S/PV.5895Resumption1 Security Council
▶ This meeting at a glance
65
Speeches
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Countries
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Resolutions
Topics
Peacekeeping support and operations
Sustainable development and climate
Security Council deliberations
Economic development programmes
Diplomatic expressions and remarks
Foreign ministers' statements
Thematic
The President: I wish to remind all speakers to
limit their statements to within five minutes so that the
Council can carry out its work expeditiously.
Delegations with statements likely to be longer than
five minutes are invited to circulate the texts in writing
and to deliver a condensed version when speaking in
the Chamber.
I now give the floor to Mr. Yukio Takasu,
Chairman of the Peacebuilding Commission and
Permanent Representative of Japan.
Mr. Takasu: I would like to express my deep
appreciation to the United Kingdom for its leadership
and timely initiative in convening this open debate. I
am grateful for the invitation to attend in my capacity
as the Chairperson of the Peacebuilding Commission. I
am also grateful for the very kind words expressed to
the Peacebuilding Commission by many speakers this
morning.
The Peacebuilding Commission was established
to address the complex challenges of post-conflict
reconstruction. I have made conscious efforts to guide
the attention of the Commission to peacebuilding gaps
in achieving a smooth shift from peacekeeping
activities and transition to development. I therefore
welcome the opportunity to discuss the issues
highlighted in the President's concept note.
First, the Commission's experiences confirm the
centrality of national ownership, which is not only for
priority activities selected by the Government. It must
also serve as the prime mover in carrying out political,
security and economic reform. Such leadership and
commitment by national Governments are prerequisites
to any successful peacebuilding effort. National
ownership must be complemented by partnership with
local stakeholders and the international partners. In
that regard, I would like to stress the important role of
the United Nations leadership on the ground.
In both Burundi and Sierra Leone, the Executive
Representative of the Secretary-General facilitated the
promotion of dialogue among all stakeholders on the
ground. Through that process, the integrated
peacebuilding strategy was developed to serve as a
framework for the coordination of various existing and
evolving activities. The leadership of the United
Nations representative is also crucial to monitoring
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progress and issuing early warnings on shortfalls in
implementation.
The United Nations representative needs to be
equipped with appropriate mandates and resources to
execute leadership. At the same time, leadership must
be exercised in an informal and flexible manner to
mobilize the full cooperation of all stakeholders.
Peacebuilding efforts can be more effective when a
lead country takes direct charge in supporting a
particular country, working in tandem with the United
Nations, and brings in new, non-traditional partners.
Secondly, national leadership requires functional
institutional and human capacities at the State and local
levels. Those capacities are usually limited in most
countries emerging from conflict, as many speakers
mentioned this morning. It is essential for international
partners to ensure the timely deployment of civilian
expertise to assist in rebuilding national capacities.
Peacebuilding requires the active involvement of
multifaceted partners with varied expertise and
specialties in such areas as governance, the rule of law,
the security and judicial sectors, civil administration -
including financial management - basic services, the
rehabilitation of infrastructure and private sector
development.
The deployment of such expertise should be
based on a clear prioritization of peacebuilding needs
in each particular phase, linked to priority areas that
the Peacebuilding Commission has identified. We
welcome the efforts of several Governments, including
that of the United Kingdom, to train and maintain a
roster of civilian specialists with the various skills and
capacities necessary for peacebuilding efforts. We
should examine an appropriate mechanism in the
United Nations to mobilize those experienced
specialists in a speedy manner to support post-conflict
capacity-building.
Thirdly, speedy and flexible funding to meet
urgent requirements has been a major concern. The
Peacebuilding Fund was established to provide
catalytic funding in order to fill the immediate funding
gaps in the critical areas, activate potential multiplier
effects for stability, and induce additional resources for
longer-term sustained support. While its volume has
surpassed the original target of $250 million with
contributions from 45 donors, it would be desirable to
see a higher level of resources in light of increasing
demands. I would like to take this opportunity to
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appeal to all Member States to make generous
contributions to the Fund.
The Peacebuilding Fund has been successfully
assisting several post-conflict countries, but it is not
expected to meet all peacebuilding needs. To achieve
maximum impacts on the ground, we should improve
the coordination of multilateral and bilateral donors in
the country. It will also be important to seek additional
means of mobilizing resources to complement the
catalytic and therefore limited role of the
Peacebuilding Fund. We welcome any innovative
proposal, including those of the United Kingdom and
others, to increase resources to post-conflict countries
that will complement the existing mechanisms and
ensure the coherence and effectiveness of all funding
resources.
It is clear that there are still many conceptual and
operational questions that need to be addressed to
better respond to the enormous challenges of post-
conflict peacebuilding. The Peacebuilding Commission
is ready to engage in further consideration on some of
the issues the Security Council has discussed today. I
hope that today's discussion will inspire specific
actions that we can move forward to strengthen United
Nations peacebuilding activities. Finally, I would like
again to thank the Security Council for its support for
the Peacebuilding Commission.
Before I conclude my statement, allow me to say
just a few words in my national capacity.
As Prime Minister Fukuda of Japan expressed in
January this year, Japan is determined to play a further
active role in the international community as a peace-
fostering nation. To that end, we have taken a variety
of initiatives to support peacebuilding activities all
over the world. Among other things, Japan has
extended substantial support to strengthen the
peacekeeping and peacebuilding capacities of many
African countries, including five peacekeeping
operation centres. Last year, we launched a pilot
programme for peacebuilding human resources
development, which will contribute to meeting some of
the gaps I have discussed today. Twenty-nine graduates
of the course from Japan and neighbouring countries in
Asia are currently working in countries including the
Sudan, Timor-Leste and Nepal. The initiative will be
expanded into a fully scaled-up programme next year.
Moreover, peacekeeping and peacebuilding will
be one of the priority issues to be considered at the
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Fourth Tokyo International Conference on African
Development, to be held in Yokohoma this month, and
at the Group of Eight Summit to be held in Toyako,
Hokkaido, in July. Japan remains committed to making
the utmost efforts to strengthen international
peacebuilding activities and to enhance global capacity
in this field.
The President: I thank the Chairman of the
Peacebuilding Commission for his statement and for
his comments in his capacity as representative of
Japan. I think we are all agreed as to the centrality and
importance of the Commission in this work.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Egypt.
Mr. Abdelaziz (Egypt) (spoke in Arabic): I
should like at the outset to express my delegation's
appreciation to the United Kingdom for convening this
important debate and for the concept paper
(S/2008/291, annex) prepared in advance of this
discussion.
My delegation aligns itself with and supports the
statement to be made by the representative of Jamaica
on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement.
The concept paper forms the basis for a
discussion of three major areas that, we all agree, need
to be addressed more robustly within the United
Nations system. While we agree with the objective
assessment that there is a need for further United
Nations efforts to address those areas, we must always
bear in mind the discussions that took place prior to the
2005 World Summit, at which it was concluded that
there were a number of gaps that must be filled by the
United Nations, including the three topics covered by
the concept paper.
The world leaders gathered at the Summit
therefore agreed to establish the Peacebuilding
Commission to carry out the tasks set out in the
resolutions providing for its establishment (resolution 1645 (2005) and General Assembly resolution 60/180),
in particular bringing together all relevant actors to
propose integrated strategies for post-conflict
peacebuilding based on the principle of national
ownership; to provide recommendations and
information to improve the coordination of all relevant
actors within and outside the United Nations, including
helping to ensure the funding necessary for those
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activities; and ensuring the necessary linkages between
peacebuilding and peacekeeping activities.
Therefore, we consider today's Security Council
meeting an opportunity to build momentum for
peacebuilding activities through the Peacebuilding
Commission, not through a contest between the
Security Council and the General Assembly for control
over the Commission, which could undermine the
Commission's credibility. Accordingly, we request that
the presidential statement to be issued by the Council
on this topic include a clear and explicit mandate from
the Council to the Peacebuilding Commission to study
the best ways to overcome these three obstacles and
any others that could prevent the Commission from
carrying out its mission - a task that, as the Chairman
of the Commission has just reaffirmed, that organ is
prepared to accomplish as effectively as possible.
The proposal that the role of the Special
Representatives of the Secretary-General be enhanced
so that they can carry out the work of the United
Nations more effectively requires that we distinguish
between two scenarios. First, if the country concerned
is not included on the agenda of the Peacebuilding
Commission, the Security Council has the right to
enhance the role of the Special Representative within a
framework that guarantees respect for State
sovereignty and the principle of national ownership.
On the other hand, if the State concerned is included on
the Commission's agenda, the Commission must, on a
case-by-case basis, determine the roles to be played by
the Special Representative and by each member of the
steering committees in various countries, including the
United Nations and other relevant influential actors, in
particular donor countries and the international
financial institutions.
With regard to the rapid deployment of qualified
civilian experts specializing in police matters and the
reform of the security and judicial sectors, it must first
be agreed that each peacebuilding situation requires
skills different from those required in other cases. This
depends on the background of the conflict and the
cultural, ethnic and religious background of the
population, among other factors. Thus, it is impossible
to determine what type of expertise is required unless
the Peacebuilding Commission first identifies priorities
and necessary areas for action, in consultation with the
authorities of the State concerned. Moreover, it is
possible that the building of such a framework could
waste huge amounts of financial resources through the
appointment of experts whom the United Nations does
not need for long periods of time, but only on an ad
hoc basis and under vastly different and substantive
conditions. That would only place an additional and
useless burden on the Organization's regular budget,
which we are trying to keep under control.
On the other hand, while we agree with the
concept paper on the need to provide rapid and flexible
funding for activities aimed at achieving stability in a
post-conflict situation, we believe that, given the
inability of existing funding mechanisms to do so with
the required effectiveness, the best way to accomplish
this is to focus on quickly overcoming the defects
hampering the work of the existing funding
mechanisms and to reform them - particularly the
Peacebuilding Fund - rather than thinking about
creating new ones.
The experience of the Peacebuilding Fund since
its establishment has underscored the urgent need to
review its working methods and terms of reference.
The General Assembly must do this through its review
of the terms of reference, which is scheduled to take
place two years after the August 2006 adoption of the
terms, in accordance with the Assembly's mandate to
provide general policy guidance on use of the Fund. In
particular, we believe that the Peacebuilding
Commission should participate in decision-making
regarding the funding of projects that are peacebuilding
priorities in the States under consideration. Thus, the
process will not be limited to informing the
Commission after the Secretary-General has made
funding decisions. We also believe it is necessary to
consider raising the ceiling of the Fund's budget - for
example, doubling it to $750 million. That would make
it possible to expand the base of projects to be funded
upon the Commission's decision and to increase the
number of recipient States. In that connection, we
propose the holding of an annual meeting of the
General Assembly dedicated to fund-raising, along the
lines of the annual meeting held by the Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs to enhance the
financial capacities of the Central Emergency
Response Fund.
Once again, I wish to thank you, Madam
President, for this opportunity to focus on three major
obstacles facing the work of the Peacebuilding
Commission. We look forward to working with the
Council, with the General Assembly and with our
fellow members of the Commission to overcome those
obstacles in order to benefit States emerging from
conflict and to enhance and promote the Commission's
authority to carry out its work in the way that we all
hope it will.
The President: I thank the representative of
Egypt for his considered statement. I am sure that we
all reciprocate the offer to work constructively
together.
I now give the floor to the representative of
Bangladesh.
Ms. Jahan (Bangladesh): The Bangladesh
delegation welcomes this opportunity to participate in
this important open debate on post-conflict
peacebuilding. We thank the delegation of the United
Kingdom for having taken the initiative to organize
this meeting.
While we align ourselves with the statement to be
delivered by the representative of Jamaica on behalf of
the Non-Aligned Movement caucus of the
Peacebuilding Commission, we have taken the floor to
underscore the following points.
Long after the guns have fallen silent, the scars of
war continue to haunt the minds of the people as well
as the economy of the country concerned. The first and
foremost task of post-conflict peacebuilding, therefore,
lies in expediting the healing process while, at the
same time, creating the conditions necessary to prevent
the situation from sliding back into conflict. In that
context, the key focus should be on developing an
integrated approach, with clear-cut commitments by
the Government in question and the international
community to broad-ranging interventions meant to
restore peace and security, on the one hand, and to
bring about economic growth and development, on the
other. Needless to say, the country concerned should
always play a leadership role in the process of
consolidating peace if that peace is to be sustainable.
Analysis of conflict situations reveals that the
twin phenomena of unemployment and conflict
continued to feed each other in many cases.
Empowerment, particularly of youth through education
and employment, should be a key focus in preventing
situations from sliding back. Furthermore, the overall
experience in implementing resolution 1325 (2000), on
women and peace and security, at all levels has been
somewhat mixed.
While we have integrated a gender perspective in
some aspects of United Nations peacekeeping
operations, in post-conflict peacebuilding efforts much
remains to be done. As one of the largest troop-
contributing countries, Bangladesh is ever conscious of
its responsibility to incorporate the essential elements
of resolution 1325 (2000) in the predeployment
training of peacekeepers. As a member of the
Peacebuilding Commission we will continue remain
vigilant in our focus on the provisions of the
resolution.
Peacebuilding, being a holistic process, involves
inter-agency cooperation across a wide range of issues.
The main challenge lies in achieving the necessary
coordination between agencies in post-conflict
situations. Ownership, especially at the national level,
and close coordination between United Nations and
national actors and the international donor community
are crucial. We would like to reiterate the NAM
position that the Peacebuilding Commission should
have the central role in post-conflict peacebuilding and
reconciliation. The Commission should be equipped
with the necessary resources for implementing its
mandated functions effectively.
The concept of "Rapidly deployable and skilled
civilian capacity" is being discussed in various forms
in the Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations
since 2005. The idea of civilian observers in the
context of United Nations peacekeeping operations was
floated in previous meetings of the Committee but it
was not agreed upon for further consideration. Certain
specific areas of multidimensional peacekeeping
and peacebuilding - for example disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration, rule of law and so on -
warrant experts in their own fields. This expertise
could be from both military and civilian backgrounds.
Hence, we are not in favour of the creation of any type
of cadre or pool comprising United Nations staff for
rapid civilian deployment. The purpose can be served
by filling the vacant posts in field missions and country
offices with personnel recruited from Member States
and host countries.
Some pertinent questions on this need much more
clarification, the most important of which is the
question of the relationship between such United
Nations capacities and national capacities. We need to
remind ourselves that national ownership of the
peacebuilding process is a fundamental prerequisite.
Any progress towards building such rapidly deployable
capacity, therefore, should be thoroughly discussed in
more inclusive forums, including the Peacebuilding
Commission.
The question of leadership on the ground also
requires careful thought and discussion. We underscore
the necessity of close coordination among the Special
Representative of the Secretary-General or the
executive representative of the Secretary-General, the
national Government and the Peacebuilding
Commission. We also would like to emphasize that the
extended role of the Special Representatives envisaged
in the concept paper should in no way undermine the
national ownership of the peacebuilding process.
We very much support the concept of a more
rapid and flexible funding mechanism. Disbursements
from the multi-donor trust funds and other funds
should be rapid and immediate to ensure early
stabilization of countries emerging from conflict. This
is crucial in assisting the national and local authorities
in delivering a peace dividend. However, we reiterate
that one of the main purposes of the Peacebuilding
Commission, as described in General Assembly
resolution 60/180 and Council resolution 1645 (2005),
is to marshal resources for reconstruction and
institution-building in countries emerging from
conflict. Therefore, the Peacebuilding Commission
should have a central role in any discussion regarding
the creation of a new rapid funding mechanism.
Many of the issues and ideas raised in the concept
paper before us have for some time been discussed in
the Peacebuilding Commission. We believe that the
proposals advanced by the concept paper would benefit
from further analysis within the Commission itself,
which, as an intergovernmental advisory body, is I
believe competent to do so. Consultations among the
Security Council, the General Assembly and the
Economic and Social Council on these issues are also
necessary. We would underscore that these
consultations should be inclusive and exhaustive to
ensure a practical outcome with pragmatic
recommendations.
Finally, our experience in dealing with the
country-specific situations in the Peacebuilding
Commission strengthens our conviction that the post-
conflict peacebuilding process requires the
involvement of all the stakeholders: the Government;
the Peacebuilding Commission's full membership;
potential donors; the United Nations country team;
financial institutions; non-governmental organizations;
civil society; and the private sector. It would also
require the continued support of the Security Council.
The President: Thank you very much for that
thoughtful statement. I think we all share the emphasis
on inclusivity.
I now give the floor to the representative of
Slovenia.
Ms. Stiglic (Slovenia): I have the honour to
address the Security Council on behalf of the European
Union (EU). The candidate countries Turkey, Croatia
and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the
countries of the Stabilization and Association Process
and potential candidates Albania, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Montenegro and Serbia and the European
Free Trade Association countries Iceland and
Liechtenstein, members of the European Economic
Area, as well as Ukraine, the Republic of Moldova,
Armenia and Georgia, align themselves with this
declaration.
In the interests of time, the EU will deliver an
abbreviated statement. The complete and official
statement is being distributed in the Council Chamber.
The European Union welcomes this debate on
post-conflict peacebuilding and agrees that there are
critical gaps in terms of leadership, civilian capability
and speed and flexibility of funding. The European
Union is committed to continue enhancing its own
capacities to address these gaps through its various
sources and to continue working with others, not least
the United Nations, to that end.
Efficient response to peacebuilding challenges in
a post-conflict country largely depends on the capacity
of the international community to come together
behind a nationally owned common strategy in a
coordinated and integrated way, cutting across the
political, security and development fields, including in
the immediate post-conflict phase.
The European Union has been working to
develop its role in this area over the past few years,
based on its ability to draw on a broad range of
security and development instruments and its
widespread geographic presence. The recent period has
seen both the strengthening of each set of tools and
efforts to improve their coordination. Particular
attention is being paid to integrating political, security
and development concerns in the European Union's
overall approach.
Areas of support in which this integration is the
most visible include security sector reform and
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration, with
attention to the security-development nexus. For
example, an integrated approach to security sector
reform is being put in practice by the EU in Guinea
Bissau, where all aspects of the reform, civilian and
military, are being addressed by the available EU
instruments.
The European Union underscores also the impact
of climate change, which can significantly increase
instability in fragile States by overstretching the
already limited capacity of Governments to respond
effectively to the challenges they face. The European
Union also underlines the importance of effective
implementation of resolution 1325 (2000), on women
and peace and security, recognizing the vital role of the
active participation of women at all levels in post-
conflict reconstruction and peacebuilding.
The European Union firmly believes that
adherence to the rule of law is critical to conflict
prevention, stabilization of fragile and conflict-affected
environments and sustainable long-term development.
Peace and justice are not conflicting goals. The
European Union strongly supports the International
Criminal Court and its activities and remains
convinced that there can be no sustainable peace
without justice.
The European Union underlines the importance
of the international community coming together behind
a common strategy as often as possible. When dealing
with an immediate post-conflict phase, the
international community needs to have a common
strategy and a common understanding of what the
needs are - what needs to be done, when and by
whom - both at the international level and on the
ground. In both cases there is a need to identify
leadership or agree upon a division of labour. At the
international level, the key is coordination of action.
On the ground, that agreement should materialize
through cooperation by actors in order to consolidate
action and achieve results.
The European Union recognizes the importance
of leadership on the ground and deploys EU special
representatives who, together with the network of
European Commission delegations in the field, work
closely with the Secretary-General's special
representatives and their staff in the field. As part of
the EU crisis response toolbox, European Community
tools were also upgraded to allow for more rapid and
flexible funding of crisis response programmes.
The European Union agrees that effective
cooperation between the United Nations and regional
organizations is essential. We recognize the important
role of the United Nations in integrating political,
security and development approaches in stabilization
and recovery contexts. In many instances, post-conflict
stabilization assistance provided under EU instruments
is implemented in support of United Nations operations
or even channelled through United Nations
mechanisms. That cooperation must be pursued.
The European Union remains committed to the
strengthening of United Nations crisis management
capacities, including on the basis of the joint statement
on EU-United Nations cooperation in crisis
management. That will continue to be a priority for the
EU. In particular, there is scope for increased
EU/United Nations cooperation in support of the
efforts of the African Union and African subregional
organizations in establishing the African peace and
security architecture. In that regard, the joint Africa/EU
strategy and its first action plan provide a solid base
for future developments.
The European Union remains committed to
playing an active role in supporting the peacebuilding
efforts of the United Nations. In that regard, we
recognize that the Peacebuilding Commission is a
valuable international instrument that can help post-
conflict States to overcome challenges to sustainable
peace. We commend the work of the Peacebuilding
Commission to date in promoting peace in Burundi,
Sierra Leone and Guinea-Bissau. We hope that the
Commission will incrementally be able to consider
countries that are more immediately post-conflict.
In conclusion, I would like to thank the
presidency of the Security Council for convening this
constructive debate. Let me reaffirm that it is a priority
for the European Union to continue to provide its
expertise and resources to post-conflict peacebuilding
around the world as a partner of the United Nations.
The President: I now give the floor to the
representative of Germany.
Mr. Matussek (Germany): First of all, we would
like to commend the United Kingdom for convening
this timely and useful debate on enhancing the
international community's ability to respond to the
challenges of peacebuilding in the immediate post-
conflict phase.
The United Nations and regional organizations,
as well as individual Member States, have to address
the challenges of immediate post-conflict situations in
their complex and multifaceted nature. Germany
stresses the increasing role and capacities of the
European Union (EU) in that field and associates itself
the statement of the EU Presidency today.
In order to achieve lasting peace and take the first
steps in reconstruction, we need to rebalance our
approach to immediate post-conflict interventions.
Political mediation efforts and military peacekeeping
operations alone are not enough to achieve lasting
stabilization; rather, the root causes of conflicts need to
be addressed at the earliest possible stage, in a
pragmatic and step-by-step approach. In concrete
terms, the military side of peacekeeping needs to be
more and better complemented by civilian capacities
geared towards a set of priority goals - inter alia, in
the fields of disarmament, demobilization,
reintegration, security sector reform, the rule of law
and justice, as well as quick-impact projects, opening
up clear perspectives of a peace dividend for the
population.
There is no one-size-fits-all approach to post-
conflict stabilization. On the contrary, specific answers
and strategies have to be identified, targeting the root
causes of each individual conflict. That is why the
international community has to build up expertise and
capacities in a wide range of areas in order to respond
adequately to the various challenges. We welcome
initiatives at the international level, within the EU and
by Member States to strengthen those critical
capabilities and provide civilian tools for post-conflict
stabilization.
We should strive to improve the exchange of
information and, wherever possible, to define common
criteria and norms - for instance in the field of
recruitment, as well as deployment.
The United Nations is the main global actor in the
international peace architecture and therefore must
play a leading role. The groundbreaking Brahimi report
(S/2000/809) led to substantial improvements in the
functioning of the overall system. Through the
establishment of integrated and multidimensional
missions, United Nations peacekeeping operations
have started to address key issues of immediate post-
conflict situations. In that context, Germany welcomes
the new principles and guidelines document distributed
by the Department of Peacekeeping Operations, which
duly reflects the multidimensional character of today's
peacekeeping operations.
Germany would also like to underscore its
continued support for the Peacebuilding Commission.
It has developed innovative participatory working
methods, and it is also beginning to build up unique
experience in the area of post-conflict stabilization in
its country-specific formats.
We should like to underscore respect for the
principle of ownership by the partner country. Building
up local capacities must be a central and integral part
of our efforts, as we believe that early national
ownership of the peacebuilding process is
indispensable to achieve positive and lasting results.
The United Nations has also gained increasing
experience in building partnerships in concrete
operations with regional organizations like the EU, the
African Union and the NATO alliance. Germany
supports a cooperative approach that combines the
value added of each and every actor. In our
coordination efforts, we should realistically assess the
capacities of the different institutions and actors. We
should pragmatically join forces in a spirit of
constructive cooperation and coordination, rather than
competition. Our endeavours within and outside the
United Nations system should be guided not by
principled debate but by the capacity to deliver on the
ground.
The United Nations system needs to increase
coherence in its approach and rapidity in its responses,
on the political as well as on the operational level.
Those are the foundations for a leading coordinating
role in international efforts in peacekeeping and early
post-conflict activities. Germany would welcome a
broad discussion of possible concrete mechanisms and
different options to that end.
In 2004, the Federal Government adopted the
action plan entitled "Civilian crisis prevention, conflict
resolution and post-conflict peacebuilding". The action
plan aims to integrate all available crisis-prevention
instruments in a unified policy approach for more
effective crisis prevention on the national and
international levels. We are developing three key
instruments within that framework.
First, we are striving to enhance our police
capacity for international missions in the framework of
the Civilian Headline Goal of the EU's civil crisis
management and on the national level. Currently,
Germany employs 248 police personnel in international
police missions. Germany is also providing training for
police officers at the Kofi Annan International
Peacekeeping Centre in Accra.
Secondly, we established the Centre for
International Peace Operations, which aims to enhance
Germany's civilian crisis prevention and peacekeeping
capacities. A key element of the Centre's mandate is
the selection and promotion of German civilian
personnel for peace operations of the United Nations,
the EU and the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, as well as other multilateral
bodies. Since 2003 the Centre has maintained a
national standby roster of about 1,100 experienced and
trained experts. Currently, about 110 German civilian
experts serve with United Nations peacekeeping and
political field missions.
Thirdly, we have developed the Federal Agency
for Technical Relief, which is currently participating in
emergency relief operations and missions in
75 countries around the world. During the last few
years, the Agency has become increasingly active in
United Nations peacekeeping missions in, inter alia,
Sierra Leone and Liberia.
A lot needs to be done and today's debate is a
very welcome step in that direction.
Mr. Munoz (Chile) (spoke in Spanish): I would
like to start by thanking the President for convening
this important open debate on peacebuilding in
societies emerging from prolonged internal conflict.
We concur with the concept paper prepared for
this occasion to the effect that the first six to twelve
weeks following the signing of a ceasefire or peace
agreement are crucial for internal stability.
In this critical phase, the international community
has a vital role to play. The United Nations system
must provide integrated, coherent and efficient support
in this first stage in order to establish the basic
minimum required for medium- and short-term
peacebuilding.
However, we have observed that, in some cases,
the response from the multilateral system, including
the United Nations and other international
organizations and entities, tends to encounter two great
obstacles in the field that create impediments to
properly tackling the challenges of peacebuilding. I am
referring to the lack of coordination and, often, the
inefficacy of aid.
Generally, once a ceasefire or peace agreement
has been signed, the international community reacts
enthusiastically by providing various types of
cooperation and aid to the society emerging from
conflict without waiting for a body or institution to
adequately channel this initial enthusiasm. This lack of
coordination augments the duplication of functions. In
some cases, it further complicates subsequent efforts at
medium- and long-term peacebuilding.
An integrated office endowed with ample
authority to address all aspects linked to peacebuilding
following a ceasefire, including peacekeeping activities
and activities related to development and the
strengthening of the rule of law, would, in Chile's
View, facilitate an integrated approach that allows for
the creation of national capacities from the start and
the creation of a rational process of medium- and long-
term peacebuilding.
We believe that an integrated approach would
facilitate coordination, and it is here that the
Peacebuilding Commission plays a decisive role. In
almost two years of operation, the Commission has
demonstrated the advantages of collectively examining
the aspects of security with matters connected to
development and rule of law in societies emerging
from conflict. We should take advantage of the
experience acquired by the Peacebuilding Commission
and not repeat the mistakes of the past.
Another problem that emerges in the weeks
following a ceasefire or peace agreement is that a large
quantity of aid begins to arrive at a time when the
capacity to absorb it adequately in the field is
insufficient. Then, when an assistance network is
finally in place to channel the aid, the media have
usually left and the flow of aid decreases drastically.
In order to circumvent this paradox, we should be
capable of acting swiftly in areas identified as
priorities in the first stage of peacebuilding. Here,
again, the activity of the Peacebuilding Commission
and the Peacebuilding Fund can play a crucial role by
providing rapid aid through coordinated quick-impact
projects and by collaborating with the national
Government to identify its priorities.
The Fund should not, however, be seen as just
another source of funding for development. I would
like to conclude my statement by making a call for us
to consider the Peacebuilding Commission as the organ
that can respond to the majority of questions and
difficulties in post-conflict societies. The Commission
has the appropriate tools and mandate, and we should
feel confident that its integrated approach can face
these challenges, alongside the States involved and
from the perspective of so-called national ownership.
Ms. Banks (New Zealand): New Zealand
commends the United Kingdom for initiating this
debate and for its useful concept paper entitled "Post-
Conflict Stabilization: Peace After War".
We see post-conflict peacebuilding as a critical
area of focus for the international community. It is an
immediate practical issue, and there are valuable
lessons to be learned from our recent experience, as
Mr. Brahimi reminded us this morning.
New Zealand is looking to improve its capacity
for post-conflict stabilization while simultaneously
"learning by doing" in several missions that run in
parallel: State-building in the Solomon Islands in an
Australian-led regional operation, in Timor-Leste in a
United Nations mission alongside a regional operation,
and through our participation in the International
Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.
We are keenly aware of the need for the
international community to improve its approach to
peacebuilding in general and to post-conflict
stabilization in particular. A military intervention may
be necessary in the first instance to stabilize a
situation. But, as many have noted here, for the
resolution of conflict to be sustainable, we need more
wide-ranging interventions to deal with the causes of
State failure and initiatives to build both capacity and
social services. Those interventions must be coherent,
coordinated, and have local ownership. Increasingly,
we must be prepared to commit a wider range of
Government agencies to complex, multifaceted
peacebuilding interventions ranging from the justice
system to border control.
United Nations integrated missions have made
considerable progress in addressing these challenges.
10
But we do share the concern of the United Kingdom
and others that, overall, our international efforts remain
too fragmented, too ad hoc and often too fleeting.
Therefore, New Zealand supports the idea of a
gap analysis. The United Kingdom has identified at
least three critical gaps in post-conflict stabilization
process: leadership on the ground, rapidly deployable
and skilled civilian capacity, and more rapid and
flexible funding.
There are no easy answers to the associated
questions in the United Kingdom paper but there are
some important points. First, it notes that the United
Nations can make a significant contribution to the
developing body of international theory and practical
learning on post-conflict peacebuilding. In the United
Nations context, the Peacebuilding Commission and
Peacebuilding Fund are, of course, central to this
discussion.
Coherence with non-United Nations actors is
vital. There is a need for coordination of and a clear
division of labour among the numerous multilateral
agencies involved in peacebuilding. Even in classic
United Nations-led interventions, the United Kingdom
identifies a broad range of non-United Nations and
often non-State actors.
Finally, within the broader context of building
deployable civilian capacity, we agree with the
identification of police advisers as a critical dimension
of the international effort. Developing the capacity for
credible, effective policing is essential to underpinning
post-conflict transition. A range of recent examples
demonstrate the challenges of building police capacity,
particularly relative to building military capacity.
Allow me to conclude by stressing New
Zealand's continuing commitment to contributing to
United Nations led, mandated and authorized peace
operations. They are tangible expressions of our
collective responsibility to serve fragile post-conflict
States, which most need the assistance of the
international community.
The President: I thank the representative of New
Zealand for her very helpful statement and ongoing
commitment.
I now have the pleasure to give the floor to the
representative of Ghana.
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Mr. Christian (Ghana): I wish to join others in
congratulating the delegation of the United Kingdom
on its assumption of the Presidency for the month of
May and commend its initiative in organizing this open
debate on post-conflict peacebuilding. The objectives
of this debate, as stated in the concept paper, are to
identify and address some of the critical gaps in
international efforts to help post-conflict countries to
stabilize and build sustainable peace as they emerge
from conflict.
The letter and spirit of the founding resolutions,
adopted by the General Assembly (resolution 60/180)
and the Security Council (resolution 1645 (2005)),
charge the Peacebuilding Commission, a subsidiary
body of these two principal organs of the United
Nations, with the responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security. The founding
resolutions also mandate the Commission's pivotal and
unique role in mobilizing sustained international
attention and engagement to help countries recently
emerging from conflict to face the formidable
challenges in achieving durable stability and
sustainable peace. It has long been recognized that
sustained international engagement and a strong
national commitment are vital ingredients for success
in any post-conflict peacebuilding endeavour.
The critical gaps already alluded to in the concept
paper are very germane to our discussion. These
include the gaps in leadership on the ground, defined
as the lack of effective coordination among the various
stakeholders in post-conflict countries, be they
governments and other institutions of national
governance; the United Nations agencies; civil
societies; the international financial institutions;
bilateral donors or the private sector. Also the need for
skilled and rapidly deployable civilian capacity,
coupled with rapidly deployable military contingents,
cannot be overemphasized. Of course, the absence of
adequate funding and of the mechanisms for swift
disbursement and allocation of the limited but available
financial and other material resources remains a
formidable challenge to post-conflicting stabilization
and peacebuilding.
Often, the gaps in the implementation of
peacebuilding strategies or framework are inherent in
the terms of the peace agreements negotiated as a basis
for the peace process. A hastily negotiated agreement,
perceived to have been imposed on the parties to a
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conflict lacks the desired long-term commitment
needed to make it durable.
Equally important, and not to be overlooked, are
the conceptual and operational questions regarding the
appropriate relationship between the Peacebuilding
Commission and other United Nations organs, as well
as between the Commission and the Peacebuilding
Fund, which, together with the Peacebuilding Support
Office, constitute the peacebuilding architecture of the
United Nations.
As clearly articulated in its founding resolutions,
the Peacebuilding Commission serves as an
international advisory body designed to play advocacy,
mobilizing and coordinating roles for the benefit of the
international community by offering assistance to
countries emerging from violent conflicts. We must
accept that the Commission has been uniquely and
carefully crafted to ensure a holistic approach to
peacebuilding, in a manner that recognizes the
interdependence of political rehabilitation, socio-
economic revival and sustainable peace.
To promote the legitimacy and effectiveness of
the Peacebuilding Commission in carrying out all
aspects of its mandate and mission, such conceptual,
knowledge or informational gaps, which usually are
not openly articulated, should be addressed.
While the founding resolutions may have rightly
emphasized the principle of national ownership, the
fact remains that these founding resolutions also
acknowledge the need for the Peacebuilding
Commission to work closely with regional
organizations, as many conflicts have triggered
instability in neighbouring States and regions.
Surely, when it comes to regional organizations,
the Commission can learn from the experiences and
lessons of the Security Council, which has, of late,
given priority to forging closer partnerships and
cooperation with regional organizations, in particular
the African Union, when dealing with countries on the
Council's agenda. Growing efforts are being made by
the Commission to bridge the critical gap in regional
engagement or regional ownership, as reflected in the
recent interactions between the Peacebuilding Support
Office and Commission on the one hand, and the
African Union (AU) Peace and Security Council on the
other in Addis Ababa and New York to exchange views
on ways to forge closer cooperation and partnerships in
dealing with countries currently on the Commission's
agenda, all of which currently happen to be African
countries.
But such regional engagement should be reflected
at the working level in the field by ensuring a more
active involvement of regional and subregional
organizations in integrated peacebuilding strategies and
in steering committees set up to address post-conflict
recovery. In this context, peacebuilding efforts in post-
conflict countries in Africa should pay due attention to
the AU Framework for Post-Conflict Reconstruction
and Development, which places emphasis on tackling
the root causes of the conflict to ensure sustainable
peace. The international community should more
actively support regional and subregional initiatives
aimed at expediting the reaction time to crises when
they occur.
The need to address the financial resource gap
cannot be overemphasized. The establishment of the
Peacebuilding Fund as a form of trust fund available
for speedy disbursement and quick impact projects,
especially in the immediate post-conflict phase, is
essential for ensuring sustainable peace. That is why
the Peacebuilding Commission should continue to
contribute to the Secretary-General's efforts to
mobilize resources to increase the level of funds in the
Fund.
The capacity gap is a critical gap that has
received increased attention. The shortage of national
human resources to help rebuild post-conflict countries
may be addressed through the promotion of the return
of the critical mass of skilled and unskilled citizens,
who flee the conflict zone when civil war breaks out.
Psychological damage can take much longer to
overcome than material damage.
Affected and victimized populations are reluctant
to return to their homeland for fear of a relapse to
violent conflict and have limited confidence in the
peace processes. Some may seek vengeance or
revenge. More attention should therefore be given to
integrating the diaspora as indispensable stakeholders
in post-conflict peacebuilding processes. Addressing
such obstacles to the consolidation of peace in post-
conflict countries should also include a commitment to
mechanisms for transitional and criminal justice and
national reconciliation.
In closing, the truth is that too often political will
or goodwill are lacking. Where there is political will
underpinned by good faith and good will there is a
way. Political will should underpin our collective will
to bridge the implementation gaps when decisions are
taken.
Conflicts often assume very complex and
complicated dimensions once they occur and may not
necessarily fall into any neat categories of critical gaps
identified by various speakers today. Thus, the
Peacebuilding Commission, the other United Nations
organs, including the Council, national authorities and
regional organizations involved in issues of peace and
security, should understand the value of preventive
diplomacy on the basis of article 1 of the United
Nations Charter, both in countries experiencing
conflicts and in those witnessing peace, in order to
save succeeding generations, including our generation,
from the ravages of war.
The President: I thank the representative of
Ghana for that very comprehensive and considered
intervention.
I now have the pleasure to give the floor to the
representative of Mexico.
Mr. Heller (Mexico) (spoke in Spanish): My
delegation would first like to thank the United
Kingdom for having the initiative to hold this open
debate on such a relevant and complex topic within the
realm of international relations and the maintenance of
international peace and security, namely the
consolidation of peace in countries emerging from
conflict.
Although efforts to avoid the recurrence of
conflict in some countries emerging from violence
continue to be insufficient, the international
community has now adopted new and improved tools
to identify the fundamental issues that must be
addressed once armed conflict has ceased.
My delegation believes that it is crucial that the
international community take coordinated, urgent and
effective measures in the weeks immediately following
the cessation of hostilities, taking advantage of the
momentum created by the signing of peace agreements,
in the knowledge that this is a phase in which all
concerned actors show sufficient political will to
implement the agreed commitments.
The United Nations must play a pivotal role in
the coordination of efforts to re-establish stability and
the rule of law, through the innovative tools that make
up the Organization's new peacebuilding architecture.
The priorities upon which national and international
efforts must focus must be immediately identified
through the articulation of an integrated strategy that
addresses the issues of security, justice, reconstruction
and development.
Determining the priorities that must be addressed
by the United Nations system and its national and
international partners is a very complex exercise.
Every issue is a priority, and each national context is
unique. It is therefore crucial that the national
Government concerned define such priorities while
ensuring national ownership of the process. The
priorities identified by the Government and supported
by the Organization should have as a first goal the
stabilization of the country and the creation of the
conditions necessary for its recovery, with the support
of all concerned actors. Ensuring peace dividends for
the local population should be a top concern when
deciding such priorities.
In the same vein, in the formulation of strategies
and action plans, programmes and policies should aim
at including gender equality and justice in the process
of peacebuilding, recovery and reconstruction.
Women's role as the centre of the family and society
must be highlighted from the very beginning of the
process.
Mexico believes that the creation of solid
foundations for the sustainable development of the
country receiving assistance should also be a goal of
utmost importance. The country's self-sufficiency will
greatly depend on such foundations. In that sense,
Mexico gives special priority to international
cooperation, primarily that of developed countries, and
to economic support from international financial
institutions and regional and subregional organizations.
My delegation notes that security sector reform is
a vital component in any integrated post-conflict
strategy and recognizes its importance in assuring the
transition from peacekeeping to long-term
reconstruction, stabilization and development. We
therefore believe that special attention should be given,
beginning in the early phases of the process, to security
sector reform and that it should include a transitional
judicial system that strengthens the rule of law and
promotes the protection of human rights and the
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of
ex-combatants.
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We welcome the fact that the mandates of some
peacekeeping missions already include security sector
reform and highlight the increasingly relevant role of
their civilian components. Moreover, three missions
already have support units to address the issue: the
United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste, the
United Nations Integrated Office in Burundi and the
United Nations Organization Mission in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. For those reasons,
my delegation considers it important that security
sector reform coordination mechanisms be established
among the various entities of the United Nations
system, both at Headquarters and in the field, in the
framework of peacekeeping operations and in
post-conflict situations. My delegation would like to
particularly emphasize the necessity of enhancing the
Peacebuilding Commission's competencies in that area.
Mexico believes that Member States and the
Organization should focus efforts and resources on
supporting the existing structures of the still-young
peacebuilding architecture. Mexico acknowledges the
work undertaken in that area by the Peacebuilding
Commission and its country-specific configurations,
which have proved to be inclusive forums for
discussion and effective agreements on the formulation
of integrated strategies to confront the enormous
challenges faced by the countries on its agenda.
Although Mexico is not a member of the
Organizational Committee, my Government has
decided to participate in the Guinea-Bissau country-
specific configuration, in order to contribute to
multilateral efforts to achieve stabilization, self-
sufficiency and sustainable development in that
country. Mexico is ready to share its experience in such
fields as combating drug trafficking, social
development, electoral processes, institution-building,
the promotion of a culture of peace and civic
education, which are fundamental issues in countries
emerging from conflict.
In the same vein, in 2007, Mexico contributed to
the Peacebuilding Fund, thus reaffirming once again its
commitment to the United Nations institutions
responsible for promoting and strengthening
peacebuilding processes. We encourage the
Peacebuilding Commission to continue to make
progress and we assure it of the complete support of
the Government of Mexico.
13
The President: I thank the representative of
Mexico for his statement and for highlighting security
sector reform and his country's engagement.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Switzerland.
Mr. Maurer (Switzerland) (spoke in French): I
would like to thank you, Madam President, for
organizing this debate. Allow me to stress three points
on the subject of peacebuilding that are important for
Switzerland.
First, we share the analysis that the funding of
early recovery activities would benefit from strategic
reflection at the highest level and should be dealt with
in the context of the peacebuilding architecture as a
whole. The experiences of past years clearly show that
considerable gaps between promises and the actual
disbursement of funds exist; that allocation criteria are
inadequate; and that there are multiple funds whose
governance remains fragmented. The goal is thus
obvious. We should have more coherent financial
structures that would be able to respond to
humanitarian allocation criteria, that is, that are
flexible, rapid and realistic in terms of risk. At the
same time, such funds must have the predictability and
the critical mass of development funds.
Secondly, the roles of the United Nations country
teams and of the mission leadership on the ground are
crucial. The complexity of tasks and of mandates
requires that the Special Representatives of the
Secretary-General and their teams possess a wealth of
knowledge and professional skills. We could consider a
standard quartet of excellence for complex missions,
made up of a Special Representative of the Secretary-
General and deputies for the role of resident
coordinator/humanitarian coordinator, for civil affairs
and for military operations.
Moreover, it is in the best interests of Member
States that the Security Council not create parallel
institutional structures and that it ensure that the lines
of command and of decision-making are always clearly
defined.
Thirdly, civilian personnel play a critical and
increasingly important role in recovery efforts within
United Nations missions. My country will continue to
provide expertise in various areas to the United
Nations, both by providing training and by seconding
experts on the ground. At the national level, there are
numerous pools of civilian peacebuilding experts in a
variety of areas. However, there is still a lack of the
relevant instruments within the Secretariat, and that
prevents a systematic and coherent deployment of such
experts.
The Secretary-General must therefore strengthen
the capacities of the system and optimize collaboration
among the United Nations, the World Bank and
existing national structures. Moreover, the rosters
within the United Nations system in various areas of
competence are important resources that could be
exploited more systematically and could thus improve
selection procedures.
Continued concerted efforts aiming at enhancing
the quality of international support in the area of early
recovery efforts and peacebuilding are both welcome
and necessary. I hope that this discussion will be
pursued in all of the appropriate forums.
The President: I thank the representative of
Switzerland for his thoughtful statement.
I now give the floor to the representative of
Brazil.
Mr. Tarrago (Brazil): I would like to thank the
United Kingdom presidency of the Security Council for
the initiative of organizing this open debate on the
major challenges facing post-conflict countries.
The United Nations system has greatly
contributed to efforts aiming at stabilization and
reconstruction in post-conflict countries. The
international response to post-conflict situations has
been evolving. Its continued improvement is a task for
all of us. We concur with the analysis that better
coherence among actors on the ground, with a strong
leadership role by the United Nations system, and an
early, flexible and expedient mechanism for mobilizing
resources in the immediate aftermath of conflicts are
key.
The recurrent outbreak of conflict is a symptom
of fundamental tensions in a country, but peacebuilding
efforts should not only aim at alleviating the
symptoms; it is necessary to dive deep into the root
causes of conflicts and to engage in a holistic
treatment. It is important to work simultaneously on
the three pillars that sustain the building of peace:
strengthening political institutions, providing security
and promoting economic reconstruction. Breaches in
any of those pillars will impair the foundations of long-
lasting peace.
Brazil has long advocated the need to integrate a
development component into peacekeeping operations.
The road from keeping to building peace should be
seen as a continuum along which the seeds of a long-
lasting peace must be spread in tandem with the
provision of prompt and concrete peace dividends to
the population.
Our experience in peacekeeping operations in
Haiti and Timor-Leste and, more recently, in
coordinating peacebuilding efforts in Guinea-Bissau
have reinforced our conviction of the correctness of
such an integrated approach. In the case of Haiti, we
have seen how useful quick impact projects are to the
operation of the United Nations Stabilization Mission
in Haiti and for changing the mindset of the
population. Brazil strongly supports a significant
increase in budgetary resources allocated to projects of
that nature. At the same time, it is imperative to step up
efforts to support the Government in implementing
programmes that can generate employment and
income. That is the surest path to the reactivation of
the economy, which in turn will provide the State
apparatus with the necessary capacity to address the
basic needs of the population.
Brazil endorses proposals aimed at devising an
emergency budgetary window to deal with unforeseen
developments in post-conflict countries. We should not
allow unexpected events - such as the recent increase
in food and fuel prices - to undermine peace and
stability.
In the Guinea-Bissau configuration of the
Peacebuilding Commission, we are following a two-
track approach aimed at combining measures with
short-term impact with a strategic assessment of the
key priorities for the consolidation of peace in that
country.
A common trait of post-conflict countries is the
institutional fragility of the State, which constrains its
capacity to effectively manage public policies. There
seems to be a vicious circle in which the absence of
response to the most elementary needs of the
population sets the conditions for political instability,
which in turn further enhances the vulnerability of the
already fragile State.
The Peacebuilding Commission, standing at the
very heart of the international peacebuilding
architecture, is particularly well suited to help turn
such a vicious circle into a virtuous one of political
stability and economic prosperity. Although still a
relatively new body in the United Nations system, the
Peacebuilding Commission is proving to add value in
the three countries under its consideration. It has been
instrumental in assisting local Governments in
developing the necessary capacity to tread their own
path to recovery and stability, in line with the principle
of national ownership.
Following its multifold mandate and relying on
the elaboration of integrated strategies, the
Commission has also been useful in marshalling
resources and galvanizing all relevant stakeholders into
concerted action. It has encouraged greater
coordination among United Nations bodies and
agencies. The focus on the countries on its agenda has
helped to strengthen the presence of the United Nations
on the ground.
The Peacebuilding Fund has also been playing a
very important role in providing catalytic money in
areas identified by the Commission. By doing so, the
Fund leads by example and prompts other donors to
invest in key priority areas for the consolidation of
peace. Ongoing efforts to strengthen the relationship
between the Fund and the Commission are much
welcome and deserve to be further enhanced.
We do hope that the Peacebuilding Commission
can continue to grow and evolve over time, take up
new countries on its agenda, and further consolidate its
niche as an important body to deal with the complex
challenges faced by post-conflict countries.
The President: I call on the representative of
Jamaica.
Mr. Wolfe (Jamaica): May I at the very outset
express my appreciation to the United Kingdom for the
very timely initiative of organizing this very important
debate on post-conflict peacebuilding.
I have the honour and pleasure to speak on behalf
of the Non-Aligned Movement.
During the relatively short time of its existence,
the Peacebuilding Commission has worked diligently
towards fulfilling its mandate of addressing the special
needs of the countries on its agenda, working
specifically towards their rehabilitation, recovery and
reconstruction with the clear aim of creating the
foundation for sustainable development, as stipulated
by its founding resolutions: General Assembly
resolution 60/ 180 and Security Council resolution 1645
(2005).
The underlying feature of the Peacebuilding
Commission's sustained engagement with the countries
on its agenda has been to strengthen State capacity by
ensuring national ownership of the peacebuilding
process through the inclusion ofa wide cross section of
key players in the decision-making process,
particularly as it relates to the identification of
priorities and the recommendation of strategies for
post-conflict peacebuilding.
Our focus after virtually two years of the
Commission's existence is on further bolstering its
effectiveness and capabilities to better fulfil its
mandate as the lead player in peace consolidation and
on ensuring that the wide network of actors involved
can operate effectively, efficiently and coherently in
building legitimate national ownership and in
establishing and strengthening capacity where
necessary, while maintaining sustained international
attention on the countries on its agenda.
In that regard, the Non-Aligned Movement
stresses the central role of the Peacebuilding
Commission as the dedicated institutional mechanism
to address the special needs of countries emerging from
conflict towards recovery, security and sustainable
development through a coordinated and integrated
approach to post-conflict peacebuilding and
reconciliation.
A close scrutiny of the concept paper presented as
the basis for these discussions reveals certain
fundamental questions, the most critical of which are:
What do such civilian capacities encompass? How do
such capacities differ from already existing
international capacity, especially the relationship
between such capacities and national capacities, the
improvement of which must remain the central
objective of all peace consolidation efforts?
Furthermore, will the utilization of such capacities
come at the expense of other elements of the
development agenda? Following upon this, the
Movement hopes to see more detailed, inclusive and
wide-ranging discussions on how such civilian
capacities are to be organized, financed and deployed
and on the nature and extent of the role of the United
Nations in that regard.
Additionally, the concept paper seems, in our
view, to be based on a similar document under
discussion in the Special Committee on Peacekeeping
Operations, on enhanced rapidly deployable capacity.
In that regard, NAM. believes that clarification as to the
nature of the relationship between the two documents
would be appreciated.
The Non-Aligned Movement remains of the view
that the leadership and the coordinating role of the
Peacebuilding Commission are critical components of
the peacebuilding architecture and the spearhead for a
coordinated, coherent and integrated approach to post-
conflict peacebuilding and reconciliation, as
underpinned by the founding resolutions. The lead role
of the Commission in post-conflict situations is
becoming even more crucial, particularly against the
backdrop of the dire situation being faced by countries
emerging from conflict, including critical humanitarian
and socio-economic challenges such as the high levels
of debt burden and severe fiscal constraints, which
require the provision of medium- to long-term
resources in order to strengthen the foundations for
security and stability countries emerging from conflict.
The issues raised by the concept paper -
leadership on the ground, the need for a rapidly
deployable and skilled civilian capacity and more rapid
and flexible funding - are already being considered
by the Peacebuilding Commission, especially in its
country-specific configurations, and should therefore
continue to be subjects for discussion and analysis, in
accordance with the Commission's mandate. Advice
and recommendations on these and other conceptual
issues should thus be provided by the Commission.
Furthermore, in addition to the discussions within
the Peacebuilding Commission, the Non-Aligned
Movement is of the view that consultations among the
Security Council, the General Assembly and the
Economic and Social Council on the issues raised by
the paper can unearth practical workable results and
pragmatic recommendations in an integrated and
holistic manner. Given the role of the Peacebuilding
Commission as an intergovernmental advisory body,
the Movement considers it appropriate - and indeed
necessary - that any advice required for the
consideration of these issues be sought from the
Commission.
The Movement remains convinced that the
appropriate forum for addressing matters relating to
building peace in post-conflict situations is the
Peacebuilding Commission. In that regard, and taking
into account the equal stake of the principal organs of
the United Nations in the long-term success and
viability of the Commission, robust efforts to craft
additional comprehensive yet flexible measures to
consolidate peace in post-conflict societies should be
based on the fullest utilization of the capabilities of the
Peacebuilding Commission.
The President: I thank the representative of
Jamaica for that very important statement, which
included with a number of significant areas for follow-
up. We agree with the emphasis on bringing in the
General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council,
the Security Council and the Peacebuilding
Commission to address these questions.
I should just like to assure delegations that there
is no intention, either in the concept paper or beyond it,
to deviate or detract from funding for development.
What is proposed would be additional to existing
measures, in order to help address some of the
questions that the representative raised about post-
conflict situations.
I now call on the representative of Pakistan.
Mr. Akram (Pakistan): First of all, I wish to
congratulate the United Kingdom on its assumption of
the presidency of the Security Council for the current
month and the delegation of South Africa on an
excellent presidency last month.
Madam President, we welcome this open debate
initiated by your Government on an important subject.
We align ourselves with the statement delivered by the
representative of Jamaica on behalf of the Non-Aligned
Movement.
Post-conflict peacebuilding is crucial for
establishing peace and sustainable development in war-
torn countries. Together with conflict prevention and
peacekeeping, peacebuilding must be part of a
comprehensive response to complex crises. While that
concept is well recognized, the challenge is to fully
operationalize it in post-conflict stabilization efforts, to
ensure coherence and synergy between peacekeeping
and peacebuilding activities from the very outset of the
engagement of the United Nations, and thus to ensure a
smooth transition from peacekeeping to conditions of
self-sustaining peace and development.
To ensure such synergy and effective
peacebuilding, the 2005 World Summit recognized the
need for a dedicated institutional mechanism. That led
to the establishment of the Peacebuilding Commission.
Together with the Peacebuilding Support Office and
the Peacebuilding Fund, the Commission is now the
central instrument for peacebuilding activities. The
unique structure and composition of the Commission
was conceived to bring together "all relevant actors to
marshal resources and to advise on and propose
integrated strategies for post-conflict peacebuilding
and recovery" (resolution 1645 (2005), para. 2 (a)).
Indeed, several issues reflected in the
presidency's concept paper for this debate (S/2008/29l, annex) - for example, the need to address the critical
gaps in peacebuilding - constituted the basic rationale
for the creation of the Peacebuilding Commission and
are indeed part of its mandate. As the Non-Aligned
Movement and others have pointed out, several of
those issues are being discussed by the Commission in
its various formats. We endorse the view that all
efforts, including this debate, should aim at
strengthening the role and the mandate of the
Peacebuilding Commission.
The coherence and integration of peacebuilding
activities and the provision of timely, adequate and
sustained funding are objectives that can best be
promoted by the Commission, since all major
stakeholders and partners are represented there.
However, in order to ensure that that task is conducted
effectively, the international community needs to
develop a common strategic vision of peacebuilding.
That requires, first, greater convergence between
the perspectives of the partners and those of the host
countries, based primarily on the priorities and policies
of the latter: national ownership and leadership are key
for the success of peacebuilding. Secondly, all actors
should demonstrate genuine political will and
flexibility to ensure effective peacebuilding. Thirdly, in
order to ensure a comprehensive approach, the
Peacebuilding Commission must be involved in
peacebuilding from the initial phases. The Security
Council should, we believe, make use of paragraph 16
of Council resolution 1645 (2005) and General
Assembly resolution 60/180 to seek the Commission's
advice in situations where peacekeeping missions are
still deployed. Empowerment of the Secretary-
General's Special Representatives to lead and
coordinate peacekeeping and peacebuilding is, of
course, desirable. However, this should not supplant,
but rather supplement, the authority and the role of
host countries.
There is, no doubt, a requirement for adequate
civilian expertise, particularly to support rule-of-law
activities. Such capacity is already being provided by
the United Nations in integrated missions. We also
support the Standing Police Capacity. However, the
concept of "rapidly deployable civilian capacities", in
large numbers and as a standing structure or
mechanism, needs further clarification with regard to
its objectives and scope, its actual requirements and its
possible implications. A somewhat similar proposal -
to establish a civilian cadre of 2,500 personnel - was
made earlier by the Secretary-General. It became the
object of numerous and legitimate questions and
concerns.
It should also be noted that civilian capacities
with relevant experience and perspectives are normally
available in the host countries and among their
diasporas, which can and should be harnessed and
utilized. Mr. Brahimi's comments this morning were
very pertinent in that regard. The objective should be
the durable development of national capacities, not
steps to replace them. These are conclusions that we
derive from the Peacebuilding Commission's
discussions relating to the countries on its agenda.
The identification of gaps is a key step in
formulating and implementing successful strategies.
That should be done not piecemeal but through an
objective and comprehensive diagnosis of the situation.
Experience has shown that the biggest and most
ominous gap in peacekeeping and peacebuilding
strategies is the failure to comprehend and address the
root causes of conflicts. In particular, the issues of
poverty and unemployment and the imperative of
socio-economic development have remained largely
neglected in plans and strategies.
Post-conflict challenges in several countries are
likely to become further exacerbated by the current
global food crisis. That was mentioned in the
Peacebuilding Commission's discussion on Sierra
Leone yesterday. We still lack a strategy that would
enable countries emerging from conflict to stand on
their own feet to achieve self-sustained peace and
development. Many promises of aid remain unfulfilled.
Often the benefit and effectiveness of such aid is open
to question, a point raised by others and by
Mr. Brahimi in this discussion.
One conclusion seems to be that such aid is best
channelled through the budgets of the host
Governments. On the other hand, many countries
afflicted by complex conflicts continue to be deprived
of revenues and earnings from their own resources, due
to unequal trade regimes, industrial country
agricultural subsidies, an inability to process their raw
materials and so forth. One example is again Sierra
Leone. Insufficient attention has been accorded to
national and international mechanisms to halt the
illegal exploitation of the natural resources of these
countries or, indeed, to enable the countries concerned
to make full use of those resources for the benefit of
their own peoples.
Thus, a fuller perspective of the peacebuilding
challenges and the formulation of adequate response
strategies are essential to achieve sustainable peace and
development. Such a comprehensive approach can be
best pursued through an inclusive and participatory
process. The Pakistan delegation expects and hopes
that the potential of the Peacebuilding Commission
will be fully utilized to this end by all Member States,
including by the members of the Council.
The President: Thank you very much for that
considered intervention and for highlighting the
importance of national capacity. I now have the
pleasure to give the floor to the representative of Peru.
Mr. Chavez (Peru) (spoke in Spanish): I would
like to commend the United Kingdom presidency for
proposing an exchange of views in the Council on
peacebuilding in post-conflict situations.
May I first make a few comments about national
ownership of the peacebuilding process. For Peru, each
conflict has its own internal as well as international
dynamic. Despite the underlying similarities in
economic or social structures in some conflicts, there
are ethnic, tribal, constitutional or historical
characteristics that mean that there are no two identical
cases or similar groups of relevant actors. Therefore, in
order to tackle the post-conflict process more
effectively, we have to recognize those features and not
follow a single format.
International actors must be aware that a genuine
process of ownership of the process of transition and
peacebuilding will be more sustainable in the context
of security - political, social, legal and economic - if
there is social legitimacy providing inclusivity. For
that, in addition to political elections, it is necessary to
verify practices, rules and institutions for adopting and
implementing agreements and for resolving disputes.
That will make it possible gradually to extend the
jurisdiction of the State, to affirm a legitimate authority
with the right to use force, to consolidate central
control of the territory with reformed security
institutions, and to establish policies to provide public
services, to administer natural resources, to encourage
investment and to increase budget resources so as to
arrive at self-sufficiency. Above all, the process must
respect the rule of law and protect human rights as
basic obligations.
As regards international cooperation, from the
outset it must essentially be directed to strengthening
the political system, the conflict resolution system and
the training of professional civil servants. At the same
time, we must highlight that quick-impact projects are
relevant for creating greater awareness and eliciting the
support of the local population. The participation of
international financial institutions and local and
international entrepreneurship are essential for the
success of the process.
All this implies a medium- and long-term
commitment, which means that the participation of the
international community, with the agreement of the
State concerned, may take place over several years and
in many priority areas and, in some cases, in great
depth. All that requires a strategic vision of the
peacebuilding process, especially because processes
are never linear - they may be regressive, or there
may be new circumstances that effect the legitimacy or
advances achieved in peacebuilding. That requires,
therefore, strategic association among the political,
social, educational and economic forces in the State
being consolidated and the relevant international
actors.
In a society that is rebuilding, it must be clear
that the international assistance it receives is designed
to strengthen the exercise of its own sovereignty, with
full respect for international law and the principles of
the United Nations Charter. It must be equally clear
that there is a time limit to the provision of aid and that
it must follow a programme with clear objectives to
measure its progress and viability.
For those who are cooperating, the strategic
association must respect political as well as social,
economic and historical characteristics and must be
based on a long-term commitment on the basis of
indicators of progress. In the case of regional or
international bodies and institutions of the United
Nations system, that long-term commitment requires a
convergence of actions and an additional effort for
coordination. It may be necessary for regional
organizations or the United Nations to lead the
international peacebuilding effort to guarantee
legitimacy, transparency, coordination and the correct
follow-up of the reconstruction process.
The organizations must, therefore, be endowed
with a great capacity for analysis, evaluation and
planning so that they can react to sudden changes in
the situation in the field that might endanger the
peacebuilding process. Similarly, there must be a
capacity to recognize the changes that the work of the
Government and the international actors is producing
on the ground so as to adjust policies and possibly the
agreed goals. We believe that the Secretary-General
can contribute with a description of the current
situation and proposals on enhancing the work of the
Organization, its organs, funds and programmes for
more concerted action.
My delegation wishes to highlight the work of the
Peacebuilding Commission, reiterates its support and
hopes the Commission will continue to contribute to
peacebuilding in Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Burundi
and other States that ask it for help. We will continue
to support constructively the leadership of the United
Nations and the Commission in those efforts.
The President: Thank you very much for that
considered statement. I now have the pleasure to give
the floor to the representative of Afghanistan.
Mr. Tanin (Afghanistan): First of all, let me avail
myself of this opportunity to join the previous speakers
in expressing our deepest condolences to the victims of
the cyclone in Myanmar and the earthquake in China.
Allow me also to express my delegation's
appreciation to the presidency of the United Kingdom
for organizing today's important and timely open
debate of the Security Council to consider the
challenges facing the international community in
stabilizing countries recovering from conflict and
delivering sustainable peace. We are also thankful for
the concept paper (S/2008/29l, annex), which is
certainly a comprehensive document that articulates
the realities of dealing with situations in countries
emerging from conflict. I am certain that the outcome
of this debate will greatly benefit nations going
through post-conflict stabilization and the
peacebuilding process, as well as the United Nations.
Emerging from more than two decades of armed
conflict, Afghanistan is well aware of the challenges
associated with post-conflict stabilization efforts.
Almost seven years ago, following the defeat of the
Taliban in December 2001, the Bonn Agreement laid
out the path to political transition in Afghanistan. It
was clear from the outset that the stabilization of
Afghanistan in the post-Taliban period would not be an
easy task nor a smooth transition. As a result of long
wars and foreign occupations, Afghanistan had become
a failed State and a broken society. The reality of the
situation was painted very tellingly today by
Mr. Brahimi.
In fact, about seven years ago, Afghanistan was a
geographical location without a State, a stage for
factional wars imposed by invaders and outsiders, a
safe haven for international terrorism and extremism, a
land where the people lived in constant fear of bandits
and thugs, and a country whose citizens were deprived
of all their rights. In addition, more than half of its
population, being female, could not go to school, work
or even obtain simple medical care.
The collapse of the State led to nation-wide
insecurity. Millions left the country or became
internally displaced, and the social trust had been
eroded. People reverted to traditional forms of mutual
support, such as tribal and ethnic alliances, which led
to increasing societal fragmentation. In a country
where agriculture was the chief engine of the economy,
illicit drugs became the main source of income. The
land began to fuel the war rather than to feed the
people.
Since the Bonn Agreement we have come a long
way, in cooperation with the international community,
in overcoming the enormous challenges of building the
foundation of a new political system aimed at
promoting long-term stability. We have adopted a new
constitution, and, in 2004 and 2005, we held
democratic presidential and parliamentary elections,
which were overwhelmingly supported by all the
people of Afghanistan.
To ensure security, recovery and development, we
embarked on security sector reform, which serves as
the lynchpin of the entire State-building process in the
country. Thanks to the support of our international
partners, our security forces have become stronger and
effective. Our national army has now reached the level
of 76,000 soldiers and has assumed a greater role in the
fight against terrorists seeking to destabilize
Afghanistan and the region.
In February 2006, five years after the Bonn
Agreement, the Afghan Government and the
international community came together in London to
design a new roadmap in order to solidify our
achievements and further empower Afghanistan to
attain sustainable peace and development.
Despite all these remarkable gains, we still face
challenges that pose a threat to our long-term stability.
There are at least four major challenges to peace and
stability in Afghanistan - terrorism, narcotics,
weakness of governance, and poverty. Those
challenges are interlinked, and they are an integral part
of the same threat. In dealing with them, we realize
that effective stabilization efforts in post-conflict
situations require a comprehensive and multifaceted
strategy, encompassing the essential components of
social and economic development, good governance,
human rights and the rule of law, and national
reconciliation. Such an approach demands a proactive
and sustained engagement of the international
community in the process.
From the beginning of the Bonn process in
Afghanistan, the United Nations has played a central
role in bringing the international community together
in order to help Afghanistan's transition from conflict
to peace, stability and democracy. During the last year,
a new momentum was built to reinvigorate the role of
the United Nations in Afghanistan. The appointment of
Mr. Kai Eide, the new Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, was an important and welcome
step.
Today, we have a broad consensus that the United
Nations should focus on its role as lead coordinator,
essential for re-energizing efforts to bring about
stabilization. The success of the United Nations in
delivering its mandate depends on uniting the efforts of
all international actors, including the donor
community, NATO, the European Union, countries of
the region, international financial institutions and
non-governmental organizations, in support of the
Government and the people of Afghanistan in their
struggle for peace, stability and progress. The key
elements for success of the United Nations in its role
entail the full cooperation of all parties in being
coordinated, as well as the mandate, resources and
adequate staff on the ground. That was something
Mr. Brahimi also emphasized today.
The role of the United Nations in Afghanistan,
similar to that in other post-conflict situations, is to
facilitate the stabilization efforts, including supporting
institution-building and acting as a bridge between the
international community and the Government and the
people.
While State-building is a collective effort in post-
conflict countries, national ownership of the process is
the core principle. Given the enabling role of the
international community, it is essential to invest more
in establishing capable and functioning national
institutions. To achieve that, we need to build national
capacity to deal successfully with challenges that arise
during the post-conflict stabilization. As experience
shows, effective State-building is like a spider web, in
that it works best when the web is built by the spiders
themselves.
As we have learned from our experiences, the
success of the international community and a national
Government in the process of recovery from conflict is
closely linked with the effective use of resources and
aid. It is paramount that the aid be need-driven, not
supply-driven. A coordinating strategy should reflect
the principles of aid effectiveness and the successful
delivery of aid aimed at improving the situation of the
country and the people.
In Afghanistan, the enemies of peace and stability
will continue their attempts to disrupt the efforts of the
Government and the people as well as those of our
international partners, efforts that are undertaken to
establish a stable, prosperous and democratic
Afghanistan. We are confident, however, that those
actions will not succeed in interfering with our long-
term goal of building a new Afghanistan. In this fight,
what we need is the continuing commitment of the
international community, time and resources.
I am confident that this debate will help the
international community to join its efforts more than
ever to deal with and address the challenges of post-
conflict stabilization as well as to enhance the
coordinating role of the United Nations.
The President: I thank the representative of
Afghanistan for his statement and for sharing with us
the lessons from Afghanistan. I now have the pleasure
of giving the floor to the representative of Turkey.
Mr. Ilkin (Turkey): Allow me to start by
reiterating our profound sorrow and heartfelt
condolences for the loss of a great number of lives
following the natural disasters in the People's Republic
of China and Myanmar. We wish the injured a speedy
and full recovery. I would also like to join previous
speakers in commending the United Kingdom's
presidency for organizing today's meeting on
post-conflict peacebuilding.
My delegation associates itself with the statement
made by Slovenia on behalf of the European Union. I
would like, however, to make a few remarks about
Turkey's approach to the subject.
Turkey has always been a staunch supporter of
United Nations peacebuilding efforts. In that regard,
we welcomed the establishment of the Peacebuilding
Commission, which we believe effectively fills an
institutional gap within the United Nations system in
terms of post-conflict management. The achievements
of the Peacebuilding Commission so far in Burundi,
Sierra Leone and Guinea-Bissau are encouraging. We
think that the long-term role and capacity of the
Peacebuilding Commission should be fostered to
enable it to include more post-conflict cases on its
agenda.
But that does not in any way absolve the States
concerned from their responsibilities to work to build
peace in their own countries. The ownership of
peacebuilding belongs first and foremost to the country
concerned itself.
Experience has shown that it is much easier to
win a war than to win the peace. There is a fine and
delicate line between peacekeeping and peacebuilding
and between peacebuilding and possible relapse.
Failure is inevitable if peace is not supported from day
one. Relapsing into conflict poses an even greater
threat. Tangible results can only be achieved if security
considerations and needs are addressed at a very early
stage in post-conflict situations. Failure to build
national security institutions can lead to the failure in
the peacebuilding process. We have seen that happen in
a number of countries in the post-conflict era.
Of course, peacebuilding is not only confined to
the security dimension. Simultaneous progress in all
the dimensions of peacebuilding is absolutely
necessary. Good governance, human rights and
capacity-building in all sectors are all part and parcel
of the process. One must therefore consider them all
together. It is crucial that the vast network of actors
operate effectively and coherently. Every country could
try to contribute to the process according to its own
resources and expertise. That is how we approach the
issue.
Cognizant of that wide framework, Turkey is
currently focusing on the security dimension of the
peacebuilding process and attaches particular
importance to the civilian police component of United
Nations missions. That is mainly because the demand
for United Nations civilian police in post-conflict
situations has grown tremendously. At present, Turkey
is the eleventh largest police contributor, with hundreds
of police officers serving in 10 different United
Nations missions. We intend to further increase that
contribution. With the ongoing growth in size and
complexity of United Nations operations, we believe
that we may consider undertaking a comprehensive
review of the capabilities and needs of the police
component at United Nations Headquarters. In that
respect, we equally welcome the establishment of the
Standing Police Capacity.
As for the issue of rapid and flexible funding, I
believe the Peacebuilding Fund sets a good example.
Contributions have exceeded the envisaged target of
$250 million. That shows the international
community's trust and faith in the success of the
Peacebuilding Commission. Turkey has already made a
contribution to the Peacebuilding Fund without any
caveat. Turkey will continue to support the
enhancement of the peacebuilding efforts of the United
Nations in every possible way.
The President: I thank the representative of
Turkey for his considered statement and for the focus
on policing. I now have the pleasure of giving the floor
to the representative of Slovakia.
Mr. Burian (Slovakia): At the outset, I wish to
underline that we fully align ourselves with the
statement made by the Permanent Representative of
Slovenia, who spoke on behalf of the European Union.
We would like to add a few additional comments on the
issue of post-conflict peacebuilding that we consider
important.
During the six decades of its existence, the
United Nations has accumulated immense experience
from its peacekeeping and peacebuilding endeavours.
However, it has not always been successful in applying
lessons learned and in avoiding mistakes in addressing
problems of post-conflict recovery in various countries.
Unprecedented growth in United Nations peacekeeping
engagements and operations will be unsustainable if
we do not find effective working solutions and exit
strategies. It can only be achieved if efficient
approaches to peacebuilding and best practices leading
to early and sustainable post-conflict recovery are
defined and put in practice.
The 2005 World Summit clearly defined the
nexus between security, development and human rights
on the global level. We must understand, however, that
the same applies to the local level. Only balanced and
coherent approaches to peacebuilding in all three areas
can secure sustainable peace and development in a
country emerging from violent conflict or civil war. We
must also understand that there are no quick fixes or
shortcuts. We have, all too often, witnessed initial
progress and success in one area being ruined because
they were not accompanied by similar progress and
consistent approaches in other areas, and the country
has subsequently slipped back into conflict and
violence.
We agree with the President's concept paper on
the fact that time is a precious commodity when
dealing with post-conflict situations. After the
conclusion of peace agreements, there is a narrow
window of opportunity, which might close if the
expectations on basic needs of people are not met. That
is why there is a need for efficient mechanisms
allowing for rapid reaction and immediate deployment,
not only for peacekeepers but also civilian experts
helping national authorities to design integrated
peacebuilding strategies aimed at strengthening
capacities in all critical areas: security; humanitarian
response; securing the basic needs of the population
while avoiding the creation of dependency on
humanitarian aid and assistance; establishing a solid
basis for sustainable development, the rule of law, and
respect for human rights; and, last but not least,
preventing impunity for gross violations of human
rights.
Those elements should be reflected in Security
Council mandates for peacekeeping missions from an
early stage of the United Nations involvement in
post-conflict peacebuilding. That urgency in
developing adequate capacities and strategies from the
very beginning of international engagement is
important so as to ensure that the peacebuilding
priorities and challenges are expeditiously and
sufficiently addressed, including by creating synergies
and complementarity between peacebuilding efforts
and reform processes and by identifying solutions that
are tailored to countries' specific needs and
circumstances. It is important to underline in this
context that national ownership is always crucial for
the sustainability of the peacebuilding process.
The entire United Nations system must work in
harmony and complementarity. There must be
synergies between the activities and agendas of the
various United Nations bodies and agencies in a
post-conflict environment. There is no place for
competition between them or unnecessary duplication.
We believe integrated missions represent a step
forward in that direction. There is, however, a need to
examine how to improve their functions and mandates
so as to achieve greater coherence and better reflect a
holistic approach to post-conflict recovery.
In that regard, we believe that the potential,
expertise and comparative advantages of United
Nations agencies such as UNDP, the United Nations
Population Fund, UNICEF and the World Food
Programme should better incorporate such an approach
and not attempt to replace or duplicate it in the
structure and functions of integrated missions. That
would, in our view, also allow, later, for an easier
transition from peacekeeping to peacebuilding, when
the mission leaves and the agencies assume their
traditional development functions. We believe that the
United Nations is best suited to generate long-term
support, funding and assistance. It might also be
acceptable as an impartial player, to coordinate the
actions of various stakeholders of the international
community and to secure coherent and consistent
approaches.
The Peacebuilding Commission has clearly
demonstrated its added value in that respect, and we
wish to commend its work thus far. At the same time,
we believe that its capacities and tools must be further
expanded and adjusted for it to be able to respond to
the concrete and diverse needs and requests for
assistance of a larger number of Member States. In that
regard, we also believe the Security Council should
consider adding new States to the agenda of the
Peacebuilding Commission.
In conclusion, allow me to say a few words about
an issue that was discussed in the Security Council last
week (see S/PV.5889) and which has direct relevance
to the discussion today. I am referring to security sector
reform. Security sector reform is an important element
of every post-conflict stabilization process. We are
pleased with the level of understanding on the
necessity of a holistic and system-wide approach to
security sector reform that has been reached within the
United Nations over the past year. Cases such as Haiti
and Timor-Leste clearly demonstrate that, without
comprehensive security sector reform, including the
establishment of functioning and accountable security,
justice and corrections institutions, no sustainable
solutions are possible. The recommendations of the
Secretary-General in his recent report on security
sector reform (S/2008/39), including the creation of an
inter-agency coordination mechanism within the
Secretariat and a pool of external experts, are fully in
line with the thrust and logic of this debate, and we
believe they should be implemented as soon as
possible.
Finally, thematic debates, such as the current one,
involving various aspects of efficient peacebuilding
contribute to a better understanding of the problem.
Now there is a need to consolidate the mandate of the
Security Council and the various United Nations
bodies and create proper United Nations tools and
mechanisms to also reflect that understanding in
practice. In that respect, we welcome the draft
presidential statement prepared by the
United Kingdom, which summarizes the basic
principles of post-conflict peacebuilding and, among
other things, invites the Secretary-General to provide
advice within 12 months for the relevant
United Nations organs on how best to take this issue
forward within the United Nations system. We fully
support that idea, and we are ready to participate in
future discussions on the matter.
The President: I thank the representative of
Slovakia for again highlighting security sector reform.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Guatemala.
Mr. Rosenthal (Guatemala) (spoke in Spanish):
Thank you, Madam President, for convening this open
debate and for having circulated an informative
concept paper (S/2008/29l, annex).
More than 11 years have passed since the
Guatemalan peace accords were signed. Notable
progress has been achieved, to such an extent that it is
a matter of pride for us that the standing item on the
situation in Central America no longer appears on the
agenda of the General Assembly. However, some
effects of the conflict persist to the present day and, at
any rate, the peace process in Guatemala offers some
lessons that, in our opinion, can enrich today's debate.
I would like to refer very briefly to four characteristics
of our peace process, which, in turn, support four
conclusions. These address some of the questions
posed in the concept paper.
First, it was the national stakeholders, in
particular the Government and the Unidad
Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca, that led the
peace process. The United Nations and the Group of
Friends of the process were invited by both sides to
support the negotiations and, subsequently, the
implementation of the peace agreement. At no time did
Guatemalans in general perceive external actors as
intrusive elements. Rather, they were present at the
express request of the parties. I mention this only
because the concept paper circulated today to orient
our debate emphasizes the role of the United Nations in
post-conflict situations. But before the Organization
gets involved, however obvious this may seem, it is
indispensable for national stakeholders to bear the
primary responsibility for peacebuilding. That
underlines the role that the United Nations can play in
domestic capacity-building.
Secondly, the United Nations has played a
uniquely important role in Guatemala, the scope of
which has changed over time. The Organization was
perceived as an objective facilitator without an agenda
of its own. First, it supported the negotiations between
the parties. Then it played a verification role with
respect to human rights. In 1997, that verification role
was augmented to cover all aspects of the peace
accords. In 2004, as proof of the progress achieved, the
United Nations Verification Mission left Guatemala.
But the United Nations presence has continued and is
now manifested through an office of the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.
It is also interesting to note that, except for a
brief Security Council mandate to send a contingent of
military observers to Guatemala for three months, the
United Nations presence was always under the
authority of the General Assembly.
Thirdly, during the existence of the
United Nations Verification Mission in Guatemala, the
United Nations had two presences in Guatemala: the
director of the Verification Mission and the Resident
Coordinator of the United Nations system. While that
situation at times led to overlap and a certain amount
of tension, it did not in general impede an acceptable
level of coherence in the Organization's activities in
Guatemala. That was due to two elements. On the one
hand, it was the Government that set the priorities and
guidelines for action for such activities, and on the
other hand, the two heads of mission made deliberate
efforts to act in a coordinated manner. In that respect,
although the recommendation contained in the concept
paper prepared by the United Kingdom on placing all
United Nations activities under the responsibility of a
single person is noteworthy, our experience also
suggests that alternative pragmatic solutions that can
be acceptable from the point of view of coherency.
Finally, I mentioned at the outset that some
effects of the conflict persist, which is another way of
saying that the phase of peacebuilding and
reconciliation can be protracted. That is especially true
when a change of attitude is needed so that a culture of
tolerance and dialogue can blossom where it did not
exist before.
The concept paper to which I have referred
several times correctly emphasizes the near term, but
our experience indicates that we must persist for a very
long time if we wish the rule of law and democratic
institutions to take root. It is for that reason, and to
combat the important islands of impunity that still
persist in my country, that last year Guatemala again
partnered with the United Nations in a creative
exercise to strengthen penal prosecution through the
creation of the International Commission against
Impunity in Guatemala.
Those are the points we wished to bring to the
attention of this Chamber.
The President: I call on the representative of
Thailand.
Mr. Punkrasin (Thailand): First of all, Madam, I
wish to congratulate your delegation on its assumption
of the presidency of the Security Council for the month
of May. I would also like to take this opportunity to
express appreciation, through you, to the United
Kingdom for its initiative to hold this timely open
debate on post-conflict peacebuilding and for the
concept paper for the debate.
Peacebuilding requires the sincerity and genuine
commitment of all parties concerned. The lesson that
we have painfully learnt is that many conflicts settled
through negotiations and peace agreements are, in fact,
unsettled. Within a few days, weeks, months or years,
many areas relapse into conflict. Those who suffer the
most are civilians, especially innocent women and
children. They have to bear the brunt and brutality of
wars, scared for their lives and unable to see what kind
of future, if any, might lay ahead for them. Conflict can
leave life physically and mentally scarred. The relapse
of peace into war may further shatter the people's
spirits and hopes. The fragility of peace is therefore
something we need to watch carefully, and we must
expend our utmost effort to break the vicious circle of
conflict.
In order to secure lasting negotiated peace, there
is an urgent need to implement peace agreements to
maintain the commitments of parties. From a different
perspective, when the relapse occurs we need to look
back and carefully and critically examine what went
wrong, why the conflict broke out again and why peace
did not last. Perhaps the peace was forced; perhaps the
agreement was unfair; perhaps the parties were
pressured into giving in. As a result, the peace was not
real. Despite good intentions, it was filled with
mistrust and lacked the spirit of cooperation. What is
more important is what we should do to address the
error and prevent the future repetition of history.
As I mentioned earlier, peacebuilding needs the
sincerity and commitment of all parties, and they must
be prevalent at all levels, including the local, national,
regional and international levels. The international
community, the United Nations in particular, could
play a vital supporting role in building and sustaining
peace in areas emerging from conflict. It must be
emphasized that international undertakings must be
made with a coherent approach and in a coordinated
manner.
A number of United Nations system agencies are
involved in the peacebuilding processes, including the
Department of Peacekeeping Operations, the
Department of Political Affairs, the Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the United
Nations Development Programme, the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and
UNICEF. Also pertinent are other international
organizations, the international financial institutions,
regional organizations and civil society.
However, it is imperative that peacebuilding be
nationally owned if it is to last after the end of
international peacebuilding support in that area.
International leadership on the ground is important, but
it is even more important that the international
community promote local and national leadership and
capacity on the ground and thereby reinforce national
ownership.
Peace should be looked at not only from the
military perspective; it should also be considered in the
socio-economic, cultural and development contexts.
Peacebuilding should enhance security, stability, justice
and the rule of law, good governance, socio-economic
development and, ultimately, human security and the
livelihood of the people. My delegation welcomes the
presidential statement on security sector reform, issued
under the symbol S/PRST/2008/14 and adopted last
week, which rightly points out that such reform is a
necessary component of peacebuilding. However, it is
only one among many.
The peacebuilding process must lay the
foundations for both security and sustainable
development. Security sector reform can help improve
the institutional infrastructures of a war-torn country,
but it may not expeditiously yield direct improvement
in the lives of the people in the short and long terms.
My delegation is of the view that it is essential that
peacebuilding incorporate development elements in its
agenda. The scope of peacebuilding may thus have to
be expanded and would be more suitable for discussion
in the frameworks of the Peacebuilding Commission
and the General Assembly. However, the inclusion of
development issues opens more windows for the
international community to contribute more assistance
to the multifaceted peacebuilding process.
The presidential statement also emphasizes the
important role of the Peacebuilding Commission in
ensuring continuous international support for
post-conflict countries. My delegation believes that the
Commission would be the appropriate forum, under the
guidance of both the Security Council and the General
Assembly, for such discussions in detail concerning
international peacebuilding efforts and strategies.
There have been some debates concerning the
transition and gap between peacekeeping and
peacebuilding activities on the peace continuum. The
United Kingdom's concept paper raises the issues of
rapidly deployable capacity and funding. My
delegation would like to share its initial thought that
peacebuilding activities could and should be prepared
in advance in terms of human and financial resources.
The activities may have to begin, in some cases, even
before the completion of the peacekeeping operations.
A smooth transition must also be ensured. As a member
of the Non-Aligned Movement, my delegation is aware
of the discussion concerning the line drawn between
peacekeeping and peacebuilding. It may be a necessary
overlap, but the special representative of the
Secretary-General and the resident coordinator may
perhaps have to play dual roles in both activities.
As a troop-contributing country, Thailand has
participated in United Nations and international
peacekeeping operations for many decades. My
delegation always views our troop contributions as an
honour for the opportunity to work side by side with
peacekeepers from other troop-contributing countries
and to help bring peace to the world. My delegation
can assure the Security Council that our commitment to
United Nations peacekeeping remains unwavering.
Furthermore, as members may well be aware, Thai
troops are recognized not only for their bravery, but
also for their congeniality, expertise and development
contributions to local communities.
For us, the concept of peace equalling security
and development is not new at all. Our interest has
never been limited to peacekeeping. My delegation
believes that we could perform even better in
peacebuilding activities. With our experiences and
expertise to share, we could make a tremendous
contribution to the Peacebuilding Commission. It is in
that regard that Thailand has decided to present its
candidature for the Organizational Committee of the
Commission in the General Assembly category for the
term 2008-2010.
The absence of conflict does not mean that there
is peace. Peace itself and peacebuilding are a long
process of reconciliation. Peace can be sustained not by
force, but by nurture. It is mainly the responsibility of
all parties concerned to faithfully adhere to jointly
accepted peace agreements. The international
community must also sincerely assist countries
emerging from conflict, whenever needed and possible,
in building peace in those countries, regions and the
world.
The President: I thank the representative of
Thailand for his very thoughtful contribution and for
highlighting the issue of sustainable development. I
now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Nigeria.
Mrs. ngu (Nigeria): The Nigerian delegation
deeply appreciates your initiative, Madam President,
not only in convening this open debate, but also in
providing a timely concept paper (S/2008/29l, annex),
which highlights the underlying principles and
challenges confronting post-conflict peacebuilding.
We share your view that peace operations are a
shared responsibility that depends on the support and
cooperation of a range of actors. As a result of our
experience in Nigeria, and as a country that has
devoted enormous resources - including lives - to
United Nations peacekeeping around the world, we
believe that the primary challenge is how to translate
peacebuilding initiatives into concrete benefits that
touch human lives at basic levels. Another persistent
challenge is how to coordinate and create synergy
among various peacebuilding actors and stakeholders
for a fully integrated response following the signing of
peace agreements. Overcoming those challenges
demands swift implementation of the strategic
frameworks developed for the countries on the agenda
of the Peacebuilding Commission.
Peacebuilding requires sustained political
attention as well as flexible financial and material
resources. Only when these are combined with speedy
delivery can tangible results become manifest. We are
witnesses to situations where the slow delivery of
approved funds has compounded the difficulties of
recovery efforts and, in fact, has impeded the
deployment of international personnel and materiel. We
would therefore like to caution against political and
financial apathy, especially when time is of the essence
and the situation is urgent.
In that context, and mindful of the ever-
increasing demands on the Peacebuilding Fund, which
have raised valid concerns about its sustainability, we
urge the establishment of a funds monitoring and
tracking mechanism to follow up on the commitments
often made at donor conferences. My delegation
endorses the call for the establishment of a United
Nations fund to provide support for reconstruction. In
order to ensure its efficacy and solvency, such a fund
should, in addition to seeking contributions from
national Governments, explore voluntary funding
sources such as multilateral banks, international
foundations and global corporations.
Regarding the enhancement of civilian capacity
in critical functional areas, such as justice and security
sector reform, health services, civil service
administration and transitional justice, we believe that
Nigeria's Technical Aid Corps programme constitutes a
model that the Peacebuilding Commission should seek
to adopt to fill capacity gaps in post-conflict countries.
Since its inception, in 1987, more than
3,000 volunteers have been deployed on a bilateral
basis across 38 African, Caribbean and Pacific
countries. Under the Technical Aid programme,
specialized personnel - medical doctors, nurses,
lawyers, educationists and engineers - are deployed
from Nigeria to provide support and capacity-building
for the receiving countries, on the basis, of course, of
the requests and expressed needs of those countries. In
post-conflict situations, the Peacebuilding
Commission, in consultation with national
Governments and other stakeholders, can build on this
model to solve capacity limitation problems, especially
in addressing the need for judicial experts, human
rights specialists and civilian police. That is a crucial
way to ensure that appropriate experts are rapidly
deployed.
In a globalized world, there are imperatives for
effective peacebuilding. Coordination and coherence
constitute such imperatives. We therefore call for
improved coordination among international
peacebuilding actors in the field. The Peacebuilding
Commission needs to strengthen its relationships with
non-governmental development partners and with
regional and subregional organizations. In that context,
we believe that the African Union's Policy Framework
on Post-Conflict Reconstruction and Development and
the conflict resolution mechanism of the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which
deals explicitly with peacebuilding, should guide
peacebuilding efforts in Africa.
My delegation wishes to underline the importance
of the regional dimension to the entire peacebuilding
process in Africa. The threats posed by illicit arms
trafficking, human and drug trafficking, the energy and
debt crises, internal militancy and other transboundary
challenges cannot be neglected. The nexus between
those threats and incessant relapses into conflict should
never be discounted. Indeed, my delegation believes
that those issues, in particular the proliferation of small
arms and light weapons, constitute the greatest threats
to peacebuilding in Africa. In recognition of that
reality, Nigeria has been unrelenting in providing
financial and material support for the implementation
of several peacebuilding projects in the subregion -
under, of course, the rubric of ECOWAS - and we
pledge to continue to do so.
The President: I thank the representative of
Nigeria for setting out some important areas for
follow-up, including drawing on the experiences of the
Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) and Nigeria.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of India.
Mr. Sen (India): Let me begin by joining others
in expressing India's heartfelt condolences on the
losses of lives sustained by two of our close
neighbours, the People's Republic of China and
Myanmar, as a result of natural calamities. Let me also
place on record our appreciation of the leadership of
the Security Council by the United Kingdom
presidency for the month of may.
It was in recognition of the international
community's less-than-stellar record in securing lasting
peace after more successfully stopping conflict that we
established the Peacebuilding Commission as the
centrepiece of an international effort to promote
post-conflict peace consolidation. In that context, our
delegation aligns itself with the statement made by the
Permanent Representative of Jamaica on behalf of the
Non-Aligned Movement.
I shall try to address the questions posed in the
concept paper (S/2008/29l, annex). The roots of
peacebuilding go deep into the Security Council
mandate on peacekeeping. It is therefore important to
implement Article 44 of the United Nations Charter
and to involve troop-contributing countries in shaping
that mandate. For instance, our armed forces have
effective programmes aimed at winning minds and
hearts.
National ownership is essential in peacebuilding.
This is not just a question of sovereignty; it is a
functional matter. For instance, schools and clinics
have on occasion been constructed by multiple
agencies and non-governmental organizations in
post-conflict situations, which later were found
unsustainable, leading to duplication and waste.
National ownership mitigates this. While the paper
correctly points out the need for better operational
coordination among international agencies on the
ground, empowerment of Special Representatives of
the Secretary-General is not necessarily the solution,
especially if such concentration of authority is
achieved at the expense of nascent national leadership,
which is often an inevitable if unintended consequence.
It is national ownership that must assess critical
requirements and gaps and must share that assessment
institutionally with those who have the ability to
deliver on bridging those gaps. That would also help us
respond to the problem posed by the inadequacy of
international resources in helping to stabilize
post-conflict countries when everything is urgent.
As for the planning and running of operations,
including the international financial institutions, the
Peacebuilding Commission has the mandate to bring
together and mobilize all actors, especially in
marshalling resources. Above all, it signals the
commitment of the international community to the
State concerned, unique as a hedge against political
risk to private capital.
The Bretton Woods institutions need to be
brought into an optimal agenda. They advised
Cambodia to reduce its civil service by 20 per cent -
after Pol Pot had already decimated it. The downsizing
was apparently not enough for them. Four countries in
Africa that collapsed into civil war had been, in the
preceding ten years, 62 to 83 per cent under a
programme of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Mining companies sometimes leave next to nothing to
Governments for spending on social infrastructure.
IMF pressure to privatize makes such imbalanced
contracting more likely. It would be useful for the
World Bank or another expert body to develop model
auction procedures and model contracts.
The concept paper touches upon factors that
hamper efforts of the United Nations and the
international community in country. The
United Nations contractual system needs to be
streamlined and conditions of service of the Secretariat
staff in the field harmonized with those of funds and
programmes in order to get and retain personnel of
better quality.
The concept paper outlines the need to establish a
rapidly deployable civilian capacity. That idea must be
elaborated through open, inclusive and transparent
negotiations in order to give the end result greater
legitimacy. India hopes to participate fully in
discussing this concept, which holds the promise of a
new paradigm of cooperation between developed and
developing States. Once the concept is fully elaborated,
recruitment of those who can deploy the appropriate
talents, skills and technologies would greatly help in
peacebuilding.
In conclusion, I would like to underline our
support for the notion that post-conflict peace
consolidation remains one of the most serious
challenges that the United Nations faces collectively.
However, we cannot produce more creative and
flexible approaches to address that challenge unless we
are willing to move beyond fixed positions. Outside
these walls, the world sees only one United Nations,
not its constituent organs or Member States. Our effort
must therefore be based on a more collective and
inclusive approach, one that justifies the first word of
the title: the United Nations.
The President: Thank you very much, Sir, for
that very thoughtful statement and the focus on
integration.
Before giving the floor to the next speaker, may I
note that we have 12 more speakers on the list. The
interpreters have kindly agreed to continue past
6 o'clock, but I encourage remaining speakers to stick
to the limit set at the beginning; that would be very
helpful.
The next speaker is the representative of
Honduras, to whom I give the floor.
Mr. Reina Idiaquez (Honduras) (spoke in Spanish): Before beginning my statement I would like
to express, on behalf of Honduras, the most sincere
sense of solidarity with the Governments and peoples
of Myanmar and China at the recent loss of human
lives caused by natural disasters in those countries.
First, I wish to convey to the presidency the
appreciation of my delegation for convening this
timely special meeting of the Security Council to focus
on post-conflict reconstruction. Holding these open
meetings on a regular basis is a step forward in the
search for transparency and equality of opportunity for
delegations to participate in the work of this important
organ of our Organization. It should be an example to
follow.
This meeting, an initiative of the
United Kingdom, is an essential step in our discussions
about the Council and the need to reform and expand it
and, more than anything, to become aware of the fact
that currently, peacekeeping operations authorized by
the Council must always include political, economic,
social and humanitarian components so that the local
problems can be tackled after all hostilities have
ceased.
Reconstruction in post-conflict situations is
indispensable to avoid a return to deplorable situations
of armed conflict. My country, Honduras, at the heart
of the Americas, after turbulent events in the Central
American region that have fortunately receded into the
past, finds itself a democracy with regional institutions
for economic, political and social integration. The
Central American Integration System, the Central
American Parliament, the Central American Bank for
Economic Integration and the Central American Court
of Justice are among the most relevant. All that has
been achieved after many meetings and discussions at
the regional level, which led to the institutionalization
of Central American summits, which are held quite
often to resolve the most important problems in the
region. Honduras has made Central American
integration its standard, and today we wish to
contribute with our message to the experiences
acquired.
Central America has the most comprehensive
experience of successes when it comes to organizing
peace, because the United Nations set up the Observer
Group in Central America, the Observer Mission to
Verify the Electoral Process in Nicaragua, the Observer
Mission in El Salvador and the Verification Mission in
Guatemala in the region in a continuous and
thoroughgoing process, in full cooperation with the
Governments of the region.
My delegation has accompanied all recent
reforms of the international architecture undertaken
under the guidance of the United Nations and the
proposals of the Secretary-General, so now the
Peacebuilding Commission is a reality, the Human
Rights Council is operating, and the special missions of
the Economic and Social Council are contributing to
improving the prospects for resolving and preventing
domestic conflict and, further, making it possible to
take the necessary measures to help the local
populations to avoid new outbursts of violence.
It is precisely in preventing conflict that one finds
the best response to conflict. Military peacekeeping
operations per se are not so complex if we compare
them to the problems that remain in various States and
regions after an armed conflict.
Today we are facing greater challenges with the
current energy and food crises and the disruptions of
nature caused by the serious alterations of climate
change. My country recognizes the proposals in the
concept paper prepared by the United Kingdom for
consideration and analysis (8/2008/291, annex). It
contains elements of great value that require more and
better discussion. The proposals must be viewed in a
holistic manner, along with the concepts in the Brahimi
report on peace operations (S/2000/809). We should
also take into consideration the earlier resolutions of
this Council, the General Assembly and the Economic
and Social Council that deal with humanitarian and
social affairs.
Any crisis will come with many perspectives and
facets, and the analysis of a crisis must examine
problems such as social inequality, massive violations
of human rights, lack of political participation, racial
discrimination, economic disparities and racial
segregation. These are just some of the elements that
generate armed national conflicts and transcend
international borders when they provoke a flow of
refugees.
Honduras considers that the Millennium
Development Goals are an indispensable tool for
averting conflict, and that is why we appeal to the
international community - in particular, what are
called the industrialized countries - to become aware
of their international responsibility for eradicating
extreme poverty and hunger in the world.
Millions of people in the world live on less than
one dollar per day. They are the first to feel the deadly
impact of the "silent tsunami", as some have called the
food crisis caused by the sudden rise in the prices of
food commodities. The world experienced a dramatic
increase in food prices in the first quarter of 2008, and
in real terms the prices of staple foods reached peaks
unheard of in three decades. This crisis will exacerbate
world poverty and malnutrition, so we must improve
coordination and increase the preventive and response
capacity of Governments and international bodies.
Innovative alternatives must be found to enhance
the establishment of integrated peace operations for the
benefit of humankind. The international community
cannot continue to ignore the pleas of the world's
dispossessed and to attempt to solve its problems using
military means as a priority, when the causes of those
problems are social and humanitarian.
The President: I thank the representative of
Honduras for sharing conclusions drawn from his own
country's experience, as well as for highlighting the
Economic and Social Council debate on food security.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Argentina.
Mr. Argiiello (Argentina) (spoke in Spanish):
First of all let me congratulate the United Kingdom
presidency on the way it has been guiding the Security
Council debate during the month of May. At the same
time, I thank you, Madam President, for the timely
convening of this open debate on a theme of great
importance at the present time, a theme on which your
country plays a leadership role.
My country considers that United Nations and, in
particular, the Security Council have a key
responsibility in the maintenance of international peace
and security. Likewise, the Organization has a crucial
role to play in post-conflict peacebuilding in laying the
foundation for sustainable peace and development.
One of the greatest challenges facing the
international community and the United Nations is to
support States in recovering from conflict and building
sustainable peace. An effective response by the
Organization requires the preparation of a broad,
coordinated strategy, based on identifying priorities
and setting specific goals and time frames. This task
requires many kinds of activities: political, security,
rule of law, humanitarian, development and the defence
of and respect for human rights.
In that stage of preparing a broad strategy and
identifying the priorities, we emphasize the importance
of national ownership: the participation and
responsibility of the authorities of the country
emerging from conflict, which should be involved
throughout the reconstruction process in order to
ensure an agreed response that can address the root
causes of a conflict with greater legitimacy and
effectiveness.
My country welcomes the work of the
Peacebuilding Commission as an advisory body on the
coordination of all international activities and
resources aimed at post-conflict stabilization. It plays a
crucial role in coordinating national authorities and all
other actors involved in reconstruction and
development, including United Nations bodies and
agencies, international financial institutions, civil
society and the private sector. We believe that the role
of the Peacebuilding Commission, the Peacebuilding
Support Office and the Peacebuilding Fund should be
enhanced.
My delegation also wishes to highlight the
important role of regional and subregional
organizations in the prevention, management and
resolution of conflicts, in accordance with Chapter VIII
of the Charter of the United Nations, and the need to
strengthen the capacities of regional arrangements in
helping countries to recover and rebuild after a
conflict.
I wish in conclusion to repeat once more what we
have said before in this Chamber: that Argentina is
convinced of the Organization's responsibility in
supporting countries recovering from conflict -
together with their national authorities and in
collaboration with regional arrangements and other
actors - in order to rebuild and strengthen their
institutions and to avoid forever the recurrence of a
conflict scenario.
The President: I thank the representative of
Argentina for his very well considered and thoughtful
intervention.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Papua New Guinea.
Mr. Aisi (Papua New Guinea): I thank you,
Madam President, for convening this important
meeting on a subject that continues to challenge all of
us in one way or another. I also wish the
United Kingdom all the very best during the remainder
of its term as President of the Council.
On 16 June 2005, the Security Council wound up
the seven-year-old United Nations mandate which had
overseen the resolution of the bloody 10-year civil
conflict which had raged on the island of Bougainville
in Papua New Guinea. Sadly, it is estimated that
between 10,000 and 15,000 - and maybe more -
people, including women and children, lost their lives
in a national tragedy that could have been avoidable.
A few months earlier, between 20 May and 9 June
2005, the first general elections for the President and
members of the House of Representatives had been
held to form the Autonomous Bougainville
Government. That historic election had been made
possible under constitutional arrangements agreed
between the Government of Papua New Guinea and the
leaders of Bougainville. The United Nations was also a
critical part ofthat process.
The agreed constitutional arrangements also
allows for the devolution of powers in areas such as
land, the judiciary, finance, transportation and
communications, to name but a few. The powers
relating to defence and foreign affairs continue to
remain national functions. Uniquely, the same
constitutional arrangements provide for a referendum
to be held amongst the people of Bougainville within
15 years of the election of the first Autonomous
Bougainville Government.
To some extent the three points raised in
paragraph 2 of the excellent concept paper from the
United Kingdom Mission (S/2008/291, annex) had
been met when the United Nations mandate was wound
up. Those points are, first, rapid implementation of the
peace agreement to maintain the commitment of the
parties; secondly, the re-establishment of stability and
the rule of law; and, finally, a demonstrable
improvement to the lives of the local people.
The overall involvement of the United Nations
during the mandate, although small in both manpower
and budget, was very effective. One element that the
United Nations was able to bring during the
formulation of the peace process was an independent
perspective, which assisted all the parties to agree on
critical aspects of how the peace process was to be
structured.
A very strong regional dimension, especially the
involvement of our immediate neighbours in the
Pacific, contributed strongly to the success of the peace
process. By the time the United Nations mandate was
wound up, countries such as Tonga, Fiji, Vanuatu,
Samoa and the Solomon Islands had assisted in some
way or another, with major logistical support provided
by both Australia and New Zealand, which enabled the
maintenance of all personnel on the ground in
Bougainville. Japan also assisted.
Added to this, the critical political support from
both the Government of Papua New Guinea and the
leaders of Bougainville was also an important aspect.
Over the life of the United Nations mandate, three
successive Papua New Guinea Governments affirmed
that the resolution of the Bougainville conflict was
critical to the stability of Papua New Guinea and thus
saw it as a bipartisan imperative. In the end, this
continued strong commitment saw the required
amendment to the Papua New Guinea constitution to
effect the Bougainville peace process overwhelmingly
supported by the national parliament.
The current situation is that, as we move towards
the third anniversary of the dissolution of the United
Nations mandate over Bougainville, next month, the
peace process continues. Political commitment at the
highest levels of our Government continues. The civil
service and senior officials on both sides continue to
maintain, within the framework of joint meetings, the
process of steady devolution of powers under the
constitutional arrangement. The people of Bougainville
have also taken part in the national election process,
the most recent being during the middle of last year.
Our regional partners continue to assist us in areas
such as police training, and the United Nations,
through its agencies, continues to deliver in various
areas, such as girls' education.
The national Government continues to provide
for Bougainville in its annual budget.
That said, it seems the more critical issue here is
the third point covered in the concept paper: that of "a
demonstrable improvement to the lives of local people"
(8/2008/291, annex, paragraph 2). I would suggest that
this point presents a potential gap that could hamper
national, regional and international efforts.
The situation on the ground on Bougainville
remains one that requires constant vigilance and
attention. The danger is that recurring incidents of
minor violence always have the potential to provoke
larger acts of violence that could lead to wider
instability. We have seen instances and signs of this in
the last three years. Fortunately, the incidents have
been contained so far. So the connection between the
need to maintain focus on reintegrating ex-combatants
and the need to assist the wider community in
developing a range of skills, especially vocational
skills, is an important focus area.
It is important to underline the importance of a
gender perspective in the process of post-conflict
peacebuilding. There is a global consensus that a
gender perspective is critical in the development
agenda; so too it would seem critical in the conflict
resolution and peacebuilding processes. Much of
Bougainville is matrilineal. When the women of
Bougainville were re-empowered, the peace process
could be better facilitated. Perhaps the toolkit of
response measures for conflict resolution and
peacebuilding should include a realization that local
customs and traditions must be better understood.
We support the position of the Non-Aligned
Movement on the functionality of the Peacebuilding
Commission, and we seek the Commission's support in
assisting us in strengthening the peacebuilding process
on Bougainville, in Papua New Guinea.
The President: I thank the representative of
Papua New Guinea for his statement and for
highlighting his country's experience. I now have
pleasure in giving the floor to the representative of
Georgia.
Mr. Alasania (Georgia): At the outset, let me
express my condolences to the families of victims of
the tragedies caused by the natural disasters in China
and Myanmar.
I would like to extend our gratitude to the United
Kingdom Mission to the United Nations for the
excellent opportunity afforded us to address this crucial
issue.
Georgia aligns itself with the statement made by
the Slovenian representative on behalf of European
Union.
Georgia considers the Peacebuilding
Commission, in close cooperation with the other main
United Nations bodies, as the most important
instrument in the field of peacebuilding, post-conflict
rehabilitation and stabilization. As a member of the
newly established body, Georgia is looking forward to
the implementation of the strategic frameworks in
those respective fields.
As we are discussing comprehensive issues
related to post-conflict peacebuilding, allow me to
contribute with observations based on experience
gained during 15 years of hosting peacekeeping
operations in Abkhazia, Georgia.
We believe that a strong peacekeeping operation
has to be supported by solid law enforcement and
security elements in order to create the secure
environment necessary for ensuring the normal rhythm
of life. We refer to the impartial international civilian
law enforcement elements, which can effectively
restore law and order and ensure the dignified and safe
return of refugees and internally displaced persons to
their homes.
For more than a decade now, we have been
witnessing that most of the objectives of the current
peacekeeping forces in Abkhazia, Georgia have not
been achieved. Clearly, our experience seriously calls
into question the rationale of having an immediate
neighbour country serving as the dominant
peacekeeper in the conflict. In our case, the gradual
shift from a military peacekeeping operation to an
international police operation with capabilities for
addressing threats to security and stability is inevitable.
We assume that the role of an effective international
police force should include anti-crime patrols,
investigation of crimes and human rights violations and
the training of local police forces.
We are confident that efficient conflict resolution
in Abkhazia, Georgia requires the appropriate
enlargement and enforcement of the mandate of the
United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia
(UNOMIG), especially in the field of law enforcement
activities. Together with operational functions, the new
mandate should allow the civilian police to supervise,
guide and train joint local police forces to enforce the
law effectively and impartially. The primary goal of the
international civilian police is to restore law and order
and assist national institutions while maintaining full
respect for the host country's sovereignty.
Based on our experience, the blueprint for a
successful peacekeeping operation includes
impartiality guaranteed by wider international
representation and solid collective international efforts
to ensure the operation's responsiveness to the changes
on the ground.
The President: I thank the representative of
Georgia for his statement and for his account of
Georgia's own experiences. I now have pleasure in
giving the floor to the representative of the Republic of
Korea.
Mr. Kim Bong-Hyun (Republic of Korea): Let
me join previous speakers in thanking the presidency
of the United Kingdom for organizing this open debate
on post-conflict peacebuilding. I would like to take this
opportunity on behalf of my delegation to convey our
sincere condolences to the peoples of China and
Myanmar for their suffering due to the recent natural
disasters.
My delegation would like to underline the
successful operation of the Peacebuilding
Commission's three country-specific meetings, on
Burundi, Sierra Leone and Guinea-Bissau. My
delegation commends the Commission for addressing
the challenges of post-conflict peacebuilding and
development simultaneously, which we believe will
contribute to solving the root cause of the recurrent
nature of conflicts. We also appreciate the Commission
for bringing all relevant actors together into a single
forum to develop peacebuilding strategies for post-
conflict countries. In this regard, my delegation hopes
the Commission's working method will be further
developed so that more post-conflict countries will
benefit from its valuable work.
To ensure the Peacebuilding Commission's
comprehensive approach and maximize its synergistic
effects, my delegation would like to stress the
importance of communication among the
United Nations, its field missions and Member States.
The United Nations should play a central role in
maintaining such triangular communication so that
Member States are fully informed and remain
connected to the field. That approach will enable us to
collect the best available peacebuilding experiences
and secure future participation from Member States.
There is no doubt that strong and effective
leadership in the United Nations field missions is
necessary to meet the need for more coordinated
peacebuilding efforts. On that note, my delegation
would like to commend the Security Council for its
creation of an integrated field office with
peacebuilding mandates in Sierra Leone through its
resolutions 1620 (2005), 1734 (2006) and 1793 (2007).
My delegation supports the Security Council in the
extension of peacebuilding mandates to other United
Nations field missions and their heads.
The peacebuilding strategies recommended by the
Commission cannot be accomplished without sufficient
funds. My delegation reiterates that as the Commission
fulfils its mandates and proves its worth, Member
States will recognize its achievements by increasing
their contributions to the Peacebuilding Fund.
However, the Fund is designed to cover initial financial
needs of post-conflict countries, and the international
community should consider how to effectively help
those countries in financing their long-term
peacebuilding needs. My delegation would like to
advance its view that the United Nations should first
develop a standing contact mechanism with
international financial institutions with a view to
facilitating the mobilization of peacebuilding funds.
Non-financial contributions such as technical
assistance for capacity-building in a post-conflict
country should also be considered a necessary resource
for peacebuilding. The United Nations should not spare
its efforts to make non-financial contributions available
at the locations where they are needed. In this regard,
my delegation would like to see the Organization
further develop its partnerships with regional
organizations and civil society in order to allow them
to be fully engaged with peacebuilding efforts. Their
role would be even more critical in ensuring rapidly
deployable and skilled civilian capacity for real field
work.
Finally, national ownership should be highlighted
to avoid moral hazards and solidify post-conflict
peacebuilding efforts on the ground. In that context, we
believe that the United Nations should encourage and
strengthen a national Government to actively
participate in the process of recovery and
reconstruction of its own post-conflict nation.
The Republic of Korea is willing to contribute to
the world's peacebuilding efforts and the further
development of the peacebuilding activities of the
United Nations. It is our sincere hope that the United
Nations will continue its considerable success and
facilitate peace throughout the world.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of Serbia.
Mr. Jevremovie (Serbia): Serbia welcomes the
debate on post-conflict peacebuilding.
Before I proceed to make my statement, I would
like to point out that Serbia has aligned itself with the
statement made by the Representative of the Republic
of Slovenia on behalf of the European Union.
Also, I would like to present the views of my
country based on its experience in respect of the
subject of our debate today, which can be useful in
identifying the critical gaps that hamper international
efforts to stabilize post-conflict countries and to build
sustainable peace.
By and large, today's conflicts are caused by
ethnicity and religion and are often exacerbated by
social and economic antagonisms. Solutions to violent
conflicts always necessitate a complex process with an
uncertain outcome.
Reconciliation is a critical aspect of post-conflict
peacebuilding. Nowadays, the United Nations plays a
vital role in that process, especially in creating
conditions necessary for reconciliation. Ethnic
conflicts are a cause of population displacement, of
which the worst aspect is ethnic cleansing. Therefore,
the safe return of refugees and internally displaced
persons (IDPs) can be taken as a yardstick of the
reconciliation process. The return of property and
compensation are equally important. In our own
experience, especially in the case of the province of
Kosovo and Metohija, the results of the rehabilitation
and IDP returns are very disappointing. The
rehabilitation of refugees from conflicts in other parts
of the former Yugoslavia is equally discouraging. If
those problems are not addressed properly,
reconciliation and peacebuilding will remain uncertain.
The essential framework for the rehabilitation of
post-conflict countries is respect for human rights,
particularly those of minorities and other disfavoured
communities. The indispensable dimension of respect
for human rights is the rule of law. That is of
paramount importance for lasting peace and stability,
whereas its absence is a great threat to conflict
resurgence.
The rule of law in today's world, characterized by
a process of globalization and unprecedented
integration, has an international dimension as well. To
be more specific, it means full respect for the United
Nations Charter and other international legal standards
that guarantee equality and mutual respect among
States and their sovereignty and integrity. In the past,
the arbitrary redrawing of national borders and the
recomposition of territories have generated
unprecedented violence and tragedies. The recent
experiences of our region provide ample evidence in
that regard.
However, the simple truth is that the
redistribution of territory cannot be substituted for
human rights and the rule of law. Of late, we have been
repeatedly told that the unilateral declaration of
independence of the province of Kosovo and Metohija
is the final act of the dismemberment of Yugoslavia. In
essence, that original notion amounts to diverting the
issue and sweeping the problem under the carpet. After
all, the story of the tragedy that followed the
dismemberment of Yugoslavia is yet to be told.
However, if we have learned anything from that bitter
experience, we, the countries of the region, should
spare no effort to be admitted under the secure
European roof.
Regional organizations play an ever more
important role in peacebuilding. However, their role
must not run counter to the role and the primary
responsibility of the United Nations for safeguarding
international peace and security. Furthermore, there has
to be not a modicum of doubt that a Security Council
decision must underpin each and every activity of
regional organizations. That conforms to my country's
position on the European Rule of Law Mission in
Kosovo, the European Union mission to Kosovo and
Metohija, an extremely important project that requires
very careful elaboration firmly embedded in the United
Nations monitoring and decision-making process.
Several years ago, Mr. Kofi Annan, the then
Secretary-General of the United Nations, said in his
report on the implementation of the Millennium
Declaration that the international community "can
ill-afford to declare victory prematurely". Indeed,
post-conflict societies are unstable and early positive
results should not justify an early reduction or
withdrawal of international presences. A change in the
scope of the engagement of international actors must
be carried out only on the basis of an objective,
consensual and realistic assessment of the capacity of
local actors to assume the functions of those presences.
The role of the United Nations in those processes, let
me reiterate, is and remains indispensable.
The President: I give the floor to the
representative of El Salvador.
Mrs. Gallardo Hernandez (El Salvador) (spoke in Spanish): El Salvador welcomes your initiative,
Madam, to convene this open debate of the Security
Council to consider the question of post-conflict
peacebuilding.
One result of the 2005 World Summit was that
our heads of State and Government agreed on the
importance of overcoming the lack of coherence in the
global vision that comprises the various phases of
action taken by the international community to
promote peacekeeping, peacebuilding and the
transition towards development. Thus, the
Peacebuilding Commission, the Peacebuilding Fund
and the Peacebuilding Support Office are today the
core elements of the new United Nations peacebuilding
architecture.
During the past two years of the Commission's
existence, El Salvador has made every effort to
contribute, in its capacity as Vice-Chair and in the
coordination of the Working Group on Lessons
Learned, to strengthening the Commission as an
advisory body to the Security Council and the General
Assembly in the field of post-conflict peacebuilding.
That new architecture has generated great expectations
among the various players in the international
community, in particular among countries in and
emerging from conflict, since the Commission offers
hope for better understanding of the goals and targets
that underpin peacebuilding activities in each specific
case.
We acknowledge with satisfaction that the
Peacebuilding Commission is exercising solid and
significant leadership in the field, motivating the
participation and inclusion of national actors,
particularly those that play a key role in the
peacebuilding decision-making process, thereby
supporting the formulation of strategic frameworks for
peacebuilding in each specific case. In that respect, we
stress the Commission's active and responsible
position in promoting the pillars that anchor collective
security and well-being: peace, security, development
and human rights.
In view of the foregoing, the Commission should
be allowed to continue developing a comprehensive
vision that will strengthen the coherence of the United
Nations system on the ground while contributing to a
better understanding by the Member States of the
complex multidimensional factors involved in
peacekeeping. El Salvador believes it essential for the
Commission to continue to deepen its experiences in a
comprehensive manner.
We welcome the fact that an inclusive agreement
was reached on the peacebuilding strategies for
Burundi and Sierra Leone and that progress continues
in the exchange of experiences on factors that have
contributed to conflicts in other parts of the world,
through the study and assimilation of lessons learned
and the thematic debates that we have held.
In that regard, allow me to recall the importance
of strengthening cohesion among the peacebuilding
goals and strategies, with the available resources for
the attainment of those goals. From that perspective,
the added value generated by the Commission is to be
found in its very composition.
El Salvador agrees on the importance of
recognizing that the raison d'etre of the Commission
must not be limited to the mobilization of financial
resources for peacebuilding processes. It is also
essential to go beyond that perspective to understand
that the complexity of conflicts requires
multidisciplinary action and a comprehensive medium-
and long-term vision that will motivate the
participation of all stakeholders in those processes.
The proposed quick-impact programmes must not
lead us to lose sight of the fact that what truly matters
is that the social fabric of a country emerging from
conflict is repaired in a climate of reconciliation and
peace, while taking the first steps towards
development. As we have said, institution-building is
the basic responsibility of national stakeholders, and it
must be one of the main long-term achievements of the
Peacebuilding Commission.
El Salvador, as a country that has made the
transition from conflict to development, has sought,
since it joined the Commission, to share its
experiences, to understand the new realities and to seek
innovative mechanisms that will help the countries
under consideration: Burundi, Sierra Leone and
Guinea-Bissau. Allow me to reiterate that El Salvador
is prepared to share the practices and experiences of
those who contributed to the transition to peace and
allowed us to lay the foundations for good governance
and the rule of law in our country.
In conclusion, in our view, the Commission has
made a difference in the countries under consideration.
Other countries, such as my own, were not able,
15 years ago, to benefit from the existence of the
Commission and had to deal with a great many
challenges in the transition from conflict to
peacebuilding and development. That is why we are
immensely pleased with the holding of this debate. We
urge the Security Council to continue to support the
work of the Commission and to strengthen the new
peacebuilding architecture of the United Nations.
The President: I thank the representative of
El Salvador for her ideas for follow-up for the
Peacebuilding Commission.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Qatar.
Mr. Al-Nasser (Qatar) (spoke in Arabic): First,
Madam, I would like to congratulate you on your
delegation's successful presidency of the Security
Council and on having selected this important topic as
a basis for today's discussion. I would also like to
commend the Secretariat's efforts in support of
peacebuilding.
I associate myself with the statement made by the
representative of Jamaica on behalf of the Non-Aligned
Movement.
The Security Council's debate on peacebuilding
centres on the role that the Council can play in conflict
or post-conflict environments in the maintenance of
international peace and security - in keeping, of
course, with its mandate - including by authorizing
multidimensional missions. We encourage coordination
with the General Assembly and other relevant organs
on peacebuilding and development.
The 2005 World Summit decided to establish the
Peacebuilding Commission as an advisory body to both
the General Assembly and the Security Council.
Therefore, when the Council addresses issues of
peacebuilding and development or the role and
mandate of the Peacebuilding Commission, it is
essential to coordinate those efforts with the Assembly,
which established the Commission under its resolution
60/180, in parallel with Security Council resolution
1645 (2005). The Council is not in a position to assume
alone the responsibility for long-term peacebuilding,
given the scope and complexity of peacebuilding,
which extends beyond threats to international peace
and security. Post-conflict peacebuilding has thus
become a multidimensional issue that requires
concerted efforts by all United Nations agencies and
partnerships with the international community based on
national ownership and full respect for the sovereignty
of the State in question, in accordance with the
principles of the Charter and international law. Those
principles are stipulated in the mandate of the
Peacebuilding Commission.
The first year of the peacebuilding architecture
that emerged from the 2005 World Summit witnessed
the launching of the Peacebuilding Support Office
within the Secretariat and of the Peacebuilding Fund,
which provides funding for many development
projects. Much progress has been achieved with regard
to the organizational and procedural aspects of the
Commission's work. We should therefore continue to
build on the progress achieved thus far, such as the
concrete results achieved on the ground in Burundi,
Sierra Leone and, more recently, Guinea-Bissau.
More States must benefit from peacebuilding
programmes, while due consideration must be paid to
the differing conditions of each situation - and hence
to the differing ways in which the peacebuilding
process should be managed in different countries.
Countries emerging from conflict must also have full
national ownership of their peacebuilding process in a
manner that serves the interests of their peoples. In
accordance with the principle of sovereignty, their
voluntary approval must be sought on programmes
implemented within their borders, especially since
those States have themselves sought the support of the
international community.
It is imperative to formulate a United Nations exit
strategy from post-conflict countries: countries
emerging from conflict cannot remain on the United
Nations agenda forever. Coordination with the State
concerned is needed to develop a comprehensive
development and capacity-building strategy, including
an education strategy to teach young people about the
culture of peace. We cannot expect a State to be in a
position to achieve sustainable development without
building its production capacity and without enabling it
to enjoy economic and political independence. The role
of the United Nations should therefore not be
understood as that of an open-ended aid provider, but
rather as that of a builder of sustainable projects.
Relationships with international partners or United
Nations missions should not be defined on a financial
basis alone.
We regret that the Council is still unable to make
use of Chapter VIII of the Charter with regard to
cooperation between the United Nations and regional
and subregional organizations and bodies, especially in
the adoption of Council resolutions involving
collaboration between the United Nations and other
organizations. During our membership of the Security
Council, we long stressed the need to adopt such
resolutions under Chapter VIII of the Charter so as not
to sideline the role that the regional arrangements
could play.
We hope that we have contributed to developing
some ideas. It would be useful for the report of the
Secretary-General called for in the draft presidential
statement to include a positive clarification of these
ideas and practical recommendations, in partnership
with the General Assembly and other relevant organs
of the United Nations.
The President: I thank the representative of
Qatar for his focus on development of capacity and on
regional arrangements.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Norway.
Mr. Lavald (Norway): I shall limit my remarks,
and the full text of my statement will be circulated.
There is a need to recognize the critical
importance of gaining a coherent understanding of
recovery interventions and successful peacebuilding.
The United Nations, its Member States and other
international actors need to change their modes of
operation in order to address the special needs of
countries that are in, emerging from or affected by
conflict. That is all the more true as peacebuilding
becomes an integral part of our common United
Nations agenda.
I want to focus on three issues.
First, with respect to leadership, it is important to
remind ourselves that one of the key lessons from the
Brahimi report is that failure is inevitable when
peacekeeping becomes a substitute for facing painful
the political compromises that are needed from all
sides to achieve sustainable peace.
One of the findings from a project on
multidimensional and integrated peace operations that
Norway initiated in 2006 was the need to get a clear
view of what needs to be achieved politically. That
could assist in making the necessary distinction
between humanitarian assistance in emergencies and
the need for long-term recovery efforts. It requires the
Secretary-General to take on a stronger role in guiding
efforts inside the United Nations system, forging
incentives for better coherence and integration.
Peacebuilding is not a sequential process; it needs
to be looked at as a highly interlinked series of
simultaneous activities. It is also important to speed up
efforts in that regard, bringing on board all
stakeholders - including the international financial
institutions, donors and national counterparts to the
countries concerned - to make sure that all are aware
of what is to be expected, delivered, how it is to be
delivered and by whom.
It is critical to ensure that the senior United
Nations representative in the field has at her or his
disposal a clear and robust mandate. The United
Nations representative also needs to be backed by a
strong and integrated leadership team. Member States
need to adapt and change the current frameworks that
guide both the administrative and budgeting processes.
Today, success often depends on the personal
capabilities of senior United Nations mission leaders to
find ways of manoeuvring around the system, rather
than as a result of it.
There is a need to address how to ensure more
predictable and sustainable sources of funding. The
current system for financing multidimensional peace
operations does not allow for the adequate resourcing
of multidimensional mandates with strong
peacebuilding and recovery components. We need to
think about how to create more organic links between
assessed and voluntary funding sources.
Secondly, with respect to the peacebuilding
architecture, the role of the Peacebuilding Commission
in taking on an even stronger proactive and convening
role in promoting better system coherence and
integration should be examined. While the Commission
has had a great deal of success in the past year, we still
have a way to go to ensure effective coordination
within the United Nations and with other partners.
Norway, for its part, has been honoured to chair the
Commission's efforts regarding Burundi, a country in
need of even greater international attention and
support.
As more countries are included on the
Peacebuilding Commission's agenda, we will have to
take a closer look at its working methods. The focus
will increasingly have to be country-specific in each
particular case, relying on tailor-made approaches and
always focusing on policy impact.
We agree with the Secretary-General that the
evolution of the peacebuilding architecture constitutes
a significant innovation in the ability of the United
Nations to help countries in, emerging from or affected
by conflict. Thus we emphasize efforts to develop
country-specific strategies that bring on board all
stakeholders, including national partners, and define
responsibilities in line with both national and
international programming objectives. Those
frameworks are not academic exercises; they are
essential tools in providing added value.
Thirdly, on civilian capabilities, an existing
deficit of readily qualified and deployable civilian
capabilities should be addressed in greater depth as a
complement to increased emphasis on national
ownership. That requires putting in place conditions
and training systems that will sufficiently prepare them
for operating in a multidimensional and integrated
mission framework in countries that require robust
recovery efforts. It also requires taking advantage of
national rosters that can be rapidly deployed. But to
repeat, that must be done to empower national
authorities further, not to replace them.
There is a need to bridge the current security,
development and humanitarian planning frameworks in
order to effectively address the complex challenges at
hand. We believe that this meeting is a critical starting
point in providing the Secretary-General and the
United Nations system with an endorsement of
progress made so far, as well as providing the political
incentives to further strengthen the implementation of
the various reform initiatives in order to better assist
countries emerging from or affected by conflict and to
prevent a relapse by building sustainable peace.
The President: I thank the representative of
Norway for his ideas for follow-up.
I now have the pleasure of giving the floor to the
representative of Australia.
Mr. Hill (Australia): I would like to thank the
United Kingdom for holding this important debate.
How best to address post-conflict and post-crisis
stabilization has been something Australia has been
working on for some years now, be it in our role in the
International Stabilization Force in Timor-Leste, in the
regional assistance mission to the Solomon Islands, or
in Bougainville, which was referred to in some detail
by my friend the Ambassador of Papua New Guinea.
We do not pretend to have all the answers, but we have
learnt a number of lessons similar to those that the
United Kingdom has drawn together. In many ways
those lessons are obvious ones, but even simple truths
bear repeating.
The speed and strength of an initial response are
of the essence. Following any conflict or crisis, there
may be a limited window of opportunity to consolidate
peace and commence rebuilding on a sound foundation,
in cooperation with national authorities. Similarly,
quick military intervention is at times the best way to
save lives. The quick deployments by ourselves,
Malaysia, New Zealand and Portugal in May 2006 to
Timor-Leste at the request of its Government
demonstrated that. The same principle applies to police
deployments.
We need the same flexibility and preparedness for
other civilian elements, although in our case we would
not look to maintain a large, multidisciplinary team on
a just-in-case basis; for us, we take a just-in-time
approach using teams drawn on a case-by-case basis
from both our national and State levels of Government
and subject matter experts from the wider Australian
community. But we look forward to hearing more from
the United Kingdom as it develops its deployable
civilian capability.
Demonstrating to a population that security has
been restored is the first step. That demonstration is
made tangible by a full re-establishment of the rule of
law, transitional justice and quick development
outcomes. To achieve those, we need to ensure that we
are drawing on the full range of our own expertise.
In that regard, Australia is establishing the Asia-
Pacific Centre for Civil-Military Cooperation as an
essential part of our commitment to regional stability
and development. The Centre will focus on supporting
a coherent national capability to assess, plan for and
implement integrated peacebuilding, stabilization,
reconstruction and international disaster relief
operations.
It is important to build up not just our own
capacities, but also those of others. It is obvious to say
this, but it would always be preferable to have built up
capacities before a crisis than to act as a substitute
afterwards. To that end, our Federal Police is the first
police force to conduct United Nations-recognized
predeployment training that meets the requirements for
United Nations peace operations.
No matter how good international assistance may
be, if it does not serve the national needs of the country
concerned, there is little point in providing it. Our help
must build up national institutions and leaders. And the
sooner we can back local authorities in reassuming full
responsibility, the better chance there will be of a
sustainable solution. The importance of diplomatic
efforts alongside security and development engagement
must also be recognized. We should ensure that
diplomacy is used to stronger effect, particularly in
situations where skilled diplomatic negotiations may
prevent a relapse into conflict.
The United Nations clearly has an important role
in promoting post-conflict and post-crisis stabilization.
We would welcome further advice from the Secretary-
General on how the Organization's contribution in this
area could be strengthened.
The President: I thank the representative of
Australia for his intervention and for offering lessons
learned from Australia's own experience.
I now call on the representative of Liechtenstein.
Mr. Wenaweser (Liechtenstein): We thank you,
Madam President, for organizing this debate as well as
for producing a concept paper. This debate comes at an
opportune moment. The demand for peacekeeping has
reached an unprecedented scale and it is certainly
timely for the United Nations membership to take a
look at the activities it undertakes after conflicts have
ended. The increase in costs for peacekeeping
operations certainly entails the risk that the resources
necessary for post-conflict peacebuilding may not be
made available.
Today we are not, of course, discussing a new
topic - quite the opposite. The presidency's concept
paper illustrates this. It quotes from the Brahimi report
published in the year 2000 (S/2000/809), and it is quite
appropriate that Mr. Lakhdar Brahimi was invited to
address the Council today. We very much appreciated
his presentation this morning, which focused strongly
on very practical aspects of post-conflict peacebuilding
and, of course, on his first-hand experience. His
comments deserve particular attention, especially on
the need to create national and local ownership, and to
rely, therefore, to the fullest extent possible, on human
resources in those countries where peacebuilding
activities are undertaken.
The fact that some parts of the Brahimi report
have still not been implemented after all these years
illustrates the fact that progress in this area has been
slow. Nevertheless, it has been steady, and it has
received an important boost through the establishment
of the Peacebuilding Commission, which has turned
out to be one of the most important results of the 2005
World Summit. The work that the Commission has
carried out so far has clearly had positive effects, and
we hope that its potential can be fully explored in the
future. In particular, it should be able to consider
situations immediately after a conflict has ended and a
ceasefire or peace accord has entered into force. In
addition, it must be understood that post-conflict
peacebuilding is always also a tool for conflict
prevention and there should be an exchange of best
practices from both fields.
One feature of the work of the Peacebuilding
Commission that merits increased attention and further
consideration is its practice of considering situations in
various configurations in order to ensure optimal
inclusion of the stakeholders. That is a very interesting
formula that could perhaps also be successfully applied
to the work of the Security Council itself.
The rule of law plays a central role in the
stabilization of countries and societies in post-conflict
situations. It is our hope that the Rule of Law Unit,
whose establishment required much more time than we
had expected, will play a positive role in that respect.
Efforts by the United Nations to secure the rule of law
over the long term can be successful only if they tap
extensively into local and national capacities and if
they expand expertise in all relevant areas.
In addition, increased attention must be given to
transitional justice needs, if and where they exist. The
international community has accumulated extensive
experience and expertise on that issue in recent years
and has developed various models and modalities to
satisfy transitional justice needs. The International
Criminal Court can play a particular role in that regard,
and we hope that it will be given the required political
support, including by the Security Council. In
particular, the Council has to recognize that the
principles of peace and justice are complementary,
mutually reinforcing and, in combination, form an
indispensable ingredient of post-conflict peacebuilding.
The presidency's concept paper identifies rapid
and flexible funding as a major challenge. At a time of
rapidly increasing costs for peacekeeping, that
challenge is likely to be exacerbated in the near future.
Since peacebuilding is a form of conflict prevention, it
can in principle be very cost-effective. However,
experience - such as the examples given in the
concept paper - has shown that little or no money
may be available during the initial phase after a
conflict, when it is most needed and when the direction
for the future process is set. Even though the activities
are very different in nature, it would appear that there
is some similarity, in terms of the funding dynamic, to
the humanitarian work of the Organization. Therefore,
funding mechanisms designed following the example
of the Central Emergency Response Fund - which has
served the purposes of humanitarian assistance quite
well - seem to be worth exploring.
The President: I thank the representative of
Liechtenstein for that very thoughtful intervention and
for highlighting justice issues.
I now call on the representative of Benin.
Mr. Zinsou (Benin) (spoke in French): My
delegation expresses its condolences to China and
Myanmar on the disasters that have so gravely affected
them. We also associate ourselves with the statement
made by the representative of Jamaica on behalf of the
Non-Aligned Movement.
My delegation congratulates you, Madam, on your
country's assumption of the presidency of the Security
Council for the month of May. We welcome the
presence of the Minister for Foreign Affairs of the
United Kingdom, which lends particular dignity to this
meeting. It is proof~ as if that were needed - of your
country's commitment to United Nations activities in
the area of peacebuilding and to strengthening the
Commission established to promote it.
The Peacebuilding Commission provides a forum
not only for consultation and coordination, but also for
reflection to come up with integrated strategies setting
out priorities for coherent support to be provided to
countries emerging from conflict. In that regard, the
Commission can help the Security Council define, in
direct dialogue with the parties to peace agreements,
the configurations of missions to be deployed and of
integrated mandates likely to promote synergies for
coherent action on the ground.
The Working Group established by the
Commission to capitalize on lessons learned can play
an effective role in that context. The Commission can
enter into contact with national actors, regional
organizations, bilateral and multilateral partners and
interested civil society actors so as to put in place
coherent support programmes aimed at helping prevent
a relapse into conflict and putting the country
concerned back on the path towards peace.
Mandates can no longer be established without
such prior consultation. Once the mandates have been
defined, the Special Representatives of the Secretary-
General should fully utilize their influence and the
civil and military means at their disposal to ensure that
the parties participate in good faith in normalization
processes.
The United Nations should help countries to
mobilize the expertise that is needed to establish the
institutions to meet national needs. If a critical mass of
human resources is lacking in the country, then one
should call on the diaspora. Nationals should be put
back in charge who can work together with United
Nations experts on defining recovery processes. In
order to play its role as guarantor of universal norms,
the United Nations must develop the competent and
neutral international expertise to meet technical
assistance needed in post-conflict situations.
In the specific area of security sector reform, the
United Nations should increase its operational capacity,
drawing up rosters of experts standing by for
deployment, with a certification system based on
competencies defined in agreement with Member
States. Particularly in the field of the police, the United
Nations should develop partnerships with countries
that have regional training centres so that their
curricula can include material relevant to participation
in integrated operations. Special attention should be
given to those areas where it is a matter of
re-establishing law-enforcement functions, since the
whole State apparatus has to start working again so that
the rule of law, which is crucial to normalization in all
other areas of life, can be re-established.
My country, Benin, experienced a national crisis
in the late 1980s. It was able to recover through a
national initiative, but it could not have succeeded
without the multifaceted support we received as we
emerged from crisis. Our development partners agreed
to pay civil servants so that the public services could
resume. The transitional Government received
substantial budgetary assistance and focused technical
assistance from bilateral and multilateral partners. This
enabled us to revive the economy on a new basis and,
above all, it enabled us to establish institutions that
were effective in taking up the challenges facing us in
the area of maintaining political stability and managing
development efforts.
Especially in the political arena, as one
Government democratically succeeded another, Benin
acquired some expertise in the area of how to
strengthen national institutions and manage the rule of
law. We are ready to share our experience with other
countries facing difficulties in that sphere. Indeed, we
are already sharing our experiences within the
International Organization of la Francophonie, the
African Union and the Economic Community of West
African States.
One lesson learned from the experience of
countries emerging from conflict is that lack of
resources to consolidate achievements and the
consequent inability to function are among the reasons
for the failure of peace agreements. New institutions
can be credible only if they are able to perform in a
way that will command respect and establish their
legitimacy in the eyes of the citizens. This, of course,
means fully respecting human rights, establishing
mechanisms that will ensure good governance, looking
after those who have been victims and establishing
transitional justice that reconciles the need to combat
impunity with the aspirations for national
reconciliation. Security sector and judicial reform are
of paramount importance and should be given special
attention and careful follow-up.
Another prerequisite for peacebuilding is having
a peacetime economy replace the wartime economy by
creating the conditions for the resumption of healthy
economic activity, combating all kinds of trafficking
and ensuring that the country can rejoin the world
economy and move towards sustainable human
development. This requires proper management of
available resources, fair regulation of peaceful
economic activities, whether it be the exploitation of
natural resources or in the service sector.
In this connection, my delegation has always had
reservations about long-term embargoes on the
exploitation of the natural resources of countries
emerging from conflict. The enormous need for
financing for recovery and reconstruction can be met
only if the domestic resources of the country are
mobilized and transparently and sensibly used.
Particularly in countries where inequitable distribution
of income from the exploitation of natural resources
was one of the causes of conflict, peace agreements
must be crystal clear on the conditions for exploitation
of natural resources and on the modalities of
redistribution.
The international community should use its
influence to help put in place agreed management
machinery, as it did in the case of Liberia with the
Governance and Economic Management Assistance
Programme. The cooperation framework set up for the
implementation of the Peacebuilding Fund's support to
beneficiary countries must take account of the need to
guide them quickly towards mobilizing their domestic
resources so that they can make better use of the
available outside assistance. The resources allocated by
the Fund should give rise to catalytic activities that can
later be assisted by financing from bilateral and
multilateral partners and private-sector investment.
A third and last area that my delegation thinks is
of paramount importance is establishing a culture of
peace. This means the setting up of systems to identify
and address problems that could undermine the
national consensus - which means agreement on how
to preserve the fabric and unity of the country.
Government mediators have a role to play: they can
help Governments to quickly defuse any disputes that
may arise in the management of public affairs. In
addition to a mediator, Benin now has a new body
called the Office of the High Commissioner on
Participatory Governance. This was established
together with the United Nations Democracy Fund. Its
job is to lead the national dialogue on substantive
matters relating to national life and to seek agreed
solutions.
Those are just a few examples of how to meet the
need of every country emerging from conflict to find
practical ways of peacefully resolving national disputes
so that they can bolster their citizens' desire to live
together in peace and strengthen national cohesion.
This must involve all players in the life of the nation.
Development partners should also offer the necessary
support to the countries concerned.
The President: I thank the representative of
Benin for that very well-considered intervention and
for offering us some of his own experiences and
thoughts on follow-up.
We have had a long but very good discussion
today, and I would like to thank all delegations for
their thoughtful and thought-provoking interventions.
My thanks go also to the Secretary-General, the World
Bank, the Foreign Ministry of Sierra Leone and
Mr. Brahimi for their presentations.
I think we highlighted a wide-ranging set of
themes that included, but were not necessarily limited
to, national ownership, including, where appropriate, a
role for the diaspora; inclusivity, including within
United Nations institutions; security; mandates;
development; regional and national experiences; the
importance of coordination; the need for both quick
responses and long-term sustainability; the importance
ofjustice; resolution 1325 (2000); and the importance
of getting adequate resources, among many others. We
look forward to discussing these issues with
colleagues, delegations and representatives in the
appropriate various United Nations forums.
And, of course, we also heard today about food
security, which has been taken forward by the
Economic and Social Council.
Following consultations among members of the
Security Council, I have been authorized to make the
following statement on behalf of the Council:
"The Security Council recalls its primary
responsibility for the maintenance of
international peace and security and emphasizes
the critical importance of post-conflict
peacebuilding in laying the foundation for
sustainable peace and development after the
scourge of war.
"The Security Council recognizes that supporting
States to recover from conflict and build
sustainable peace is a major challenge facing the
international community, and that an effective
response requires political, security, humanitarian
and development activities to be integrated and
coherent, including in the first phase of integrated
mission planning.
"The Security Council emphasizes the importance
of national ownership and the primary
responsibility of national authorities emerging
from conflict for peacebuilding and sustainable
development, expresses its intention to support
those efforts and encourages other actors to do
the same.
"The Security Council recalls its resolution 1645
(2005) and welcomes the work of the
Peacebuilding Commission in advising on the
coordination of international peacebuilding
activities and resources, and expresses its support
for enhancing the role of the Peacebuilding
Commission, Peacebuilding Support Office and
the Peacebuilding Fund.
"The Security Council recognizes that, in
particular in the immediate aftermath of conflict,
affected countries have urgent needs including,
but not limited to, the re-establishment of the
institutions of Government, disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration of armed forces,
security sector reform, transitional justice,
reconciliation, re-establishing the rule of law and
respect for human rights, and economic
revitalization. The Security Council underlines
that civilian expertise in post-conflict
peacebuilding is essential in helping to meet
these needs.
"The Security Council encourages efforts to
address the urgent need for rapidly deployable
civilian expertise and stresses that the critical role
for such expertise is working in cooperation with
national authorities to strengthen national
capacities.
"The Security Council highlights the need for the
United Nations to play a leading role in the field
in coordinating international efforts in post-
conflict situations. The Security Council stresses
that coordination between national authorities and
others involved in longer-term reconstruction and
development, including organs of the United
Nations system in accordance with their
respective mandates, the international financial
institutions as well as with civil society and the
business sector, is vital for the success of United
Nations and international engagement in post-
conflict situations.
"The Security Council stresses the need to ensure
that finance is available from the outset for
recovery and peacebuilding activities to meet
immediate needs, and to lay a solid foundation
for longer-term reconstruction and development.
The Security Council reaffirms the role of
regional organizations in the prevention,
management and resolution of conflicts in
accordance with Chapter VIII of the Charter of
the United Nations, and the need to strengthen the
capacity of regional organizations in helping
countries recover from conflict.
"The Security Council encourages the Secretary-
General, the Peacebuilding Commission,
international and regional organizations and
Member States to consider how to support
national efforts in affected countries to secure a
sustainable peace more rapidly and effectively,
including in the areas of coordination, civilian
deployment capabilities and financing. The
Security Council invites the Secretary-General to
provide advice within 12 months to the relevant
United Nations organs on how best to take
forward these issues within the United Nations
08-34772
system and, taking into consideration the views
of the Peacebuilding Commission, how to
coordinate peacebuilding activities and encourage
the mobilization and most effective use of
resources for urgent peacebuilding needs".
This statement will be issued as a document of
the Security Council under the symbol
S/PRST/2008/16.
There are no further speakers on my list. Once
again, I would like to thank participants for attending. I
also thank our interpreters and the Secretariat.
The Security Council has thus concluded the
present stage of its consideration of the item on its
agenda.
The meeting rose at 7.10 pm.
43
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