the Security
Council and of the Economic and Social Council
should jointly, with representatives of the Secretariat,
evaluate the activities that the two organs are already
carrying out in Africa. They should then decide what
improvements to the existing instruments and
mechanisms are required. In essence, what is required
is a period of serious reflection, long-term vision,
constructive criticism and genuine joint efforts. We
believe that a series of periodic seminars or retreats,
bringing together representatives of the States members
of both organs and the Secretariat would be a first step
in that direction.
We should not delude ourselves by thinking that
greater coordination between the two organs will
automatically improve the effectiveness of the United
Nations in promoting peace and development in Africa.
The real problem is not a lack of coordination but a
lack of resources and a lack of clear goals and concrete
mandates.
If economic, technical and human resources are
not allocated and if the indispensable political support
is not forthcoming, peacekeeping in Africa cannot be
effective. One cannot build peace if one does not tackle
the underlying causes of conflicts. The development of
democracy requires not only the establishment of
electoral mechanisms but also a long process of
cultivating a democratic culture.
Sustainable development is impossible if the
necessary resources are not provided for economic
development, poverty alleviation and unemployment
and without access to international markets. Social
development requires the inclusion of human rights as
a guiding principle of national policy. The task is
enormous and requires the firm and resolute support of
the entire international community.
The problem of the lack of coordination is not
limited to the relations between the Security Council
and the Economic and Social Council, but can be found
in all endeavours of the international community in
which various actors are attempting to prevent or
resolve conflicts. We have sometimes seen how
countries with influence on the parties, various
international organizations, diverse groups of
mediators, the United Nations and non-governmental
organizations promote contradictory or redundant
initiatives. In the area of emergency humanitarian
assistance, one can find some projects with an excess
of resources while others, equally important, are
neglected. Those difficulties are aggravated by the
duplication of mandates, competition for resources and
influence and a multiplicity of political goals.
A possible solution to the coordination issue is
the creation of groups of friendly countries. But that is
an instrument that can be used only if the number of
actors is small, if those actors possess a high degree of
political commitment and if their interests generally
converge. If those conditions do not exist, such a
mechanism will not work. Furthermore, groups of
friends should never replace the Security Council as
the main centre for decision-making on behalf of the
international community.
Alternatively, increasing the authority of the
Secretary-General's Special Representatives might
solve some of the coordination problems. The most
successful Special Representatives have been those
who served as go-betweens among the countless
international actors and who, in that fashion, were able
to channel various efforts in the field. We believe that
this function of the Special Representative should be
institutionalized. However, we are aware that the task
is hindered by a lack of coordination among the
capitals and by the competition and rivalry among the
various actors and organs. Special Representatives will
be able to effectively coordinate international actions
only when all the actors effectively recognize the
primacy of the United Nations on the issue of conflict
prevention and resolution and when those actors
subordinate their narrow interests to the goals and
strategies adopted by the Security Council.
Considering the terrible consequences of armed
conflicts for the peoples of Africa, we believe that
those conflicts must be prevented before they break
out. That requires an ongoing and sustained effort by
the African peoples themselves and by their leaders in
order to create an atmosphere of mutual respect and of
the rejection of violence. It is indispensable to ensure
decent living conditions for all the continent's
inhabitants to satisfy their basic needs, ensure respect
for fundamental rights and enable them to resolve their
differences democratically. What is needed is a firm
policy of strengthening civil authorities and reducing
spending on arms, redirecting military spending
towards education, health, housing and social
investment.
Today we see positive signs of a better future for
the people of Africa. We have witnessed the end of
some armed conflicts, the strengthening of democratic
institutions and growing respect for human rights and
democratic legitimacy. African leaders are increasingly
active in the prevention and resolution of the conflicts
afflicting their continent at the same time as they are
promoting the economic and social development of
their peoples. The international community and the
Security Council have the obligation to fully support
them.
The President: The next speaker inscribed on my
list is the representative of Ethiopia. I invite him to
take a seat at the Council table and to make his
statement.
Mr. Hussein (Ethiopia): My delegation wishes to
thank the Singaporean presidency for convening this
meeting. I do not think it is a coincidence that during
Singapore's presidency Africa has occupied a high
place on the agenda ofthe Security Council; this is due
to the importance that Singapore attaches to the
problems of Africa. Mr. President, your own presence
further confirms that fact. Like some of my
predecessors who spoke on this subject, I would like to
say that you have an excellent team here at the United
Nations. It is ably led by Ambassador Kishore
Mahbubani. My delegation also wishes to thank the
Chairman of the ad hoc Working Group on Conflict
Prevention and Resolution in Africa, Ambassador
Jagdish Koonjul, for his excellent work, which
definitely led to the convening of this Security Council
meeting today.
I also welcome the presence of the President of
the Economic and Social Council, Ambassador
Simonovie, Ambassador Kebe of the Organization of
African Unity and my good friend Assistant Secretary-
General Ibrahima Fall, whom I wish well in his new
task in Dakar.
Uncharacteristically, allow me to thank all those
members of the Security Council who are still
persevering and staying with us until almost 9 p.m. I
also wish to thank the speakers remaining on the list. I
would especially like to thank the Ambassadors who
have stayed - the Ambassador and Permanent
Representative of the Syrian Arab Republic and, until
very recently, the Ambassador of Norway. They
deserve special thanks, at least from my delegation, for
having stayed.
I do not have a prepared statement as such, which
would have been distributed to you. After having
listened to many statements, I fully endorse the
statement made by South Africa. Ethiopia's formal
statement has been made by South Africa. I am now
just adding a few points.
The United Kingdom mentioned lessons learned.
I am going to dwell on lessons learned and things that
we, the Ethiopian delegation, feel that the Council and
the rest of us should really look at. Some of it may not
be flattering to the Council, so please bear with me.
Many have spoken very positively about the
Ethiopia-Eritrea conflict having been successfully
resolved. We are very happy with the peace agreement
signed in Algiers and with the Boundary Commission's
decision, which both countries have accepted. This is
very positive. But if we go back and ask, could this
conflict have been prevented? The answer is, yes, of
course. I do not want to enter a debate on this. Since I
do not see my Eritrean friends here, I will not indulge
in that. But it could have been avoided. The role of the
Council, in our view, should have been more vigorous
in supporting the role of the Organization of African
Unity (OAU), which took a very good initial step
through its conflict resolution mechanism. But it was
not supported at the beginning. The OAU, the regional
organization, did not have the full, vigorous support of
the Council. I am saying that the Council could have
prevented that conflict; the conflict whose successful
resolution is now referred to by all.
Other lessons learned have related to coordination
by external actors. That is very important. Some
members have also mentioned that. Regarding
coordination or the lack ofit, as some delegations, such
as the Djibouti delegation, have pointed out, if there is
good coordination, there is the interest of a big Power.
That is unfortunate, but that is the case. In Sierra
Leone, which had the support of the regional
organization, the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS), we have had a positive and
happy outcome. I congratulate my brothers and sisters
in Sierra Leone on their successful election.
In other cases where this has not been the case,
such as Somalia, Sudan and the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, the conflicts have not been resolved.
There are many actors and various initiatives. That is
another point I wish to make. We should avoid having
too many initiatives by various parties, some of which
have differing or conflicting interests. The Council
sometimes looks askance at this and keeps its distance,
unless it is nudged by a powerful interest. Of course,
all Permanent Representatives of members on the
Council will stay until 9 p.m. even, if something of
great interest to them is being considered.
The Council imposes sanctions. I am referring
here not only to economic sanctions, but to sanctions in
general. That is all right if they are imposed for good
reasons. But the Council should not impose sanctions,
if it does ensure follow-up, because then they will be
disregarded by everyone. That is the case with weapons
sanctions, and there are many other examples that can
be cited.
The Council should not take action when one
party is clearly at fault. The Brahimi report on
peacekeeping tells us that one of the lessons to be
learned is that a spade should be called a spade. The
Council does not do that in some cases, which helps
conflicts to continue. What sometimes happens is that
the Council takes sides, even in deciding who the
parties to a conflict are to the exclusion of others. In
cases where there is a clear culprit, such as the case of
UNITA in Angola, nothing has been done. Of course
they continue. Other circumstances are, hopefully, now
helping the resolution of that problem.
The role of the Economic and Social Council has
been emphasized. The new direction and collaboration
that is developing between the Council and the
Economic and Social Council is welcome. There is also
the need for very strong coordination between the
various United Nations specialized agencies, which
does not exist. It has not existed before the conflict,
during the conflict and after the conflict.
I will conclude by making one recommendation.
It is good that the Council occasionally visits countries
or regions in conflict. That practice must be continued,
in the View of my delegation. However, my delegation
would also like to recommend that the Council
sometimes hold its meetings away from Headquarters
in New York. The Council has done that on two
occasions. The first was in January 1972, in Africa, at
the OAU headquarters in Addis Ababa. The other
time - ifI am not incorrect - was the following year
in 1973, in Panama. This is a good practice. I think it
will also give the Council an inside perspective on
places other than New York. Maybe the Council should
also hold those meetings when the weather in New
York is too cold.
The President: I call on the representative of the
Central African Republic. I invite him to take a seat at
the Council table and to make his statement.
Mr. Poukre-Kono (Central African Republic) (spoke in French): The delegation of the Central
African Republic welcomes the proposed agenda, and
we would like to share with the Council part of our
modest experience.
Allow me, at the outset, to congratulate you, Sir,
on your presidency during this month. Your presence is
evidence of the sympathy and interest that your
country, Singapore, has for the cause of sustainable
development in Africa through the resolution of
conflicts there. I also would like to thank Ambassador
Lavrov of the Russian Federation, who very ably
conducted the work of the Council during the previous
month.
I appreciate the conduct of this work because it is
interactive and strengthens the will of members and
non-members of the Council to find compromise
solutions to the difficult issues confronting Africa.
My delegation is pleased with the very
informative presentations made by Ambassador
Koonjul, Chairman of the ad hoc Working Group on
prevention and resolution of conflicts in Africa, by
Ambassador Kebe ofthe Organization of African Unity
(OAU) and by Ambassador Simonovie, President of the
Economic and Social Council. The statement of
Assistant Secretary-General Ibrahima Fall, full of
reflective thoughts, could enable greater coordination
between the Security Council and the Working Group
in order to respond to some pending issues that merit a
just and lasting solution.
Africa is facing huge problems of great
complexity, and their appropriate solution requires an
integrated and comprehensive approach. Wherever the
crises are, the same problems include poverty, HIV/
AIDS, refugees, drought and famine.
It is very encouraging to note also that it is the
African leaders themselves who are the first to do
something about outbreaks of tension and conflict. My
country, the Central African Republic, has been the
scene of repeated crises in the past years. It was the
first country in the African continent to receive great
attention by African leaders, and this was very
reassuring. The establishment on the ground of an
inter-African force (MISAB) for the monitoring of the
Bangui Agreements, followed by the United Nations
Mission in the Central African Republic (MINURCA)
and, finally, the United Nations Peace-building Office
in the Central African Republic (BONUCA) certainly
contributed to an improvement in the security situation.
We thank all African countries, friendly nations
on other continents, the European Union, United
Nations bodies and OAU bodies, near and far, that
helped us to gradually re-establish national unity.
However, I believe that MINURCA has not fully
accomplished its mandate. Whereas the Central African
Government wanted the extension of its mandate, its
hasty retreat left a hint of lack of conviction that was
witnessed by the international community. Why did
MINURCA withdraw even though there was no
political stability, even though a lot remained to be
done in the political, social, economic and cultural
areas? The Central African Republic, the patient, was
still recovering when the doctor left the room.
A special meeting on cooperation with the
Central African Republic was held in May 2000, where
some promises of external aid were recorded. Repeated
calls were made to have programmes that had been
stopped made operational. Again, the implementation
of the foreign aid promised was pitiful, just when the
Central African Government was making progress. The
question remains: is it possible to carry out national
programmes while a country is trying to be reborn from
its ashes?
To give an example: is it possible to implement a
demobilization programme during the transitional
period of seeking peace - that is, between the end of
the conflict and the beginning of development? It is
now nearly a year ago, on 27 May 2001, that there was
an attempted coup in Bangui, and that, too, jeopardized
normal life. Again, it was African countries that
showed their concern.
Thanks to members of the Community of Sahelo-
Saharan States (CENSAD), the reestablishment of
peace is gradually happening. The Acting Chairman of
CENSAD, the representative of the Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya, spoke very eloquently. Its actions should
be supported by the Security Council.
We are gathered here to think about what the
work of the ad hoc Working Group should be. It is
working successfully and has a very busy programme.
What we expect of it is concrete work within the
framework of the various Security Council resolutions
on African conflicts. It is clear that African issues
dominate the Council's agenda. Voices more eloquent
than mine have raised in this Chamber the question of
the implementation of Security Council resolutions.
Taking the Central African crisis as an example, we
have the impression that the Council has grown tired of
this conflict, although it made enormous efforts to
establish MINURCA to do the job, but then it was
quickly eliminated while the situation on the ground
was still risky.
A post-conflict State does not mean a peaceful
State. The reestablishment of peace is a slow, long but
certain process. I would like to thank all speakers and
those who spoke about the case of the Central African
Republic, whose experience has not been very
convincing. The involvement of regional organizations
in conflicts, in accordance with Chapter VIII of the
United Nations Charter, is very important. Nor should
we forget the impact of non-governmental
organizations, which are increasingly playing the role
of mediator in national crises.
The work of the ad hoc Working Group, which
we are considering, should save as a catalyst for the
work of various ad hoc groups created in various places
to find solutions to African crises. We do not want yet
another working group that would duplicate the same
functions in another programme. This Working Group,
which would work in concert with the Security
Council, the Economic and Social Council and other
regional and subregional organizations, should be able
to establish priorities and deadlines. I am afraid that
there might be some risk of overlapping in the work
and the objectives, but my delegation believes that this
new group might make a difference, compared to other
groups previously created. Transparency and vigilance
should be major assets. No regional organization
should refuse to cooperate with this Group. Its work
will play a crucial role in allowing the voices of
countries confronting conflicts to be heard.
My delegation will work in close cooperation
with the ad hoc Working Group, the establishment of
which, we believe, is very welcome for all of us. We
fully support its work programme and the role that the
Security Council continues to play in this regard.
Before concluding, I would like to take this
opportunity to congratulate, to encourage and to wish
full success to Mr. Ibrahima Fall, who will be starting
his new functions in the coming months.
The President: Before I deliver my concluding
remarks, I would like to give the floor to His
Excellency Mr. Jagdish Koonjul.
Mr. Koonjul (Mauritius): Mr. President, since
you are going to be summarizing today's discussions, I
will take the floor very briefly simply to comment on
some ofthe points that have been raised.
First of all, I would like to thank all the speakers
for their contributions and for their kind words
addressed to me and to the members of the Working
Group. Certain comments that they have made have
already been answered by our colleagues in the
Security Council. We are very much encouraged by the
wide support for the ad hoc Working Group and for the
programme of work that we have submitted. We are
very appreciative of the comments that have been
made, and we are certainly going to take them on board
as we consider the future work of our Working Group.
Let me just take one or two points that have been
raised and comment briefly on them. First of all, it is
agreed by one and all that there needs to be greater
coordination between the Security Council and regional
and subregional organizations. I think this point was
made by almost all of the speakers. Therefore, there is
a need to have very close coordination and contact,
both with the Organization of African Unity (OAU)
itself and with all the other subregional organizations.
Another proposal was made to invite, whenever
possible, the executive heads of subregional
organizations. I want to just say that this idea is very
much on our mind, because this Working Group is an
informal one, and we are obviously in a position to
invite whoever can help to contribute to the work ofthe
Working Group. Likewise, the ad hoc Working Group
is going to be open - and I think the question of
transparency and openness has been stressed. We
should be able to meet with anyone who can contribute,
as well as with those countries that are directly
concerned with any subject under discussion. I just
want to reassure members who have raised these
points.
The other point that has been stressed is
preventive actions and the possibility of using the
subregional organizations as a means to get early
warning on conflicts. We can also assure members that
we will certainly look into that.
When Mr. Ibrahima Fall made his statement early
this morning he mentioned the close contact that exists
already between the Secretary General of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) and our
Secretary-General and also between the United Nations
Secretariat and OAU secretariat. That is very true.
They do meet every six months, once in New York and
once when there is a meeting ofthe OAU Summit.
But we have not found the same kind of contact
between the Security Council and the OAU Office.
This is why I think we will now have to work much
harder with the OAU, and especially with the OAU
Observer Office here. I think the point has also been
made that we have to be very clear about initiatives
which are taken, because very often there can be
divergence of views and policies as to what the OAU
and the Security Council might be doing. So it will be
extremely important to have a special channel of
communication, as Mr. Fall puts it, between the
Security Council and the OAU Central Organ.
One question was asked by the distinguished
Ambassador of Benin. It was rather a point of
clarification that he was looking for with regard to
what we had in mind with respect to election
observation. This is a pretty sensitive issue. We have
all felt in the Working Group that very often
democratic elections are the beginning of a peace
process, such as what we are doing in Sierra Leone.
Now there are going to be elections and hopefully there
is going to peace after that. But in some cases,
elections have been at the very origin of conflicts, as is
the case, for example, in Madagascar. The idea here is
not only to observe elections at the last stages, when
the elections are actually taking place, but to help with
the electoral process right from the beginning. The
Ambassador of Benin clearly pointed out how
important it is that electoral lists be up to date at the
time that they are prepared and renewed, because that
is the time when the whole election process can be
defeated. The idea would be therefore to assist any
Member State, obviously at its request, in the whole
electoral process, right from the beginning all the way
until the end. There is also the question of coordination
of the observation between OAU observers, United
Nations observers and occasionally European Union
observers.
The other important issue that has been
mentioned is the question ofillicit traffic in small arms
and the implementation of the recommendations of the
Panel of Experts on this issue. Here I just want to say
that the Working Group, as we said earlier, is not going
to be duplicating the work of the Security Council or
any other body. This is definitely an important issue,
but we feel that this matter is being addressed in other
forums and other groups.
Somebody also mentioned the question of
mercenaries, and that is also a matter that needs to be
addressed. What we are going to try to do at the level
of the Working Group is to revisit this issue and see
whether the Working Group should be taking upon
itself the work of trying to deal with the question of
illicit trafficking in small weapons.
The final point is the importance, which
everybody has been stressing, of having very close
contact with the Economic and Social Council in order
to have very special working relations with the
advisory group on African countries coming out of
conflicts. What we need to do here is not only to
enhance the cooperation, but also, as Ambassador
Greenstock puts it, to make sure that we see the results
on the ground. We certainly look forward to working
very closely with Ambassador Ivan Simonovie on this
matter, and we hope very soon to be able to have him
attend one of our meetings and share his views on this.
These are the few points that I wanted to make at
this stage.
The President: In my concluding remarks, let me
first thank all the speakers for the kind words
addressed to my delegation and to myself. It has been a
great honour for Singapore to have chaired this
meeting on such an important subject. Having
personally served as Permanent Representative to the
United Nations 30 years ago, it has been a pleasure and
privilege for me to have interacted with distinguished
Permanent Representatives during this week.
When I opened the meeting this morning, I
indicated that at the end of the debate I would try to
draw on some specific conclusions from our
discussions, which I hope will feed into the future work
of the Council's Working Group on Africa, as well as
the work of the Council on African issues. I also hope
to further refine these points and distribute them
eventually to Member States on my own responsibility.
Before drawing these conclusions I would like to
once again thank Ambassador Jagdish Koonjul,
Ambassador Amadou Kebe, Ambassador Ivan
Simonovic' and Assistant Secretary-General Ibrahima
Fall for their excellent contributions. On behalf of the
Security Council, let me also express our deep
appreciation to Assistant Secretary-General Mr.
Ibrahima Fall for the invaluable contributions that he
has made to the work of the Security Council. We have
immensely benefited from his incisive analysis of
issues and his tremendous vision. We wish him all the
best in his new endeavours.
There can be no doubt that we have had today a
rich debate. When Mauritius and Singapore sent out
their letter of invitation to all Members, we really had
no idea that this invitation would receive such an
overwhelming response, 35 non-members addressing
the Council. It indicates that there is a great desire on
the part of the membership to give input and
recommendations to the Council's work on Africa.
It is not an easy task in a brief summary to
capture the many points that were made today. My
remarks should therefore be viewed as a first step
towards culling the important points made today. I
shall divide my remarks into two parts. Firstly, I shall
try to draw some general points that were made.
Secondly, I shall list some of the specific suggestions
that were put across for the ad hoc Working Group to
follow up on. I apologize in advance ifI have left out
any major points made by speakers, but will capture
these points in a consolidated summary
Several general points were made. Firstly, as
President of the Economic and Social Council,
Ambassador Ivan Simonovie said effective strategies to
deal with conflict prevention and recovery require a
comprehensive approach. Indeed, this is probably one
of the main conclusions we could draw from today's
debate. Many speakers observe that there had been a
series of initiatives on Africa, ranging from the broad
initiative of the New Partnership for Africa's
Development (NEPAD) to more specific initiatives. A
challenge is to ensure that all these initiatives work
together coherently. Here, too, the ad hoc Working
Group could make a valuable contribution.
The second general point that emerged was a
strong appeal made by non-members for Council
members to consider carefully all the points of view
put forward today, especially by African Member
States. I have no doubt that Council members have
listened carefully to the points that have been made and
requested by the African Group. Some members of the
Council have also responded to these points. As a
result, we have had a rich and interactive dialogue. But,
then, dialogue is not an end in itself. Several speakers
have emphasized that the Council needs to work out a
partnership with African States so as to respond to
African challenges. We hope that the healthy dialogue
we have had today will help create the partnership that
many have called for.
Thirdly, it was suggested that the Working Group
could work out a balance sheet of successes, failures
and lessons learned in tackling the problems in Africa.
Ambassador Greenstock, for example, suggested a
lessons-learned exercise on Sierra Leone. I am citing
only one example, but many other concrete examples
were offered for lessons-learned exercises.
Fourthly, it was suggested that, unlike the
Security Council - which tends to be more formal and
more reactive - the Working Group was an informal
and ad hoc body and could be more proactive and
could experiment with innovative measures. That was
suggested by the Chairman of the African Group, the
Permanent Representative of Benin, and his suggestion
may be worth reflecting on.
Fifthly, there was broad agreement among all
speakers that the Working Group should not duplicate
the work carried out by the Security Council; rather, it
should assist the Security Council in its work and
should provide value-added contributions.
I should now like to turn to some of the specific
suggestions that were conveyed today to the ad hoc
Working Group. Those specific suggestions relate to
the seven items outlined in the ad hoc Working Group's
programme of work.
With regard to the Economic and Social Council,
the following suggestions were made: that the Working
Group could appoint a representative to work with the
Economic and Social Council's ad hoc Advisory Group
when it is created, in preparation for the high-level
General Assembly meeting on Africa to be held on 16
September, which could include discussions on the
New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD);
that there is a need for the Working Group to adopt an
integrated approach and to ensure a smooth transition
from peacekeeping to peace-building, another area for
cooperation between the Security Council and the
Economic and Social Council; and that cooperation
between the Working Group and the Economic and
Social Council could address the failure of partnerships
between members of the United Nations family and
could help to address the economic and social causes of
conflict.
On confidence-building in the Mano River
region, it was suggested that the Council should listen
to the views of African regional organizations, such as
the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS), on what needs to be done for the region;
and that the Working Group could look for joint
solutions affecting the three Mano River Union
countries - for example, joint disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration programmes, a joint
plan of action against the illicit arms trade, and
possibly a rationalization of the posts of the two
Special Representatives ofthe Secretary-General.
On the role of Special Representatives of the
Secretary-General in Africa, it was suggested that the
Special Representatives should work closely with each
other despite their different geographical mandates,
especially in the field ofpreventive diplomacy.
On assistance to electoral processes, while
speakers noted that the Security Council had no direct
role in elections observation, the Working Group could
reflect on formulating rules acceptable to all
concerning a possible partnership between the
Secretaries-General of the United Nations and of the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) to observe
electoral processes in the months preceding elections,
during elections and during the announcement of
results. That will obviously require careful
consideration. The Working Group should also help to
ensure that the Council remains seized of the situation
in conflict areas, even after successful elections.
Premature withdrawal from such areas in the past led to
the re-emergence of factors that could embroil States in
yet another conflict.
On the establishment of groups of friends,
speakers noted that groups of friends were a good idea,
particularly useful for gathering information on
specific situations and in the areas of mediation and
providing good offices. However, they could not
replace the Council in its work.
On the question of cooperation with the OAU and
subregional organizations, there was a particularly rich
discussion. One suggestion was that the Working
Group should facilitate the circulation of all OAU
Central Organ decisions and those of other security
organs of subregional organizations as Security
Council documents to ensure their effective
implementation. There was also a suggestion that the
Working Group should facilitate periodic interaction
and dialogue between the Council and the OAU, and
that there could be regular exchanges of early-warning
information between the Working Group and the OAU.
On the question of inviting non-governmental
organizations and academics to join the Group's work,
many speakers noted that this was useful to their
exchanges in seminars involving non-governmental
organizations and think tanks and it could contribute to
the Council's decision-making.
As I said, this brief summary cannot do justice to
the rich debate that we had today. Earlier, my officers
had given me a long list of suggestions to mention in
my concluding remarks, but, given the lateness of the
hour, I could mention only a few of them. I am also
pleased to inform the Council that my summary will be
posted on the Singapore Mission's web site, and that
later we will post a more detailed record of all the main
points that were made during today's debate.
The main purpose of today's debate was to
provide a stepping stone for the Council to continue
focusing actively on the many challenges that we face
in Africa. We hope that, when the next debate is held
on this subject, members will refer to the rich debate
we had today. In that connection, I am pleased to hear
that the United Kingdom will be building on the results
oftoday's debate during its July presidency.
Finally, I should like to thank all participants for
their participation and for their contributions to the
debate.
There are no further speakers on my list. The
Security Council has thus concluded the present stage
of its consideration ofthe item on its agenda.
The meeting rose at 9.30 p.m.
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