Mr. President, distinguished members of the Council,
Mr. President, distinguished members of the Council,
Over the past four days, I have had a series of positive, constructive discussions here in Sri Lanka. The Secretary-General of the United Nations asked me to visit at what he sees as a moment of historic opportunity for the people of this beautiful country: your democratic elections and peaceful transition have not only inspired the citizens of Sri Lanka but also captured the attention of Sri Lanka’s many friends in the international community. I want to thank the Government of Sri Lanka for its generous hospitality in helping to arrange my visit on relatively short notice.
While here, I had the opportunity to meet President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime MinisterRanil Wickremesinghe, Acting Foreign Minister Ajith Perera, the leadership of the JHU, SLMC, TNA, and the diplomatic community. Yesterday in Jaffna, I met with the Governorand the Chief Minister of the Northern Provincial Council. In addition, I was able to listen to, and compare notes with, a divergent group of civil society representatives both here in Colombo and in Jaffna. Those I met over the past four days inspired me with their visions for a prosperous, democratic country, at peace internally and with positive, close, mutually beneficial relations regionally and internationally.
Ladies and gentlemen,
2015 marks the 70th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations. We are also approaching the 60th anniversary of when Sri Lanka’s first Permanent Representative to the UN, Sir Senerat Gunawardene, presented his credentials. In the years since then, Sri Lanka has made many important contributions to the Organization. I am thinking of the leadership roles that prominent personalities from Sri Lanka have played in the UN – people such as Justice Christopher Weeramantry, Jayantha Dhanapala, Radhika Coomaraswamy, Andrew Joseph, and Shirely Amarasinghe. The current Governor of the Northern Provincial Council represented your country with distinction in New York during a particularly challenging time.
Thousands of Sri Lankan citizens over the decades have contributed to UN peacekeeping efforts, including those currently deployed to important missions in Haiti, South Sudan, and the Central African Republic. The Secretary-General believes strongly that we now have the opportunity to build on this existing foundation to renew and strengthen the partnership between Sri Lanka and the United Nations and between Sri Lanka and the international community.
We in the United Nations recognize that Sri Lankans from across the country suffered during a long conflict. No community was immune, and, despite the work of many commissions, the list of grievances and unresolved issues remains long. As demonstrated by the speech of The Honorable Minister of Foreign Affairs before the Human Rights Council in Geneva yesterday, we are encouraged by this government’s commitment to promote reconciliation, accountability and human rights. This is very much in line with the 2009 joint communiqué issued on the occasion of the UN Secretary-General’s visit to Sri Lanka soon after the end of the conflict. In our view, credible, tangible progress in these areas is a prerequisite to the achievement of sustainable peace and prosperity in Sri Lanka.
In that spirit, I have urged government leaders to take steps in the short term to address issues regarding land, detentions, disappearances, and the military posture in civilian areas. Over the longer term, I have underscored in my meetings the expectation by the United Nations and by the international community that the government will – as it has promised -- develop in the coming months a strong framework for accountability that meets international standards and norms and that is seen as credible across Sri Lanka. These are not easy tasks, but we believe that they are essential tasks, expected by the international community and also – more importantly – by the citizens of this country themselves.
Without question, there is still a wide trust deficit between communities in Sri Lanka, especially between the Tamil and the Sinhalese. We have thus encouraged the national leaders and political stakeholders to work on all of these issues in the spirit of inclusion and consultation. Inclusion requires that all communities be willing to participate in these processes. As requested by Sri Lanka, the United Nations is committed to assisting in the process of accountability and reconciliation, through the Peacebuilding Fund and other facilities, as appropriate. But it is first and foremost for Sri Lankans themselves to shape how to address issues of the past in order to find a common future.
With regional allies and the world focused in a positive way on Sri Lanka, and with the citizens of Sri Lanka having drawn from Sri Lanka’s strong democratic history and traditions to promote a peaceful transition, this is a historic moment to seize. I know that the Secretary-General himself and the United Nations system more broadly will stand with the people and leaders of Sri Lanka, as they address credibly and thoroughly the accountability and reconciliation issues that, once resolved, will contribute to Sri Lanka’s long-term peace and prosperity. In this 70th anniversary of the UN’s founding and the 60th year of Sri Lanka’smembership in the UN, we welcome the promise of renewed partnership.
Thank you.
Mr. President,
Mr. President,
The guide aims to inform mediators and stakeholders addressing conflicts over natural resources - whether those disagreements are violent, have the potential to turn violent, or are part of a larger political struggle, including within a peace process. It draws on the field experiences of mediators and mediation experts.
At the request of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon I visited Burkina Faso with the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for West Africa, Mohamed Ibn Chambas.
We met with the transitional authorities and representatives of political parties. I commended Michel Kafando, Transitional President of Burkina Faso, and transitional authorities for their determination to put in place a transitional process and organize elections in accordance with the timeline set out in the Transition Charter.
I underscored that the United Nations are committed to provide Burkina Faso with the necessary support to organize free, transparent and democratic elections.
I emphasized that it is essential that transitional institutions continue to respect the aspirations of the Burkinabe people and ensure full respect for human rights and the physical integrity of all citizens.
I encouraged the transitional authorities to do everything possible to implement the Transition Charter in an inclusive manner and in a spirit of national cohesion/unity.
We all know that transitions are difficult; all transitions are fragile; there is no transition without difficulties. However, the international community will not tolerate any obstacle to the transition. Those who threaten the transition should be aware that the international community is watching and will hold them accountable.
The United Nations, through the good offices of its representative for West Africa, Mohammed Ibn Chambas, will continue to support, in close cooperation with regional and international partners, the efforts of national authorities during the transition.
04 février 2015, Déclaration à la presse à Ouagadougou, de Mr. Jeffrey Feltman, Secrétaire général adjoint de l’ONU chargé des Affaires politiques, à la sortie de l’audience avec M. Kafando, Président de la Transition du Burkina Faso
A la demande du Secrétaire général de l’ONU, M. Ban Ki-moon, j’ai entrepris une visite au Burkina Faso avec le Représentant Spécial du Secrétaire général pour l’Afrique de l’Ouest M. Mohamed Ibn Chambas.
Nous avons rencontré les autorités de la transition et les représentants des partis politiques. J’ai félicité M. Kafando, Président de la Transition du Burkina Faso, et les autorités de la transition de leur détermination à mettre en œuvre le processus de transition et à organiser des élections selon le chronogramme prévu dans la Charte de la Transition.
J’ai souligné que les Nations Unies sont engagées à fournir au Burkina Faso le soutien requis pour l’organisation d’élections libres, transparentes et démocratiques.
J’ai relevé qu’il est essentiel que les institutions de la transition continuent à respecter les aspirations du peuple burkinabè et qu’elles assurent le plein respect des droits humains, de l’intégrité physique de tous les citoyens.
J’ai encouragé les autorités de la transition à tout faire pour mettre en œuvre la Charte de la Transition de façon inclusive et dans un esprit de cohésion nationale.
Vous savez que toutes les transitions sont difficiles ; toutes les transitions sont fragiles ; Il n’ya pas de transition sans problèmes.
Mais en même temps, la communauté internationale ne tolèrera aucune entrave à la transition. Ceux qui menacent la transition doivent savoir que la communauté internationale les observe et les tiendra responsables.
Les Nations Unies à travers les bons offices de notre Représentant Spécial pour l’Afrique de l’Ouest, M. Mohammed Ibn Chambas, continueront à soutenir, en étroite collaboration avec les partenaires régionaux et internationaux, les efforts des autorités nationales pendant la période de transition.
Mr. President, distinguished members of the Council,
The conflict in eastern Ukraine
Let me begin by stating clearly our alarm: Following weeks of relative calm, the Council meets today amidst the worst hostilities in eastern Ukraine since the cease-fire and Minsk Protocol were agreed on 5 September. Encouraging signs of progress, such as the exchange of hundreds of prisoners, are quickly being overshadowed by renewed fighting and a deepening political stalemate. Ukraine, as well as its neighbours and the broader region, cannot afford the current, violent status quo. The escalation of fighting threatens to unravel the Minsk Protocols.
Visit to Ukraine
Mr. President and distinguished members of the Council,
Mr President,
I am concluding a two-day visit in Nepal. I came here at the request of the Secretary-General, who is personally committed to Nepal’s peace and prosperity, including the successful completion of the constitution-making process. The Secretary-General asked me to meet with Nepal’s leaders and to convey several messages:
The first message was to stress the strong and long-term commitment of the United Nations to Nepal’s development and democratic stability. Nepal has given so much to the causes of the United Nations, including through significant contributions to peacekeeping. The United Nations is equally committed to support Nepal in its political and socio-economic development.
The second message was to express our firm belief that only Nepalese can take the important political decisions that are needed for the full implementation of the 2006 Comprehensive Peace Agreement. It is not for the United Nations to decide on the substance of the constitution or the timeline for its adoption. Nepali political leaders have already shown great courage and vision in 2006 when the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed. Much progress has been achieved. It is in that same spirit that we look to the Constituent Assembly members to demonstrate leadership and complete the constitution-making process in a timely and inclusive manner. It is important that the constitution contain no discriminatory provisions.
Our third message was to encourage political leaders to put aside narrow interests and exercise flexibility in reaching an agreement in the interest of all the Nepali people. The adoption of the Constitution is a historic event that will mark the culmination of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, laying the foundation for Nepal’s future political stability and economic development. This is not a routine piece of legislation; this is a foundational document that should enjoy the widest possible support. It is from that wide support of the Nepali people that the legitimacy of the constitution derives. That is why on behalf of the Secretary-General, I strongly encouraged the leaders to neither threaten a walk out nor force a vote, but rather to conclude the process through compromise, flexibility, and inclusivity.
Political leaders assured me that they have already made great progress, and that only a few issues remained outstanding. I was encouraged to hear that they were committed to finding a solution in time. But time, according to the calendar set by the leaders themselves, is running out. We believe it is essential for political leaders to seize the moment and carry out the mandate entrusted to them by the Nepali people. We appeal to all leaders to rise above their party ambitions and move forward in the national interest of the country – as they did in 2006. This is a historic opportunity for the future of Nepal.
Nepal has a great, yet unrealized, potential. The stability the constitution can provide is the key for prosperity. The adoption of the Constitution will be the culmination of Nepal’s historic peace process. I am convinced that Nepal can rise to its full potential as a peaceful, democratic, and prosperous country. The international community and the United Nations remain committed to supporting your efforts.
A full transcript of the meeting is available at http://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=S/PV.7353.
C’est un honneur d’avoir été reçu par le Président de la République. Je lui ai transmis les salutations chaleureuses du Secrétaire général des Nations Unies, Ban Ki-Moon. J’étais accompagné du Représentant Spécial du Secrétaire général au Burundi Parfait Onanga-Anyanga.
Je félicité le Président de la République pour la réussite de la Table Ronde, qui s’est tenue hier et aujourd’hui avec les partenaires du Burundi. Cela a été l’occasion pour les partenaires du Burundi de poser les bases d’une coopération renforcée après la tenue d’élections crédibles et pacifiques.
J’ai profité de ma présence au Burundi pour symboliquement célébrer la fin du mandat du Bureau des Nations Unies au Burundi (BNUB). Je voudrais ici, au nom du Secrétaire général, exprimer notre appréciation pour le travail remarquable accompli par le personnel du BNUB sous la direction avisée de Parfait Onanga-Anyanga.
J’ai dit au Président combien le Secrétaire général apprécie la longue et fructueuse collaboration entre l’ONU et le Burundi. A ce sujet, j’ai salué l’engagement du Burundi dans la paix et la sécurité en Afrique, notamment le sacrifice des troupes burundaises en Somalie et en République Centrafricaine.
Nous avons parlé des questions de paix et sécurité dans la région des Grands Lacs, notamment du rôle du Burundi dans l’Accord cadre pour la paix, la sécurité et la coopération en République démocratique de Congo et la région.
Nous avons également évoqué la nécessité d’organiser des élections paisibles, crédibles et inclusives, en accord avec les aspirations du peuple burundais. Je profite donc de cette occasion pour exhorter toutes les parties prenantes à résoudre tous les griefs électoraux par le dialogue et en accord avec les procédures établies.
Enfin, j’ai confirmé au Président de la République le déploiement au premier janvier, à la demande du Gouvernement, de la Mission d’observation électorale des Nations Unies. Cette Mission sera dirigée par l’Envoyé spécial du Secrétaire général Cassam Uteem, ancien Président de l’Île Maurice.
Je vous remercie.
Excellence, Monsieur le Président de la République
Excellence, Monsieur le Premier Vice Président de la République
Excellence, Monsieur le Deuxième Vice Président de la République
Mesdames et Messieurs les Ministres,
Monsieur le maire de Bujumbura,
Monsieur le Président de la formation Burundi à la Commission
de consolidation de la paix,
Monsieur le Réprésentant Spécial du Secretaire general,
Mesdames et Messieurs les Ambassadeurs et chefs de missions diplomatiques,
Distingués invités, Mesdames et Messieurs
Chers collègues,
Il y a deux ans, la Conférence des partenaires de développement à Genève a été l’occasion de présenter un « nouveau Burundi » et son succès a montré que les partenaires internationaux avaient la volonté d’investir dans cette vision.
Depuis, le Burundi a continué à progresser sur la voie de la consolidation de la paix et de la stabilité. La situation du pays s’est améliorée. Le retour au Burundi des figures politiques jusqu’alors en exil a marqué la normalisation de la vie politique depuis le boycottage des élections de 2010. Plusieurs institutions créées par la Constitution du Burundi se sont consolidées. Il ne restait que la Commission Vérité et Réconciliation, dont la récente nomination vient parachever le chantier de l’Accord d’Arusha.
Les fondations du « nouveau Burundi » ont été posées. Il ne manque que la volonté politique de construire l’avenir avec toutes les forces vives de la Nation. Pour cela, il faut dépasser les clivages partisans et concentrer les débats et les énergies sur les véritables défis que le Burundi doit relever. La lutte contre la pauvreté, le déficit énergétique : le chantier est vaste.
Alors que le pays se prépare pour les élections de deux-mille quinze, les Burundais ont posé les bases de ce scrutin en adoptant le Code électoral de façon consensuelle. La Commission électorale indépendante est à pied d’œuvre. Tous les acteurs clés ont adhéré au Code de bonne conduite pour les élections de deux-mille quinze. C’est un signal fort de la volonté des Burundais à créer un environnement propice à des élections crédibles, inclusives et apaisées.
Toutefois, nombreux sont les observateurs à avoir noté une réduction croissante de l’espace politique. Il revient à toutes les parties prenantes de démontrer que ces observateurs se trompent. Que ces signaux préoccupants ne sont que des écarts. Récemment, il y a eu des développements encourageants. Les dernières consultations sur le processus électoral, auxquelles ont pris part toutes les parties prenantes, sont très prometteuses. Nous encourageons le Gouvernement à poursuivre ces efforts pour garantir des élections crédibles, inclusives et apaisées.
L’ONU reste déterminée à soutenir le Burundi face aux nombreux défis qui restent à relever. Nous serons aux côtés des Burundais pendant toute la période électorale avec la mission d’observation électorale qui sera déployée le premier janvier deux-mille quinze (1er janvier 2015). Sur le plus long terme, les agences de développement des Nations Unies continueront à soutenir le Burundi dans ces efforts pour la consolidation de la paix et le développement.
Travaillons ensemble pour que les importants progrès de ces dernières années deviennent vraiment irréversibles.
Je vous remercie.
Distinguished Ministers and Representatives,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I thank the government of the United Kingdom for hosting this important meeting, and extend my thanks to all present here, for reaffirming their commitment to supporting a strong, independent and forward-looking Afghanistan.
I warmly welcome President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani, CEO Abdullah and the Afghan delegation to this meeting, recognising the central role that reform has played in the President’s first months in office.
While it is true that many challenges lay ahead for Afghanistan on its road to stability and peace, we should first recognise the peaceful transfer of political power from one democratically elected leader to another in Afghanistan in September which marked a key milestone in the political rebirth of the nation.
However, the economic situation in Afghanistan remains fragile. Endemic poverty, hunger and malnutrition, faltering growth, diminishing revenue and a burgeoning illicit economy continue to diminish opportunities for Afghan communities, and inherently leave open space for those who seek to exploit such fragility for their own ends. Similarly, corruption, weak rule of law and lack of respect for human rights including women’s rights remain widespread, exercising a deeply corrosive influence on both the capacity of government to deliver results and the faith that Afghans and the international community can place in government itself.
These are issues of which President Ghani and CEO Abdullah are keenly aware and engaged, and I commend the National Unity Government on its ambitious and focused proposal for reform and renewal outlined in the conference paper “Realising Self-Reliance”. I also note the Government’s commitment to develop detailed action plans once this meeting has concluded, and the United Nations recommits itself to supporting our Afghan partners in this work.
Ladies and gentlemen, it is apt, at this historic moment of political and security transition that the international community reconvene to review, update, assess and renew the commitments made two years ago in Tokyo, together with its Afghan partners. This is, above all a meeting about partnership.
This is an opportunity to forge a strong, sustainable and accountable partnership between the nations and organisations present here today, and through that union, lay the foundation for a more secure and more prosperous Afghanistan. The United Nations remains a committed partner with Afghanistan and the rest of the international community in building that foundation.
Building sustainable economic growth and development cannot be the realm of government alone – either domestic or foreign. Improved governance, revitalised markets and strengthened institutions can only take place with the assistance, commitment and input of the community, civil society, the private sector and regional partners. Only through such broad engagement can the conditions in which greater stability, increased peace and growth in opportunity prosper.
I commend the Afghan Government’s direct commitment to address the impacts of economic fragility in conjunction with bolstering the rule of law framework. A commitment on all sides to accountability and transparency is the clearest path toward renewed and sustainable governance and institutional capacity. The United Nations remains engaged closely in these issues as the next tranche of reform commences.
The continued empowerment of women in all aspects of Afghan life and further strengthening of safeguards in the protection of women remain important issues. No community, no economy and no country can be truly prosperous and genuinely strong if half of its citizens do not enjoy the same protections, respect and economic and educational opportunities as the other.
The scope of the humanitarian crisis effecting Afghanistan should also not be underestimated, and is a United Nations priority. There remains an acute need for humanitarian support and funding to protect communities at risk and assist effected communities recover. Similarly, the human cost of the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan remains deeply concerning. Rising civilian casualties, conflict-related displaced persons and acute societal disruption all adversely affect the capacity of communities and government to function and provide the basic necessities as a direct result of conflict.
Ladies and gentlemen, the security situation in Afghanistan is deeply troubling. The horrific attack in Paktika which killed at least 62 individuals – mostly civilians – and injured more than 100 others, is a clear but sadly not isolated example of the terrible toll this conflict continues to take upon the Afghan people. Despite the drawdown in international military forces, the international community must remain engaged in combating the devastating effects on civilians of this conflict.
It is timely as well to acknowledge that “business as usual”, including for the United Nations, is not enough. The Afghan government has already indicated that it is seeking to refresh the form and function of aid and partnership with the United Nations and international community, and I see this is a clear opportunity for us all. Genuine partnership requires both honesty and commitment on both sides, and I acknowledge that rethinking our approach to development in this context is an opportune discussion, and one rich in potential rewards for how we all progress a sustainable reform agenda.
Our commitment to Afghan partnership must remain unshakeably linked to the principles of international aid effectiveness, focus on the priorities identified by Afghanistan, and must recognise the primacy of Afghan leadership in shaping the development agenda and implementation. This is a grave responsibility for all present, and I reaffirm the United Nation’s ongoing assurance of support and action.
Thank you.
Mr. President,
Your Excellency, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, President of the Federal Government of Somalia,
Your Excellency, Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Prime Minister of Denmark,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am honored to be with you today. I thank our generous hosts, the Government of Denmark, and all of you for your commitment to Somalia.
I bring you the greetings of the Secretary-General, who visited Mogadishu last month together with the President of the World Bank and many of the regional partners here – another sign of our broadening and deepening international engagement in Somalia.
Excellencies,
In my career of over 30 years in international affairs, I have never known a year like 2014. In the Middle East, in Ukraine, in West Africa, we have seen relentless crises, conflict and human suffering.
Somalia has stood out as different - a bright spot, a positive narrative in the making.
Of course this does not mean plain sailing. In speaking to the Security Council last month, our Special Representative Nick Kay called it a country “waking from a terrible nightmare”. Some of Somalia’s old shadows still haunt us. And the waking world has its own challenges.
But in this forum, together, we can face the challenges frankly as partners - with our eyes open, and focused on the way ahead.
Excellencies,
As the Danish Prime Minister and President noted, so much has been achieved since we met in Brussels just over a year ago.
First, Somalia has made strides towards building regional administrations that will be the foundation of a federal state. I want to congratulate our Somali partners on this ongoing effort, which takes great courage and compromise from all sides.
I am glad to see representatives of Somalia’s regions with us today, particularly those from Puntland and the Interim Jubba Administration. Your common work in building inclusive, representative governance will be key to Somalia’s future and to delivering on our Compact. I want to take this opportunity to pledge our support, and to encourage you especially to include women at all levels in your work.
Second, the campaign against Al-Shabaab has advanced. I salute the courage and sacrifice of Somali security forces and AMISOM. Their courage and sacrifice have denied Al-Shabaab their last strongholds, and we rely on them to consolidate security and enable access to these areas in the months ahead.
We must continue to support Somalia in stabilization and building sustainable security, under the leadership of the Federal Government. That must include a comprehensive approach to counter-terrorism.
Third, we have seen progress in our partnership for transparent finance through the Financial Governance Committee. This is critical to build confidence in Somalia’s economy at home and abroad. Much more needs to be done. But international economic investment is already significant and growing.
Excellencies,
Overall Somalia is in a better state than it has been in a generation. These gains have been the result of a strategic, effective partnership among Somalia’s federal leadership, that gave Somalis and those of us in the international community faith and confidence.
That is why I feel great sadness at the current political situation.
The news and scenes of the past few weeks in Mogadishu are unfortunately not new. Somalia has often been haunted by political instability and disunity.
Somalia cannot afford to repeat the pattern of division and paralysis that has led to ten Prime Ministers in a dozen years. This is not what Somalis have asked of their leaders. It is not for this that Somalis and AMISOM have laid down their lives. As Somalia’s friends and partners, the lack of unity, stability and delivery shakes our confidence.
I urge His Excellency the President and all our Somali colleagues to ensure that the current crisis is resolved rapidly, and in a way that ensures political stability through to 2016. I welcome the role of IGAD, of which Somalia is a founding member, in facilitating the search for a lasting solution.
In turn, we as international partners must ourselves must live up to the partnership principles we have pledged, and fulfil the commitments of this Compact.
Together, we all need to do better to ensure that our investment and commitment in Somalia is matched by results on the ground. We also must redouble our efforts to improve the lives of ordinary Somalis, remembering that some 3.2 million remain in need of humanitarian assistance. Failure to address their needs could undermine progress on all fronts.
The Compact we will renew today remains the right tool to marshal our efforts for long-term peace and development.
I look forward to our discussions today as partners. Let us especially remember that the purpose of the New Deal is to bring tangible benefits to the people of Somalia.
It is for us to help them forge the foundation of democracy, stability and prosperity on which they will rebuild their lives.
I wish you a productive conference.
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
This has been a rich day of discussions.
I will not attempt to summarize all our deliberations, but let me review the salient points.
First, I welcome the agreement we have heard on the need for an arrangement to ensure political unity, continuity and stability.
We welcome the process initiated by IGAD to facilitate dialogue to this end.
We have agreed to come together within 6 months, to evaluate progress on the political process, implementation of Vision 2016, and security.
Recognizing the recent military gains, we have reaffirmed our commitment to the conclusions of the London Security Event.
We have also reaffirmed the importance of stabilization activities, both governance and peace dividends; and highlighted the need to link the process of establishing local administrations to the state formation process.
We have agreed on the need to redouble our respective efforts on financial accountability and transparency, and to implement together the principles of the New Deal.
We have renewed our partnership and revalidated the Compact as the path and process whereby we work jointly for a peaceful, united and prosperous Somalia.
Finally, we finish our work today conscious of the urgency of delivering for the citizens of Somalia - on political unity, on stability, on security, on prosperity.
The past year has seen advances in our partnership, but activities in all areas need to be stepped up. Now is the time to show results. We cannot afford delays. Ultimately, the people of Somalia will be our judge; we must be ready to stand before them.
Thank you, Mr. President,
Mr. President and distinguished members of the Council,
Political update
Conflict in the east
UN activity
Conclusion
I am pleased to convey my greetings to this meeting of the International Support Group for Lebanon. I thank the German government for hosting and recognize Prime Minister Salam for his leadership.
Last month in New York, this Group expressed concern about the severe and growing challenges facing Lebanon as a result of the conflict in Syria. Continuing pressure on Lebanon’s eastern border and the weekend’s attacks on the Lebanese army in Tripoli have further highlighted the threat.
The unity of this Group – and indeed of the Security Council- in support of Lebanon’s stability and leaders has sent a strong signal. This complements the progress reflected in the present government. I hope that unity will soon be reinforced by the election of a new President.
This Group has consistently highlighted Lebanon’s need for international assistance for the Lebanese Armed Forces; for Syrian refugees and the communities hosting them; and for affected government programmes.
I welcome this meeting’s focus on the refugee presence in Lebanon. I understand certain anxieties about the scale of the Syrian refugee presence, and note the tensions in some communities. I also note recent policy decisions announced by the Government. I stress the continuing importance of close cooperation between the Government and UNHCR in managing the refugee presence effectively and in accordance with international humanitarian standards and human rights.
I look forward to the outcome of your discussions. I am very concerned at the shortfall in funding and hope your conclusions and those of the conference will encourage more stable and predictable funding from humanitarian and development sources. I also hope for further support to initiatives for resettlement of Syrian refugees. Lebanon is a beacon of tolerance and co-existence in the region. Easing the situation imposed by a crisis now in its fourth year is essential to Lebanon’s continued stability.
I extend my best wishes for a successful meeting.
Statements on 28 October 2014
The International Support Group for Lebanon met on Tuesday in Berlin to discuss the impact of millions of Syrian refugees in the country and the region. The Group includes representatives from the UN and its specialized agencies, the Arab League, the European Union (EU) and the five permanent members of the Security Council. It was established in 2013 to mobilize support for Lebanon's stability and state institutions in the wake of the crisis in Syria.
Chairman's Summary
At the invitation of German Foreign Minister Dr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier a meeting of the International Support Group for Lebanon was held in the presence of Prime Minister Tammam Salam preceding the ministerial “Conference on the Syrian refugee situation – supporting stability in the region”, on 28 October 2014 in Berlin.
Participants recalled their previous statements, including that issued after the last meeting of the Group which was convened by the Secretary-General of the United Nations on 26 September 2014 in New York.
Participants recognized with respect and grave concern the tremendous burden Lebanon continues to bear in hosting nearly 1.2 million refugees from Syria registered or awaiting registration, equivalent to a 30 per cent increase in Lebanon’s population, following the massive influx of Syrians into Lebanon since March 2011. They paid tribute to the response of its people and government. They recalled that mobilizing assistance to refugees and vulnerable communities affected by the crisis had been among the core objectives set at the inaugural meeting of the International Support Group for Lebanon on 25 September 2013 (SG/2198), and that this requires a coordinated humanitarian and development response and greater burden-sharing.
Participants noted the recent decision of the Government of Lebanon concerning its Syrian refugee policy. They encouraged the Government and UNHCR, with other UN agencies and partners, to cooperate closely to promote the effective management of the refugee presence.Participants will strive to support efforts leading towards durable solutions, namely repatriation in safety, abiding by the principle of non-refoulement, and resettlement. They reaffirmed their commitment to efforts under the auspices of the UN to achieve a political solution to the conflict in Syria which will create the conditions for refugees to return in safety, while recognizing that conditions for safe return could precede such a solution. In the absence of these conditions, participants reaffirmed their support to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees in his efforts to identify alternative options, including through increased resettlement, admission based on humanitarian needs, admission schemes based on private sponsorship, facilitation of family reunification or the use of programs such as student or employment visas to third countries. Participants welcomed efforts already undertaken by UN Member States in this regard and called for their enhancement.
Participants recalled that Lebanon has the highest per capita ratio of refugees worldwide, and that the pressure on Lebanese infrastructure and services is proportionately greater than in any other country. Reaffirming their call for expedited donor assistance, participants recognized the commitment of the Government of Lebanon to address the socio-economic impact of the Syrian crisis in an integrated Lebanon Crisis Response Plan to ensure that the needs of the vulnerable are adequately met, and stabilization requirements addressed. They welcomed the programs developed by the Lebanese government aimed at strengthening the public sector in response to the Syrian crisis, for example in the field of education. They acknowledged that competition over access to public services can exacerbate communal tensions and thus negatively affects stability. Participants called for the provision of support targeting the needs of refugees and Lebanese communities and affected Government programs, as will be outlined in the Lebanon Crisis Response Plan and the Government’s Roadmap for Stabilization and reflected in the “Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan” (3RP). They noted that a range of instruments has been developed to enable the provision of support based on the Government’s stabilization priority projects, including the World Bank Multi-Donor Trust Fund. They stressed the need for the Lebanese authorities to have in place arrangements to ensure speedy approval for international assistance programs and swift project implementation.
Participants recognized the security related implications of the crisis that threaten the safety of host communities and refugees alike and the efforts of the Government of Lebanon to mitigate them. They pledged to closely cooperate in countering all forms of extremism. They welcomed ongoing international assistance to address Lebanon’s security concerns and underlined the continuing urgent need for international support to the Lebanese Army and the security forces, as elaborated at the last meeting of the International Support Group.
Participants again emphasized the crucial importance of national unity for stability and security and expressed support for the efforts of Prime Minister Salam and his Government in confronting the many challenges facing the country. They expressed deep concern however at the continued vacancy in the office of the President and its impact on the functioning of State institutions. They affirmed that, while the presidential election must remain a Lebanese process, free from foreign interference, it is vital that Lebanon’s political leaders act to resolve the issue in the interest of all in Lebanon without further delay.
Madame la Présidente, Distingués membres du Conseil, Excellences, Mesdames et Messieurs,
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Mr. President,
Mr. President,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Dear Friends,
Allow me first to convey to you all the best regards and wishes of success from Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. I would also like to congratulate the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Fudan University, the United Nations Association of China and UNITAR for organizing this event – a unique opportunity to delve into the challenges of global governance from the perspective of cooperation between China and the United Nations.
I am delighted to be in China for the second time as Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs.
The United Nations welcomes the increasingly important role China plays across many areas of our work, including international peace and security. We share China’s view that peace and development go hand in hand. We welcome China’s determination to promote the reform of global governance with the United Nations at its core. We see China – with its long-term strategy of peaceful development, reform and opening-up – as our natural partner in this endeavour.
This September, Foreign Minister Wang Yi told the UN General Assembly that China would seek “to play a more proactive and constructive role in addressing international and regional hotspot issues to promote peace and dialogue, defuse conflicts and safeguard world peace and stability.” This is not only encouraging and vitally important, it is also what lies at the heart of the mandate of my Department and what I see as the pinnacle of our growing partnership with China and of the changing nature of global governance.
In my remarks today, I will therefore focus on how our efforts to strengthen the United Nations’ ability to prevent and resolve armed conflicts, in cooperation with Member States and regional organizations, mirror China’s pursuit of the “3 Cs”: “comprehensive, cooperative and common security”. I will provide you with a sense of how we carry out preventive diplomacy in practice, and share some lessons we have learned.
I am very pleased that my predecessor and friend, Ambassador B. Lynn Pascoe, who spearheaded my Department’s effort on conflict prevention, is present here with us today. I am sincerely grateful to Lynn for helping to turn DPA from what had been a largely analytical department into one that is also operational in the areas we are discussing today.
Ladies and gentlemen,
In our view, “Comprehensive, cooperative and common security” starts with conflict prevention. It is the raison d’êtreof the United Nations and lies at the heart of the Charter, whose drafters envisioned a strong preventive role for an Organization created to “save succeeding generations from the scourge of war”.
In 2011, State Councilor and then Foreign Minister H.E. Yang Jiechi at a high-level Security Council debate on preventive diplomacy reminded us that the UN “should truly change the mindset of prioritizing treatment over prevention” and to “devote energy to early warning, conflict prevention and peace mediation”.
This is exactly what DPA has been trying to do, and what we would like to do more of in cooperation with China. While our work to prevent and resolve conflicts takes different forms, today I will focus on the Good Offices of the Secretary-General and his Special Envoys as pivotal in preventing conflicts from erupting and in bringing wars to an end.
However, I will also be very clear that we cannot do this alone – history shows that only when we cooperate closely with Member States and regional organizations do we have a chance of succeeding.
Our Special Envoys are perhaps the most visible manifestation of the Secretary-General’s good offices mandate. In a variety of contexts across the globe, from Myanmar to the Arab world, these Envoys are supporting parties to prevent, defuse or resolve conflicts. They do this with support and mandates from either the Security Council, as is usually the case, or the General Assembly, and they always work in the context of respect for national sovereignty and ownership.
In Yemen, the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser has helped the Yemeni parties stay the course, thus far, in what remains the only negotiated transition of the Arab Spring. While I do not want to underestimate the fragility of Yemen’s institutions or the extend of the country’s challenges, the national dialogue that is currently taking place is the broadest consultation ever seen in the country, and a striking example of inclusivity, particularly women’s groups.
Yemen has deep, historic, regional, tribal, political, and even religious divides, and it has one of the most heavily armed populations in the world. Yet with the help of its regional and international partners, Yemenis remained determined to pursue a peaceful, negotiated transition.
In the African Great Lakes region, which has seen continued instability since the mid-1990s despite hosting the world’s largest UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC, the United Nations and its regional partners helped broker an unprecedented agreement, signed by eleven African nations, aimed at bringing peace to the peoples concerned.
The Secretary-General’s Special Envoy – the former President of Ireland, Ms. Mary Robinson – has been working closely with regional leaders, international actors and civil society groups to advance the implementation of this agreement and turn the tide from violence to hope. This agreement is called the “Framework of Hope,” and it contains voluntary commitments made at the national, regional, and international levels to address longstanding issues of governance, development and human rights. The Framework of Hope grew out of the conviction by regional and international leaders that the security problems in the Great Lakes region cannot be addressed by security means alone.
Ideally, prevention starts before it becomes even visible: in situations of low-level tensions that may, in the long run, become more serious if left unaddressed, we support national governments, at their request, to strengthen local capacities for conflict prevention and dispute resolution, working hand in hand with development partners.
In the best cases, we have worked with local and international partners successfully to address issues before they hit the news rather than merely respond once a conflict has attracted media attention.
When electoral processes raise the prospects of heightened tensions and instability, we work with governments to prevent election-related violence. In Guinea, for example, the Secretary-General responded last year to growing violence and calls for electoral boycotts by appointing an International Facilitator. The facilitator, working with a larger UN team of technical electoral and mediation experts, assisted the parties in overcoming their differences, with all parties agreeing to compete in and then accept the final results of the elections. The new national parliament is being sworn in today in Conakry, demonstrating that elections created the political space to move forward in the process of democratic consolidation. The fact that you have probably not heard of the UN’s role and that you didn’t have to read about a breakdown into violence are, in our opinion, hallmarks of successful intervention.
Often, prevention is about the patient and painstaking work of envoys and missions to keep attention on some of the world’s most chronic problems -- and to keep them from deteriorating. Big picture success has for decades eluded those working to bring peace to the Middle East, or solve the disputes on Cyprus or the Western Sahara. Yet there is not a doubt that the day-to-day work of keeping dialogue open and bringing parties around the table is helping to keep a lid on tensions.
Let me also refer specifically to Northeast Asia and Asia. The rest of the world expects a lot from the people and countries from this region, which is generally peaceful and well-equipped to address locally any issues that arise. But the region is not immune from serious challenges. Again with full respect for national sovereignty and in line with the UN Charter that is the basis of our work, we are ready to work with you and other countries concerned to overcome any deficit of mutual trust and understanding, so that the region can continue to realize its creative and constructive potential.
Regrettably, prevention does not always work. However, even in cases where it has clearly failed, such as Syria or the Central African Republic, Good Offices offer a potentially successful path back to security and reconciliation: diplomacy must continue to get the parties to step back from the brink and face each other around a negotiating table. Political challenges lie at the center of most conflicts and are the key to both their prevention and their resolution. Only by finding political solutions can we ensure that peace, when it does come, holds over the long term.
I am planning to travel with the Secretary-General to Geneva next week for the peace Conference on Syria. We have worked very hard to get the parties to Geneva. We still don’t know if we will succeed. But we see this as the best hope for achieving a political solution that can end the violence and help restore peace to Syria. We have long said that there is no military solution that will end Syria’s crisis, and the attempt by both the government and the opposition forces to impose a military solution has created a humanitarian catastrophe. It should be obvious to all that the cost of a military approach is simply too high. We’re grateful to China for its support of the 30 June 2012 Geneva communique which holds out the promise of a political solution.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Hard-won experience over the years has taught us a number of lessons about what works in preventive diplomacy and mediation as critical elements to bring about the “3Cs”. I know that China, too, has accumulated important knowledge in this regard, both in Asia and further afield. We are very interested in hearing your views, learning from your lessons, and exchanging experiences.
We have learnt that being present early is critical. This not simply about getting the necessary information at an early stage of the conflict, but also about mobilizing rapid, effective and unified diplomatic action as soon as opportunities present themselves. As a Permanent Member of the Security Council, China’s role here is essential: we need Security Council support for early engagement.
Second, early engagement is only part of the puzzle. We also need to be skilled at what we do. Preventive diplomacy and mediation are complex and increasingly specialized fields, which require expertise in a wide array of areas, some quite technical and complex. We have, therefore, focused on building up expertise that can be rapidly deployed and available to United Nations envoys, regional organizations and Member States themselves.
Third, partnerships are key. The crises we face are too complex for any one organization or Member State to address alone. In a world where the nature of conflict has evolved, where terrorism and transnational crime often intersect with political grievances, partnerships are all the more important. The United Nations is working ever more closely with regional and sub-regional actors, such as with the League of Arab States on Syria and with the African Union in Somalia and Mali. Our cooperation with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization provides a solid foundation for engaging with the region and we stand ready to work even more closely together. As does China, we are also building a strong partnership with ASEAN, in line with its own goals of establishing an ASEAN community by 2015.
Fourth, the perhaps most important ingredient for success in preventive diplomacy is leverage. The Secretary-General of the United Nations commands no battalions and is not in charge of a Treasury. The tools he has at his disposal are largely the power of persuasion and the principles of the United Nations Charter.
These are powerful tools in their own right. They reflect a shared understanding amongst Member States, refined through decades of negotiations and practice, and are applicable universally. But to be effective, they require that the international community – and in particular the major global powers – be closely aligned, empowering the Secretary-General to speak on behalf of a common voice.
In Syria, we see how hard it is to make progress when this unity of purpose is not present. In Mali and Yemen, on the other hand, the international community was able to move quickly to prevent quickly deteriorating situations from becoming even more unstable. We are attempting to do the same today in the Central African Republic and South Sudan.
While some countries may see UN support in conflict prevention or peacemaking as a sign that a government has failed, this is not the case. Our role is to support national efforts, and it is with national actors that we work in every single instance.
Ladies and gentlemen,
To realize “comprehensive, cooperative and common security”, the case for diplomacy – and ideally preventive diplomacy - is compelling andwe know that it works. Not in every situation, or even close. But our experience tells us that if we are present in the trouble spots, with early and skilful diplomatic initiatives, backed by the unified stand of the international community and the necessary resources, we can be successful in either preventing conflict or keeping it in check.
China is a key actor in this endeavour, whose voice needs to be heard both on specific cases and in general debates about a twenty-first century approach to these vital global governance topics. This is why this dialogue is so important and why, I hope, it will grow and flourish in the years ahead. We are confident that our partnership with China will contribute to making the world more peaceful, secure and prosperous.
May I wish you all a happy, healthy and dynamic forthcoming Year of the Horse.
Thank you.
Good evening ladies and gentlemen.
I am delighted to be back in Bangladesh at the behest of the Secretary-General. Since my arrival on 7 December, I have had discussions with a range of national stakeholders. I have met with the Prime Minister, the Opposition leader, the Foreign Minister and Foreign Secretary, the Chief Election Commissioner, a number of senior advisors to the Prime Minister and to the Opposition leader, as well as leaders of major political parties and representatives of civil society.
The current political crisis is exacting a heavy, human, social and economic toll on Bangladesh. It has resulted in increasing tension and seriously threatens the hard-earned economic and social progress that Bangladesh has achieved.
I also conveyed to everybody that I met the Secretary-General’s extreme concern about the rising levels of violence. The majority of the victims of this violence are innocent civilians, including women and children. I strongly urged everybody I met to exercise restraint, uphold human rights, and to respect the rule of law. The actions of leaders on these issues would address one of the greatest concerns I have felt during my short visit here: ensuring the security of all people.
The UN stands for free, fair, inclusive and non-violent elections. It is clear that the Bangladeshi people want and deserve this. The credibility of the election will ultimately rest with the people of this country.
I strongly believe that a solution to the current deadlock is still possible if there is political will, leadership and an attitude of compromise.
Yesterday and today at the invitation of the UN Secretary-General, senior representatives from the Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party met and engaged in dialogue. I commend both sides for seizing this important opportunity: it is a first answer to the expectations of the people. A third meeting was agreed between the parties.
The leaders have shown statesmanship. It remains critical to reduce tension and to continue to engage in constructive dialogue so as to create a congenial atmosphere.
There are measures that would contribute immensely: a call by all sides to end the violence, the release of opposition political leaders, and a mutually satisfactory solution to concerns regarding the election schedule.
At this moment the world is remembering Nelson Mandela’s legacy. Please allow me to quote his words from the visit he made to Bangladesh in March 1997: “a nation united in pursuit of shared goals can overcome the most difficult problems”.
I firmly believe there is ground for an agreement. Bangladeshi leaders must continue to come together. I encouraged both sides to continue their dialogue in the spirit of good will and compromise. Bangladeshi’s expect them to work together constructively to decrease tensions and to find mutually agreeable solutions for free, fair, inclusive and non-violent elections.
On my return to New York, I will brief the UN Secretary-General on my visit and I will share with him the messages and views of those that I have met.
Bangladesh is an important Member State of the United Nations. It has a powerful voice in shaping the global development agenda beyond 2015. It is consistently one of the largest troop contributing countries to the UN peacekeeping operations. So much has been achieved since independence. The United Nations Team, here on the ground in Bangladesh, remains deeply committed to supporting the country’s drive to development and middle income status. We will also continue to support efforts to strengthen democracy.
I have enjoyed a tremendous hospitality of the Bangladeshi people. I remain optimistic about the prospects for this country’s future.
Before closing, I would like to thank the press. Please continue your work, please remain balanced and impartial.
I thank you for your attention and welcome questions.
Mr. President,
Friends and colleagues,
Let me begin by thanking Brookings, and in particular Strobe Talbot, Martin Indyk and Bruce Jones, for the invitation to speak about the UN’s diplomacy in today’s crises. I credit Martin, in fact, for how my career evolved: when I worked for Martin as a “Gaza watcher” from the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv, I had not planned to spend the rest of my State Department tenure in the Middle East and North Africa. Martin’s passion and leadership inspired me to do just that. Martin also had the good sense to encourage me to get to know Bruce Jones, then with the UN, to explore how the U.S. and the UN could work together to promote Israeli-Palestinian peace. Given the leadership role Norway plays in promoting peaceful resolution of conflicts including through funding and organizing UN mediation efforts, I am particularly grateful for Ambassador Strommen’s participation here today.
It is a pleasure to be here and to see so many familiar faces and such interest in the United Nations.
It was exactly a year ago this month that – after nearly 30 years at the State Department – I took up the position as head of the UN’s Department of Political Affairs. It has been an interesting twelve months.
For those who do not know it, the Department of Political Affairs works at the center of UN preventive diplomacy and peacemaking. It oversees political missions and peace envoys abroad, and the UN’s support for free elections worldwide. It monitors political developments around the globe and works hard to mobilize action at the international level to prevent and resolve conflict. One could say that the Department of Political Affairs, or DPA, plays a similar role within the UN that the U.S. State Department plays within the U.S. Government, in that we advise the Secretary-General on peace and political issues and manage UN political efforts in the field. But, as I shall explain, that parallel only goes so far.
Today I am delighted to be back in Washington, familiar terrain, but my vantage point has changed. To illustrate my new, UN perspective, I will attempt to answer two questions:
In answering these questions, I will open with some general comments about the work of the UN and then use some specific geographic examples to illustrate our methods.
On the first question – differences between multilateral and bilateral diplomacy -- I underestimated the time and effort I needed to adjust to a far greater change than I had anticipated. As an English native speaker I had assumed that I would have no difficulties in “reading comprehension” at the UN. It could not have been further from the truth: 193 nations are far more creative than a single one – getting fully proficient in UNglish is enriching even for those of us who grew up with Webster’s and the Oxford English Dictionary.
But, more seriously, until you leave the U.S. Government you cannot fully grasp what it means to walk into a room backed at all times by the tangible power of the Presidency, the Pentagon and the dollar, the voting weight at the IMF and World Bank, and a permanent seat in the Security Council. They were assets that – almost without noticing – I carried with me as U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon and U.S. Assistant Secretary of State. Yes, of course when serving the U.S. Government, one is vaguely aware of the “package” one carries into a meeting. And one of my best educational experiences in the U.S. Foreign Service was observing and learning from experienced foreign policy practitioners, like Martin and Strobe, how to use those powers. But if one has spent an entire diplomatic career with those assets, as I did, it is something of a shock suddenly to be without them. Initially I felt a sense of almost diplomatic nakedness: you mean I now have to rely only on my own powers of persuasiveness?
But at the UN, I learned from watching my new colleagues that UN officials also wield important sources of power as they try to coax antagonists toward peace. But the UN powers are quite different from what U.S. diplomats carry with them to meetings. Learning how to use intangibles -- ideals, principles, values -- has been at the top of my own UN education.
Placed on our shoulders, for example, are the principles of the UN Charter and the legitimacy derived from the universal membership. The principles and ideals that gave birth to the UN, it is worth remembering, derive from U.S. leadership and vision.
Another of the UN’s strengths is its perceived impartiality, which allows us to talk to all sides and play the honest-broker role that others often cannot. And here again that universal membership helps: to crises, we can deploy negotiators and missions that are diverse and with regional and substantive expertise. This can help win quick respect of the parties concerned.
Moreover, our goal is to prevent and resolve conflicts, period. We do not pick winners or losers. Think about when the UN reports to the Security Council: While our reports can be, and often are, criticized, the UN has an ability to shape international perception of an issue that would be different, say, than when the U.S. Government issues a report on something in which the U.S. has a vested interest in a certain outcome.
This UN leverage, you might think, is less than what the U.S. has. But the legitimacy that the UN can convey to decisions on peace and security cannot be replicated by any one nation, no matter how powerful.
A further difference for me was trying to master, after all the years thinking about the Middle East, a conflict portfolio that is global as opposed to regional. My geographic experience from the State Department was of little use as I walked the corridors of the African Union for the first time, struggled to grasp the challenges we faced in the Central African Republic or Mali, or during the visits I’ve made to Ashgabat and Kathmandu.
What remains the same, however, whether viewed from Foggy Bottom or from Turtle Bay, is the political nature of most conflicts and, thus, the centrality of political solutions.
Yes, the UN can use troops – and often needs to – to stabilize and to provide security on the ground. The UN deploys over 110,000 troops around the world, second only to the United States. And, yes, UN humanitarian actors help to diminish the suffering of victims of man-made or natural disasters.
But lasting solutions to conflicts requires working the politics in tough places. The day I took office, the Secretary-General instructed me to strengthen our diplomatic engagement across the board, to do better on early warning, preventive diplomacy, and conflict mediation. Ban Ki-moon has made prevention – from prevention of childhood disease to prevention of armed conflict – the centerpiece of his leadership at the UN.
And this is what we are trying to do, with varying degrees of success, in numerous arenas today, often in evolving and complex operating environments, in which problems of state failure and internal conflict have been magnified by cross-border threats, such as terrorism and the rise of organised crime, by military coups, and by changing patterns of violence. And in doing this, we are trying to use established tools as effectively as possible, while also developing new approaches. It is worth remembering that the UN was established a result of a world war between states. But more often than not, conflicts now emerge within states, meaning our tools and engagement must constantly evolve as well.
Let me focus now on a few of these cases, and highlight what the UN brings to the table in doing politics in tough places: Syria, Somalia, the Great Lakes region of Africa, and Afghanistan.
I will begin with Syria. Nothing has been more painful than to watch the Syrian crisis unfolding ever more tragically every day, and sowing instability across the entire region.
The Syria crisis is an example of the challenges the UN faces when sharp divergences of perspectives paralyzes the Security Council. UN tools that some might consider as potentially useful – an arms embargo, sanctions, perhaps even reference of the Syria file to the ICC – simply aren’t available, given the Security Council deadlock. So what do we do?
First, one important aspect of the UN’s work regarding the Syria crisis is mobilizing support for humanitarian relief and delivering humanitarian assistance to those affected by the fighting. The humanitarian actors lead these efforts, obviously, but there are political aspects as well: the Damascus office of UN-League of Arab States Joint Special Representative Lakhdar Brahimi has, drawing on the impartiality of the UN, brokered with government and opposition forces some localized cease-fires to get assistance across constantly changing front lines.
Second, we are working as best we can to limit the damage to Syria’s neighbors of the spillover from the conflict. We promote ways to support host communities and government institutions, particularly in Jordan and Lebanon, to help mitigate what could easily become destabilizing factors stemming from the inflow of hundreds of thousands of refugees. Drawing on the fact that, while divided on Syria, the Security Council is united on Lebanon, we have also sought to strengthen political support for Lebanon.
Third, the UN has also organized post-conflict planning. These efforts do not presume any particular political outcome but do assume that, when the guns fall silent, the UN will be expected to play a role in rebuilding a shattered country. We have prepared a number of scenarios for UN action that will depend on the circumstances and on what the Syrian people themselves might request from the UN.
Our primary political role, of course, is promoting a political solution for Syria. We could not have more capable mediators than, first, Kofi Annan and, now, Lakhdar Brahimi. And only the UN can offer the broad umbrella of impartiality under which parties and their supporters can arrive at an internationally legitimized settlement in confidence that their interests could be protected.
But it has been an uphill struggle from the onset. All of our bleakest predictions seem to be coming true. Whenever a slight opening appears for advancing a political solution, dynamics either on the ground or among international and regional actors interfere.
Neither side in Syria has been ready to talk peace seriously. The Government has continued to depict what is a full-blown civil war, rooted in real grievances, as the work of a handful of foreign-backed terrorists. The opposition has remained mired in its conflicts and fragmentation.
Still, we remain convinced that there is no military solution. The belief by some that there is a military solution is leading to Syria’s destruction. We stand ready to host a peace conference as soon as possible in support of the Kerry-Lavrov initiative announced on May 7, and I participated in the two Russian-U.S.-UN trilateral preparatory meetings chaired by Lakhdar Brahimi in Geneva in June. But with current developments on the ground, the conference date keeps slipping.
In the end there is a need for a new politics in Syria – and urgently so: with every additional day of fighting, lives are lost, hatred rises and a united, multicultural, peaceful Syria becomes an ever more distant reality. If the key powers can help deliver the parties to the table, there is still a chance, based on the Geneva Communiqué, for a negotiated transition in Syria.
Let me turn now to Somalia, where we have reached a potential turning point. I was in Mogadishu just two weeks ago, my second trip there in 2013. For the UN, Somalia represents the challenge of how, in the face of so many crises demanding attention, the UN can help to sustain regional and international focus on a process that has the promise of real success but that still needs to be nurtured.
Since the early 1990s, it had been perhaps convenient to look away from Somalia in despair. But clearly one of the lessons of the past decade -- from Kabul to Mogadishu to Bamako – is that failed and failing states pose an unacceptable danger not only to their own people but to the region around them and the world at large.
And so the task ending anarchy and building security and a stable government in Somalia took on great strategic as well as humanitarian significance. The UN has invested heavily along with partners including the African Union and key governments such as the United States to try to turn the tide in that country.
The UN helped mediate the 2008 Djibouti Agreement, which laid out a roadmap for transition that was completed last August when Somalis elected a new Government. The UN helped broker some of the understandings between clans and regions that led to the end of the transition period.
Today, the country has, for the first time in decades, a leadership that is committed to building the state. The archetypal failed state has before it the best chance in a generation to build a stable government and bring a measure of peace and prosperity to its people.
Of course diplomacy is only one side of this story. It was a major security intervention by the African Union that fundamentally turned the tide against Al Shabab. The United States helped get that AU mission, AMISOM, off the ground and secure UN support for it. Part of our task today is making sure AMISOM continues to receive financial and political support, for the Somali security services are not yet able to extend authority across the entire state. Somalia still needs AMISOM, and AMISOM still needs financial and logistics support from the international community.
The very real security gains provided already by AMISOM have helped pry open space for serious political work. For the first time since the 1990s, the UN’s political mission for Somalia operates in Mogadishu, not Nairobi. Our political engagement inside the country includes helping to address the relationship between the federal government in Mogadishu and the regions, including Somaliland and Puntland. Our Special Representative in Mogadishu is also helping to manage the evolving relationships between Mogadishu and its neighbors, whose support remains essential to Somalia’s success.
Security is still a concern – a UN compound was attacked by terrorists last month – and we do not underestimate the obstacles ahead in Somalia. But we remain committed and determined to stay. Others need to remain focused on support for Somalia as well.
In the Great Lakes Region of Africa, we can see how the UN has addressed a long-standing challenge, a problem that seems almost immune to solutions – instability in the eastern Democratic Republic – with a new, expanded approach that offers a ray of hope.
MONUSCO, the UN’s peacekeeping force in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is the UN’s largest. It remains an essential tool for the protection of civilians and to promote stability. But, recognizing that security tools alone were insufficient to solve the problems of the eastern DRC, the Secretary-General at the beginning of this year concluded a political agreement among 11 countries – the DRC and its neighbors – and four organizations, including the UN and the African Union. Dubbed the 11+4 agreement, this framework codified commitments from the DRC, the other national signatories, and the four organizations.
In addition, the Secretary-General appointed Mary Robinson, the former President of Ireland and former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, as his Special Envoy to the Great Lakes Region, to use the framework to end the recurring cycles of violence, including horrific sexual violence. Besides working at the senior leadership level, Special Envoy Robinson is also drawing in grass-roots civil society and women’s organizations to a comprehensive political approach.
We also welcome the recent appointment of the U.S. envoy for the Great Lakes and the U.S. commitment to work closely with Mary Robinson in support of the 11+4 framework.
To add economic incentives and underline the linkage between security and development, the Secretary-General and Jim Yong Kim, the President of the World Bank, recently travelled in the region in what was the first joint mission of this kind.
Moreover, the Security Council has authorized a new intervention brigade within the UN’s peacekeeping mission in the DRC. This is intended to establish a deterrent that should give some breathing space for renewed political and diplomatic efforts.
In summary, we are bringing our convening power, diplomatic, peacekeeping and financial assets into play to encourage a comprehensive approach to the challenges in the Great Lakes. We cannot afford to let this new opportunity slip away.
Regarding Afghanistan, the UN is viewing our engagement in light of the significant changes that will take place with the withdrawal of ISAF troops and the presidential elections in 2014. My colleagues in the UN’s Department of Peacekeeping Operations have the lead in Afghanistan, but DPA is heavily involved in strategic thinking as well. Among other challenges, Afghanistan is a good example of how even the United Nations – like the United States -- needs to be sensitive to concerns of national sovereignty.
In March, the Security Council renewed the mandate of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) for an additional year without major changes and thereby signalled a desire for continuity in the mission’s role, including its good offices on elections; reconciliation and regional cooperation.
Many of our Member States see a similar role for the UN post-2014. However, some actors in the current Afghan Government have indicated skepticism regarding a continued political role for the UN. They argue this role could “interfere” with Afghan sovereignty. UN diplomacy will require finding compromise and consensus among different interests to allow the Organisation to continue to assist Afghans in the most effective way without compromising the country’s sovereignty.
One way for the UN to engage, of course, is to work regionally, where Afghanistan is one among several partners. The UN’s Regional Centre in Central Asia based in Ashgabat, another one of DPA’s overseas missions, is actively involved in the Istanbul Process and working with the governments of the region to identify common projects and approaches which build trust and thereby prevent conflict and instability in the long term.
To illustrate our work on more “classic good offices,” let me also touch briefly on Yemen and relations between Iraq and Kuwait:
Yemen, in my view, is an excellent example of how the UN complements the work of other partners. It is the only country in the region to emerge from the so-called Arab Spring with a consensus blueprint for a peacefully negotiated transition. The GCC countries and bilateral partners such as the United States deserve our applause in promoting the power-sharing and transition roadmap known as the GCC initiative, finally signed by former Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh in November 2011. I believe that the leverage in terms of real power politics by certain GCC countries and the U.S. was essential in persuading Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down.
But Saleh’s signature was only one step in a long and complicated process. A national dialogue had to be organized, with a secretariat set up and committees established, to draw up principles on which a constitution would be drafted. Various understandings had to be brokered, lest the nascent dialogue process collapse. Powerful parties and individuals had to be persuaded to put their trust in the process. All these complicated aspects of implementation have been overseen by the UN, through the Secretary-General’s special envoy.
While considerable work remains before elections can be organized as scheduled in 2014, let us remember that Yemen has one of the most heavily armed and severely tribalized societies in the world, not to mention enormous economic and social challenges. The fact that the Yemenis themselves remain by and large inside the political process speaks volumes about the effectiveness of multilateral diplomacy and partnerships.
On Iraq and Kuwait, the Security Council passed a resolution on June 27 that praised the relationship between the two countries, lifted some of the Chapter VII obligations on Iraq regarding Kuwait, and that was drafted with the full cooperation of both Iraq and Kuwait working in partnership. Moreover, the two countries have been maintaining their border together. For those of us who remember the 1990-1991 period, this is a remarkable turn-around. Credit is due first and foremost to the Kuwaitis and Iraqis themselves. But this is also an area in which I believe UN diplomacy, complemented and backed by the U.S. efforts in both Kuwait and Baghdad, made a real difference.
Both Yemen and Iraq/Kuwait demonstrate the importance of complementary action of bilateral and multilateral diplomacy: when we combine our strengths, lasting solutions can be found.
Ladies and gentlemen,
As we deal with tough politics in all of these arenas and others that might come up in the discussion afterwards, a number of challenges emerge across the board.
First, going from early warning to early response. Although we are still sometimes caught off guard, our single biggest challenge is not to improve early warning, but to find ways to mobilize early action – rapid and unified diplomatic action – as soon as opportunities open up. This is particularly important when we need to prevent mass loss of life. Successful early interventions are far less costly in blood and treasure than conflicts and peacekeeping, obviously.
But political space for early interventions is often extremely limited, due to concerns over sovereignty and interference in internal affairs. The UN cannot simply force itself upon the parties to a conflict; it can only mediate where there is willingness and consent. Sovereignty issues and other questions that affect our ability to broker peace and prevent atrocities are currently at the heart of a major internal process at the UN of learning from the lessons of failure to prevent atrocities in Sri Lanka.
Second, professionalising the service. Yes, there is an art to diplomacy and there always will be. However, in today’s complex peace processes, even the most skilled diplomat needs access to a broad range of technical expertise. Through relatively new instruments, including a stand-by team of mediation experts who can be deployed to any negotiation setting in the world within 72 hours, we are adding more than a dose of science to the art. This kind of mobile assistance – on issues such as power-sharing, constitution-making, mediation process design – is in such demand that we can barely keep up. And let me here salute Norway again, as Norwegian financial, intellectual, and logistics support has made this stand-by team possible.
My third point relates to security, a subject quite familiar to U.S. diplomats as well. Our work is becoming more and more dangerous. Mogadishu was only the most recent reminder. When our mobility is restricted due to security, our ability to deliver on our mandates is seriously compromised. In short, we, too, face the dilemma of trying to do effective political outreach while hemmed in behind T-walls, razor wire and sandbags.
Finally, let me end how I started, with leverage. Equipped with neither offensive battalions nor billions of available dollars, what leverage does the UN have – beyond the UN’s broad legitimacy I spoke of earlier?
The real challenge is finding ways to build consensus and to get the international community to speak with one voice.
When it is united, the leverage is high. On Yemen, we have a united Council. On Syria, we do not. It is hard to overstate the difference that makes.
Doing politics in tough places is not easy. But it is my strong belief that we have no alternative but to maintain the momentum around diplomacy and ensure that we stay focused, in every engagement, on finding political solutions.
And that we pool our efforts for peace. For while bilateral and multilateral diplomacy may work differently, when they combine their clout the results can be powerful. We need the best of both to succeed in today’s tough places.
Thank you very much.
Your Excellency, Mr. Didier Burkhalter, Vice-President of the Federal Council and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Government of Switzerland
Your Excellency, Ambassador Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Director-General of the United Nations Office in Geneva
Your Excellency, Ms. Navanethem Pillay, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Distinguished delegates,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
It is my distinct privilege to welcome you all to the International Counter-Terrorism Focal Points Conference on Addressing Conditions Conducive to the Spread of Terrorism and Promoting Regional Cooperation.
Let me begin by extending my sincere gratitude to H.E. Minister Burkhalter for co-chairing this Conference. Through him, I wish to thank the Government of Switzerland for the support it has provided to the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task Force (CTITF) in convening this event.
And I thank all of you who have traveled from great distances to participate in what I trust will be rich and thought-provoking discussions.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
This Conference takes place at a critical time in the international community’s struggle against terrorism and extremism. If we scan the international landscape today, unfortunately, we see terrorism expanding its geographic range, reaching distant and unlikely corners and not confined to a select group of countries or a single region.
At the same time, the mere fact that conferences such as today’s as well as the regional workshops preceding it take place, also points not only to increased international awareness but also resolve to jointly tackle one of today’s greatest global challenges.
When considering the twin aspects of our theme:
Addressing Conditions Conducive to the Spread of Terrorism;
and Promoting Regional Cooperation
and putting them in relation to the UN’s mandate as stipulated in the Global Counter-terrorism Strategy, there appear to be three main questions that we should address today and tomorrow:
Allow me to sketch some initial suggestions based on the Secretary-General’s call for the UN as a whole to closely work with Member States to ensure that we do not simply respond to ever more sophisticated attacks but that we get ahead of the ones calling into question everyone’s right to a life in dignity and security.
With regard to the question of how to translate the global resolve to counter terrorism into practical cooperation at regional level, the UN has started by reviewing its own internal cooperation:
The Secretary-General has requested all relevant UN agencies to collaborate under their respective mandates to counter terrorism.
While the primary responsibility for the implementation of the Global Strategy rests with Member States, CTITF’s coordination and coherence role ensures that the UN system is attuned to the needs of Member States and provides them with the necessary policy support, as well as technical assistance.
CTITF has brought 31 UN entities under its framework to coordinate the UN’s CT-related activities. Several Security Council mandated bodies, including the Counter-Terrorism Executive Directorate (CTED) of the Counter-Terrorism Committee, the Al-Qaida Taliban Sanctions Monitoring Teams and the 1540 Monitoring Team and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) are key partners under the CTITF framework.
While progress has been made, we are striving to further enhance internal coordination and coherence.
With regard our role in assisting enhanced regional cooperation, I see it two-fold: first, building in-depth knowledge of the Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy amongst a broad spectrum of national authorities, relevant ministries, regional organizations, civil society and a variety of other non-traditional stakeholders; and second, to assist member states with capacity-building.
Under this initiative, the CTITF has convened regional events on the implementation of the Strategy in Southeast Asia, Eastern Africa, Southern Africa and South Asia, and will convene the next regional event for Western African and the Sahel in Nigeria next month.
I thank the Governments of Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Namibia, Nigeria and Indonesia for their partnership in this important endeavor. I also thank the Governments of Austria, Germany, Norway, Switzerland, Turkey and the United States for making this initiative possible.
In each of the regional workshops that the CTITF organized, three key messages were shared: first, terrorism can be effectively countered through meaningful, inclusive and broad-based coordination between all relevant national ministries, agencies and civil society partners. Second, regional counter-terrorism mechanisms must be strengthened to enhance cross-border cooperation against a threat that is not confined within political borders. And last but not least, states must give due consideration to conditions that are conducive to the spread of terrorism and provide terrorists an appealing narrative to spread hate, foment extremism and provoke violence.
Moving beyond the national level, we know that States cannot win the battle against terrorism alone. They must cooperate with each other, starting with cooperation at the regional level.
When a group of regional States synchronize their respective legislation, appoint coordinators or focal points on institutional coordination, develop mechanisms for sustained cooperation and address the threat of terrorism with collective resolve, terrorists find it difficult to recruit, move, raise funds or carry out their activities within that region.
A number of regions in the world have demonstrated that strong counter-terrorism cooperation at the regional level is possible. We should continue supporting more regional cooperation in other regions of the world. The UN is your partner in enhancing regional links.
Let me now turn to my second question: How do we move beyond combating the criminal aspects of terrorism and address its root causes more effectively?
While terrorism cannot be justified for any reason or for any grievance, we also know that there are socio-economic and political conditions that let terrorists gain sympathy, spread extremism and develop a narrative in support for violence.
Unemployment, intolerance, lack of education, on-going conflict, the absence of the rule of law and good governance – all can become factors that could help terrorism and extremism spread. We need to learn from each other and work across sectors to ensure that link short-term actions with longer term investments in better livelihoods and opportunities for all.
National counter-terrorism focal points serve a critical purpose in ensuring that all relevant sections of Government, including those sections that are not traditionally associated with security, are playing their part in fostering dialogue between communities, preventing radicalization, improving law enforcement, suppressing the financing of terrorism and ensuring that all national counter-terrorism policies are in accordance with international human rights, humanitarian and refugee laws.
Through this Conference, the United Nations intends to further emphasize the critical role that counter-terrorism coordinators play in the fight against terrorism at the national, regional and international levels.
And now to my final opening question: how do we ensure that we do not call into question the full respect of human rights when fighting terrorism?
The human rights principles provide us with our common basis on how to allow every person to lead a life in dignity and freedom.
If we allow compromise on human rights we are not countering terrorism but letting it gets its way. When the principles enshrined in the human rights instruments are disrespected, extremism tends to thrive. In turn, the human rights principles provide us with a strong basis for making the case against terrorism. Thus, rather than seeing a dichotomy, I see human rights as one of our greatest assets in finding sustainable solutions to countering extremism and terrorism.
High Commissioner Pillay’s team closely cooperates with CTITF and Member States and provide us with practical suggestions on how to make the positive correlation more explicit.
As we begin our two days of discourse, I invite you to share your experiences and your knowledge on these topics. We at the United Nations are keen to hear your views. At the conclusion of this Conference, we will share a short informal Chair’s summary that will help guide our work in the near future. And I will brief the Secretary-General upon my return to New York.
As Chairman of the CTITF and Executive Director of the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNCCT), I will ensure more effective action in implementing the Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy by the United Nations.
I am confident that the challenge of terrorism is not insurmountable if we act jointly.
Thank you.
I am visiting the Central African Republic today to express the grave concern of the United Nations about the deteriorating security and human rights situation in the country and to convey the solidarity with the people who are suffering and extremely vulnerable at this moment.
How to stop the suffering, ensure that security is restored and to help the Central African Republic back on a path to legitimate constitutional rule was the subject of my discussions in Cameroon on Saturday and again today in Bangui with Prime Minister Nicolas Tiangaye and with representatives of political parties and civil society.
I have also spent time today with our team in the country. They have been doing their best under very difficult circumstances under the leadership of SRSG Vogt.
I met yesterday in Yaounde with UN staff who had to be temporarily relocated until security permits them to return to their jobs. Many of our own staff also face uncertainty and had their homes and personal property looted.
Of course our primary concern remains with the people of the Central African Republic.
Foremost at this time is the urgent need to establish law and order throughout the country and to protect civilians from abuse.
There must be a stop to the killing, the looting, the attacks on civilian population, the violations of human rights and the violent confrontations targeting segments of the population.
There must be an immediate stop to acts of sexual violence, and a stop to the recruiting of children into armed groups.
Those who have seized power must shoulder their responsibilities and control those elements under their command. The Secretary-General believes firmly there should be no impunity for violence and crime.
All actors, including Seleka, should facilitate the distribution of humanitarian aid. The extensive looting of humanitarian aid agency offices and warehouses and the disruption of vital humanitarian aid are having a devastating impact on the lives of hundreds of thousands of civilians.
The authorities must move quickly to establish security, with support from all who are in a position to help fill the vacuum. ECCAS has made a welcome announcement last week of its intention to increase the numbers of regional forces. More support may be needed.
In my meeting with the Prime Minister in Douala on 20 April, I have urged him to exercise leadership in helping to restore calm throughout the country.
On the political front, there must be a full return to constitutional order, as the United Nations, the African Union, ECCAS and many in the international community have demanded. We continue to emphasize that this transition should be carried out in an inclusive and transparent manner, in accordance with the Libreville Accord signed in January this year.
Winner-take-all politics has caused grave harm in the past. A peaceful future will require dialogue and compromise between Central Africans.
Let me add that the international community also has an important responsibility. It must remain focused on the Central African Republic and to provide sustained and timely attention and resources.
The Central African Republic cannot continue to be the “forgotten crisis” that emerges briefly on the international radar screen and then slips back into oblivion until the next tragic flare-up.
After security, humanitarian needs are paramount at the moment. With the current humanitarian appeal at just over 20% funded, we are calling on donors to increase urgently their contributions in order to address the immense needs and help to prepare us to move forward as security conditions permit.
The United Nations is looking at how it can enhance its assistance. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has expressed his deep concerns.
My discussions here will help to inform a report he will be making to the Security Council in the coming days, as we look to see how best the UN can use all of the instruments at its disposal to help build the environment of peace and security that the people of the CAR so badly need and deserve.
Thank you.
Excellences,
Je me réjouis de vous retrouver à Bamako pour discuter comment nous pouvons au mieux harmoniser nos efforts en soutien au Mali. Depuis la dernière réunion du Groupe de soutien et de suivi, le 5 février à Bruxelles, la communauté internationale a continué d’intensifier ses efforts pour contribuer à la résolution de la crise au Mali. Comme vous le savez, le Secrétaire général a présenté son rapport sur la situation au Mali le 26 mars au Conseil de sécurité, et nous attendons une décision du Conseil dans les jours à venir. I am delighted to once again join all of you here in Bamako to discuss how we can best align our efforts in support of Mali. Since the last meeting of the Support and Follow-up Group on 5 February 2013 in Brussels, the international community has continued to intensify its efforts in support to the resolution of the crisis in Mali. As you know, the Secretary-General presented his report on the situation in Mali to the Security Council on 26 March and we expect the Council to take a decision on Mali in the coming days.
Dans le même temps, la stratégie intégrée des Nations Unies pour le Sahel est en cours de finalisation et nous espérons qu’elle servira d’outil pour s’attaquer à certaines des causes du conflit au Mali et dans le Sahel. Je salue la présence parmi nous l’Envoyé spécial du Secrétaire général pour le Sahel, M. Romano Prodi. M. Prodi partagera avec nous sa vision sur la façon dont la communauté internationale pourra aider le Sahel à surmonter les défis profonds auxquels il est confronté. At the same time, the UN integrated Strategy for the Sahel is being finalized and we expect it to serve as a long term instrument to address some of the structural and underlying causes of the conflict in Mali and the broader Sahel region. I am delighted to have with us today Mr. Romano Prodi, Special Envoy if the Secretary-General for the Sahel. Mr. Prodi will brief us on the UN Sahel Strategy and will share his vision on the way forward for the international community to support the Sahel region in overcoming the deep-rooted challenges it is facing.
Entre-temps, nous devons redoubler d’efforts pour garantir que le processus politique, qui est fondamental pour la stabilité du Mali, ne soit pas supplanté par les opérations militaires en cours qui sont tout autant essentielles. Pour aborder plus en détail la nature du soutien et de l’engagement des Nations Unies au Mali et au Sahel, je salue également la présence icide M. Said Djinnit, Représentant spécial du Secrétaire général pour l’Afrique de l’Ouest, de M. Anthony Banbury, Sous-secrétaire général à l’appui aux missions, de M. David Gressly, Chef du Bureau des Nations Unies au Mali, de M. Aurélien Agbénonci, Coordonateur résident et Coordonateur humanitaire de l’ONU au Mali et de M. Jack Christofides du Département de opérations de maintien de la paix. Meanwhile, we should redouble our efforts to ensure that the political process, which is key to Mali’s stability in both the short and long term, is not overshadowed by the equally essential military operations underway. There have been some important developments in the political situation which should encourage us to do just that. To further elaborate on all these developments and on the UN’ support and engagement in Mali and the West African region, I am also accompanied today by Mr. Said Djinnit, Special Representative of the Secretary-General for West Africa, by Mr. Anthony Banbury, Assistant-Secretary-General for Field Support, by Mr. David Gressly, Head of the United Nations Office in Mali (UNOM), Mr. Aurelien Agbenonci, United Nations Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator in Mali and by Mr. Jack Christofides from the Department of Peacekeeping Operations.
In terms of political developments in Mali, the establishment by the Transitional Government on 6 March of the National Commission for Dialogue and Reconciliation, and the appointment of its leadership a few weeks later, are important steps for putting in motion a broad and comprehensive political process. The appointment of a women and a Tuareg as vice-presidents of this Commission is consistent with the transitional authorities’ repeated assurances that inclusiveness and plurality will be foundation blocks of the political process. We hope that a broad and inclusive Malian-led political process can begin to address the challenges that must be overcome for Mali to achieve political stability and economic prosperity. We look forward to the establishment of the Secretariat so that the Commission can begin its important work in earnest.
To this end, the United Nations will provide all the assistance we possibly can to the Commission in collaboration with regional and international partners. In this regard, UNOM is available to assist all efforts to promote dialogue between the Government and those who wish to take part in the search for a political solution to the crisis, while UNOWA continues to coordinate closely with and support regional efforts to facilitate such a process.
I would also like to reiterate one of the key messages we have conveyed to the Security Council regarding the need to ensure that, in the current interplay between political and security priorities, the security imperative does not detract from the primacy of politics in Mali, in both the short and long term. Security Council members have expressed their strong concurrence with this message.
We are encouraged by President Traoré’s commitment to move rapidly toward elections by 31 July 2013, as this constitutes a fundamental benchmark in restoring constitutional order in Mali. We encourage all Malians to continue to work towards the creation of a favourable environment for the holding of credible and peaceful elections. There are important challenges for this electoral process to be held in time. Apart from logistical, legal and financial obstacles, the still-volatile security conditions and the absence of State administration in northern Mali poses an important challenge. And on the political front, the absence so far of a dialogue and reconciliation process limits the space for constructive electoral debate. Dialogue with all stakeholders, including in areas where the Malian administration is not yet deployed such as Kidal, is also essential to ensure that elections can take place across the entire territory.
Mindful of how much work is required to meet the July deadline, the UN will intensify its effort in support of the preparations for the holding of free, fair, transparent and credible polls in keeping with international standards. We call on the international community to step in and provide timely financial and logistic support for the elections. We hope that ongoing security operations as well as the appointment of the Commission for Dialogue and Reconciliation will help overcome these challenges and pave the way for inclusive and credible elections.
As you know, the Secretary-General deployed a multi-disciplinary Exploratory Visit to Mali headed by Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Mr. Edmond Mulet from 10 to 16 March to develop recommendations on options for establishing a United Nations peacekeeping operation in Mali. The Mission provided some key observations and recommendations to the Secretary-General that were included in his report.
One important observation states that the serious and inter-linked challenges that confront Mali require concerted and broad-based efforts by the Malian authorities and its people, together with significant international support. They go beyond addressing security threats and require tackling the deep-rooted political, governance, development and humanitarian challenges that are not susceptible to an easy solution. With respect to the security challenges, a key question is the extent to which the United Nations can or should assume responsibility for security and stabilization which, ultimately, will need to serve as an incentive for Malians to engage in a viable political process.
We are also mindful of humanitarian actors’ increasing concerns about the possible deployment of a United Nations force in Mali and the need to retain a clear distinction between the humanitarian and political/security agendas to ensure the impartiality of humanitarian action, avoid threatening the safety of aid workers and guarantee humanitarian access to all those in need.
In his report, the Secretary-General has proposed two options for UN engagement in Mali, which are now under consideration of the Security Council.
Our consultations with Security Council members indicates that the Council prefers the second option, that of a UN multidimensional stabilization mission under Chapter VII alongside a parallel force. Under this option, the bulk of AFISMA would transition to a UN stabilization mission, which would operate under robust rules of engagement allowing it to address threats to the implementation of its mandate, within its capabilities and its areas of deployment.
This option would be part of the process of transition from the current situation to a UN stabilisation mission deployed alongside a parallel force and it takes into account the fact that the UN is operating in a new geopolitical context and faces threats that have not been encountered before in a peacekeeping context. The situation on the ground remains fluid, and extremists and criminal elements continue to pose a significant threat to the safety and security of the people of Mali as well as to UN personnel. Therefore, it will be of critical importance that a clear distinction is maintained between the core peacekeeping tasks of an envisaged UN stabilisation mission and the peace enforcement and counter-terrorism activities of a parallel force. Any blurring of the distinction would place severe constraints on the ability of UN humanitarian, development, human rights and other personnel to safely do their work.
Given that the crisis in Mali is part of serious wider regional challenges, it will be essential to link our support to Mali within a broader regional strategy that incorporates Mali’s neighbours and key partners in the process. To that end, SRSG Djinnit will continue to work with the ECOWAS countries on the definition of a shared approach to effectively address the security and political challenges in Mali and its impact in the sub region and beyond.
In addition, the regional strategy that the UN is developing for the Sahel should be viewed as a complementary and indispensable process. As this issue will be addressed at more length during the day, I will just bring to your attention that the Secretary General is expected to report to the Security Council at the beginning of May on the development and implementation of the UN Strategy for the Sahel. In this regard, SESG Prodi has set the overarching framework for the strategy and has commenced work, in close coordination with concerned UN entities, on formulating an Action Plan focused on the four thematic pillars of the strategy; namely, governance, security, humanitarian and development as well as on the different levels of coordination foreseen in the strategy.
In closing, let me emphasize the full commitment of the United Nations to using all available tools to support and promote a Malian-led process leading to the resumption of democratic rule in the country in the short term and to political stability and economic growth in Mali in the long term.
Thank you.
Your Excellency Mr. Marty Natalegawa, Foreign Minister of Indonesia,
Your Excellency Mr. Le Luong Minh, Secretary-General of ASEAN,
Representatives of the Governments of ASEAN Member States,
Representatives of the ASEAN Institutes of Strategic and International Studies (ASEAN ISIS),
Excellencies, Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen,
Selamat Pagi [good morning]
I am greatly honoured to be here with you this morning at this ASEAN-UN workshop on Lessons Learned and Best Practices in Conflict Prevention and Preventive Diplomacy. At the outset I wish to convey the warm personal greetings of the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon. You are all aware of the great value and importance the Secretary-General attaches to the United Nations’ partnership with regional organizations. Over the years we have been making steady progress in our endeavor to form and operationalize such partnerships around the world. You also know that the Secretary-General is a particularly close friend to ASEAN, and his tenure has coincided with an acceleration of the integration process within ASEAN. We are committed to continuing our work to strengthen this partnership in a meaningful way in the months and years to come.
Our partnership has already come a long way. The two organizations have held four summits since 2000. In this relatively short span of time, we have deepened our cooperation, elevating it to the level of ‘comprehensive partnership’ two years ago. The “Joint Declaration on Comprehensive Partnership between ASEAN and the United Nations” adopted the 4th ASEAN-UN Summit in Bali could not have been readily endorsed without the personal initiative and commitment of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa under Indonesia's active chairmanship of ASEAN. We are very grateful for these efforts on your part.
Our comprehensive partnership consists of four pillars: “Political-Security Cooperation”; “Economic Cooperation”; “Socio-Cultural Cooperation”; and “Cooperation between Secretariats”. The first three substantive pillars mirror the structure of the ASEAN Community to be established by 2015 and are thus closely aligned to AEAN's priorities. This reflects the United Nations' strong support to the regional integration process of ASEAN. Most of UN activities under this new partnership framework are geared towards assisting ASEAN in achieving the 2015 target date.
The United Nations is also strengthening its cooperation with the ASEAN Secretariat, mainly through regular Secretariat-to-Secretariat (S2S) dialogue. This is a valuable mechanism underpinning the growing partnership of the two organizations. We look forward to working closely with new ASEAN Secretary-General, His Excellency Mr. Le Loung Minh, in raising our collaboration to newer heights. I am pleased to note that, in his insightful speech, His Excellency has noted various ways and means of “ASEAN conflict prevention”, including the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation (TAC) and a multilayered web of regional architectures such as the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), as well as the upcoming ASEAN Institute for Peace and Reconciliation (AIPR). He also touched upon a number of actual cases of conflict prevention and preventive diplomacy in the ASEAN region, which could be examined during the course of the present workshop.
Excellencies,
Ladies and gentlemen,
Today’s workshop “Lessons Learned and Best Practices in Conflict Prevention and Preventive Diplomacy,” builds on our past collaborative efforts, including the workshop and a seminar held in the past couple of years. It is designed to take us to the next level of collaboration. On behalf of the United Nations, I wish to express our deep gratitude to the Government of Japan for providing the financial resources that have made this Workshop possible.
This Workshop is an important step in the implementation of the first pillar, i.e. the Political-Security Cooperation pillar of the ASEAN-UN Comprehensive Partnership.
Preventive diplomacy has been an enduring aspect of the work of the United Nations. After all this organization was founded on the promise to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has made it a priority to re-energize the United Nations’ preventive diplomacy, to improve our machinery and expand our partnerships. It is based on our strong belief and experience that through a combination of informed analysis, early warning, confidence building, rapid response and effective partnerships, we can help defuse emerging tensions, prevent the escalation of disputes into open conflict, and when conflicts do flare up, assist parties in resolving them peacefully. In his report “Preventive Diplomacy: Delivering Results” (2011), the UN Secretary-General observed that “the establishment of regular and informal early warning dialogues between the United Nations and regional and other partners would allow us to pool information and help us to anticipate “threshold moments” when key actors might decide to use violence.” He also stated that “to live up to our full potential in this field, we need to further strengthen these relationships, in particular those with regional partners”.
Our two-day workshop is conceived, and should be perceived, I feel, within this framework. It is an integral part of our strategic dialogue and regular engagement and consultation with our distinguished partners.
Excellencies,
Ladies and gentlemen,
Since it’s founding in 1967, ASEAN has played a key role in securing stability and growth in this region. While the history of this region has been tumultuous and the major conflicts of the fifties, sixties and seventies had been destabilizing in many way, Southeast Asia has been relatively conflict-free since then, and was able to make major strides in creating a modicum of regional stability and forging regional integration. In recent decades, you have experienced exponential economic growth. Apart from becoming a dynamic regional catalyst of international trade, ASEAN, with its diversity, today represents a powerful microcosm of the great convergence and connectivity the world is experiencing.
This is not to suggest that the region is without problems. The intra-regional disparities within ASEAN are still significant. Several low intensity, intra-state armed conflicts, as well as some incipient and potentially troubling maritime disputes, remain unresolved.
But the successes accruing from regional cooperation of the ASEAN member states are evident in the increased and proactive engagements of major global powers with the region. ASEAN's ‘centrality’ is the key factor behind the multiplicity of regional structures and mechanisms that have taken shape, including the ASEAN Plus Three, the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), and the East Asia Summit.
There is a lot the world can learn from ASEAN on the maintenance of regional peace and security, including on conflict prevention and preventive diplomacy. With many prominent speakers gathered in one room here in Jakarta, we can expect stimulating and informative discussions on case-studies within the region and beyond. By the same token, we, from the United Nations, are more than happy to share our diverse experiences in preventive diplomacy and peace-making, including the use of the Secretary-General's good offices, facilitation and mediation. Perhaps, we could also explore ways and means enhancing capacities in preventive diplomacy. The United Nations is ready to look deeper into ways of engaging within the various regional architectures including the ARF on peace and security.
Excellencies,
Ladies and gentlemen,
About a year ago, in February 2012, we held a workshop, here in Jakarta on lessons learned and best practices of the United Nations and Regional Organisations in conflict prevention, peacemaking, peacekeeping and peacebuilding. Together with representatives from the African Union and the European Union, we undertook comparative studies of experiences of regional organizations and the UN in these fields. We then came up with ten specific points. Allow me to highlight some of them:
This Workshop could discuss these and other possible initiatives that could be implemented in a concrete and tangible manner. ASEAN can provide other regions valuable lessons both in the articulation of the vision of a regional community as well as in the dynamics of how they may work together in concretizing that vision. In turn the United Nations may have some experiences of utility to you. Let me assure you that the United Nations stands ready to work with ASEAN in all its efforts to bring peace, stability and benefit to the people of this immensely diverse region.
Excellencies,
Ladies and gentlemen,
This Workshop is not meant to be just an academic exercise. We expect your full and active engagement and would welcome your forthright comments. The issues we are considering are key issues the two organizations will need to continue addressing for some time to come. The first formal review of the ASEAN-UN Comprehensive Partnership will be conducted in October this year under the Chairmanship of Brunei. We must continue our collaborative efforts in implementing the framework agreement as concretely as possible in all four pillars. Our discussions today and tomorrow will, I am sure, provide valuable input for this review process. As this engagement broadens, ASEAN and the United Nations hopefully conduct similar exercises covering the other pillars as well – the Economic Cooperation pillar, the Socio-Cultural Cooperation pillar, and the Secretariat-to-Secretariat Cooperation pillar – so as to have a holistic approach in conducting the review of the implementation of the Comprehensive Partnership.
Let me conclude by repeating what I said at the Jakarta Defense Dialogue a few weeks ago. The UN partnerships with regional organizations are based on the principle of complementarity and burden-sharing. Harnessing the respective strengths of each actor in the maintenance of international peace and security is one of our key priorities, as we work together in ever more challenging environments. I am confident that we shall continue to work together in the future bringing better coherence and effectiveness in our joint efforts for peace and security. We are also confident that this partnership is dynamic and self-renewing as we respond to the changing demands, priorities and specificities of this exceptionally promising region.
Terima kasih [Thank you]
Thank you.
The Secretary General developed the United Nations Guidance for Effective Mediation in response to a request from the General Assembly (A/RES/65/283). The Guidance identifies a number of key fundamentals that should be considered in mediation processes: preparedness; consent; impartiality; inclusivity; national ownership; international law and normative frameworks; coherence; coordination and complementarity of the mediation effort; and quality peace agreements. The Guidance explains each fundamental, outlines some potential challenges and dilemmas facing mediators and offers some guidance.
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