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Many people
have grasped the message of my report [In Larger Freedom].
Put simply, that message is twofold. First, we are all in
the same boat. More than ever before, the human race faces
global problems-from poverty and inequality to nuclear proliferation,
from climate change to bird flu, from terrorism to HIV/AIDS,
from ethnic cleansing and genocide to trafficking in the lives
and bodies of human beings. So it obviously makes sense to
come together and work out global solutions. And, secondly,
the three freedoms which all human beings crave-freedom from
want, freedom from war or large-scale violence, and freedom
from arbitrary or degrading treatment-are closely interconnected.
UN
Photo
There
is no long-term security without development. There is no
development without security. And no society can long remain
secure or prosperous without respect for human rights and
the rule of law. That is the premise on which the Larger Freedom
agenda is based. It was, as you know, an agenda for the World
Summit last September. Let me start by mentioning the areas
where the Summit took important steps forward.
First,
it helped stimulate major new commitments of aid and debt
relief-amounting to a doubling of aid for Africa-and won a
strong and unanimous reaffirmation of the Millennium Development
Goals. The developing countries gave very important commitments,
starting with an undertaking to produce by the end of this
year national strategies for reaching the MDGs by 2015. In
the area of human- itarian relief, the Summit has given us
a much improved emergency fund, which should enable us to
respond promptly whenever disaster strikes.
In the
area of peace and security, Member States agreed to "strongly
condemn terrorism in all its forms and manifestations, committed
by whomever, wherever and for whatever purposes". And
they instructed the General Assembly, "without delay",
to develop, adopt and implement a comprehensive global counterterrorism
strategy, built on the elements that I set out in Madrid last
March. But their most concrete decision in this area was the
creation of a Peacebuilding Commission. This body will fill
a real institutional gap and ensure that attention and resources
are devoted to countries emerging from violence, long after
peacekeepers have left.
In the area of human rights, we have got a strengthened office,
with significant new resources, for the High Com- missioner.
We got a warm endorsement for the new Democracy Fund. And
I hope, in the next week or two, we may see agreement on a
new Human Rights Council to replace the discredited Commission.
Most precious of all to me is the Summit's acceptance that
States, both individually and collectively, have a responsibility
to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing
and crimes against humanity. This is a major breakthrough
which I had been advocating for years.
Finally,
the Summit opened the door to big changes in the way the United
Nations is managed. Some of these I have already been able
to move ahead with, such as creating an ethics office and
guaranteeing stronger protection for whistle-blowers. But
the main ones are still ahead. Indeed, many of the Summit's
decisions are only commitments in principle. The hard struggle
now is to get them implemented, in detail and in practice.
Take, for instance, the commitments for development from both
donor and developing countries. Pushing these through each
country's political system, against powerful vested interests,
will require a sustained political effort. And a similar effort
will be needed to achieve the breakthrough on trade, giving
developing countries a real chance to compete in the global
market.
On peace
and security, Member States have yet to respond to the need,
which the Summit stressed, "to make every effort"
to reach agreement on a comprehensive convention on terrorism
within the present session of the General Assembly. It is
vital that they do so, as well as developing a comprehensive
counterterrorism strategy with the urgency the Summit called
for.
Much the
same applies to the commitments for human rights. Now is the
time when all who really care about human rights must make
the maximum effort to ensure that we do get an authoritative
Human Rights Council, able to command respect and to stand
up for the rights of the oppressed throughout the world. And
that applies also to the splendid declaration of willingness
to take action, "in a timely and decisive manner through
the Security Council", to protect populations whose own
Governments fail to do so. This will only be meaningful if
the Security Council is prepared to act on it. And the Council
faces a clear test right now, since the African Union has
signalled its wish to see its mission in Darfur transformed
into a UN peace operation. That gives the Council an inescapable
responsibility to act, swiftly and decisively, to halt the
killing, rape and ethnic cleansing to which people in Darfur
are still being subjected.
It remains
to be seen too whether we shall get the thorough overhaul
of all our rules governing personnel and resources, to which
the Summit opened the door and which we badly need, if we
are to have a management system that is up to handling the
operational responsibilities given to us by Member States
over the last 15 years. For this, it is vital that Member
States agree to act on the proposals I shall submit next month.
At the same time, the General Assembly is going to undertake
a review of all the mandates still in force, which were given
to the Organization by Member States between 1946 and 2001.
You can imagine the challenge. This should make it possible
to avoid much duplication and waste, and ensure that our work
reflects the current priorities of Member States, rather than
those of yesteryear.
None of
these reforms are easy for Member States to agree on because
of the profound suspicions between developing and donor countries,
between small States and big, and often between the single
remaining super-Power and everyone else. Those suspicions
affected the Summit too. There are areas where world leaders
failed to reach any agreement at all. The biggest disappointment,
for me, was their failure to chart a way forward on disarmament
and non-proliferation.
Can there be any threat more alarming in today's world than
that of a nuclear or biological weapon falling into the hands
of terrorists or being used by a State as a result of some
terrible misunderstanding or miscalculation? The more States
have such weapons, the greater the risk. And the more those
States that already have them increase their arsenals, or
insist that such weapons are essential to their national security,
the more other States feel that they too must have them for
their security.
For 35
years, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty has been remarkably
successful in protecting mankind from this danger. But now
it faces a very serious challenge. Today's headlines concern
Iran-rightly so, for basic treaty obligations and commitments
are at stake. For signatories of the NPT, the right to develop
nuclear energy is conditional on the solemn obligation not
to build or acquire nuclear weapons and to comply with standards
set and monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency.
But, when we step back from the headlines, it should be clear
that we cannot continue to lurch from crisis to crisis, until
the regime is buried beneath a cascade of nuclear proliferation.
Twice last year, Governments had the chance to strengthen
the foundations of the NPT regime by: agreeing on more robust
IAEA inspections; incentives and guarantees for countries
to forgo the enrichment and reprocessing of fissile materials;
and energetic steps to meet disarmament commitments. Both
times, they failed. We cannot afford any more such squandered
chances.
The Summit's
other great failure, of course, was that it did not agree
on enlargement of the Security Council. But do not underestimate
the slow erosion of the UN authority and legitimacy that stems
from the perception that it has a very narrow power-base,
with just five countries calling the shots. I have in the
past described this as a democracy deficit. It is this feeling
of frustration and exclusion that prompts many States to exercise
the only power they do have: the power to block other reforms,
such as better management. So the base must be broadened.
Sooner or later, the Security Council will have to be enlarged.
But, meanwhile, there are other ways to give more States more
of a say in UN decisions. The permanent members could pay
more attention to the elected members, and the General Assembly
could take more care to elect members who are up to the responsibility.
And the
Council as a whole should be more willing to share power with
other organs of the United Nations, including the new Human
Rights Council and Peacebuilding Commission, a reformed Economic
and Social Council, and the General Assembly itself. If these
institutions win more respect and greater powers, there will
be opportunities for more Member States to exercise those
powers, which in turn will give them a renewed feeling of
commitment to the Organization and a stronger interest in
making it work.
If we
are to have a UN capable of coping with today's crises and
tomorrow's-from Doha to Darfur, from global terrorism to global
warming-a real effort of statesmanship and confidence-rebuilding
is required. I fervently hope that at the end of this year
I shall be able to hand on to my successor an Organization
better equipped to meet the challenges of the twenty-first
century, and to serve the peoples in whose name it was founded.
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