REPUBLIC OF
BOTSWANA
Statement by
The Hon. Lt. Gen. Mompati S.
Merafhe, MP, PH.
Minister of Foreign Affairs
of the Republic of Botswana
at the
Fifty fifth Session of
the United Nations General Assembly
New York
September 19, 2000
Mr. President,
I congratulate you on behalf
of the Botswana delegation on your election to the Presidency of the 55th
Session of the General Assembly. You can count on our support as you discharge
your onerous responsibilities during this historic Session and in the year that
lies ahead.
I also take great pleasure
in saluting my brother and colleague, the outgoing President, Dr. Theo-Ben
Gurirab, for his outstanding leadership of the 54th Session of the General
Assembly, the last Session of the 20th century, and for steering it to a successful
conclusion.
Secretary General Kofi Annan
has continued to give a good account of himself as the Chief Executive of
this our United Nations. Mr. Secretary-General, we owe you a debt of gratitude
for the manner in which you have, without fear or favour, led the United Nations
during the past four years.
Mr. President,
Five years ago, in this very
hall, we celebrated the Fiftieth Anniversary of the founding of the United
Nations. On that historic occasion, the former President of the Republic of
Botswana, Sir Ketumile Masire, had this to say about the United Nations:
And
I quote:
"The United Nations has served us well. Small States like my own
have found in the United Nations a vital forum for collective bargaining. It
has contributed to the advancement of international cooperation in solving
economic, social, cultural and humanitarian problems. It is a centre for
harmonizing the actions of nations in the attainment of these common ends
".
End of Quote
Mr. President,
Botswana's faith in and commitment to the United
Nations remains undiminished and we are here on the eve of the new millennium
to renew that faith and to reaffirm that commitment.
The United Nations begins
the new millennium heavily laden with the residual problems of the outgoing
century. Even as we meet here, bloody conflicts,
in varying degrees of intensity and savagery, are ravaging societies in many
places across the globe. Endemic poverty holds sway in the developing world in
contrast with the lavish opulence of the west.
Diseases, the most virulent
of which is the devastating HIV/AIDS pandemic, have continued to cause untold
misery all over the world, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. All these
problems pose a serious challenge to the United Nations and to the international
community as a whole.
The character of the 21st
century, Mr. President, will no doubt be determined by our ability and
commitment to face this challenge.
On the African continent, the
struggle for peace and against war remains an all -consuming preoccupation.
The agendas of the United Nations Security Council and the Organization of
African Unity attest to this vexing state of affairs.
All the efforts of the leaders
of Central and Southern Africa which a little more than a year ago produced
the Lusaka Agreement aimed at bringing peace to the war -torn region
of Central Africa have thus far come to naught. There is still no peace in
the region because the Agreement remains unimplemented even as the parties
have continued to profess their fidelity to it.
The United Nations now has
the authorization of the Security Council to deploy more than 5,000 observers
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to monitor the ceasefire and
pave the way for the deployment of a full-fledged peacekeeping force in the
near future.
Mr. President, a crucial
element of the Lusaka Agreement, amongst others, is that there must be dialogue
in the DRC, among the people of that country, if international efforts
spearheaded by the United Nations and the OAU aimed at creating conditions for
national reconciliation in the DRC, are to bear fruit.
Regrettably, there is no
dialogue in process in the DRC, although a facilitator has been in place for 9
months.
Instead, a festering
stalemate in the implementation of the Lusaka Agreement is threatening the
integrity of the Agreement. The ceasefire which was to be buttressed by the
Agreement is in serious jeopardy, if it is still holding.
We hope the Congolese
leaders will soon realize that without the implementation, in full, of the
Lusaka Agreement their country will be bereft of any hope for peace. There may
be no second chance. The Lusaka Agreement is their only salvation.
The leaders of Burundi, next
door to the DRC, recently gathered in Arusha, in the United Republic of Tanzania,
to make peace under the facilitation of the former President of the Republic of
South Africa, Mr. Nelson Mandela.
Their gathering attracted the
presence in Arusha of leaders from near and far, including the President of
the United States of America, Mr. Bill Clinton. Regrettably, this peace agreement
was embraced by some and denigrated by others, a situation which does not
augur well for peace in Burundi. It is our fervent hope that those who have
not embraced the Arusha Peace Agreement will do so. In President Mandela,
the Facilitator, the people of Burundi could not have been more fortunate-and
more fortunate for the second time.
Before President Mandela, it
was the late President Mwalimu Nyerere, may his soul rest in peace, who gave so
much of himself for peace in Burundi. Burundi may not be so fortunate for the
third time. On that occasion, President Clinton had this to say and I quote:
"So I plead with you: You have to help your children remember
their history, but you must not force them to relive their history ". Burundi
would do well to heed these words and save its children from the scourge of
endemic conflict.
The Great Lakes region of Central
Africa needs peace, Mr. President. The neighbours of the DRC and Burundi,
all of them, will not have peace so long as carnage continues in their backyard.
Angola will not have peace so long as its neighbours to the north are strife-torn.
Mr. President,
The United Nations is making
a steady progress in Sierra Leone following initial mishaps which threatened to
reduce this organization to an object of ridicule. The size of the United
Nations force in that small country should be enough to frustrate the murderous
activities of the bandits of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). In the final
analysis, however, the future stability of Sierra Leone cannot be imposed by
the United Nations or even indeed by ECOWAS. It is the people of Sierra Leone
themselves who must embrace the logic of peace through national dialogue and
reconciliation.
The silence of the guns in
the horn of Africa in the tragic war between Eritrea and Ethiopia could not
have been more welcome. The region has more than enough problems without
endless war. Famine is stalking the area evoking earlier episodes of human
devastation, particularly in Ethiopia and Somalia. In peace, the international
community hopefully will be able to assist the affected areas without
hindrance.
Our hearts and best wishes
go out to the people of Somalia, Mr. President, in their difficult endeavour to
restore normalcy to their fractured country. We hope the new central authority
they have established will be respected by all the parties in the country.
Mr. President,
The struggle for peace in
Africa, if it is to be successful, must be prosecuted on two fronts, political
and economic. On both fronts, I can assure this august Assembly that Africa is
not a hopeless continent as some of our detractors would have the world
believe.
The Secretary-General's seminal
report on the Causes of Conflict in Africa has not fallen on deaf ears. Our
continent has been changing for the better for sometime now. Changing democratically
elected governments by unconstitutional means, whatever the reasons, is no
longer tolerated. Coup makers are no longer welcome in the councils of the
OAU.
We have come to accept that
good governance and the rule of law, far from being regarded as sinister neo-colonialist
concepts, as some may wish to stigmatize them, mean simply, accountability
and transparency on the part of those who are entrusted with the responsibility
of running the affairs of their nations. They mean cultivating a culture of
incorruptibility, openness and tolerance.
On the economic front, Mr.
President, I cannot gainsay the obvious fact that people do not eat democracy
or good governance. Democracy in an environment characterized by abject poverty
and ignorance is an endangered species.
Africa needs investment and
aid to buttress its democratization process. The challenge facing the United
Nations in the new century is, therefore, to strive to ensure that Africa's
difficult renaissance is not simply encouraged but supported in material ways.
The western world would do
well not simply to shout at Africans, to pontificate about human rights and
good governance, and deprecate the continent's civil wars and endemic instability
from the privileged comfort of western Europe and North America. Africans
need and deserve hand-on solidarity and constructive engagement with the developed
world if they are to succeed in their struggle for peace and development.
Mr. President,
Let me state the obvious.
Small States like my own derive a sense of security from our membership of the
United Nations. The United Nations is our shield against the vagaries and
predatory nature of world politics.
That is why we have been
unstinting in the fulfillment of our obligations to the organization. We pay
our dues to the organization without fail. We have participated in its
peacekeeping activities. And we have defended it against its many detractors.
It is no secret, however, that
this United Nations to which we all habitually profess our unflinching commitment
and devotion is perpetually tottering on the brink of insolvency. This is
unfortunately so even as we equally habitually burden the organization with
escalating tasks which it must perform on a shoestring budget. The Secretary-General
is right in challenging us, Member States, to hold one another responsible
for the financial difficulties faced by the United Nations. We alone can resolve
these difficulties. We must honour our Charter obligations and do so without
conditions.
We must strengthen the
United Nations to secure our future, the future of mankind. We must continually reform the organization to
adapt it to the realities of the post cold war world and the new
millennium.
A crucial part of this
reform and adaptation is the reconfiguration of the Security Council on which
there is sufficient consensus in our UN family. The Council needs a heavy dose
of democratization and accountability about which there is no dissension.
We must strengthen the
peacekeeping arm of the United Nations to make good or deliver on our Charter's
pledge "to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war... "
Peacekeeping has always been a crucial function of the United Nations. And so
the need to enhance the rapid reaction of the United Nations to conflict
situations around the world has long been recognized and is deeply felt.
The lessons learnt in Kosovo,
East Timor, and more recently in Sierra Leone, have taught us that the UN
needs better trained and well-equipped troops, as well as innovative, imaginative
and realistic mandates from the Security Council.
Let there be no repetition
of the kind of humiliation the UN suffered recently in Sierra Leone in the
hands of a ragtag army of bandits. The conflicts that are wreacking havoc on
societies today are radically different from those that preoccupied the United
Nations during the cold war era. We must, therefore, devise new and creative
mechanisms and strategies for responding to them.
Let me conclude my
statement, Mr. President, by reiterating Botswana's commitment to the United
Nations and its Charter. This organization is irreplaceable, and I am sure the
presence here two weeks ago of so many world leaders to mark the turn of a new
millennium is more than enough testimony to this obvious fact.
I
thank you.