UNITED
NATIONS
GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Statements and Messages from the President
United
Nations General Assembly Presidency in the Light of the Caribbean Candidacy
Message from H.E. Mr. Jan Kavan, President
of the Fifty-seventh Session of the United Nations General Assembly
Intersessional Meeting of Prime Ministers of Caricom
in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
14 February 2003
Secretary General Carrington, Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a great
honor and privilege for me to address the Intercessional Meeting of Caribbean
Community today.
I would like to thank you, especially Your Excellency Secretary General Carrington,
for your kind invitation and the Ambassador of Grenada to the United Nations
Lamuel Stanislaus for all the necessary arrangements connected to my travel.
It gives me the invaluable opportunity to share with you some of my thoughts
about the work of the UN General Assembly.
I myself come from a relatively small country - the Czech Republic. The first contacts of my homeland with the region came several hundred years ago with the originally Czech Moravian Church settling in many of the Caribbean countries. I can only hope, that in not too distant future we will be able to renew similarly rich cultural interchange.
My origin in a small country in the heart of Europe helps me to understand the problems of small countries face to face with the global competition. I also know that this is exactly the reason why these countries, more than any other, need well functioning international organizations based on mutual understanding and cooperation. The United Nations based on sovereign equality of its members shall always play the principal role in this regard. I am doing my best in the course of my presidency to try to make the General Assembly an equally comfortable home for everybody.
I think, that this role of the UN will be even more strengthened next fall and it will be from many points of view in your hands. It is your region that will have the honor to choose the next General Assembly President. Therefore, let me present you our work at the presidency of the General Assembly.
***
We considers the substantial autumn part of the 57 UNGA to be a success and to some extent the return to normalcy after the previous session so affected by the horrific events of the 11 September 2001, although issues of Iraq and situation in the Middle East are high, and will remain high for still some time, on the political agenda.
I would like to start with the recollection of priorities of this presidency:
1. Enhancement
of peace and security
- strengthening of the international coalition against international terrorism,
- contributing to the prevention and resolution of conflicts.
2. Promoting
poverty eradication and sustainable development in the accelerating process
of globalization
- effective and sustained follow-up to the Conference on Financing for Development
in Monterrey, World Summit for Sustainable Development in Johannesburg and
preparation for the implementation of a number of the development goals of
the Millenium Declaration
- support to a broader access to information and communication technologies,
namely for education, good governance and health care.
3. Strengthening
the role of the United Nations with focus on:
- better policy coherence through enhancing partnerships between the UN, Bretton
Woods institutions, WTO and other development partners,
- enhanced cooperation between the General Assembly, the Security Council
and ECOSOC, as well as the Secretary-General.
4. Reform
of the United Nations
- enhancement of the effectiveness of the work of the United Nations on the
basis of the Road map towards the implementation of Millenium Declaration,
- revitalization of the General Assembly,
- facilitation of discussion on the Security Council reform.
In the autumn part of the 57th UNGA session, the activities focussed on arranging debates on the absolute majority of items on the agenda, while in the remaining part of the year they will concentrate above all on the priorities of the Czech presidency as I outlined earlier.
Assessment
of the 1st Part of the General Assembly Session
Let me now turn to the assessment of the main session of the General Assembly
which ended last December. As to organisational issues, one should note:
· a shorter general debate;
· that time efficiency of meetings has improved due to timely start
of meetings and well organised conduct of business;
· that fewer meetings were held (only 78 plenary sessions compared
to 92 in 2001) due to for example, holding joint discussions on substance
related topics (one for the Report of the SG on the work of the Organisation
and follow-up activities to the Millenium Summit and one for Security Council
report and SC reform) and thus contributing to a greater effectiveness of
the meetings.
Some of the issues may seem to have marginal relevance and low political importance, but in our view they are an important element of improving functionality and cost efficiency of the UN.
Last year the President of the GA was for the first time elected in advance, (two months before taking on the office, this year it should be full three months in advance). I, therefore, had more time to prepare for the office, get acquainted with the work of my predecessor and already consult for example the Secretariat on a number of issues. As a result of these extensive consultations, it became possible, for the first time in its history, for the General Assembly to approve its complex programme of its main work till the end of the year already in early September.
On of the
major tasks of the important autumn part of the General Assembly session was
the consideration of the report of the UN General-Secretary "The strengthening
of the UN: agenda for further change". The text of the resolution setting
the further course for the reform processes and strengthening of the organization
was worked out under our guidance. The unanimous approval of the resolution
was perceived as an unquestionable success, though some elements of the reform
proposal of the SG will have to be discussed further.
I also presented a draft resolution on the report of the UN Secretary-General
"The Implementation of the Millennium Declaration". This resolution
was also adopted by a consensus and it proposes the holding of a summit to
deal in whole complexity with the state of implementation of the objectives
of the Declaration at the 60th UNGA session in 2005.
The 57th UNGA dealt in detail with problems of the African continent. The high-level plenary session on the New partnership for Africa's development focussed on discussing the possibilities of international support for this initiative, in particular on the part of the UN system.
The General Assembly President also opened a discussion on revitalizing the work of the General Assembly. The discussion focussed on the rationalization of the UN, on greater effectiveness of its work and on revitalizing plenary debates. This discussion will continue for the rest of our mandate and I assume that many of its aspects will be inherited by your Presidency.
A new element in the GA work was the organization of a panel entitled "Afghanistan a year after" attended by representatives of the UN, NGOs and mass information media. The event was a success and the UNGA presidency was asked to organize such panels more often. We will almost certainly organise such a panel on the widest possible aspects of a struggle against terrorism, starting with targeting its roots, which includes extreme poverty, unsolved political problems and other ingrediences which lead to the emergence of feelings of frustration, powerlessness, anger and sometimes even more radical, fundamentalist responses preparing ground for terrorism.
Priorities
for the upcoming period
First priority of the Czech Presidency will be to continue to seek consensus
on a new implementation mechanism in the recently created working group on
integrated and coordinated fulfilment and follow-up to the main UN economic
and social conferences and summits. Under the leadership of the UNGA president
an open-ended working group has been formed to deal with streamlining of existing
structures for monitoring the implementation of
major conferences by various UN bodies and organizations. Results of such
working group should inter alia contribute to more efficient fulfilment of
development goals, rationalization of work of the UNGA, its Committees, functional
Commissions and ECOSOC and thus contribute to strengthening the UN role in
the area of development cooperation.
In the second part of the mandate, the UNGA presidency will focus on the open-ended working group on prevention of armed conflicts. The newly created group of facilitators under our leadership has now began to concentrate its efforts on the draft resolution reflecting positions and interests of Member States in the field of conflict prevention. It should also enhance mechanisms for conflict prevention. The president will seek consensus or at least a majority agreement on the draft resolution by the end of April.
In the scope of third presidency priority, concerning strengthening the UN role, I plan to continue to conduct high-level meetings with the representatives of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and to prepare a High-level dialog on the implementation of the conclusions by the FfD Conference which should take place in October 2003 already under the new President. Regular contacts and informal information exchange will be continued with the Presidents of ECOSOC and of the Security Council.
Fourthly, under the leadership of the president 57th UNGA the work on the revitalization of the General Assembly will continue. I shall also continue to chair the Open-ended Working Group on Security Council Reform during the spring session and facilitate discussion on the issue of equitable representation and increase in membership of the Security Council but I have no illusion that the working groups will be able to find a consensus despite the fact that the reform of the Security Council is so obviously badly needed. There is a clear lack of political will in many capitals and this effectively blocks a meaningful progress on the main reform. Without a major political breakthrough, which is not on the horizon, there can be no early resolution of this matter which will be also inherited by my successor. At the same time it has to be acknowledged that the working group will also focus on the question of working methods and transparency of work of the Security Council and in this field I believe a progress can be achieved.
In our view, 57th GA has further strengthened the position of its President who is expected to take initiatives on increasing number of topics (be it UN reform, SC reform, revitalisation of the GA, follow-up activities to the Millenium Summit, integration of UN follow-up conferences, prevention of conflicts or the issue of HIV/AIDS, etc.).
***
In conclusion, let me also mention that our Presidency is in close touch with my country and with our region. I believe that the work of the Presidency is today so complex that it could succeed next year only if the Caribbean Community will be prepared and able to provide the next presidency, your presidency - with cooperation and full support for the implementation of major UN goals in economic, social, and many other areas.
Ladies and
Gentlemen,
I look forward to hear your comments and suggestions, which will help me to
ascertain better the opinion of member countries and of this region in particular.
I am deeply convinced that everybody's ideas can be interesting and inspiring,
regardless of the size of the country he or she represents. And I am a strong
believer in the concept of an open sincere dialogue. It seems to me that continuous
dialogue on crucial issues attempting to reach a consensus while respecting
different views best describes my perception of the GA Presidency.
Thank you,