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G8 MIYAZAKI INITIATIVES FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION
I. EFFORTS FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION -- A BASIC CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK --
The G8
Heads of State and Government announced last June in Cologne, and we,
Foreign Ministers, reiterated last December in Berlin, the determination
to make prevention of armed conflict a high priority issue in coming
years. We have to nurture a "Culture of Prevention" throughout the global
community by encouraging international and regional organizations, states,
NGOs and other actors to view their activities and policies from the
vantage of conflict prevention, and to commit themselves to work towards
this goal.
The G8
confirms that efforts to prevent conflict must be based upon observance of
international law including the UN Charter, democracy, respect for human
rights, the rule of law, good governance, sustainable development, and
other fundamental values, which constitute the foundation of international
peace and security.
"Comprehensive Approach"
The
G8 believes that, because of the diversity and complexity of causes of
conflicts, the following "Comprehensive Approach" should be adopted:
Consistent
efforts for conflict prevention need to be made at every stage, from
pre-conflict to post-conflict (Chronological Comprehensiveness).
During
each stage of a conflict, the international community should draw from a
wide-ranging menu of political, economic and social policy options.
Furthermore, it is crucial to address the issues of human rights and
protection of civilians. (Comprehensiveness in Measures for Conflict
Prevention)
It
should be noted that, in taking concrete measures on individual conflicts,
their characteristics, including their causes, parties, modalities, and
regional contexts, as well as coherence with policies in other fields --
e.g. international trade and finance -- need to be fully taken into
consideration.
The UN, the G8 and Other Actors
We,
the G8 Foreign Ministers recalled at the Berlin Ministerial Meeting on
Conflict Prevention that the UN Charter confers the primary responsibility
for maintenance of international peace and security upon the Security
Council, and that the UN Secretary General also has an important role in
this respect. We reaffirmed that a reformed and effective UN remains
central. In this context, the G8 notes the relevance of the report of the
UN Secretary General in preparation for the UN Millennium
Assembly.
While
the principal responsibility for preventing conflicts lies with the
parties directly concerned, conflict prevention is a joint venture
involving all the international community, including other international
and regional organizations, states, business sector, NGOs, and
individuals.
The
G8 welcomes wider use of the relevant provisions of the UN Charter for
preventive diplomacy and will work for integration of the diverse elements
of the UN system so as to support more effectively preventive
action.
The
G8 regards the UN's peacekeeping capacity as a key contribution to global
conflict prevention efforts. We note the establishment by the UN Secretary
General of an expert panel and welcome the effort to conduct a
comprehensive review in this field as a contribution to efforts to
strengthen the quality and speed of the UN response to peacekeeping
challenges. We underline the importance of efforts to create arrangements
with member states for an effective surge capacity for planning and
conduct of peacekeeping operations. We also look forward to the
reinforcement of the capacity of the UN in the area of
CIVPOL.
The
G8 supports the UN's existing mechanism for maintaining compliance with
the international human rights standards and regular communication of this
information to relevant UN bodies for use in their deliberations. We
intend to contribute to strengthening the conflict prevention and early
warning capacity of the UN by, inter alia, promoting the reinforcement of
the role of the Special Representatives of the Secretary General.
The G8
stands ready to support the efforts by the international community for
conflict prevention, especially in those areas where it has a special
contribution to make.
II. THE G8 INITIATIVES FOR CONFLICT PREVENTION
Based on
three criteria, namely, (a) whether the issue has a direct relevance to
conflict prevention, (b) whether the G8 has a comparative advantage over
other players in dealing with the issue, and (c) whether a joint
initiative by the G8 could bear fruit, this year the G8 undertakes the
following initiatives:
- Small Arms and Light Weapons
- Conflict and Development
- Illicit Trade in Diamonds
- Children in Armed Conflict
- International Civil Police
1. Small Arms and Light Weapons
The G8
believes that the uncontrolled and illegal transfer of small arms and
light weapons (hereinafter referred to as "small arms") and the existence
of destabilizing accumulations of these weapons in many parts of the world
pose a serious threat to peace, security, and prosperity. The G8 therefore
strongly supports national, regional, and international efforts to ensure
that transfers of small arms are carried out in a responsible and legal
fashion, and to reduce existing destabilizing accumulations to levels
consistent with legitimate defense and security
needs. The
destabilizing proliferation of small arms presents the international
community with challenges in many areas including export control policy,
prevention of illicit trafficking, law enforcement and crime prevention,
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration, post-conflict
reconstruction, and security sector reform. The G8 emphasizes the need for
international institutions and individual states to increase the
effectiveness of their efforts by developing coordinated and coherent
policies in all of these areas, while avoiding duplication.
The G8
looks forward to the holding and a successful outcome of the UN
Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons in All
Its Aspects, in 2001. We will work for a conference with a broad agenda
whose outcome will genuinely strengthen international efforts to
eradicate illicit trafficking, particularly of small arms.
while recognizing that transfers of small arms are consistent with
the right of self-defense enshrined in the UN Charter, confirms that we
will exercise a high degree of responsibility in controlling and
licensing such exports. Unless we have stricter regulations, in our
approach to approving export licenses the G8 will take as a minimum
criterion the legitimate defense and security needs of the recipient.
The G8 will not authorize the export of small arms if there is a clear
risk that these might be used for repression or aggression against
another country. Finally, the G8 will consider the scope for further
action at the national level and in international fora such as the
Wassenaar Arrangement to minimize the risk that small arms may be
illegally diverted or re-exported. To this end, the G8 agrees on the
importance of effective national controls for arms brokering. The G8
strongly encourages other small arms exporting countries to adopt these
principles in their own policies.
emphasizes the importance of complementary demand-side measures. In
this context, the G8 welcomes the October 1998 adoption of the ECOWAS
Moratorium on the Importation, Exportation and Manufacture of Light
Weapons and encourages other regions affected by the problem of small
arms proliferation to consider similar measures. The G8 will take steps
to ensure that our export licensing decisions respect the ECOWAS
moratorium and urge other exporting states to do likewise. The G8 also
welcomes the recently-adopted Nairobi Declaration on the Problem of
Proliferation of Illicit Small Arms and Light Weapons in the Great Lake
Region and Horn of Africa. The G8 encourages those in a position to do
so to provide financial and technical assistance to support the
implementation of the ECOWAS moratorium as well as the Nairobi
Declaration.
encourages the countries and regions directly affected by illicit
arms trafficking to enhance transparency in this regard which could
include exchange of information on discovered instances and routes of
illicit small arms supply. The G8 considers that the marking of small
arms could improve their traceability. The G8 will work to build
international consensus on increasing the degree of transparency
attached to such transfers. With the aim of combating the illicit
trafficking of small arms and building confidence, the G8 stands ready
to exchange information in appropriate fora concerning national
legislation, practices and experience, and calls upon other states to do
likewise.
emphasizes the fundamental importance of measures to combat illicit
trafficking in small arms. The G8 is committed to maintaining effective
national export control and enforcement systems in order to prevent the
illicit transfer of small arms from, via or to our territories. We
reaffirm our commitment to implement strictly all arms embargoes imposed
by the UN Security Council. To this end, the G8 strongly supports
appropriate national legislation that establishes legal enforcement of
these embargoes. We strongly support efforts to increase the
effectiveness of UN sanctions, such as the Security Council's decision
to investigate reports on the violation of measures against UNITA.
stands ready to support projects and programs which will increase
the capacity of states directly affected by illicit small arms
trafficking to implement effective controls. The G8 emphasizes the
importance of coordinated regional and international action in this
area, and welcomes initiatives such as the OAS Inter-American Convention
Against the Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms,
Ammunition, Explosives and other Related Parts and the EU/SADC action
program for tackling illicit arms trafficking in Southern Africa. The G8
also attaches importance to increased information exchange in the
Wassenaar Arrangement and in other international and regional fora as
appropriate on issues such as illicit trafficking routes and
diversionary destinations.
recognizes the need to tackle the problem of illicit small arms
possession and misuse through effective law enforcement and crime
prevention measures. With regard to firearms, the G8's Lyon Group will
continue within its mandate to consider how to improve the effectiveness
of the G8 members' policies and countermeasures to the illicit
manufacturing of and trafficking in firearms. The G8 will play an active
and constructive role in the work to elaborate the Protocol against the
Illicit Manufacturing of and Trafficking in Firearms, Their Parts and
Components and Ammunition, supplementing the draft UN Convention Against
Transnational Organized Crime, which will serve as a key element in
international efforts to combat illicit firearms trafficking, with a
view to ensuring these negotiations are completed by the end of 2000.
pledges its full support for the effort to reduce existing
destabilizing accumulations of small arms. The G8 encourages affected
countries and regions to adopt confidence-building measures and
incentives to encourage the collection and destruction of surplus or
illegally-held small arms. The G8 confirms that we are ready to support
such efforts through the voluntary provision of financial and technical
assistance, including through specifically targeted funds, existing or
to be established, at the UN, regional and local level, and designed to
deal with the problem of small arms, and call upon the international
community to do likewise. In this context, the G8 emphasizes the central
importance of comprehensive demobilization, disarmament and
reintegration programs in post-conflict situations. The G8 will support
the inclusion of such programs where appropriate in peace agreements
between the parties to conflicts and mandates of peace keeping forces
and other relevant missions.
emphasizes the importance of the role of civil society in tackling
destabilizing accumulations of small arms, for example through
awareness-raising at the community level. The G8 encourages the
international community and governments of affected countries actively
to involve civil society in efforts to prevent the uncontrolled spread
and destabilizing accumulation of small arms.
reaffirms its support for the principle that all surplus or
illegally-held small arms which have been removed from circulation in
countries or regions affected by destabilizing accumulations should, if
not immediately destroyed, be properly secured and managed prior to
their early and effective destruction, preferably under international or
third party supervision
2. Conflict and Development
Peace and
democratic stability are indispensable pre-conditions for economic growth
and sustainable development. Moreover, economic and development
co-operation has an important role to play in fostering peace and
stability. The G8 can use its position as the major provider of the
development assistance to pursue actively initiatives in this area. While
ensuring that fundamental development goals remain at the core of
bilateral and multilateral assistance policies, the G8 should take
initiatives particularly in three areas: (a) promoting the consideration
of conflict prevention in development assistance strategies, (b) focusing
assistance to ensure quick action to prevent conflict, and (c) ensuring a
smooth transition from emergency humanitarian assistance to development
assistance in the post-conflict stage. The G8 also recognizes that a
recipient government's ownership of its development policies and civil
society's participation can contribute to mitigating tensions.
(1) Promoting the Consideration of Conflict Prevention in Development
Assistance Strategies The G8 ,
continues to extend economic and development cooperation to promote
prosperity, reduce poverty, and to help create resilient societies that
promote inclusion and opportunity for all citizens.
recognizes the importance of addressing root causes of conflicts,
including through assistance to regional and subregional organizations.
will consult with the relevant international financial institutions
regarding conflict-related implications of development assistance.
aims, with other bilateral and multilateral actors, to use
development assistance to promote democratic and legislative
institutions, good governance, rule of law, peaceful resolution of
disputes, civic education and other structural elements.
aims to build capacity in administrative and security systems,
including police, penal and judicial institutions.
enhances technical assistance to build capacity and to ensure
appropriate social investments in education, health and nutrition, and
other programs targeting vulnerable segments of society, seeking to
protect these expenditures during economic downturns and time of crises.
considers ways to use economic and development assistance to address
causes of conflict stemming from competition for natural resources, such
as water, and to encourage regional approaches to their management .
will pay attention, in extending economic and development
cooperation, to excessive military expenditure where it occurs in
recipient countries and calls upon developing countries to ensure
effective, transparent and accountable public sector management of state
expenditures, including military budgets and the use of development
assistance.
recognizes the important role that donor coordination in the area of
conflict prevention plays in enhancing the effectiveness of economic and
development assistance in this regard.
welcomes the work of the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC)
to review bilateral donors' practices in the field of conflict
prevention.
(2) Focusing Assistance to Ensure Quick Action to Prevent
Conflict The G8,
recognizes the importance of extending flexible, quick assistance
with the aim to helping to alleviate and stem the spread of human
suffering to countries and regions neighboring conflict areas, including
displaced persons and refugees, and will work towards more effective and
better coordinated provision of emergency and other relevant assistance
through regional and international organizations, in particular the
United Nations.
encourages the international community to focus its attention on
conflict and development in Africa and to carry out closer exchanges of
perspectives and information, including at the field level and within
the UN system.
(3) Ensuring a Smooth Transition from Emergency Humanitarian Assistance
to Development in the Post-Conflict Stage The G8,
recognizes the importance of continuous and coordinated efforts by
various actors including UNHCR, UNDP, UNICEF, World Bank, other
international and regional organizations as well as NGOs in achieving a
smooth transition, and invites the international community to give
further consideration and support toward this end.
will strive to focus emergency and transition aid on supporting
local security, economic and political stability, local capacity
building, and reconciliation.
3.Illicit Trade in Diamonds
The G8 is
concerned that the proceeds from the illicit trade in certain high value
commodities, especially diamonds, are providing funds for arms purchases,
thus aggravating conflicts and humanitarian crises in Africa (particularly
Angola, DRC and Sierra
Leone). Whilst
insisting that the interests of the legitimate diamond producers and
traders are not put at risk, the G8 will take the following steps to
counter the illicit trade in diamonds, particularly those coming from
conflict zones in Africa.
The G8, which accounts for the bulk of the
global market for diamonds,
will co-operate closely with governments of diamond-producing
states, neighboring states, major marketing centers, regional
organizations and industry in order to curb illicit diamond flows.
calls on producers and buyers to work in close co-ordination on the
elaboration of specific measures to trace and block the illicit trade in
diamonds in Africa on an urgent basis, as a first step.
supports the efforts of African states in strengthening regional law
enforcement and internal capacity building for curbing the illicit trade
in diamonds and welcomes their respective initiative in this regard.
emphasizes that the UN Sanctions Committee on Angola is central to
efforts to strengthen sanctions enforcement against UNITA and the need
to fully implement UN Security Council resolutions 1173 and 1295.
welcomes the initiatives within the UN framework to assess the
impact of the illegal exploitation of natural resources, including
diamonds, on the conflict in Democratic Republic of Congo.
calls for the urgent cooperation of interested parties including the
diamond industry with the government of Sierra Leone on the proper
control over trade in diamonds produced in Sierra Leone.
welcomes 'Technical Forum on Diamonds' held at Kimberly, South
Africa, as an important contribution to finding pragmatic solutions. The
G8 supports rapid follow-up, involving all the key actors, which should
include the exploring of a possible certification scheme for rough
diamonds from conflict areas, industry codes of conduct and an
international body to promote transparency and accountability.
will consider appropriate action to keep diamonds from illicit
transactions out of the G8 markets.
4. Children in Armed Conflict
The plight
of war-affected children, a group which includes, in particular, child
soldiers, child orphans, sexually exploited children and children
traumatized by armed conflict, but also comprises all the children
affected by the effects of war in wider sense , is one of the most
disturbing human security issues facing the world today. The G8 is
particularly concerned by the issues raised by children in armed conflict
both as participants and victims. In this context, the G8 agreed upon the
following approaches.
(1) Pressure Against Those Who Involve or Target Children in Armed
Conflict in Breach of International Standards The G8
will concert G8's pressure in UN and other fora against individual
governments and armed groups when access to assistance is denied to
children or when children are specifically targeted as victims and/or
participants in a conflict.
will take account of, and promote international standards on the
non-use of child soldiers in considering our military assistance to
armed forces in third countries.
(2) Support for International Standards and Mechanisms The G8
urges universal adherence to the ILO Convention 182 on Elimination
of Worst Forms of Child Labor.
welcomes the adoption of and supports the universal adherence to the
Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict.
provides support for the office of the UN Special Representative for
Children and Armed Conflict in its role as an advocate on behalf of
war-affected children, and to UN agencies including UNICEF.
will cooperate in the UN and other international fora when there is
a need to ensure assistance to children in armed conflicts or when
children are specifically targeted as victims and/or participants in a
conflict.
(3) Outreach The G8
supports action by the UN, regional organizations, NGOs and media in
raising awareness of problems of children in armed conflict.
commits to include child rights training in military assistance
training programs.
supports the 2001 UN Special Session to review the achievement of
the goals of the World Summit for Children and works to ensure that any
document it adopts has a strong section addressing the issue of
war-affected children.
encourages and supports other national and regional efforts to
highlight the issue of children in armed conflict, including the
Conference on War Affected Children in West Africa (April 2000) and the
international conference to be hosted by Canada in September 2000 on
this subject.
(4) Reintegration and Rehabilitation The G8
commits to promote the protection, welfare and rights of children
during peace negotiations and throughout the process of consolidating
peace in the aftermath of conflict, including through reintegration of
former child soldiers in peace support operations.
commits to prioritize assistance for war-affected children,
including former child soldiers, in expenditure for post-conflict
reconstruction.
makes close contact, through UNICEF and other fora, on individual
reintegration programs e.g. to identify and share best practice, noting
the particular needs of displaced and vulnerable children in
rehabilitation and reintegration programs and being sensitive to gender
differentiated experiences.
5. International Civilian Police
UN deployed
civilian police (CIVPOL), usually as a component of peacekeeping
operations, are a critical element in conflict prevention as they help
indigenous civilian police forces develop the capacity to maintain law and
order, and if necessary, can perform this function on an interim basis.
The G8
notes the recent dramatic increase in civilian police operations and
the resulting increase in the demand for international civilian police
officers. The G8 calls upon the UN and regional organizations to work
with member states to explore ways to meet this demand in a timely and
effective way. The G8 urges that states in a position to do so make
efforts to enhance their own capability to provide qualified civilian
police officers on a timely basis, and that those with active training
programs for international civilian police officers make them available
to police from other contributing states.
stresses the need to enhance the capacity of the UN in the frame
work of peacekeeping operations to support more comprehensive planning
and better coordination of indigenous civilian police operations,
criminal justice, and development of indigenous criminal justice
systems. The G8 calls on the UN, in close consultation with member
states, to take further steps to improve its international civilian
police capabilities. Such steps should include development, on the basis
of national contributions, of a reserve list of pre-trained,
UN-certified international civilian police officers for possible
service; completion of the review and revision, as appropriate, of the
criteria for selection, evaluation, and training of these officers; and
formulation of comprehensive policies on international civilian police
operations to reflect new responsibilities such as in recent UN
peacekeeping operations.
calls as well for increased UN support for training local police
forces also as a post conflict activity and as a regular developmental
activity with priority emphasis where such training would help prevent
conflict. The G8 calls for new efforts in this regard on the basis of a
dialogue involving member states, all relevant UN institutions,
including UNDP, and other developmental institutions. This activity
should promote the principles of democracy, good governance, human
rights, and equal treatment under law.
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