S/PV.4845Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
51
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Topics
Counterterrorism and crime
Peacekeeping support and operations
Sustainable development and climate
General debate rhetoric
Global economic relations
Security Council deliberations
Thematic
Mr. Florent (France) (spoke in French): Allow
me, in my purely personal capacity, to note that the
work of the Security Council and its Counter-Terrorism
Committee does not seem to be as popular a subject as
Iraq. I regret that personally, but would point out that
the Chamber is less crowded.
On a more serious note, my delegation fully
adheres to the statement to be made by the Italian
presidency of the European Union. In my national
capacity, I wish to state our position on the current and
future work of the Counter-Terrorism Committee.
The Committee has been in existence for two
years now. Ever since its creation under resolution
1373 (2001), it has done work that we all rightly agree
to have been outstanding. In accordance with its
mandate, it has actively and effectively contributed to
monitoring and facilitating the correct implementation
by all States of resolution 1373 (2001) and of
subsequent relevant Security Council resolutions,
including resolution 1456 (2003) adopted at the
ministerial level in January.
Without going into detail, I simply wish to
highlight, first, the unprecedented number of national
reports that the Committee has considered and
assessed, with the valuable and effective assistance of
the independent experts - without whom this work
could not have been carried out, and whom I personally
wish to thank; secondly, the indispensable development
of cooperation with regional organizations, including
the European Union, and international organizations
with competence in the war on terrorism, as evidenced
by the joint meetings held on 6 March in New York and
on 7 October in Washington, DC; thirdly, the efforts
made to facilitate the provision of technical assistance
to States that need it in order to help them fully to
implement resolution 1373 (2001); and fourthly, the
substantial increase since the adoption of resolution
1373 (2001) in the number of States parties to the
various international anti-terrorism instruments, in
particular the 1999 International Convention for the
Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism. This rapid
overview, although positive, must prompt us to give
further thought to the experience gained and to the
guidelines that we plan to provide for the work of the
Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC).
It is important in working towards this goal that
we do not lost sight of the fundamental principles that
must guide our action. First of all, the war against
terrorism must remain a major priority for the
international community, in particular the Security
Council. Secondly, it can be effectively carried out
only with the determined participation of all. As recent
events have tragically confirmed, no figure on the
international stage - including within the United
Nations - is safe from the global scourge of terrorism.
Two years after the adoption of resolution 1373 (2001),
the Security Council must remain the foundation for
our deliberations in the campaign against terrorism.
Nevertheless, it seems to us that it would be
desirable for the CTC - while continuing with its
essential tasks - henceforth to commit itself more
actively to evaluating the measures taken or announced
by States with a view to fighting terrorism more
effectively.
My delegation believes that a number of
guidelines should be given pride of place. First, the
CTC must focus further - as it is beginning to do -
on ensuring that the efforts undertaken by States in
implementation of resolution 1373 (2001) are
commensurate with the terrorist threats against them.
In this regard, through its evaluations, the Committee
should intensify its consideration of the progress made
by States in fully implementing resolution 1373 (2001),
taking into account the effectiveness of measures
adopted at both the legislative and administrative
levels - that is, the institutional structures set up to
intensify the fight against terrorism. National reports
should also be adapted along these lines. Such national
reports i which are indispensable - are not, however,
all we need. It is important that they be supplemented
with other sources of available information which the
Committee, in particular its independent experts, must
receive from regional or international bodies, which
are, in turn, engaging in evaluations of their members
in various areas in the fight against terrorism. Such
cooperation, if it avoids duplication, can only
strengthen the effectiveness of the war against
terrorism, which must be our primary concern.
Of course, in the context of this strengthened
evaluation process, it is essential that technical
assistance needs be duly taken into account. Given the
magnitude of those needs and the limited resources
available to satisfy those needs, priorities must
inevitably be established. In this respect, there is a
particular need to maintain and intensify the close
cooperation between the CTC and the Counter-
Terrorism Action Group, established by the Group of
Eight during the Evian summit in June. It is the job that
Group - in whose meetings the CTC Chairman
participated, with the agreement of all of the members
of the Committee - to better assess needs and
priorities for technical assistance in the fight against
terrorism. It is working with the CTC to strengthen
global capacities to combat terrorism and thus to
ensure that all Governments take effective measures to
prevent any active or passive support for terrorism.
Secondly, it seems to us to be crucial that the
work of the CTC, which, is by its very nature is
technical, be more actively linked to the political level
through the Security Council. In this respect, in
accordance with the proposal made by France in the
Council in April, my delegation welcomes the fact that
the Spanish chairmanship of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee provided, in the programme of work to be
submitted to the Council by the end of November at the
latest, an account of the major difficulties encountered
in the implementation by States of resolution 1373
(2001). That report should, we believe, allow the
Security Council - which is, and must remain, the
parent body of the CTC - to take the necessary
political measures with a view to supporting the action
of the CTC in such a way as to ensure the full
implementation of resolution 1373 (2001). What is at
stake here is the credibility of all of the actions
undertaken by the Security Council in the priority area
of combating terrorism.
Mr. Mekdad (Syrian Arab Republic) (spoke in Arabic): The delegation of the Syrian Arab Republic
welcomes the convening of this meeting and expresses
its appreciation to Ambassador Inocencio Arias,
Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC),
for his extraordinary efforts over the past few months.
Furthermore, my delegation would like to express its
appreciation to the two Vice-Chairmen, the members of
the Committee, the experts and the Secretariat for their
successful efforts in fulfilling the mandate of the
Committee throughout its past eight stages.
The Counter-Terrorism Committee has succeeded
in fulfilling its responsibilities and mandate.
Furthermore, the Committee has worked intensively to
make progress in upgrading the capacities of Member
States with a view to enabling them to align their
national legislation with the requirements and
provisions of resolution 1373 (2001). This success has
been due to the interaction between most Member
States and the Committee in the framework of
resolution 1373 (2001), as demonstrated by the second
and third reports submitted to the Committee. I am
pleased to say that Syria is one of the States that have
submitted their third reports in accordance with the
timetable. Subsequently, on 9 September 2003, in the
context of the sustained efforts made by Syria to
combat terrorism, the President of the Syrian Arab
Republic issued presidential decree number 59, which
includes legislation to combat money-laundering and
all other illicit financial transactions. That is yet a
further demonstration of our sustained determination to
coordinate efforts with the international community in
fighting terrorism and the financing of terrorism.
We are also pleased that the Committee is
continuing to maintain an open dialogue with all of the
Members of the United Nations, in a framework of
transparency, in order to facilitate the delivery of aid to
those States that have expressed a need for such
assistance with a view to upgrading their capabilities in
fighting terrorism. We are grateful for the efforts of the
assistance task force, which coordinates work between
those countries that request assistance, the donor
countries and those who are capable of rendering
assistance. We also appreciate the genuine interaction
between the Committee and regional, subregional and
international organizations in accordance with their
respective mandates.
Syria supports the ninth 90-day work programme
submitted by the Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee (S/2003/995, annex). In that context, Syria
underlines its determination to continue all efforts to
implement that programme within the framework of
resolution 1373 (2001). My delegation also supports
the continued mandate of the current officers and the
current Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Arias, as we
highly appreciate his efforts and his dedication to his
work.
It gravely harms and distorts global efforts to
claim to be fighting terrorism while practising
terrorism daily on the ground, such as by committing
crimes against humanity, war crimes, massacres and
acts of aggression; displacing and killing civilians;
pursuing settlement policies; annexing territories;
violating international law and Security Council
resolutions; and breaching treaties.
The danger of international terrorism requires
joint global action without prejudice, double standards
or the muzzling of world public opinion. Terrorism
must be diagnosed in order to combat and end it. In
that regard, we wish to stress the necessity of defining
terrorism and of distinguishing between it and the
legitimate right of peoples to liberation. The right of
liberation is guaranteed by the Charter of the United
Nations. It is an inherent right that must be upheld by
all Member States, and all measures must be taken to
preserve it.
Syria here reaffirms its firm commitment to
combating terrorism and its continued cooperation with
all members of the world community that wish to
pursue that cooperation; it underlines the important
role played by the Counter-Terrorism Committee and
expresses its satisfaction at the work accomplished by
the Committee in carrying out its mandate.
Mr. Khalid (Pakistan): At the outset, I wish to
congratulate Ambassador Arias on his successful
completion of the first six months of his term as
Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC).
I also wish to thank him for his statement and for
presenting the ninth 90-day work programme of the
Committee (S/2003/995, annex).
We have noted the progress made by the
Committee in the past three months. We hope that the
Committee will be able to maintain its momentum and
achieve the targets set for the next 90-day work
programme. We appreciate the opportunity offered by
our meeting today to reflect on the course of action that
we have taken so far in countering terrorism and to
plan for the future. We need to craft a strategic vision
of the direction which our common efforts against
terrorism have to take.
The CTC represents an important organized
international response to global terrorism. We hope that
the CTC will continue to perform its mandated tasks in
an effective manner. It is important that the Committee
consolidate its activities within its existing mandate. It
should avoid assuming a policing role, which is beyond
its mandate.
The effects of terrorism can be felt in almost
every country today. Pakistan in particular has been
exposed to terrorism for decades. However, Pakistan is
resolved to combat that menace with full vigour. That
is made abundantly clear by the successes Pakistan has
registered in capturing more than 500 terrorists,
including key operatives of Al Qaeda and the Taliban.
Approximately 70,000 troops have been deployed in
the harsh and inhospitable western region along the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border to carry out interdiction
operations against suspected terrorists.
We appreciate the CTC's continued commitment
to maintaining transparency, as reflected in its work
programme. That is crucial for winning the confidence
and cooperation of all States in fighting terrorism. We
have noted that a number of States have moved from
stage A to stage B, namely, to the implementation of
the counter-terrorism legal framework. Naturally, the
Committee should expect a greater time commitment in
reviewing a State's performance at this stage.
However, there is a need to balance reporting
requirements with actual action on the ground. We
hope that the issue of reporting fatigue will be
adequately covered in the Chairman's report to the
Council, to be presented by 15 November, on the
problems encountered by States and the CTC in
implementing the provisions of resolution 1373 (2001).
We support the CTC's contacts with regional and
subregional organizations to coordinate efforts for
counter-terrorism. We have noted the usefulness of the
CTC's joint meeting with the Inter-American
Committee Against Terrorism of the Organization of
American States, held on 7 October in Washington. We
look forward to the joint meeting of the CTC with the
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in
Vienna next March. However, we share the view
expressed at the meeting in Washington that future
meetings of the CTC with such organizations should
also be held in different geographic regions.
I would like to take this opportunity to make a
few comments on the general drift of our counter-
terrorism efforts. First, we should arrive at a
consensual legal definition of terrorism, including State
terrorism, not only to lend clarity to our fight against
terrorism but also to pre-empt its abuse.
Secondly, we need to examine the causes which
lie at the roots of terrorism. The issues of political and
socio-economic justice are not just fancy and exotic
terms. The existence and quality of those factors are
closely linked to the growth of, and support for,
terrorism in a particular region.
Thirdly, human rights should be at the core of
counter-terrorism efforts. Counter-terrorism should not
be used as a cloak to violate the very freedoms and
rights we are seeking to protect.
Fourthly, States have continued to make an
opportunistic use of counter-terrorism measures. That
applies in full measure to situations of foreign
occupation and alien domination, particularly in
Kashmir and in Palestine. It would be a travesty of
justice to allow the perpetrators of terrorism to join the
fight against terrorism. We should fully resist attempts
to delegitimize just causes and the just struggles of
peoples for their right to self-determination.
Terrorism has no faith. We should therefore avoid
linking terrorism with any religion. Rather, we should
direct our energies towards promoting interreligious
and intercultural understanding and harmony.
Lastly, technical assistance constitutes an
important element of the counter-terrorism work of the
Committee. We need to enhance the capacity of
Member States by providing them with sustainable
technical assistance.
Mr. Karev (Russian Federation) (spoke in Russian): First, I express our gratitude to the Chairman
of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC),
Ambassador Arias, for the report that he introduced on
the work of the Committee.
Two years have passed since the adoption of
resolution 1373 (2001) and the creation of the CTC. By
United Nations standards, that period is sufficient to
assess the Committee's work in implementing its
mandate and to discuss its prospects. We welcome the
intention of the Chairman of the Committee to prepare,
by 15 November, a document on the difficulties States
and the CTC are encountering in implementing the
provisions of resolution 1373 (2001).
I wish to make the following points.
In its two years' existence, the CTC has clearly
been playing a key role in the global anti-terrorism
structural system. That is fair and justified. Thanks to
its representativity, legitimacy and transparency, the
Committee is one of the guarantors of a harmonious
and united universal anti-terrorist coalition.
A great achievement of the CTC is the process it
initiated of uniting the efforts of competent
international, regional and subregional organizations in
assisting States to implement the provisions of
resolution 1373 (2001). Evidence of that was the
successful holding of two meetings of those
organizations, on 6 March in New York and on 7
October in Washington, DC. It is gratifying that a
growing number of international structures and
organizations are demonstrating interest in
participating in such events. In particular, readiness to
become involved in this process was expressed recently
by the Collective Security Treaty Organization. The
Committee must continue to have an impact on this
process, participating directly in the preparation and
holding of subsequent meetings to ensure that their
work is built on dialogue focused on the most pressing
issues.
One of the most important objectives of the CTC
is the establishment of mechanisms for an exchange of
information between all parties to the global anti-
terrorist coalition. A reliable instrument for achieving
that objective is the Committee Internet site, which has
been substantively improved recently. We hope that the
site will soon eliminate the gap between the Russian
and other language versions and the English version.
The CTC is doing a great deal of work to have
States bring their legislation into line with the demands
of resolution 1373 (2001) and to universalize
participation in the 12 international anti-terrorist
conventions in force. Figures were cited today
confirming the substantive progress made in the past
two years in this area. However, the work is still far
from having been concluded, particularly regarding
developing countries that need assistance in drafting
appropriate legislation.
The Committee is paying a great deal of attention
to establishing a system for rendering assistance to
States to enhance their anti-terrorist potential. There
have been some results, but, in our view, so far the
CTC is unable to make full use of that potential.
With regard to a rather significant group of
States, the Committee has embarked on a new phase of
its work of determining the effectiveness of States'
implementation and use of anti-terrorist legislation and
of their law enforcement mechanisms.
It will be extremely difficult to carry out the
CTC's tasks in this new phase solely by using today's
means and methods. The members of the Committee
should study what new elements must be introduced
into its work so that it can fully implement its mandate
during phases B and C.
In conclusion, we wish the CTC success in its
further work to strengthen the anti-terrorist coalition of
States.
Mr. Lucas (Angola): The Security Council is
meeting today to consider the quarterly report of the
Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC)
and its 90-day work programme, until the end of 2003,
which my delegation fully endorses as a real
contribution to the global fight against terrorism.
We praise the activity undertaken by Ambassador
Inocencio Arias, current Chairman of the Committee,
its members and the independent experts. We have
taken note of the Committee's work regarding the
implementation of resolution 1373 (2001) by reviewing
the reports submitted by States, by ensuring that all
States become parties as soon as possible to the
relevant international conventions and protocols
relating to terrorism; and by taking, in the area of
assistance, a more proactive approach to its
collaboration with States facing difficulties in
complying fully with the provisions of resolution 1373
(2001) and strengthening cooperation with and among
international, regional and subregional organizations
with anti-terrorist programmes.
The fact that, by 30 September 2003, 48 States
were late in submitting their reports to the CTC is a
reality that reminds us of the urgent need to extend and
strengthen CTC assistance to a large number of
developing countries in order to make the existence of
legislation and operational mechanisms to combat
terrorism global and effective. A large number of
developing countries have enacted anti-terrorist
legislation, but their scarce financial, technical and
human resources inhibit the implementation of such a
legislative framework.
Moreover, those countries lack the capacity to
deal effectively with border control and security, the
movement of criminals, the smuggling of illicit drugs
and illegal firearms and possible links with terrorists.
We recognize the need for those countries to approach
international standards in order to meet the great
challenges ahead. However, to meet that goal,
developing countries need long-term assistance focused
on national and regional capacity-building in areas
related to resolution 1373 (2001). Only through a
concerted effort and international assistance will they
be able to meet reporting requirements and strengthen
their capacity to wage an effective fight against
terrorism. We welcome the Committee's commitment
to provide assistance to countries in need and its
decision to adopt a more proactive approach to the
delivery of assistance.
The CTC recognizes that cooperation with
international, regional and subregional organizations is
the main thrust of its programme of work. The meeting
held on 7 March by the CTC with international,
regional and subregional organizations concluded that
the sharing of information and best practices relevant
to global cooperation was one of the main instances of
their coordinated approach for the suppression of
terrorism. Regional and subregional organizations are a
suitable forum for the exchange of information, setting
standards and disseminating best practices among
members.
The African Union set a pioneering example by
establishing the Organization of African Unity
Convention on the Prevention and Combating of
Terrorism, generally called the Algiers Convention of
1999. Through the Convention, the African countries
pursue a common objective, with joint action at the
intergovernmental level for the exchange of
information on the activities and movements of
terrorist groups in Africa, and with actions designed to
step up the fight against terrorism. In that regard,
international cooperation is vital to build capacities in
the African countries, allowing them to take more
effective action at the national, subregional and
continental levels against the financing of terrorism, to
track terrorist networks and to apprehend terrorists and
bring them to justice.
In conclusion, the approach and strategies for
fighting terrorism have been agreed by consensus by
the international community. The establishment of
international standards and best practices; adherence by
all States to them, the provision of technical assistance
to States lagging behind in establishing the appropriate
legislative and operational mechanisms to combat
terrorism; and cooperation among international,
regional and subregional organizations - those are the
main elements of the global strategy established by
resolution 1373 (2001) that we are striving to
implement.
Mr. Pujalte (Mexico) (spoke in Spanish): Mexico
is a member of the Rio Group, and associates itself
with the statement that the Ambassador of Peru,
Mr. Osvaldo de Rivero, will soon be making on behalf
of the Rio Group.
My delegation would like first to express its
gratitude to Ambassador Inocencio Arias of Spain for
the work accomplished since he assumed the
chairmanship of the Counter-Terrorism Committee
(CTC), and to the members of his team and the
Committee experts. We also thank the Ambassador for
his presentation of the report and programme of work.
Mexico is a member of the Committee. Being one
of the Vice-Chairpersons, we work very closely with
the Chairman and greatly appreciate his efforts. We are
aware of his thinking and his programmes, and a lend
them our full support.
As I have said, Peru will be making a statement
on behalf of the Rio Group, so I shall be brief. But I
would like to emphasize two points that my delegation
considers very important and to make a few comments
on the Committee's present and future work.
First, we consider that an important development
in the work of the Committee has been the inclusion of
a special section with explicit questions in the
Committee's letters to Member States on the machinery
that each country uses to deal with all kinds of
weaponry, especially the illicit traffic of small arms
and light weapons. This is an important step to ensure
that the Committee can support the objectives of the
United Nations Programme of Action to Prevent,
Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms
and Light Weapons in All Its Aspects. It will thus
contribute to solving problems that are clearly related
and therefore require a joint and coordinated solution.
Secondly, I wish to refer to the protection of
human rights. In our view, the Committee must
maximize its efforts to ensure that counter-terrorism is
carried out in full compliance with international
humanitarian law and with respect for human rights.
The inclusion of this issue in the letters to States will
promote awareness of it. As the Security Council
considers the changes to the CTC to improve its
effectiveness, it should take account of the need to
include a human rights expert on the Committee. That
would enhance the Committee's legitimacy with all
nations.
A step in the right direction was the inclusion of a
section on human rights and terrorism on the
Committee's Web site. We particularly welcome the
link with the publication by the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on the
practices of the Organization and regional
organizations with respect to the protection of human
rights in the fight against terrorism. We ask the CTC to
carefully study and carefully discuss this in order to
clearly identify areas for its participation.
With regard to the current work of the
Committee, I would like to refer to the identification of
criteria for States that are moving from the
implementation stage to the legislative measures
recommended in accordance with resolution 1373
(2001), namely, stage B. We view positively the fact
that at this new stage Committee experts will be in
close contact with States to propose specific measures,
case by case, and above all to identify the needs for
assistance that States demonstrate.
Committee members have the sensitive task of
giving the appropriate orientation, in close consultation
with the experts, to define priorities for each country.
We would like to make it clear that all States, whatever
stage they have reached, must continue to submit
reports and continue the dialogue with the Committee,
no matter how advanced their own institutional or
judicial mechanisms to combat terrorism may be.
It should be remembered that the obligations set
forth in resolution 1373 (2001) apply to all Member
States. We thus avoid focusing exclusively on one
group of countries. The Committee should also
continue to work on the basis of cooperation with, and
assistance to, States that lack the capacity to meet all
the requirements of resolution 1373 (2001). The
Committee should continuously strengthen this aspect,
in order to facilitate and maintain interest and
momentum in the campaign against terrorism.
As for the CTC's future work, while it has
certainly made headway, we perceive a weakness in its
structure, owing to the Committee's full workload. The
challenge now is for it to be efficient yet sufficiently
flexible.
In that respect, my delegation awaits with interest
the report on States' problems in complying with
resolution 1373 (2001), as well as the difficulties in the
structure and functioning of the CTC itself. That
document should provide a foundation for real
improvements in the Committee's work. Mexico will
therefore be active and constructive in putting forward
proposals.
On other matters, we view with interest the
progress in strengthening dialogue with the relevant
international, regional and subregional organizations.
We welcome the recent meeting of the Organization of
American States, of which Mexico is a member, to that
end. Strengthening such links should help principally
to complement efforts and avoid duplication or
confusion in the areas of competence of the various
organizations.
We support the initiative of the Chairman of
accepting invitations to represent the Committee when
he considers it advisable to do so.
I cannot conclude without saying that terrorism is
one of the greatest threats facing the international
community today. All Members of the Organization are
agreed on this. But there is also consensus that the
struggle against terrorism must not be waged in such a
way that the values and principles that nourish our
countries and the United Nations itself are weakened.
My delegation will continue to insist that it must be
pursued in accordance with human rights, international
law and the Charter.
Mr. Zhang Yishan (China) (spoke in Chinese):
Allow me to begin by thanking you, Mr. President, for
convening this open meeting. At the same time I wish
to thank Ambassador Arias for his briefing on the work
of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC).
Over the last three months, the Committee has
achieved significant results in its work, which merits
full acknowledgement from the Security Council. The
Committee focused its deliberations on reports
submitted by Member States on their implementation
of Security Council resolution 1373 (2001) and has
moved on to stage B in its deliberations on a number of
countries.
At the same time the Committee is continuing to
intensify its efforts in providing assistance to the fight
against terrorism and encouraging its experts to
actively engage Governments of Member States to
learn about the difficulties they experience in
implementing the resolution and the assistance they
need, and to follow up on the provision of assistance.
On 7 October, the Committee, in conjunction with
the Inter-American Committee against Terrorism of the
Organization of American States, organized a second
special meeting with national regional and subregional
organizations, thereby further enhancing the
communication and cooperation among various
organizations in the fight against terrorism.
China supports the CTC's ninth 90-day work
programme. We believe the CTC should further
intensify its efforts in providing assistance to the fight
against terrorism, and to take all possible measures to
meet the assistance requests of the large numbers of
developing countries.
We hope the new requirements in this context, as
reflected in the ninth 90-day work programme will be
effectively complied with. We support the CTC in its
efforts to further enhance its communication and
cooperation with international, regional and
subregional organizations, while ensuring the CTC's
leading role in the worldwide fight against terrorism.
The authority and legitimacy of the CTC, established
pursuant to Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter,
are irreplaceable.
Terrorism remains a major threat against
international peace and security. Combating terrorism
is an arduous and complex long-term task. In order to
more effectively combat terrorism, the international
community, in the fight against it, should abide by the
purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter
and the fundamental norms of international law.
The fight against terrorism should address its
symptoms as well as its causes, focusing on eradication
of the root causes that breed terrorism. For this
purpose, there should be a comprehensive approach
encompassing economic, political and social
dimensions. In particular, efforts should be made to
solve the conflict in question, and to actively help
developing countries eradicate poverty.
We also believe there should be no double
standards in the fight against terrorism. All terrorist
organizations should be targeted relentlessly, but at the
same time, the fight against terrorism should not be
used as a pretext to wilfully expand the scope of such
combat. International cooperation should also be
enhanced in the fight against terrorism.
China supports the leading role of the United
Nations in the fight against terrorism worldwide. We
support strengthening the role of the CTC. We will
continue to work with the Chairman and the members
of the Committee to advance the work of the CTC to a
new stage.
Mr. Quintero (Spain) (spoke in Spanish): On
behalf of Spain, we would simply like to add a
proposal to the CTC Chairman's statement earlier
today that in the presidential statement at the
conclusion of this meeting, a paragraph - already
distributed to Council members - be included, clearly
declaring the Security Council's and the Organization's
condemnation of all acts of terrorism. The wording is
specifically drawn from Security Council resolution
1456 (2003). We are proposing that this now-
distributed paragraph, which condemns terrorism in
explicit terms, be part of the presidential statement.
The President: I thank the representative of
Spain. I understand that proposal has been accepted
and the draft presidential statement is being amended
accordingly.
I shall now make a statement in my capacity as
the representative of the United States.
Terrorism is an ever-present threat. Those who
engage in it do so because they are not interested in
peace. Yesterday, an American diplomatic convoy was
bombed in Gaza. The Americans who were attacked
were pursuing a vision for a better future for the
Palestinian people. They were there to interview young
Palestinian candidates for Fulbright scholarships to
study in the United States. We send our heartfelt
condolences to the families of the brave Americans
who were killed and injured serving our country and its
ideals. We not only condemn the attacks, we warn the
attackers: you can run but you cannot hide.
Two years ago, this body met to adopt Security
Council resolution 1373 (2001), a central component of
the Council's robust response to the horrific attacks of
11 September 2001. The Counter-Terrorism Committee
(CTC) was established to monitor, promote and assist
in its implementation.
As we endorse the Committee's work programme
for the next 90 days, it is worth both recalling some of
the Committee's accomplishments and reminding this
body of the important challenges that remain.
As one of the key Security Council counter-
terrorist instruments, the CTC has given new,
important, international legal and political authority to
the counter-terrorism efforts of many nations and
intergovernmental organizations. It has placed the issue
of terrorism and the international community's
capabilities to confront it on the agenda of the United
Nations and other intergovernmental bodies. It has
spurred organizations around the world to undertake
enhanced counter-terrorism planning with their
member States. It is recognized as the worldwide
clearinghouse for counter-terrorism information,
assistance, and cooperation. It has achieved universal
engagement in resolution 1373 (2001), with all 191
Member States submitting reports on their counter-
terrorism capabilities and on the steps they have taken
to implement the resolution.
Through the CTC's efforts, the number of States
joining the international conventions relating to
terrorism, and the progress of many States in enacting
domestic legislation implementing those conventions,
has been significantly increased.
While much of the material submitted by States is
as yet unverified - and must be verified - this
universal engagement constitutes a significant
mobilization of political will and the first-ever
worldwide audit of States' counter-terrorism
capabilities. In short, the Committee has focused and
organized States' attention on counter-terrorism and
laid the foundation for significant upgrades in capacity-
building.
Although the Committee should be proud of these
accomplishments, it must not be complacent. Based on
the work programme laid out last March, in the coming
months we would like to see the Committee take steps
to build on the work already done. Working with
relevant functional and regional organizations, the
Committee should verify more effectively than
heretofore the steps that States have taken to
implement the resolution. It is not simply the accession
to conventions and protocols, nor the enacting of
domestic legislation, that will show the CTC'S
accomplishments, but the actual effectiveness of each
country in fighting terrorism.
To help accomplish this goal, Committee experts
working with experts from the relevant functional and
regional organizations, should visit several capitals to
discuss implementation of resolution 1373 (2003). For
example, officials in many capitals can benefit from
discussing both the specifics in the CTC's letters
directly with the Committee's experts, as well as the
assistance that might be available to address needs. As
with the Committee's work to date, these consultations
in country capitals would aim to learn more about the
areas where implementation is incomplete and where
Member States need assistance, and that message
would be carried back to the Committee and to other
intergovernmental organizations and States that can
assist.
A number of global and regional organizations
are already sending representatives on such missions to
discuss matters that relate to some elements of
resolution 1373 (2001). For the Committee to maintain
its long-term primacy and relevance, it should,
whenever appropriate, participate in these missions.
The March meeting with those Organizations showed
that they are interested in working cooperatively with
each other and with the Counter-Terrorism Committee
(CTC) in this area.
Given the important work that remains to be
done, it is essential that the Committee receive
increased support from Member States, all parts of the
United Nations system and organizations engaged in
the fight against terrorism. It must act with a renewed
sense of urgency, as if 9/11 took place yesterday - not
more than two years ago. The Committee must not wait
for the next major terrorist act to occur in order to
become re-energized. As the Committee begins its next
phase of work, it must never forget that we will all be
vulnerable to terrorism as long as States have counter-
terrorism needs that are not being addressed.
In addition, the Council must continue to play an
active role in the fight against terrorism. While its
subsidiary bodies, such as the CTC, are important
instruments, there are times when Council action will
be necessary. The Council must therefore be prepared
to act. We look forward to the coming reports of
Ambassador Arias to the CTC and the Council, as he
works to take the Committee to an intensified level of
action and effectiveness.
Before concluding, I would like to echo the words
of praise spoken here for Chairman Arias, his dedicated
staff at the Spanish Mission and the Committee's
experts and secretarial staff. All of them deserve our
heartfelt congratulations for their work in making the
Committee the success that it is. Through the vigorous
and committed leadership and creativity of Chairman
Arias, we are confident that the Committee will meet
the challenges that lie ahead. We all owe him our
strongest support.
I resume my function as President of the Council.
In order to optimize the use of our time, I will not
individually invite speakers to take seats at the Council
table. When a speaker is taking the floor, the
Conference Officer will seat the next speaker on the
list at the table.
The next speaker inscribed on my list is the
representative of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, to whom
I now give the floor.
Mr. Elmessallati: (Libyan Arab Jamahiriya) (spoke in Arabic): At the outset, allow me to thank you,
Mr. President, for convening this meeting and for
giving us an opportunity to participate. I would also
like to convey our gratitude to Ambassador Inocencio
Arias, Chairman of the Committee established pursuant
to resolution 1373 (2001), for the commendable effort
he has made as the Committee's Chairman and for the
excellent briefing he gave us this morning, which
detailed the efforts being made by the Counter-
Terrorism Committee (CTC) to exercise its mandate
and presented us with a detailed view of the
Committee's work in the upcoming 90 days. As in the
past, my delegation will continue to afford the
Committee's work our full cooperation and attention,
in the hope that the Committee will make further
progress and achieve greater success.
The Libyan Arab Jamahiriya has always pursued
a basic policy of renouncing and condemning all forms
of terrorism at every national, regional and
international forum. That position is based on our total
conviction that terrorism is a threat to the peace,
security and stability of the world's peoples and whose
disastrous effects are not limited to any State or region.
Terrorism's effects are felt by everyone, irrespective of
religious, national or cultural affiliation. Its negative
implications also have an impact upon every area of
socio-economic development and saps national and
international resources that could otherwise be directed
towards that development.
We believe that terrorism has neither religion nor
identity. We therefore categorically reject any attempt
to link the phenomenon of terrorism to a specific
religion or culture or to label indiscriminately as
terrorists persons who belong to a given culture or who
follow a particular religion. The evils of terrorism have
affected people of different religions and cultures.
There are numerous examples of that fact, and it is not
my intention to go into detail about them here.
Libya's position of principle has therefore been to
condemn and renounce terrorism and to seek ways to
combat it and eradicate it. Libya had been combating
terrorism for years, even before the world woke up to
this scourge. We believe that, in that respect, Libya was
the first to draw the world's attention to the dangers of
terrorism. While we urged that terrorists be tried, some
supported terrorists and considered them to be
freedom-fighters. Many States hosted and sheltered
terrorists and encouraged them to pursue their terrorist
activities. Since the mid-19905 we had called on
Interpol to arrest certain terrorist elements - persons
who were subsequently proven to have been involved
in international terrorism.
Along with other Member States, we have called
for an international conference to be held under the
auspices of the United Nations to address the terrorist
phenomenon, its root causes and the ways and means to
combat it, as well as to decide on a clear definition of
terrorism. The lack of a clear definition of terrorism
may dilute international efforts to combat terrorism,
thereby weakening their effect.
In that regard, we reiterate our call for the need to
differentiate between terrorism and the right of peoples
to self-determination. It is simply unacceptable for the
two concepts to be equated and for those who are
fighting for freedom and independence to be treated in
the same way as those who turn to terrorism as a way
of realizing goals that are based in no logic, law or
right. There is no doubt that occupation and foreign
hegemony are among the worst forms of terrorism.
Libya, perhaps more than any other State, is
aware of the dangers of terrorism and its disastrous
consequences. We have suffered from various types of
terrorism and we have paid a heavy price for the
terrorism that was perpetrated against us for many long
years. State terrorism is the worst form of terrorism.
Many Member States have been subjected to it, and it
is currently a scourge on the Palestinian people.
We are therefore eager to ensure the success of
each and every initiative to combat and eradicate
terrorism in all its forms. Terrorism is an evil that must
be defeated and eradicated. All Member States and
members of the international community should
intensify their efforts in this regard in order to
strengthen international peace and security and
eliminate all the dangers that threaten them.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Yemen.
Mr. Alsaidi (Yemen) (spoke in Arabic): Once
again, I would like to express to you, Mr. President,
our appreciation for your wise guidance of the work of
the Security Council. I would also like to pay tribute to
the role being played by Ambassador Inocencio Arias,
Ambassador of Spain and Chairman of the Counter-
Terrorism Committee (CTC), which was created in
accordance with resolution 1373 (2001).
I say nothing new when I emphasize that
everything that has been done to combat terrorism adds
up to achievements of which the Organization can
justly be proud. This also shows what can be achieved
by collective will in the face of a plethora of diverse
challenges that know no political borders or national
sovereignty. We can cope with such challenges only
through collective efforts.
Contrary to the case of the war in Iraq and the
divisions and divergences in viewpoints and positions
that emerged, the international community was
unanimous in its will to combat terrorism. That
struggle was, and is still, based on consensus and on
international cooperation - the best guarantee of
success in this area.
For its part, the Republic of Yemen was aware of
the phenomenon of terrorism and of its growth well
before the tragic events of 11 September 2001. The
Republic of Yemen was also aware of the dangers it
posed to peace, to society and to collective security. In
that light, my Government has made the campaign
against terrorism one of its top priorities and has thus
undertaken a number of measures aimed at containing
and eradicating terrorism. The Security Council
Committee established under resolution 1373 (2001)
has made clear what has been achieved, as can be seen
from the reports, including the third additional report.
The Government of the Republic of Yemen is also
working unilaterally and jointly with interested
countries to implement other measures in this respect
to combat terrorism in an ongoing manner within the
country. This is clear evidence of Yemen's will to
eradicate the phenomenon of terrorism in all its forms.
Terrorism is alien to Yemeni soil. Terrorism has
been denounced by our Muslim religion and by our
Arab traditions. We are opposed to terrorism, both in
theory and in practice, and to all who claim to possess
the truth but do not respect the opinions of others.
We cannot accept the attempts of some to impose
by force their points of view on others. Such is our
position of principle regarding terrorism within and
outside Yemen.
Here, however, we would like to emphasize that
up to now, measures of international cooperation have
not been able to contain this phenomenon, much less
eradicate it. That, in our view, is due to the fact that the
way in which this problem is being dealt with is
characterized by an incomplete vision and errors in
terms of method.
Here we are in full agreement with what was
stated in the report of the Secretary-General regarding
the work of the Organization this year - namely that
efforts made to combat terrorism require the
strengthening of measures to alleviate poverty, to
redress injustices, to strengthen good governance and
to promote tolerance.
At the same time, the war on terrorism requires
the establishment of a new world order based on
humanitarian principles and on equity. The political
leaders of the Republic of Yemen have called for a
unified vision to be developed, within the framework
of a high-level international conference to be held
under the auspices of the United Nations, to study the
phenomenon of terrorism and to lay down a strategy
that would include practical solutions for addressing
the reasons and motivations behind this phenomenon
and its development.
In conclusion, we would like to reiterate our
readiness to work for the success of efforts to draft an
international convention that would represent a legal
point of reference for fighting terrorism. We would like
to reaffirm the importance of establishing a clear
definition of terrorism that would cover all terrorist
acts, whether they be perpetrated by individuals, by
groups or by States.
Like many other Members of this Organization,
we cannot accept a formula that would deny peoples
their legitimate right to fight against foreign
occupation. We would like to reiterate the principled
dedication of the Government of the Republic of
Yemen to separating terrorism from legitimate
resistance, which has been enshrined in legislation of
all kinds.
The President: The next speaker is the
representative of Peru, on whom I now call.
Mr. De Rivero (Peru) (spoke in Spanish): I have
the honour to address the Council on behalf of the
member States of the Rio Group - Argentina, Bolivia,
Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, the Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana,
Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay,
Uruguay, Venezuela and my own country, Peru.
The Rio Group welcomes this open debate in the
Security Council to consider the quarterly programme
of work of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC)
and reiterates its resolute rejection of terrorism and its
determined support for the very positive work of the
CTC, chaired by Ambassador Inocencio Arias of Spain.
Since the most recent open debate, held on 23
July, an unprecedented and outrageous event befell the
international community: the terrorist attack against the
United Nations, which we deeply deplore and strongly
condemn. The criminal terrorist act in Baghdad that
ended the lives of distinguished officials of our
Organization - including that of Sergio Vieira de
Mello and others from the four corners of the world -
remind us that no one is safe from the ravages of
terrorist acts perpetrated against innocent people,
including officials who were carrying out humanitarian
work aimed at alleviating the suffering of the Iraqi
people. The entire international community, including
its humanitarian activities, is vulnerable to this
scourge, as demonstrated, tragically, every day.
But since the Council's last open meeting, on 23
July, there have been some positive events in the fight
against terrorism. There is the meeting last week at the
headquarters of the Organization of American States in
Washington held by this Committee and the Inter-
American Committee Against Terrorism with
international regional and subregional organizations.
That meeting dealt with the distribution of information
by all participating organizations, building operative
capacities and the implementation of a joint
programme. All that has been mutually beneficial and
has strengthened the collective effort to advance
practical ways of increasing the means and capacities
of States in the fight against terrorism.
The member States of the Rio Group reiterate our
conviction of the need to define and execute a global
strategy against terrorism. In this globalized world, the
fight against terrorism is not just a national matter. The
means and procedures to confront it must also be
global and integral, having as their basis the shared
responsibility of all States. Each State bears a specific
responsibility. The international community must
cooperate with regard to legal activities, policing,
equipment, technology, exchange of information,
intelligence activities and budgets, inter alia, within the
context of full respect for human rights, the United
Nations Charter and international law.
Furthermore, to combat terrorism effectively it is
necessary, as the Secretary-General has reminded us
recently, to fight its deepest roots and identify means of
tackling them. The authority of our Organization, its
scope, its legitimacy and, most importantly, the way it
represents the desire of all of its Members for
cooperation constitute the best guarantee for leading
and promoting action in this area.
In this regard, we are concerned at the lack of
political will to achieve substantive progress towards
framing a general convention against terrorism and a
convention to eliminate acts of nuclear terrorism. We
believe it is necessary to redouble our efforts in order
to resolve in a constructive manner the few outstanding
questions that have so far been impeding the
finalization of these negotiations.
Regarding the Committee's programme of work
for this ninth session, we are pleased that it is
continuing to work in a matrix that connects the aid
and cooperation needed by countries with the offers
extended for such assistance and that continues to
develop a global counter-terrorism information
network, to modernize the web site of the Committee
and to promote the universal participation in the 12
international agreements and protocols on counter-
terrorism.
Moreover, we appreciate the constructive
proposals of the Chairman of the Committee to assess
the difficulties encountered by States in their
implementation of resolution 1373 (2001), as well as
the structure and functioning of the Committee itself.
The member States of the Rio Group will
continue to submit our reports and to cooperate so that
the work of the Committee - to harmonize the
implementation of measures against terrorism and to
put into operation mechanisms for international
cooperation at various levels - contributes to devising
and implementing a global strategy in the struggle
against this criminal activity.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of Switzerland.
Mr. Staehelin (Switzerland) (spoke in French): I
would like to thank Ambassador Arias, Chairman of
the Security Council Committee created under
resolution 1373 (2001), for his statement on the work
already accomplished by the Committee and for the
programme of work for its ninth trimester, submitted
this morning.
Terrorism did not come into being on 11
September 2001. But on that day its face took on
particularly odious and murderous features. In earlier
years, terrorists assassinated monarchs and politicians
but hesitated at striking innocent civilians in such great
numbers. Today, however, terrorist groups no longer
have any moral or religious scruples. They are
deliberately targeting civilians and can have access to
modern technologies with unprecedented destructive
power.
In the face of the worsening of the terrorist threat,
it was imperative that international cooperation be
intensified. Switzerland welcomes the role played by
the United Nations in this matter, particularly through
the use of instruments of multilateral cooperation and
by the Committee established pursuant to resolution
1373 (2001). The United Nations is also taking
preventive measures by working to combat those
injustices that form the breeding ground from which
certain terrorist groups fill their ranks. In the long term,
the fight against terrorism will succeed only if we can
reduce those injustices and inequalities, defend human
dignity and develop dialogue between different cultures
and religions.
I would like to take advantage of this open
debate, briefly and for the first time here before the
Security Council, to outline the steps taken by my
country to prevent and suppress terrorism.
First, in the area of police and judicial
cooperation, Switzerland cooperates closely with
various countries in the pursuit of terrorist groups and
in the identification of their sources of funding.
Switzerland has also strengthened its legislative
arsenal. Changes have been made in the penal code to
increase the means for combating the financing of
terrorism. Banks and financial intermediaries have
been obliged to increase their vigilance. Those
legislative modifications permitted Switzerland to
ratify, last 23 September, the International Convention
for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism and
the International Convention for the Suppression of
Terrorist Bombing. Switzerland therefore is now party
to the 12 main United Nations conventions on terrorism
whose ratifications were requested by resolution 1373
(2001).
Regarding measures decided by the Security
Council against Al Qaeda and the Taliban, Switzerland
has applied them integrally from the start. By decree,
the Swiss Government has adopted and rapidly updated
the measures necessary to implement the sanctions set
out in resolution 1267 (1999) and in subsequent
resolutions. Switzerland is also cooperating closely
with other countries and with the Counter-Terrorism
Committee in implementing Security Council
resolution 1373 (2001). My country has already
submitted three reports to the Committee detailing the
measures undertaken.
With regard to technical assistance, Switzerland
has provided various forms of support to other
countries in the fight against terrorism and its
financing. Such technical assistance includes the
training of legal experts for the drafting of new
legislative texts. It also aims to train banking
executives or representatives of financial
administrations to recognize suspicious operations
involving money-laundering or the financing of
terrorism. Within the framework of its participation in
the Group of Eight Action Group - established to
fight terrorism and to assist other countries in that
area i Switzerland will continue its commitment with
regard to technical assistance.
Finally, Switzerland is participating actively in
negotiations with a view to adopting a comprehensive
convention against terrorism. It has played a
facilitating role on certain points during the ongoing
negotiations in the Sixth Committee of the General
Assembly and hopes that those negotiations will
conclude swiftly.
Preventing and suppressing terrorism is a long-
term fight. The international community must remain
firm in its resolve to carry on that struggle. It must also
see to it that, in doing so, it does not sacrifice respect
for human rights and for the rule of law. In recent
years, disturbing tensions have appeared between
security and freedom. However, Switzerland is
convinced that it is not necessary to compromise
fundamental freedoms in order to ensure effectiveness
in the fight against terrorism.
In conclusion, Switzerland must congratulate the
Counter-Terrorism Committee on the remarkable work
accomplished in two years. We invite it to pursue, in a
spirit of tried-and-true consultation, close dialogue
with Member States and to increase its cooperation
with regional organizations and specialized technical
bodies such as Interpol, the World Customs
Organization, the International Atomic Energy Agency
and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of Italy.
Mr. Mantovani (Italy): I have the honour to
speak on behalf of the European Union. The acceding
countries Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia,
Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia
and Slovenia; the associated countries Bulgaria,
Romania and Turkey; and the European Free Trade
Association countries members of the European
Economic Area Iceland and Norway align themselves
with this statement.
At the outset, I should like to join other speakers
in expressing thanks to Ambassador Arias for the
excellent work performed by the Counter-Terrorism
Committee (CTC).
The significant results that have been achieved
over the past few years in the worldwide fight against
terrorism should not be underestimated. Top leaders of
terrorist networks have been arrested in Europe, Asia
and other regions. Criminal proceedings and trials are
under way in several countries, and many sentences
have already been handed down. Terrorist cells have
been disrupted and attacks foiled in several countries.
None of those successes would have been possible
without close cooperation among the law enforcement,
intelligence and judicial authorities of various nations.
This type of cooperation is still the international
community's approach to peace and security.
Nonetheless, the threat of terrorism remains a
major source of concern. While the terrorist network
has suffered major blows, it has also shown
extraordinary resilience and a strong ability to adapt to
changing situations. It does so by decentralizing its
planning and operations and by reconstituting its bases
and safe havens elsewhere, especially in failed States
or in countries with particularly weak public
institutions.
The European Union recognizes and supports the
central role of the United Nations in the fight against
terrorism worldwide. Within that framework, the
European Union stresses the need for closer
cooperation between the United Nations, in particular
the Counter-Terrorism Committee, and regional and
subregional organizations. The European Union is
actively engaged in political dialogue and multifaceted
cooperation with several of those organizations. Most
recently, the European Union participated in two
significant initiatives: the seminar hosted by the
Chinese Government in Beijing on 22 and 23
September 2003 within the framework of the Asia-
Europe Meeting, and the meeting organized by the
CTC and the Organization of American States in
Washington, DC, on 7 October 2003.
On this occasion, I should like to reiterate some
of the basic principles underlying the strategy of the
European Union.
First of all, the European Union unequivocally
condemns all acts of terrorism as criminal and stresses
that terrorism is never justifiable, irrespective of its
alleged motivations, objectives, forms or
manifestations.
The fight against terrorism must be conducted
with full respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms, the rule of law and, where applicable,
international humanitarian law. In its internal anti-
terrorist legislation, the European Union and its
member States have set high standards for the
safeguarding of human rights.
The European Union considers Security Council
resolution 1373 (2001) to be the cornerstone of the
international community's cooperation strategy and is
firmly committed to its implementation. I should like
to highlight some of its basic aspects. The signature,
ratification and full implementation of the 12
international conventions against terrorism are a top
priority for the European Union. The European Union's
members and acceding countries are now parties to the
vast majority of those conventions. We strongly
encourage all other members of the United Nations to
act in that direction. Regional organizations have a
crucial role to play, since they can reaffirm their
commitment by actively monitoring the progress being
made on signature and ratification of the conventions
by their respective member States.
The fight against the financing of terrorism is
equally crucial. We have increased our efforts and our
effectiveness in that field, focusing our attention on
cutting off financial flows and other forms of support
from terrorist organizations. A list of terrorist
individuals, groups and entities is regularly reviewed
and updated.
A workshop on terrorism financing, organized
jointly by the Italian European Union presidency and
the European Commission, will be held in Brussels on
7 November 2003. That forum will provide an
opportunity to pursue political dialogue and to
exchange information and best practices on problems
related to the implementation of international
obligations stemming from the relevant Security
Council resolutions.
Technical assistance aimed at strengthening
counter-terrorism capacity-building is another basic
tenet of the European Union's strategy. In addition to
programmes carried out by individual member States,
the European Commission has launched pilot projects
in a few countries in consultation with the Counter-
Terrorism Committee.
In that context, the European Union also
recognizes the role of the Terrorism Prevention Branch
of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to
assist States in implementing their obligations arising
from Security Council resolution 1373 (2001),
particularly in becoming parties to and fully
implementing the relevant international conventions
and protocols related to terrorism. We believe that
effective technical coordination in that field is crucial
to the success of counter-terrorism capacity- building.
Special attention should be dedicated to the links
between terrorism and organized crime, especially
trafficking in drugs and human beings. In many
instances, funds generated from these criminal
activities help finance terrorism. Terrorist organizations
also seek to take advantage of migration flows in order
to infiltrate countries and execute their deadly projects.
Faced with the serious challenge of terrorism and
its global threat to peace and security, the international
community must continue to respond with a strategy of
cooperation at all levels. To this end, the European
Union supports the role of the competent United
Nations agencies and bodies in helping to strengthen
the United Nations capacity to counter terrorism and
advise Member States on the implementation of the
pertinent Security Council resolutions and the United
Nations legal instruments against terrorism.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Uganda.
Mr. Butagira (Uganda): Allow me to
congratulate you, Sir, on your assumption of your
important post and to wish you well. Equally, I thank
your predecessor, the representative of the United
Kingdom, for work well done.
I thank the Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee, Ambassador Arias, for the excellent work
being done by his Committee.
I would like to thank the Security Council for
organizing this important debate. Issues of peace and
security are a shared responsibility of members of the
Security Council and non-members alike. The dialogue
should continue on this and other important issues of
international concern.
I will begin with a simple story. About a month
ago, my wife and I travelled to Toronto, Canada, to see
our daughter, who had just produced twins. At La
Guardia airport, we went through a security check. I
was told to remove my shoes and so was my wife. As I
was going through the metal detector, something made
noise. I did not know what it was. I was told to remove
my trouser belt, which had a metal clip, and in the
process my trousers nearly dropped down. Still, the
noise sounded. I had no metal on me anymore. It was
an awkward situation. They would not let me go.
Suddenly, I remembered that, in my right leg, there are
metal nails which doctors had used to piece together
my broken bones as a result of an accident I had
sustained. I explained to the security personnel and I
was scared that they would not let me go unless, of
course, the nails were removed and I were made to go
in a wheelchair, unable to walk. Eventually I was let to
go. Such, then, was my embarrassment and humiliation
and I am sure many here have gone through similar
experiences at airports. That is the price we have to pay
to counter terrorism.
A lot of money has been spent on gadgets to
alleviate the terrorist threat. People have reduced their
travel, affecting tourism earnings. The terrorists are
forcing us to change our way of life and they should
not be allowed to do so. The money diverted to fight
terrorist threats could have been used for development
purposes and to advance mankind's potential. A lot of
lives have been lost and properties destroyed in
terrorist attacks. Uganda condemns the indiscriminate
use of violence against civilians and its authors.
Here, I want to extend Uganda's condolences to
the families of those brave Americans who died for a
noble cause just a few days ago in Gaza.
The terrorist threat will not even spare those
misguided elements or rogue nations that sponsor
terrorism. Terrorists have gradually upped the stakes
over the years. From conventional weapons, now they
are reaching for weapons of mass destruction. The
growing availability of nuclear, biological and
chemical weapons has increased the chance of those
weapons falling into the hands of non-State actors and,
particularly terrifyingly, into the hands of these
mindless merchants of terror. Should this prospect
come to pass, the world will be brought to a deadly and
terrifying precipice.
The time to act is now. The international
community needs to work more urgently to ensure the
non-proliferation and eventual total elimination of
nuclear weapons, as well as the elimination of all
weapons of mass destruction. We must also develop
verifiable mechanisms for the control and tracing of
conventional weapons, including small arms and light
weapons, to ensure that they do not fall into
irresponsible hands.
In Africa, many of our countries have been
victims of terrorist acts perpetrated from both within
and without. My own country, Uganda, has had to
defend itself at great cost, both in human lives and
financial resources, against terrorist attacks by thugs
and bandits based beyond our borders. That is why we
were compelled to send our troops to the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, in exercise of the right of self-
defence and in accordance with bilateral agreements, in
order to destroy the camps and supply lines of these
bandits. That is also why we have had to send our
troops to southern Sudan, with the agreement of the
Government of the Sudan, in order to eliminate the
terrorists of the so-called Lord's Resistance Army, who
for the past 17 years have used that area as a
springboard to terrorize the innocent villagers of
northern Uganda. Similar stories are occurring daily in
many areas of Africa.
Today, we would like to call upon the
international community, particularly the Security
Council, whose primary mandate is to ensure
international peace and security, to assume their
responsibility and to address in a substantive way the
growing menace of international terrorism. In addition
to the elaboration of multilateral mechanisms and
instruments to combat terrorism, our countries should
be assisted financially and technically in building
capacity for the detection, prevention and combating of
the scourge of terrorism.
In Uganda, we have passed an anti-terrorism act
that criminalizes terrorism and its financing. The
financial institutions are required to comply with the
act as far as the financing of terrorism is concerned. We
have also put into place anti-money-laundering
measures and soon will enact legislation to that effect.
Assistance is needed for the training of security
personnel, the acquisition of necessary equipment and
the restriction of the movements of terrorists and their
funds across borders. Otherwise, the very existence of
States, the livelihood of their citizens and, ultimately,
international peace and security are threatened.
Finally, Uganda has continued to submit reports
to the Counter-Terrorism Committee, as required under
resolution 1373 (2001). We support Germany's
proposal for creating the office of a coordinator to act
as a focal point for the United Nations effort to fight
terrorism.
The President: I thank the representative of
Uganda for his expression of condolence.
I now give the floor to the representative of
Japan.
Mr. Haraguchi (Japan): The growing threat of
terrorism - as demonstrated by the bombings at a
hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia, and at the United Nations
headquarters in Baghdad in August; at the city centre
of Mumbai, India, last month; as well as the frequently
occurring terrorist attacks in Iraq in recent months -
poses an extremely grave challenge to our effort to
build a more decent world.
I would like to reiterate the importance of
resolute action on the part of the international
community in the fight against terrorism and to touch
upon the following three points in that connection.
First, I have repeatedly point out that it is
important to deny safe haven to terrorists. Despite the
repeated appeals of the international community, the
number of contracting parties to the counter-terrorism
conventions and protocols is still far from satisfactory.
In this connection, Japan has organized a seminar that
is being held today and tomorrow in Tokyo with a view
to encouraging accession to these counter-terrorism
conventions by countries in South-East Asia.
International and regional efforts are also
essential in order to deny safe haven to terrorists. We
welcome the strengthening of cooperation between the
CTC and other international and regional
organizations. One example of a regional effort in Asia
was the Asia-Europe Meeting seminar on anti-terrorism
held last month in Beijing, co-sponsored by China,
Denmark, Germany, Spain and Japan. My country is
determined to continue efforts to further strengthen
such international and regional cooperation.
Secondly, as regards the task of denying terrorists
access to the means of committing acts of terror, the
importance of promoting the conclusion of the
International Convention for the Suppression of the
Financing of Terrorism and of strictly implementing
the sanctions imposed on Al Qaeda and the Taliban by
Security Council resolution 1267 (1999) and
subsequent resolutions can hardly be overemphasized.
Efforts by Member States, however, should not stop
there. They need to go well beyond these measures.
Japan has frozen the assets of the military wing of
Hamas, in accordance with resolution 1373 (2001), but
in the light of the fact that Hamas has expressed its
tolerance of and support for terrorism, we have decided
to take measures to freeze the assets of Hamas as a
whole. We believe that these measures taken by my
country will encourage further efforts by the
Palestinian Authority to dismantle the terrorist
infrastructure, as required by the road map, and thus
contribute to achieving peaceful coexistence between
Israelis and Palestinians and to bringing about peace in
the Middle East.
With regard to the arms that can be used as a
direct means of committing terrorist acts, we welcome
the recent recommendation of the Group of
Governmental Experts on the United Nations Register
of Conventional Arms that man-portable air defence
systems be included among the categories of arms
subject to registration and reporting. We hope that the
inclusion of these weapons in the United Nations
Register, once agreed upon by Member States, will
make a significant contribution to preventing terrorists
from acquiring them.
We are also of the view that the CTC and the
Security Council as a whole should seriously address
the issue of the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction in the context of our fight against terrorism.
Thirdly, lack of capacity due to a variety of
constraints prevents many developing countries from
taking effective counter-terrorism measures, although
they recognize their importance and have the earnest
intention of implementing them. It is essential to
extend assistance for capacity-building to those
developing countries. Japan will continue to contribute
in this area through activities such as inviting
conference and seminar participants from developing
countries, in coordination with the CTC.
The necessity of addressing the root causes of
terrorism has been underscored on numerous
occasions. Identifying and addressing the root causes is
crucial, and all parties are called upon to make a
serious effort to eradicate them. However, while
acknowledging the need to address the underlying
causes of terrorism, we can never accept the existence
of root causes as justification for the use of terrorism or
as an excuse for delay in taking effective counter-
terrorism measures. We should be aware that only with
resolute will and determined action will we be able to
overcome the threat of terrorism.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of Israel.
Mr. Mekel (Israel): Allow me at the outset to pay
tribute to the Ambassador of Spain, Mr. Inocencio
Arias, for his stewardship as Chairman of the Counter-
Terrorism Committee (CTC). Under his leadership, the
CTC continues to play a vanguard role in the global
campaign against terrorism, in assisting and monitoring
State implementation of resolution 1373 (2001). Israel
takes this opportunity to reaffirm our support for the
work of the CTC and assure it of our full cooperation.
The war on terrorism has not been won. Although
both committees established by the Security Council to
fight that scourge have made significant contributions
since the Council last discussed this issue in July, there
is a risk of increasing complacency. On the day that a
terror attack succeeds, gruesome pictures are broadcast
across the globe, and we are overwhelmed with
genuine sympathy for the victims. But our resolve to
fight terrorism - not merely to condemn it - must
remain even when the images fade.
Recent attacks have demonstrated that extremist
elements are willing and able to strike at any target, in
any hemisphere, without concern or regard for human
life. In Baghdad in late August a terrorist bomb ripped
through United Nations headquarters, killing the top
United Nations envoy in Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello,
among many other victims. In Haifa this month, a
homicide bomber blew up the Maxim restaurant,
destroying over 40 years of Arab and Jewish
cooperation, killing 21 Israeli civilians, including three
whole families, and wounding over 60. Just yesterday,
three American citizens were killed in a terrorist attack
in the Gaza Strip as they were on their way in convoy
to interview Palestinian students for scholarship grants.
No part of the world - New York, Washington,
Mombassa, Karachi, Bali, New Delhi, Mumbai,
Casablanca, Jerusalem - is immune from the scourge
of this global threat.
We need an international partnership - a
coordinated global approach to combating international
terrorism. Israel welcomes the efforts of the Chairman
of the CTC to develop a new activist agenda for the
that body, and we look forward to the expansion of
existing bilateral and multilateral activities to
strengthen both the political will and the practical
capabilities of States to this end.
Global anti-terrorism conferences, such as those
organized by the CTC and the Organization of
American States (OAS) in New York and Washington
this month, serve as instruments to establish the legal
parameters for all regions and Governments to
collaborate to devise effective strategies and implement
policies to dismantle networks that provide financial
and logistical support to terrorists.
Regional organizations like the OAS serve a vital
role as catalysts and intermediaries, working in
conjunction with the CTC to meet the specific needs of
Member States. In the past few months, significant
contributions have been made by regional
organizations in the areas of capacity-building,
distribution of information, best practices, assessment
and programme implementation.
Still, our pace is too slow. The development of
practical counter-terrorism instruments and capabilities
is an important achievement, but they only matter if
they are implemented on the ground. Paper must not be
confused with progress.
A number of States, while demonstrating the
political will to fight terrorism, lack the proper
instruments to do so. International codes, best practices
and model legislation are the keys to success. However,
our pace is slowed primarily by those regimes that are
able but unwilling to join this campaign. It takes only
one non-compliant or complicit State to provide safe
harbour for a terrorist operative and to enable the
perpetration of future attacks against civilians. Those
who harbour terrorists or fund acts of terror are as
guilty of terrorism as those who pull the triggers,
detonate the bombs or crash the aeroplanes. Those who
abuse the language of resistance to justify the murder
of innocents create the environment where such murder
can take place.
For Israel, it is self-evident that the international
fight against terrorism must begin at home, at the
national level. It can succeed only if every individual
State makes a sincere commitment to prevent terrorists
from obtaining weapons and to dismantle the
infrastructure and networks that sustain them.
The threat of weapons of mass destruction falling
into the hands of terrorists is a dire illustration of the
nexus between terrorism and the illicit transfer and
proliferation of weapons. It is incumbent upon the
Committee and States to set standards for their import
and export, in order to ensure that no weapon of any
magnitude could be supplied to clients who may, in
turn, transfer them to terrorists.
The intensive cooperation and coordination of the
international counter-terrorism community is also
necessary in addressing the dire threat posed by man-
portable air defence systems (MANPADS). As the CTC
works to consolidate its agenda for the near future,
Israel reiterates its call for increasing efforts to combat
the threat of MANPADS, both strengthening
countermeasures and reducing the danger of
proliferation.
Security Council resolution 1450 (2002)
condemned in the strongest terms the missile attack in
Kenya on an Arkia Israeli Airlines flight. Subsequent
warnings of planned attacks involving shoulder-
launched surface-to-air missiles capable of destroying
civilian aircraft at low altitudes underscore the need for
States to take urgent action to curb the proliferation of
those weapons and access to them by terrorist groups.
Finally, we must recognize the crucial role that is
played by vicious incitement in the creation of suicidal
terrorists and in the fostering of an environment that
supports them. Unfortunately, in our region there are
too many examples of children who attend schools
adorned with posters of terrorists, study from books
filled with inflammatory rhetoric and watch children's
television programmes filled with songs which
demonize other cultures and praise terrorism and
violence.
We must ensure that information in educational,
religious and political institutions, as well as the media,
is used to promote progress and tolerance, knowledge
and understanding, and not be used as a tool to subvert
them. If education is left in irresponsible hands, we risk
giving birth to generations of children deprived of the
chance even to contemplate peace and who are incited
to consider the murder of innocent civilians as a
legitimate and even noble act. If incitement is not
eliminated, in accordance with established human
rights norms, it will be impossible to move away from
terror and violence to the path of dialogue and the
building of a better future.
The goals of terrorism are clear: to spread fear, to
weaken the rule of law, to undermine the exercise of
our most basic human rights, to demoralize law-abiding
citizens and ultimately, to destroy the essential
institutions of society. The targets and intended victims
of this vicious cycle are democracy and freedom itself.
The concerted efforts of the CTC, the Council and the
international community as a whole are needed to
ensure that the terrorists' goals are never achieved.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of Colombia.
Mr. Rivas (Colombia) (spoke in Spanish):
Colombia fully endorses the statement made by the
Permanent Representative of Peru on behalf of the Rio
Group. We thank the Ambassador of Spain,
Mr. Inocencio Arias, chairman of the Security
Council's Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC), for his
assessment of the work accomplished during the eighth
work programme of the Committee and for submitting
the ninth work programme, for the three-month period
extending from October to December 2003.
We welcome the progress the Committee has
made since it was created in implementing worldwide
resolution 1373 (2001), on the basis of the principles of
cooperation, transparency and equal treatment, and in
achieving its goal of maintaining and strengthening the
international community's consensus on the importance
of combating terrorism. We support the Chairman's
initiative of identifying difficulties in the Committee's
structure and functioning.
The question the Council is considering today is
fundamental for a country such as Colombia, which is
defending democracy and the human rights of its
citizens from the attacks committed daily by three
terrorist organizations. The current Government has
found approximately 30,000 persons belonging to
armed organizations that can be considered terrorists
due to the nature of their acts. In the approximately 1.2
million square kilometres of our national territory, of
which almost 400,000 square kilometres are jungle, the
lack of a State presence in many areas has been taken
advantage of by terrorists. Of 1,100 municipalities, 170
had no police presence.
In the first year of the mandate of President
Uribe, the policy of democratic security that has been
applied to uproot terrorism in the country yielded its
first results. A police presence has been extended to
151 municipalities, the number of homicides has
dropped 22 per cent, the number of massacres has
fallen 35 per cent, kidnappings have been reduced 34.7
per cent, illegal detentions on the highways have
dropped 49 per cent and the number of internally
displaced people has been reduced by 66 per cent. The
reduction of all these types of crime is significant, but
their levels continue to be alarming. No country can
accept such circumstances.
The progress made in protecting our fellow
citizens encourages us to continue our efforts to
vanquish terrorism, in rigorous conformity with the
law. We require more extensive powers that remain in
keeping with the rule of law. Currently, the
Government is preparing an amendment to the
Constitution to allow the public forces of order, in
cases of terrorism, to deploy specialized personnel to
carry out arrests, searches and communications
interceptions. That amendment will include democratic
safeguards so that an independent public prosecutor
can subsequently take immediate action and the office
responsible for oversight of the civil service can be
informed, as well as the Congress, which possesses
responsibility for political control. The powers
proposed in this amendment are considerably weaker
than laws in effect in democracies that do not have our
degree of terrorist risk.
A few weeks ago, before the General Assembly,
President Uribe said that,
"In Colombia's current situation, terrorism,
illicit drugs, violence and insecurity are really the
same thing. We plead for a commitment from the
world so that we are able to completely defeat
drugs. We implore the world not to harbour our
terrorists, to help us confiscate their goods and
only to open their doors to help peace processes."
(A/58/PV1 7)
That is why my delegation requested to speak at
this debate, in order to insist on the need for the CTC
and the Security Council to take up fundamental issues
that we had already brought forward in the debate last
23 July.
First, in spite of the fact that in resolutions 1373
(2001) and 1456 (2003) the Security Council expressed
concern at the close links existing among terrorism,
transnational organized crime, the use and illicit
trafficking of drugs, money-laundering and illicit arms
trafficking, it is necessary for the Committee and the
Council to deal with those links more thoroughly. That
is essential if we take into account that to the degree
that the controls imposed by resolution 1373 (2001) on
the financing of acts of terrorism meet with success,
terrorists will increasingly resort to these types of
crime to finance their activities. In Colombia, this has
been occurring for several years now, and today drug
trafficking and money-laundering have become the
principle source of financing for the terrorist groups
operating in the country.
That is why we insist that the nature of terrorist
acts must be defined not just according to the place
where they are committed or by their national or global
reach, but also by the roots of their financing and the
money used to finance them. It has been demonstrated
that the international financial networks used by
terrorism are similar to those used in the illegal
trafficking of drugs and arms. It is urgent that the
frontal war against terrorism include the campaign
against its related crimes on the basis of the principle
of shared responsibility.
Secondly, terrorism is a single phenomenon,
regardless of the form it takes. Any terrorism, domestic
or international, must be rejected and fought with the
same determination. It cannot be any other way, since it
challenges democratic principles that respect life and
fundamental freedoms of individuals - principles
cherished by our peoples and this Organization.
Moreover, any terrorism can become a threat to
international peace and security.
Finally, we emphasize the need to carry out a
serious study on the feasibility of the CTC and the
Security Council drawing up a general list of world
terrorist organizations similar to the one maintained by
the 1267 Committee on Al Qaeda and the Taliban. We
do not think that a prior formal definition of terrorism,
which has not been possible to achieve in the past 30
years, is necessary in order to begin to draw up that
list. Anyone who perpetrates, in the words of General
Assembly resolution 49/60, "Criminal acts intended or
calculated to provoke a state of terror in the general
public", is a terrorist, regardless of motivation. We
must, once and for all, rid ourselves of the political
content of the topic of terrorism in order to be able to
fight it in all parts of the world for what it is - a
serious crime against the life and liberty of peoples and
a serious threat to civilization.
While reiterating our support for the work carried
out by the Security Council and the CTC in the fight
against that universal scourge, I wish to inform the
Council that Colombia is taking steps domestically to
ratify counter-terrorism conventions to which it is not
yet a party. We therefore reiterate our appeal for
cooperation on the part of the international community
with regard to legal and police activities, as called for
in resolution 1373 (2001), to successfully fight
terrorism.
In that area of international cooperation, we must
emphasize that the United Nations has the capability,
the experience and the moral authority to help all
countries and regions throughout the world beset by the
scourge of terrorism.
The President: I call on the representative of
India.
Mr. Gobinathan (India): We thank you, Sir, for
scheduling this public meeting of the Security Council
on an issue of considerable importance and great
concern to all members of the United Nations. We also
congratulate Ambassador Arias of Spain and his team
for their capable stewardship of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee (CTC), established pursuant to Security
Council resolution 1373 (2001).
Terrorism is not a new phenomenon and, contrary
to some popular misperceptions, the fight against
terrorism was not born out of 11 September. India has
been at the forefront of the fight against terrorism for
almost two decades. During this period, over 60,000
Indians, mainly women and children, have lost their
lives to terrorism. Most recently, in a major incident,
52 innocent bystanders were killed in the twin terrorist
attacks in the city of Mumbai.
The scourge and reach of terrorism has indeed
extended across the world. Globalization cannot be
seen today merely in the context of the success of free
enterprise or the pervasiveness of television and other
mass media. The very means that have facilitated the
success of the global marketplace - improved
communications, access to media, better transport links
and faster and easier means of international travel -
have contributed to the development of a global
network of terrorism, - a network that feeds on the
common message of hatred and seeks to attain the
common objective of carnage and indiscriminate
destruction, and to demoralize and thereby dominate
civilized societies, particularly those based on
pluralistic democracies.
Unfortunately, some States regard terrorism as a
low-cost means of inflicting damage to the social,
political and economic well-being of their supposed
detractors by pursuing a form of low-intensity warfare,
without its attendant costs or risks. Despite the claim
that they are part of the global alliance against terror,
they stand implicated by their past records and present
inability to come clean.
Contradictions persist but cannot persevere. In a
recent newspaper article, a senior envoy of a permanent
member of the Security Council has reportedly accused
a Government, also a member of this Council and
which professes to be a valued partner in the war
against terrorism, of allowing renegade Taliban forces
a safe haven from which to "regroup, recruit, cross into
Afghanistan and cause mayhem" - a fact that Afghan
leaders have sought consistently to underscore at the
highest levels.
The Secretary-General, in his report entitled
"Measures to eliminate international terrorism",
observes that "it has to be assumed that the grenades
used in this terrorist attack" - the attack on the Indian
Parliament in New Delhi on 13 December 2001 -
"were produced in Pakistan". (A/58/116, para. 22) We
in India did not require this corroboration of a fact that
we had already deduced on the basis of solid and
incontrovertible evidence gathered from the terrorists
and their accomplices themselves. But the fact that the
Secretary-General has brought this to light in a report
that considers measures to eliminate international
terrorism is in itself a telling story, as it is also
indicative of the double standards that we sometimes
seem to operate under.
An article published in The New York Times
yesterday refers to the United States Treasury
Department designating a charity, Al-Akhtar Trust
International, as a financial sponsor of terrorism. This
group is accused of financing Al Qaeda militants in
Afghanistan, terrorist acts in Iraq and of possible
linkages to the murder of The Wall Street Journal
reporter Daniel Pearl. Anyone looking for more
material available in the free press on the existence of
an epicentre of terrorism has only to read the
celebrated French author and philosopher Bernard
Henri Levy's recently released book, Who Killed
Daniel Pearl?
The CTC, for all its good work, will need to go
beyond the stage of inexhaustible reporting to a more
serious examination of the actual actions taken by
States in their international counter-terrorism effort.
The Committee would have to take advantage of the
momentum achieved since its establishment to go
beyond assisting in the creation of legal and financial
mechanisms to holding countries accountable for their
genuine commitment to and actions in the fight against
terrorism from territories under their control.
India was among the first countries to ratify all 12
Conventions on international terrorism. It has initiated
the draft comprehensive convention on international
terrorism, currently under consideration in the Sixth
Committee of the General Assembly, and supports the
adoption of the draft International Convention for the
Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism. Cognizant
of the possible threat to civilized and orderly societies
by terrorists and non-State actors equipped with
weapons of mass destruction, India sponsored a
resolution dealing with the linkages between terrorism
and weapons of mass destruction, which was adopted
by the General Assembly by consensus last year.
A number of countries have responded quickly to
the international call for the tightening of domestic
legislative and financial frameworks designed to
counter terrorist activities. Unfortunately, there is an
increasing feeling among Member States that the more
effective the response to the requirements and
questions of the CTC, the more voluminous and
intrusive the reporting process becomes. In our view, it
is important to avoid conveying the impression,
however erroneous, of an expanding bureaucracy,
represented by the CTC secretariat, indulging in an
exercise of self-preservation and self-perpetuation.
While we acknowledge fully that the
development of effective legislative and financial
mechanisms is the first step in enabling States to come
to grips with the fight against terrorism, we are
convinced that a system of endless reporting, without
any effort to keep sight of the larger objective realities,
can only disillusion States and ultimately impact
adversely on the efforts of the Security Council to
mobilize an effective international counter-terrorism
effort.
It is critical that a system of effective interface
between Council members and the larger membership
on the manner in which the CTC should operate be
arranged on a periodic and institutional basis. Feedback
from such exchanges needs to be monitored and
absorbed by the CTC. What are required are clear and
objective guidelines to govern the system of reporting
to which States are subject. Most important,
transparency and openness in the process will foster a
greater willingness among respondents, namely the
Member States, to cooperate.
The undue emphasis on cooperation with other
international and regional organizations in the work of
the Committee work will also require careful
consideration. States are accountable for their actions
but several partner organizations of the CTC that have
been placed on an equal pedestal with the States
Members of this Organization do not bear the same
responsibility or accountability. Often, they even lack
the mandate or competence to deal with the area of
work of the CTC.
In our view, the primary point of contact for the
CTC should continue to be the Member States, under
whose mandate the Committee operates. Discussions
with regional and international organizations should be
secondary to discussions with States. All interfaces
with partner organizations must be undertaken with the
full knowledge and consent of the States involved in
the organization concerned. Also, regional imbalances
in the number of partner organizations with which CTC
works will have to be taken into account.
Finally, issues such as the credibility and sources
of information and the independence of experts
working with the CTC are important, particularly if the
views of Member States are not always taken into
account.
We have provided those illustrations in order to
convey candid feedback of the impressions and
opinions of the larger membership. The ultimate aim is
to enable the Council and the Chair of the CTC to take
such opinions on board in the implementation of the
Committee's mandate. I should like to reiterate here
that they have been made in a constructive spirit.
The fight against terrorism is among the most
important issues currently on the agenda of this
Organization. It is being pursued simultaneously in
most, if not all, of the United Nations major organs,
including the Security Council. My Government has
been, and will continue to be, engaged fully in the fight
against international terrorism. I would like to take this
opportunity to express once again our deep
appreciation to the Chair of the CTC for his efforts in
leading that important Committee of the Security
Council and to assure him of our fullest cooperation in
the fulfilment of his noble mission.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Azerbaijan.
Mr. Aliyev (Azerbaijan): First of all, I would like
to welcome today's opportunity to participate in the
open debate on so important and pertinent a subject as
terrorism vis-a-vis international peace and security, and
to thank Ambassador Arias for his very interesting and
informative briefing.
A bit more than two years ago, the Security
Council adopted resolution 1373 (2001), reaffirming its
unequivocal condemnation of the terrorist attacks that
took place in the United States on 11 September 2001
and expressing its determination to prevent all such
acts in the future.
The decision to establish a Counter-Terrorism
Committee (CTC) that would increase the capability of
States to fight terrorism was dictated by the shared
common vision of States of the radically changed
security environment and by the necessity to jointly
face new threats and challenges.
Azerbaijan highly values the activities of the
CTC, including its proactive cooperation with regional
organizations and groups, aimed at facilitating dialogue
and exchange of information on the global and regional
levels. As a coordinator on counter-terrorism issues
within the Georgia, Uzbekistan, Ukraine, Azerbaijan,
Moldova Group (GUUAM), my country shared within
the CTC the Group's perspective on addressing new
threats caused by terrorism. In this capacity we actively
participated in the 6 March 2003 meeting of the CTC
with regional and subregional organizations as well as
in the follow-up meeting jointly organized by the CTC
and the Organization of American States this October
in Washington, DC. We consider that regular exchange
of opinions and information on the subject will be to
the great benefit of our joint work.
Indeed, today we find ourselves in an era of
increased and globalized instability that respects no
borders. The threats, risks and challenges to
international peace and security have undergone a
serious qualitative transformation. In the meantime, the
scale of those threats has also increased. Today,
terrorism and other asymmetric threats and challenges
to security are more international and far more lethal
than before. Terrorist attacks that have been taking
place on a regular basis ever since 11 September 2001
have, unfortunately, had a strong grip on the news
headlines and prove that, despite certain progress
achieved in addressing this challenge, the threat is still
with us.
Azerbaijan condemns in the strongest possible
terms all terrorist attacks perpetrated recently
throughout the world, including the terrorist act against
the United Nations headquarters in Baghdad and the
most recent terrorist attack against the Turkish
Embassy in the same city, which were further attempts
to undermine the international community's efforts to
improve security within Iraq.
While actively participating in the global fight
against terrorism and reiterating our continued
readiness to provide an important contribution to that
effort in future, we would like to stress once again that
the fight against terrorism cannot be successful if that
evil is treated on its own, in isolation from such
terrorism-breeding threats as organized crime,
aggressive separatism, militant nationalism, drug
trafficking and the proliferation of small arms and of
weapons of mass destruction.
It is imperative to target ways and means of
accumulating the huge financial assets that fuel
organized criminal groups with close operational ties to
international terrorist networks and illegal armed
separatist movements. The territories that are currently
controlled by unlawful separatist regimes, in particular
within the zones of so-called frozen conflicts, have
been turned into grey zones of various criminal
activities, and illicit profits gained therein are being
actively used to bolster armed separatism and
terrorism.
All of this once again testifies to the necessity for
the international community to take a more resolute
and bolder stance on the question of resolving the
aforementioned conflicts on the basis of ensuring and,
where necessary, enforcing respect for the norms and
principles of international law, including the principle
of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of the
Member States.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Liechtenstein.
Mr. Wenaweser (Liechtenstein): The Counter-
Terrorism Committee (CTC) plays an outstanding role
in the international efforts to combat terrorism, even
more so because progress in related areas such as the
drafting of a comprehensive convention to fight
terrorism is still not forthcoming. I would also like to
thank the Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee, Ambassador Inocencio Arias, for his very
informative briefing today and to express my
delegation's gratitude for the work undertaken under
his leadership.
Two years after the adoption of Security Council
resolution 1373 (2001) and the subsequent
establishment of the Counter-Terrorism Committee, the
Committee finds itself at a crucial juncture. While the
world has witnessed a number of successes in the fight
against terrorism during the past two years, in
particular the arrests and subsequent trials of a number
of terrorist suspects, there have also been a
disconcerting number of setbacks and new attacks,
such as the atrocious bombing of the United Nations
headquarters in Baghdad almost two months ago.
Those are some of the most visible and concrete
examples showing that international cooperation in the
area is needed now more than ever. The work of the
CTC, however, cannot simply be measured against
those events. Its task is to prepare the ground for a
common, sustainable approach by all Member States in
the fight against terrorism, with a view to its long-term
success. That is a task of the utmost importance and
delicacy since it involves the constant striking of a
balance between the sometimes conflicting goals of
national and international security and the rights of
individuals.
We remain convinced that human rights, which
rank among the greatest achievements of this
Organization, must not fall victim to the fight against
terrorism. This requires a clear commitment by the
United Nations and its Member States to the
maintenance of human rights and the rule of law while
countering terrorism, as expressed by the General
Assembly in its resolution 57/219, but also a
considerable amount of expertise. We commend the
CTC's increasing efforts to coordinate the provision of
technical assistance, and we would like to express our
view that such technical assistance should also be
tailored to meet the needs of human rights and the rule
of law.
The CTC's reporting system is another pillar of
its work aimed at promoting the implementation of
resolution 1373 (2001). While the reporting procedure
has so far been a clear success in quantitative terms,
further thought needs to go into its strengthening in
qualitative terms. Every Member State has reported at
least once to the Committee; many have done so twice,
and a number of States - among them
Liechtenstein - even three times. However, it also
remains clear that the number of reports submitted by a
State is not a reliable indicator of its willingness and
ability to implement resolution 1373 (2001).
It will be one of the most pressing challenges for
the CTC in the near future to address this issue in a
manner that takes into account the specific situations in
which States find themselves, while at the same time
establishing uniform benchmarks for all States. Those
benchmarks do not end with the issue of the ratification
of international conventions relating to the fight against
terrorism - and Liechtenstein has ratified all 12 of
them - or with ensuring that the necessary legislation
is in place. Legislation is only the basis for action, and
cannot replace concrete action and practical measures.
We therefore encourage the CTC to continue its work
in all relevant areas, including in the increasingly
important field of implementation.
We believe that the debate today has brought
forth useful new ideas. I would like to refer in
particular to the statement made by the representative
of Germany earlier today.
Finally, let me reiterate Liechtenstein's
unequivocal condemnation of all acts of terrorism,
whatever the justifications and motives invoked. We
remain committed to the international fight against
terrorism, and to cooperation with the CTC in
particular.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of Indonesia.
Mr. J enie (Indonesia): I have the honour to speak
on behalf of the member countries of the Association
of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), namely Brunei
Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, the Lao People's
Democratic Republic, Malaysia, Myanmar, the
Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Viet Nam.
I would like to take this opportunity to express
the deep appreciation of my delegation to the Security
Council for convening this meeting on the work of the
Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC). Before I go
further, tribute is also due to Ambassador Arias for his
great sense of leadership, and to the Vice-Chairs, other
Committee members and all the experts involved for
their dedication and hard work.
ASEAN welcomes the ninth 90-day work
programme of the CTC, during which it will advance
its objectives. We are encouraged that the CTC plans to
prepare a follow-up programme with other
organizations in the field of international cooperation.
ASEAN shares the view that such contacts and
meetings are useful as a continuing avenue for the
exchange of views and coordination towards combating
terrorism. ASEAN also welcomes the enhanced
coordination between the CTC and the Security
Council Committee established pursuant to resolution
1267 (1999).
Allow me to provide an update on ASEAN's
continuing efforts in combating international terrorism
since the last Council meeting on the CTC, held on 23
July 2003. First of all, at the ninth ASEAN summit,
held in Bali on 7 October 2003, ASEAN firmly agreed
to continue to undertake and build on the specific
measures outlined in the ASEAN Declaration on Joint
Action to Counter Terrorism, which was adopted in
November 2001 in Brunei Darussalam. By this,
ASEAN committed itself to intensifying its efforts,
collectively and individually, to prevent, counter and
suppress the activities of terrorist groups in the region.
ASEAN also underlined the need to maintain practical
cooperative measures among its member countries and
with the rest of the international community.
Furthermore, within the context of combating
global terrorism more effectively, ASEAN further
reaffirmed its determination to work together in
mitigating the adverse impact of terrorist attacks on
ASEAN countries, and urged the international
community to assist in these efforts. It pledged to
ensure the security and harmony of its societies and the
safety of its peoples, and also of others visiting or
residing in its countries and in the region.
At the meeting of heads of State or Government
of ASEAN member States and the Republic of India on
8 October 2003, the ASEAN-India Joint Declaration
for Cooperation to Combat International Terrorism was
adopted. In essence, both parties reaffirmed the
importance of a framework to prevent, disrupt and
combat international terrorism through the exchange
and flow of information, intelligence and capacity-
building. They also stressed their commitment to
implementing the principles laid out in the Declaration
in accordance with their respective domestic laws and
specific circumstances. They called on participants of
the ASEAN-India dialogue to become parties to all 12
United Nations conventions and protocols relating to
terrorism. The Declaration further called on the
participants to designate an agency to coordinate with
law enforcement agencies, authorities dealing with
counter-terrorism and financing and other concerned
Government agencies, and to act as the central point of
contact for the purpose of implementation of the
Declaration.
ASEAN continues to condemn terrorism in all its
forms and manifestations and emphasizes the need to
address the root causes of terrorism, and rejects any
attempt to associate terrorism with any religion, race,
nationality or ethnic group.
In addition, individual ASEAN members are
engaged in various initiatives related to combating
international terrorism, such as the Agreement on
Information Exchange and Establishment of
Communication Procedures, originally signed by
Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines on 7 May
2002. To date, the countries which have become parties
to the Agreement are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand. Under the
Agreement the parties would cooperate to combat
transnational crime, including terrorism.
Finally, ASEAN welcomes the opportunity to
participate in future CTC meetings in order to present
updates on the progress made in our region in the fight
against terrorism.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of South Africa.
Mr. Nacerodien (South Africa): My delegation
appreciates this opportunity to share our views with the
Security Council at this important debate on threats to
international peace and security caused by terrorist
acts. The United Nations has made great strides in the
global fight against terrorism. We would like to thank
Ambassador Arias of Spain for his briefing this
morning and for the exemplary manner in which he has
chaired the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC).
The recent attack on the headquarters of the
United Nations in Baghdad demonstrated the
vulnerability of the Organization, which is above all
else dedicated to promoting peace and security in a
non-partisan manner. It is my Government's view that
to direct an attack against the United Nations is to
combat the collective efforts of the international
community aimed at promoting peace and improving
the living conditions of the most unfortunate.
The death of three United States diplomats in
Gaza two days ago is a regrettable reminder of how
unsafe and unruly the world can become. If the
international community is going to succeed in
maintaining global peace and security, we will need to
adopt a comprehensive approach to dealing with
conflict situations.
In dealing with global terrorism, the international
community will need to address the conditions that
make it possible for terrorism to thrive. We cannot
hope to make progress so long as we ignore factors
such as poverty, human rights abuses and foreign
occupation, which prompt irrational acts of violence
and self-destruction.
No Government can hope to defeat terrorism on
its own, because terrorists now operate on a global
scale, virtually oblivious to State boundaries and
equipped with the latest technologies that allow them
to operate international networks. In combating
terrorism it is equally important that our national and
multilateral efforts respect international law, human
rights and global norms regarding the protection of
civil liberties. We believe that international law and
human rights should constitute the bedrock of our
collective efforts to eradicate the scourge of terrorism,
because it distinguishes us, as law-abiding people,
from those who target innocent civilians for political
gain.
My delegation believes that no legislative
measures and no amount of police action, intelligence-
gathering or military force can ever guarantee our
safety while millions of disaffected and marginalized
people across the world continue to suffer the threat of
hunger and debilitating poverty. If continuously
overlooked, the insecurity derived from lack of food,
shelter and other basic human and social needs can
become a serious cause of instability and conflict.
It is essential to bear in mind that combating
terrorism is one of the number of often interrelated
priority tasks of the Organization. In Southern Africa,
as in many other parts of the world, a central challenge
remains the eradication of poverty and
underdevelopment, which constitute a serious threat to
peace and security. To that end, the campaign against
terrorism should also take into account the poor of the
world, who require resources to extricate themselves
from their condition of poverty and underdevelopment.
Terrorists take advantage of the sense of despair
and frustration that arises when people are forced to
live without hope and without freedom. Terrorists also
capitalize on situations where States violate human
rights during their counter-terrorism operations.
Whenever States resort to making arbitrary arrests,
detaining people without trial, subjecting suspects to
cruel or degrading treatment or singling out certain
ethnic or religious groups, terrorists are given new
recruitment opportunities. It is our belief that objective
criteria need to be developed by the Security Council
when drawing up lists of names of individuals and
entities committing terrorist acts, taking care not to
single out certain cultures, religions or countries.
We need to be aware of the fact that there are still
people living under foreign occupation, who are
entitled under international law to resist such
occupation. We also need to be cautious when we
regulate or monitor cultural practices such as informal
donations to charitable causes, in order to uphold civil
liberties. Although charities may be exploited by
terrorists, we should avoid frustrating the noble
objectives that such charities were created to serve, in
the process further alienating entire communities.
An issue that remains of concern to South Africa
relates to perceptions that are created by
unsubstantiated travel advisories by other Governments
and the media regarding the potential for terrorist
activities in third countries. Due to the negative impact
of those advisories on the economies of the affected
countries, it is imperative that credible intelligence
concerning potential terrorist attacks be shared with the
relevant foreign authorities so that preventive action
may be taken.
South Africa remains fully committed to the
struggle against terrorism. Efforts to enhance our
counter-terrorism capabilities under the auspices of the
United Nations are complemented by the collective
actions of our African partners through multilateral
organizations such as the African Union, the
Commonwealth and the Southern African Development
Community. My delegation continues to value South
Africa's close working relationship with the CTC's
counter-terrorism experts, especially at a time when
our Government is in the process of preparing our
fourth national report on counter-terrorism.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Kazakhstan.
Mr. Kazykhanov (Kazakhstan): I would like to
thank you, Mr. President, for organizing this debate,
which gives us an excellent opportunity to review the
progress made in the fight against terrorism and to
determine priorities for the subsequent work of the
Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC).
My delegation would like to pay tribute to
Ambassador Arias for the effective leadership he has
displayed in steering the work of the CTC. I would also
like to thank him for his informative briefing and his
presentation of the Committee's comprehensive 90-day
work programme.
The unprecedented attack against United Nations
headquarters in Baghdad last August was the cruellest
and largest-scale terrorist act in the entire history of
our Organization. General Assembly resolution 57/338,
which was adopted by the Assembly soon after that
tragic event, strongly condemned that atrocious attack
and called for intensified cooperation to prevent and
eradicate such acts of terrorism. It is a timely
resolution, given the threats faced by United Nations
personnel in war zones all over the world.
We believe that the issue of combating terrorism
should remain a top priority on the agenda of the
international community. Security Council resolution
1373 (2001) is a landmark in the global fight against
terrorism. Under the leadership of the Counter-
Terrorism Committee, we continue to move forward
towards full implementation of that resolution.
Since its inception, the Committee has been at the
forefront of the fight against major threats to
international peace and security and has been involved
in a wide range of activities. My delegation encourages
the CTC to intensify its cooperation with international,
regional and subregional organizations. The second
meeting of the CTC with international organizations,
which was held in Washington on 7 October, has given
further impetus to our joint actions against terrorism.
We support the Committee in attaching great
importance to that cooperation, which enables us to
broaden the dialogue that is so essential to combating
terrorism. We commend the CTC for its efforts to
pursue an open dialogue with Member States in a spirit
of transparency, as well as its assistance to countries to
enhance their capacity to combat terrorism.
The Counter-Terrorism Committee has a broad
mandate encompassing international cooperation,
internal executive machinery and domestic legislation.
My delegation is pleased with the Committee's focus
on enhancing legislation and national mechanisms for a
more effective fight against terrorism. Since the
establishment of the CTC, we have witnessed a steady
increase in the number of countries acceding to
international instruments on terrorism. For its own part,
Kazakhstan has ratified the International Convention
for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism and
the International Convention for the Suppression of
Terrorist Bombings. In the near future, our country
intends to complete the process of accession to all 12
international instruments on terrorism.
Kazakhstan supports the tireless efforts of the
United Nations to combat international terrorism.
Pursuant to resolution 1373 (2001), my country has
taken effective measures against terrorism by
establishing a comprehensive national mechanism to
suppress the financing of terrorism and money
laundering.
Kazakhstan is also working to enhance
cooperation in that area at the regional level. The
process represented by the Conference on Interaction
and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia, which was
initiated by President Nazarbaev, serves that purpose
by encouraging active cooperation among regional
States in the fight against terrorism. We believe that the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization can make a
significant contribution to counterterrorism efforts in
the Eurasian region. Kazakhstan has contributed to the
establishment of an anti-terrorist centre by the
Commonwealth of Independent States. We are taking
further steps to develop cooperation in that area with
other Central Asian States.
In order to ensure a systematic and progressive
approach, the CTC has continued to review reports by
Member States on the implementation of resolution
1373 (2001). According to information provided by the
Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism Committee, every
State has submitted its initial report, 150 States have
submitted their second reports and 71 States have
presented their third reports.
I am pleased to note that Kazakhstan, having
submitted its third report within the established time
frame, has fully complied with the requirements of
resolution 1373 (2001) and is engaged in a meaningful
dialogue with the Counter-Terrorism Committee.
Finally, my delegation believes that it is
imperative for the CTC to continue to rely on the
support of Member States and of the entire
international community. As I mentioned earlier,
Kazakhstan has been fully cooperating with the
Counter-Terrorism Committee since its establishment
and will continue to provide to this important body all
necessary support by making every effort to oppose
terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.
The President: The next speaker on my list is the
representative of Brazil, to whom I give the floor.
Mr. Valle (Brazil): At the outset, I would like to
associate my delegation with the statement made by the
representative of Peru on behalf of the Rio Group. It is
my intention, however, to make a few remarks in my
national capacity.
I also avail myself of this occasion to reiterate
our deep sympathy for, and solidarity with, all those
who suffered in connection with the tragic loss of life
caused by the recent heinous terrorist attacks in
Baghdad, Haifa and Gaza. Those despicable acts were
received with outrage in Brazil. Our thoughts and
prayers go to the victims and to their families.
I would like to express our appreciation for the
work performed by all those involved with the
Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC), in particular
Ambassador Arias, for his skilful performance as
Chairman of the Committee and for the clearly stated
goals he has set for its continued work. We are also
grateful to the independent experts of the CTC, whose
work has been instrumental in the progress achieved.
As reported, the Inter-American Committee
against Terrorism of the Organization of American
States (OAS), in cooperation with the CTC, held a
meeting less than two weeks ago to examine how
regional and international organizations can advance
global efforts to combat terrorism. That meeting - a
direct follow-up to the meeting promoted by the CTC
and held at the United Nations in March - is a clear
example of the broad range of possibilities that exists
for cooperation between regional organizations and the
United Nations and other international organizations in
the identification and implementation of strategies and
practices to promote cooperative efforts to counter the
threat of terrorism.
In that regard, we look forward to the follow-up
programme for activities in the field of cooperation
with international organizations announced in the
CTC's programme of work for the current 90-day
period. As has been repeatedly stated, the OAS has
been taking a leading role in terms of concerted
regional initiatives in reaction to the threat of
terrorism. The results of that meeting could constitute a
helpful input for future meetings under the same format
with other regional and international organizations.
I would like also to mention the report that the
Chairman of the Committee intends to circulate by 15
November regarding the difficulties encountered by
States and by the Committee itself in implementing
resolution 1373 (2001). That document should
constitute a valuable contribution to the evaluation of
the appropriate course to be taken in promoting
universal compliance with the resolution and in
allowing for the careful planning of further actions.
As a final comment regarding the work
programme, it is to be noted that all Member States
have complied with the obligation of presenting at least
their first report to the CTC. Integral compliance with
the initial stage of reporting on the implementation of
resolution 1373 (2001) is a considerable achievement
and shows that the ambitious benchmarks set out in
that resolution, although hard to attain, can be reached.
Through the work of the CTC and of other bodies such
as the Committee established pursuant to resolution
1267 (1999) in combating terrorism, the Security
Council is carrying out its primary responsibility for
the maintenance of international peace and security, in
accordance with its mandate as set out in the United
Nations Charter.
Despite those achievements, terrorism remains
one of the greatest threats to international peace and
security, fundamental freedoms, human rights and
democratic institutions. As recent developments in the
Middle East and Iraq make blatantly clear, we are still
far from eradicating the scourge of terrorism. On the
contrary - as tragically demonstrated by the terrorist
attack carried out against United Nations headquarters
in Baghdad, which claimed the lives of 22 people,
among them Sergio Vieira de Mello - no one, not
even those strictly involved with humanitarian and
reconstruction efforts and the promotion of human
rights and dignity, is safe from the scourge of terror.
Regardless of achievements with respect to
compliance with the relevant resolutions of the
Security Council, the adoption of pertinent
international conventions and coordinated efforts in the
combat against terrorism, injustices and inequalities
still victimize large portions of humanity. Young
people living under such conditions are prone to heed
the call of radicalism. Any comprehensive long-term
strategy to combat terrorism will have to deal with
those issues.
As President Lula stated at the international
conference on "Fighting Terrorism for Humanity":
"Terrorism is a symptom of social disease.
By promoting democratic values and respect for
human rights, and by promoting the economic
development of nations and the social well-being
of peoples, we will be building healthy societies,
immune to the scourge of terrorism".
In reaffirming my Government's condemnation of
terrorism in all its forms and manifestations, I renew
the Brazilian commitment to fight against terrorism and
its readiness to contribute, with cooperative efforts, at
the national, regional and international levels, in
accordance with the United Nations Charter,
international law and respect for human rights.
The President: The next speaker on my list is the
representative of Ecuador, to whom I give the floor.
Mr. Gallegos Chiriboga (Ecuador) (spoke in Spanish): Let me at the outset commend Ambassador
Arias for his leadership and thank him for his report. I
welcome this opportunity for my delegation to address
this body of the United Nations, and I appreciate it
even more because it is rare for non-members of the
Security Council to be able to address this body to
express their concerns or views on the most important
problems facing the international community as a
whole.
Accordingly, my delegation deems it appropriate
that its voice be heard concerning one of the most
serious and acute problems facing us today - a
problem that is disrupting the equilibrium, peace,
concord and security of the planet, rending the socio-
political fabric and undermining financial architecture
and State security - that is to say, the problem of
terrorism in all its manifestations and ramifications,
with all its linkages to a broad range of illicit activities.
My delegation endorses the statement made by
the representative of Peru in his capacity as coordinator
of the Rio Group in New York. I wish, however, to
make our voice heard, because Ecuador is an ally of
those peace-loving nations that aspire to the peaceful
solution of disputes. Ecuador believes in respect for the
rule of law, international solidarity, tolerance and full
respect for human rights, as well as in the immutable
ethical and moral principles by which we should abide
in the context of relations among human beings and
States. On the basis of the principles and values to
which the Ecuadorian nation firmly adheres, we are a
strong champion of the Charter of the United Nations.
Ecuador wishes to reiterate to the Security
Council and to the international community its
strongest support for the any initiative or action
undertaken to fight international terrorism in all its
forms and manifestations. However, such action should
always be undertaken in the framework of the United
Nations, which has a central role to play as the premier
multilateral body ensuring respect for international law
and human rights. We are therefore firmly convinced
that this global threat must be dealt with firmly, in a
concerted manner and with all the ways and means that
international and national law make available to States.
My delegation would like once again to reiterate
its categorical condemnation of terrorism in all its
forms and manifestations and calls on the international
community to redouble its efforts to seek the necessary
consensus, with a view to giving the international
community a sufficiently broad multilateral legal
framework for the global fight against terrorism, while
at the same time preserving the fundamental rights and
dignity of human beings. We must adopt legislation
against those acts and penalize them more severely to
prevent them from taking innocent life, causing
enormous material damage and affecting sociopolitical
and economic structures of the international
community to satisfy the perverse and execrable
purposes of their masterminds.
My delegation wished to say this because, while
we frequently bury ourselves in long and unfruitful
etymological or conceptual discussions, men, women
and children in every corner of the world -
defenceless, innocent people - continue to be the
victims of these unacceptable, indiscriminate and, from
any point of view, unjustified terrorist acts. The
perpetrators, accomplices and dissimulators, in making
violence and terror their way of life, claim to justify
their acts by wrongly attaching to them some kind of
foundation or principle, some ideological, religious or
other singularity.
However, my delegation also wishes to point out
to this body that hunger, unhealthy conditions, poverty,
great economic disparities, failure to respect human
rights, corruption, the handling of divergencies and
conflicts in non-peaceful ways and the overwhelming
external debt burden are all sources of international
instability and insecurity. They undermine
governability and destabilize democratic institutions. It
is therefore of paramount importance that the
international community be fully aware that these harsh
daily realities of developing countries are also a threat
to world security, since they cause the loss of
thousands of human lives around the world every day.
Thus, the international community must,
concurrent with its frontal attack on terrorism,
undertake a broad and concerted global strategy to
promote development and improve the standards of
living of the great majority of the world's population
and develop dialogue and tolerance among human
beings as well as among States.
As I said yesterday to the Sixth Committee,
several years have elapsed and lengthy discussions
have taken place on measures to eliminate international
terrorism and on the drafts of the comprehensive
convention on international terrorism and the
international convention for the suppression of acts of
nuclear terrorism. They have been analysed yet again
in recent days, but, for various reasons, it is not yet
possible to guarantee their viability. We reiterate in this
forum our appeal to all peoples who hold dear peace
and the peaceful solution of conflicts to overcome their
differences and to join efforts in the interest of the
common good and of international peace, security and
concord, with a view to securing a present imbued with
progress, development and peaceful co-existence and
guaranteeing for coming generations a future in which
respect, tolerance, dignity of the human being reign
supreme.
Faithful to these beliefs and principles, as well as
to its international commitments, the Government of
Ecuador has in the past year complied with article 18,
paragraph 13, of the United Nations Convention on
Transnational Organized Crime relating to the
appointment of a central authority and has promulgated
the text of the Convention so that it will be a part of
our national legal code. Similarly, on 25 February
2003, the Ecuadorian Government ratified the
International Convention for the Suppression of the
Financing of Terrorism.
Ecuador has done its utmost for the effective
application of existing international norms relating to
the prevention and suppression of terrorism, especially
Security Council resolution 1373 (2001), for which it
has developed a wide-ranging strategy that includes
legislative, administrative, policing and other
measures. At the same time, we are taking steps and
exercising the necessary control with regard to the
consolidated list prepared by the Security Council
Committee established under resolution 1267 (1999).
In this connection and on the occasion of the
seventeenth Presidential Summit of the Rio Group in
May, Ecuador committed itself to strengthening
cooperation in the struggle against terrorism and has
been participating in efforts within the Organization of
American States and in the Andean Community to this
end.
The evil activities of terrorist networks have a
profound and indiscriminate effect on the entire
international community. We cannot remain passive
before such a serious global threat. We must ensure
peace and the peaceful co-existence that all peoples of
the world desire.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Armenia.
Mr. Martirosyan (Armenia): First of all, let me
congratulate you, Mr. President, on your assuming the
presidency of the Council for the month of October and
thank you for convening this open meeting on a matter
of grave concern to the whole United Nations
membership. May I also commend the diligent work of
the Counter-Terrorism Committee under the competent
leadership of Ambassador Arias.
In the aftermath of the shocking tragedy of 11
September 2001, a broad international coalition
emerged to fight the dreadful scourge of terrorism.
Alas, we have to admit that, in spite of all the efforts
by the international community, terrorism is still on the
rise, from Bali to Moscow, from Casablanca to
Bombay. Moreover, the very symbol of peace - the
United Nations - suffered a brutal terrorist attack in
Baghdad this August.
All these events shed new light on the
phenomenon of terrorism, since they demonstrate so
distinctly that no nation and no individual is immune
from this scourge. Terrorism affects the security and
political and economic stability of all nations. At the
same time, no nation is able to successfully fight this
threat alone. As a global threat, terrorism must be
fought by means of a broad international reaction in
which measures at the national level are complemented
and supported by effective regional and international
cooperation.
It is imperative that all Member States increase
their cooperation in the fight against terrorism and
abide by the principles of the international conventions
and protocols relating to terrorism. Armenia stresses
the significance of an internationally agreed-upon
definition of terrorism. We believe that the adoption of
a common definition will enhance the collective efforts
to eradicate that evil. Armenia is fully committed to
continuing to work with the Security Council's
Counter-Terrorism Committee established pursuant to
resolution 1373 (2001) to combat terrorism, and we are
determined to contribute to all actions undertaken by
the United Nations towards that end.
Under the provisions of resolution 1373 (2001),
we have presented two reports to the Committee, and
another is due to be presented by the end of this month.
I would like to extend our appreciation to the
Committee and its secretariat for the vital contribution
they are providing in combating this global evil.
Conferences and seminars under the counter-
terrorism agenda taking place in different parts of the
world are an encouraging sign of the growing trend
toward multilateral cooperation in combating terrorism.
These kinds of international and regional events have
taken place in Armenia, also with the valuable support
of the Counter-Terrorism Committee.
There is nothing inherent in any religion or
civilization that generates terrorism. Terrorism by itself
is considered primarily the weapon of the politically
weak or frustrated, those who believe themselves to be
unable to redress their grievances through conventional
political or military means.
Whatever the causes, the actions of terrorists can
never be justified. However illegitimate terrorism is,
the root causes must be addressed for anti-terrorism
efforts to have a greater chance of success. We must
collectively undertake measures to change policies that
victimize vulnerable populations. Such victims often
hold others responsible for their suffering and thus
become easy recruits for terrorist organizations.
The United Nations should redouble its efforts in
the fields of economic development and poverty
eradication, since these are strategic battlefields in the
war against terrorism. Crafting a policy based on the
promotion of and respect for human rights,
international law and sustainable development would
probably make the world a much safer place.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Lebanon.
Mr. Kronfol (Lebanon) (spoke in Arabic): There
is no doubt that giving Member States the opportunity
to participate in the deliberations of the Security
Council on the threats to international peace and
security as a result of terrorist activities enhances the
principle of cooperation, transparency and equality that
inspires and guides the work and activities of the
Counter-Terrorism Committee.
Allow me, on my country's behalf, to
congratulate Ambassador Inocencio Arias on his great
skill and his valuable role in ensuring the continued
success of the work of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee (CTC). We appreciate his detailed briefing
on the Committee's programme of work for the coming
period, in which he emphasized the importance of the
practical steps the Committee has taken to increase the
available resources and develop the capacities of all
Member States for the fight against terrorism and his
intention to submit a report on the obstacles and
difficulties encountered by Member States in
honouring their commitments under resolution 1373
(2001). In that context, I should like to stress that
Lebanon continues to strongly support the CTC in
combating terrorism and to cooperate with it in the
implementation of its mandate.
Lebanon strongly condemns and denounces all
terrorist acts, including acts of premeditated violence
such as murder, assassination, hostage-taking, the
hijacking of aircraft, bombings and all other acts
targeting civilians. I reiterate that Lebanon stands ready
to cooperate with any just and impartial international
effort to fight terrorism in all its forms and
manifestations.
Lebanon continues to believe that any
international effort to suppress terrorism must be based
on an understanding of terrorism's root causes and
origins in order to diagnose, contain and consequently
eradicate the disease - hence the need for a definition
of terrorist acts and for the adoption of objective
criteria for defining terrorism that are in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations, international
legal norms and human rights principles. Such a
definition would undoubtedly enhance international
cooperation to fight the scourge of terrorism.
Supporting the Security Council's essential role
in maintaining international peace and security can be
strengthened only by honouring our commitment, as
Member States of the Organization, to address the
challenges and crises facing the international
community by resorting to agreed collective solutions,
in conformity with the basic principles of the Charter
and of international law. This would help avoid using
the international counter-terrorism campaign as a
pretext for trampling upon and violating the rights of
peoples and jeopardizing the sovereignty and territorial
integrity of Member States. Any violation of the
Charter, any disregard for or circumvention of the
United Nations and its legitimacy, any selectivity in
implementing its resolutions, or any attempt to impose
external solutions to conflicts represents a grave
setback to the credibility of the Organization -
including its agencies and, in particular, the Security
Council - and a serious blow to the very foundations
of the international order. Therefore, Lebanon believes
that approaches based on security alone and on partial
and phased solutions can never succeed in eradicating
the scourge of terrorism, for it is difficult for human
societies to achieve security without social, political
and economic justice.
Clearly, the effectiveness and success of the CTC
depend ultimately on the degree of Member States'
compliance with their obligations under resolution
1373 (2001) and other relevant Security Council
resolutions, and on support on the part of all Member
States and international organizations that play an
important role in this area. Lebanon is acting at the
regional and international levels and through its
national institutions to carry out its obligations under
the provisions of the relevant resolutions and the
protocols, agreements and conventions to which it is a
party, which take precedence over the provisions of
Lebanon's domestic laws. Lebanon's counter-terrorism
steps are included in the three reports it has submitted
to the Security Council Committee established pursuant
to resolution 1373 (2001), contained in documents
S/2001/1201, S/2002/728 and S/2003/451; and in its
report submitted under resolution 1455 (2003),
contained in document S/AC.37/2003/(1455)/60.
Lebanon looks forward to continuing its
cooperation with you, Mr. President, and with the
international effort to help to find just and
comprehensive solutions to address the scourge of
terrorism from which the international community is
suffering.
The President: I give the floor to Ambassador
Arias should he wish to make any further comment.
Mr. Arias (spoke in Spanish): I should just like to
thank the people who addressed kind words to me and
to the Committee. We have taken note of their
suggestions on ways to improve the Committee.
The President: The representative of Pakistan
has asked to take the floor.
Mr. Khalid (Pakistan): I apologize for taking the
floor, given the lateness of the hour. I shall respond
briefly to the points raised by the representative of
India. We deeply regret that he used this platform once
again to defame Pakistan and to indulge in fabricated
allegations. Incidentally, he made the same allegations
yesterday in the Sixth Committee. We categorically
reject all of those allegations as false, malicious and
self-serving.
Pakistan is proud of its role as a front-line State
in the fight against terrorism. Our law-enforcement
agencies are engaged in carrying out interdiction
operations against suspected terrorists - especially
along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border - and that fact
is well known to the world. All allegations of Taliban
elements regrouping in Pakistan are misleading and
totally wrong.
The Indian representative made a reference to a
so-called assumption, based on an investigation in
Austria, that the grenades used in the attack on the
Indian Parliament on 13 December 2001 were
produced in Pakistan. This is nothing but sheer
propaganda. If the Austrian company that was actually
the subject of these investigations had exported these
grenades to Pakistan, one could not rule out the
possibility of similar export to other countries,
including India.
As far as yesterday's article in The New York
Times is concerned, we have shared the information
with the concerned Security Council Committee. We
are certain that the article is based on false information
that must have been shared by the interested quarters,
who spare no opportunity to malign Pakistan. In fact,
the Indian allegations are an attempt to deflect
international attention away from the reign of terror it
has unleashed on the innocent people of occupied
Jammu and Kashmir in order to suppress their
legitimate struggle for the right to self-determination.
India's oppressive policies in occupied Jammu
and Kashmir constitute the worst forms of State
terrorism. As our Secretary-General has said:
"Internationally, we are beginning to see the
increasing use of what I call the 'T-word' -
terrorism - to demonize political opponents, to
throttle freedom of speech and the press, and to
delegitimize legitimate political grievances. We
are seeing too many cases where States living in
tension with their neighbours make opportunistic
use of the fight against terrorism to threaten or
justify new military action on long-running
disputes." (SG/SM/8518)
India indeed knows a lot about terrorism. It has
indulged in the worst form of terrorism against its own
nationals. Last year, the killing of 2,000 Muslims in the
Indian State of Gujarat was a living example. It is a
pity that India gets away with such acts in the name of
democracy and secularism. India has sponsored
terrorism against each one of its neighbours. One just
has to read the book entitled Indian Intervention in Sri
Lanka: The Role of India's Intelligence Services by
Rohan Gunaratna. The book says:
"More than 20,000 Tamil militants were
based in India. The first and second batch of
training was provided by the Indian Foreign
Intelligence Agency, the Research and Analysis
Wing, in Uttar Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh at
two Indian military facilities. After that they
set up their own training camps in South India."
There are well-documented reports that the Indian
intelligence agencies have sponsored and directed
renegade groups of Kashmiris to perpetrate terrorist
actions within Indian-occupied Kashmir as a means of
defaming the Kashmiri freedom struggle and
intimidating the Kashmiri people. This is recorded by
Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International and in
other credible reports.
We will shortly communicate to the Counter-
Terrorism Committee information on the activities of
India's consulates in Afghanistan in promoting
terrorism in Pakistan. Specific information will be
provided to the Chairman of the Committee on a
confidential basis. If the Indians so desire, we can
share this information publicly.
The President: There are no further speakers
inscribed on my list.
After consultations among members of the
Security Council, I have been authorized to make the
following statement on behalf of the Council:
"The Security Council welcomes the
briefing by the Chairman of the Counter-
Terrorism Committee (CTC) on the work of the
Committee.
"The Security Council reaffirms that
terrorism in all its forms and manifestations
constitutes one of the most serious threats to
peace and security and that any acts of terrorism
are criminal and unjustifiable, regardless of their
motivation, whenever and by whomsoever
committed.
"The Security Council recalls the statement
of its President of 4 April 2003 (S/PRST/2003/3),
which recorded its intention to review the
structure and activities of the CTC no later than 4
October 2003. The Council confirms the
continuation of the current arrangements for the
Bureau of the Committee for a further six months.
It invites the Counter-Terrorism Committee to
pursue its agenda as set out in the work
programme for the Counter-Terrorism
Committee's ninth 90-day period (S/2003/995),
focusing on practical measures designed to
increase the means available to States to combat
terrorism, helping States identify the problems
faced by States in implementing resolution 1373
(2001), attempting to find solutions to them,
working to increase the number of States which
are parties to the international conventions and
protocols related to counter-terrorism, and
deepening its dialogue with international,
regional, and subregional organizations active in
the areas covered by the resolution. The Security
Council invites these organizations to continue to
find ways of improving their collective action
against terrorism and, where appropriate, to work
with donor States to establish suitable
programmes.
"The Security Council notes that 48
Member States are late in submitting their
reports, as called for in resolution 1373 (2001). It
calls on them urgently to do so in order to
maintain the universality of response which
resolution 1373 (2001) requires. By 31 October
2003, the Chairman of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee will send to the Security Council the
list of the States which at that date are late in
submitting their reports.
"The Security Council invites the Counter-
Terrorism Committee to continue reporting on its
activities at regular intervals and expresses its
intention to review the structure and activities of
the CTC no later than 4 April 2004."
This statement will be issued as a document of
the Security Council under the symbol
S/PRST/2003/17.
The Security Council has thus concluded the
present stage in its consideration of the item on its
agenda.
The meeting rose at 6.30pm.
▶ Cite this page
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