Thursday, August 25, 2005

Crisis talks begin to salvage UN world summit

The draft outcome document of the 2005 Summit is currently being hotly debated at the United Nations with just over two weeks before world leaders meet in New York to review the progress with the implementation of the Millennium Declaration in 2000. The following extract from the story published in the Financial Times lays out the scenario in New York Headquarters..

...But months of talks brokered by Jean Ping, president of the General Assembly, have instead highlighted deep disagreements over how to tackle poverty, human rights, proliferation, terrorism and management reform.

The disagreements have grown deeper with each effort to make proposals more specific.

First, an attempt to expand the Security Council recently collapsed after India, Germany, Brazil and Japan failed to secure sufficient support in their bids for new permanent seats.

The US has since thrown the rest of the package into disarray by demanding changes to almost every
aspect of Mr Ping's 39-page outcome document.


Among many amendments, the US wants to delete references to the Millennium Development Goals, debt relief, climate change talks, nuclear disarmament and a strategic UN military reserve.

Diplomats said the US was calling for a line-by-line renegotiation or alternatively, for scrapping the idea of a broad document in favour of a much shorter declaration. The problem, diplomats said, was that if countries would not compromise on certain areas in return for progress on issues they supported, the project could disintegrate.

Countries from the non-aligned movement and the group of seven leading industrialised nations, and others, have objected to proposals on a new human rights council, a peace-building commission,
terrorism, and strengthening the secretary-general's capacity to make management decisions without interference by the General Assembly.

According to one UN diplomat, the final document is in real danger. “We definitely have to work
to prevent the US proposal from unravelling the document.” The diplomat said it was possible the US bombshell would spur others to work harder for the reform package, which Europe broadly endorsed. But the mood has substantially worsened over recent days.

The idea now is for a group of 20-30 countries, which would include representatives from regional groups, the permanent five members of the Security Council, and a smattering of activist diplomats, to salvage what they can.

But recriminations are beginning over a badly managed process that did not take account of political realities, and lacked effective leadership from political and UN figures.

Many of the UN's most senior officials went on holiday for much of August, returning with only three weeks to go before the summit.

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