UNITED
NATIONS
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Statements and Messages from the President
Statement
by the President of the General Assembly
Presenting to the General Assembly the outcome of the work of its Ad Hoc Working
Group on the Integrated and Coordinated Implementation of and Follow-up to
the outcomes of the major United Nations Conferences and Summits in the Economic
and Social Fields.
Excellencies, Distinguished delegates, Ladies
and Gentlemen,
It gives me special pleasure and satisfaction to present to the General Assembly
the outcome of the work of its Ad Hoc Working Group on the Integrated and
Coordinated Implementation of and Follow-up to the outcomes of the major United
Nations Conferences and Summits in the Economic and Social Fields.
As you know, the concept of the “integrated implementation of the major
UN conferences” has been followed by the Czech Presidency as one of
our four priorities from the very beginning of the 57th session. In January
2003, I made it an urgent priority of my presidency to see the successful
and timely completion of the work of the Ad Hoc Working Group. The challenge
before this working group was considerable. You had entrusted it to make concrete
recommendations to ensure that the UN supports, in the most efficient way,
the implementation of the ambitious and detailed set of development goals
agreed upon at major UN conferences and summits.
When we started our work in January, many doubted whether the group would
be able to tackle adequately this complex and comprehensive issue within the
time limits.
We were well aware of our ultimate goal, but unsure of the path to follow.
Yet the working group, guided by the Bureau, engaged in a firm and demanding
programme of work. And as we engaged ourselves, what we could achieve became
clearer. As did the fact that we agreed on many issues, and that our commitment
to the goals agreed at conferences, from the Children Summit to the Millennium
Summit, Monterrey and Johannesburg, was alive and strong, much stronger that
our areas of divergences.
The resolution born from that intense, and at times difficult process, is
before you today. I am convinced that it is a good outcome. It will help make
the work of our organization more relevant, more visible and enhance its role
and political importance, by focusing it on the actual implementation of conference
outcomes.
I am particularly pleased that there is a general agreement to look at the
work programme of the Second Committee. This will weave a certain logic and
topicality in its work.
I also very much welcome the idea of holding a politically attractive major
event in 2005, to review progress achieved in implementing commitments made
during the conferences and summits. We should all work with our Governments
and partners to ensure that commitments made are expeditiously implemented
so that concrete advances are made when we meet in 2005.
Another important achievement is the agreement that the General Assembly should
decide on the periodic review of the implementation of conference outcomes
on a ‘case-by-case’ basis.
The draft resolution has also given new impetus
to the coordination work of the ECOSOC. By planning better its work on common
conference themes, the Council will be able to engage the functional commissions
and the various parts of the UN system more intensely in its preparations.
We have asked the functional commissions to review their working methods in
light of the changes that have been made by the Commission for Sustainable
Development. We have given clear guidance to organizations of the UN system
to work closely together to help Governments implement conference targets.
The Council’s coordination segment in July will be able to build on
these recommendations and launch measures for their implementation.
As I told the working group last Tuesday, I see this resolution as an important
landmark that will contribute to strengthening of the General Assembly and
ECOSOC, and to the implementation of the programme of reform launched by our
Secretary-General.
Our achievements go beyond this. We have demonstrated
that the spirit of cooperation and compromise, and the principles of multilateralism
are very much present. We have shown once again that the UN can deliver agreements
and concrete measures at a political level.
I would like to extend my profound thanks to the two Vice-Chairs of the Group
- Ambassador Nana Effah-Apenteng of Ghana and Ambassador Jean de Ruyt of Belgium
who presided over the informal consultations, provided guidance through the
whole process and tirelessly participated in the work of the Bureau and related
negotiations. I am also very grateful to our facilitator, Counsellor Henri
Stephan Raubenheimer from the Permanent Mission of South Africa, whose substantive
skills, tireless efforts, and suggestions greatly helped finalize the work
of the working group.
I would also like to express my deep appreciation to all the delegations who
participated in our deliberations, for their continuing engagement, their
ideas, and for the collaborative spirit in which they worked throughout our
many sessions. I would also like to acknowledge with appreciation the solid
and substantive support provided to the Group and to the Bureau by the Secretariat,
particularly by Mr. Sarbuland Khan and Mr. Nikhil Seth. My personal thanks
go also to my team for its hard work and dedication to this important issue.
Thank you.