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38th
Ordinary Session of the Assembly
of Heads of State and Government of the OAU: Decisions
8
July, 2002
Durban, South Africa
AHG/Decisions
171-184(XXXVIII)
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Table of contents -
DECISION ON THE 15TH
ANNUAL ACTIVITY REPORT OF THE AFRICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN
AND PEOPLE’S RIGHTS - AHG/Dec. 171 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly,
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TAKES NOTE WITH SATISFACTION of the
15th Annual Activity Report of the
African Commission on Human and People’s Rights
and COMMENDS the African Commission for the
excellent work accomplished in the past year in the
area of promotion and protection of human rights;
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CALLS ON the African Commission to
propose ways and means of strengthening the African
system for the promotion and protection of Human and
People’s Rights within the African Union, and
submit a report thereon at the next session of the
Assembly;
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CALLS UPON Member States, which have
not yet done so, to expedite the process of
ratification of the Protocol to the African Charter
on Human and People’s Rights on the Establishment
of an African Court on Human and People’s Rights
in order to have this important instrument in force
before the next session (July 2003);
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REQUESTS the Secretary General to
take the necessary action in order to complete as
soon as possible, the elaboration of the Draft
Protocol to the African Charter on Human and People’s
Rights relating to the Rights of Women in Africa and
to make sure that all Member States are fully
involved in the process;
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AUTHORIZES the publication of the 15th
Annual Activity Report of the African Commission on
Human and People’s Rights, pursuant to Article 59
of the African Charter on Human and People’s
Rights.
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DECISION ON THE REPORT OF
THE AFRICAN COMMITTEE ON THE RIGHTS AND WELFARE OF THE
CHILD - AHG/Dec. 172 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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TAKES NOTE of the report and
recommendations of the inaugural meeting of the
African Committee on the Rights and Welfare of the
Child;
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RECOGNIZES the important role of the
African Committee in the improvement of the
conditions of African children everywhere on the
Continent;
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CALLS UPON the Committee to ensure
that the provisions on the rights and welfare of the
African child, as enshrined in the African Charter
are respected in all Member States;
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URGES Member States which have not
yet done so to urgently sign and/or ratify the
African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the
Child;
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REQUESTS Member States to extend
their full support and cooperation to the African
Committee and submit their reports regularly to the
Committee;
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CALLS UPON the Secretary General to
urgently appoint a Secretary to the Committee, as
stipulated in Article 40 of the African Charter on
the Rights and Welfare of the Child, to enable the
Committee to function effectively;
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DECISION ON THE LOCKERBIE
CASE - AHG/Dec. 173 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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TAKES NOTE of the Report of the OAU
Commission of Jurists on the Lockerbie Case which
noted that the judgment of 31 January 2001 was based
on evidence that was not in line with the vital
elements of the accusation;
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RECALLS Decision AHG/Dec.3 (V)
adopted by the 5th Extraordinary Session
of the Assembly of the Heads of State and Government
held in Sirte, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya on 2 March
2001 and Decision AHG/Dec. 168 (XXXVII) adopted on
the issue by the 37th Ordinary Session of
the Assembly of Heads of State and Government held
from 9 to 11 July 2001 in Lusaka, Zambia as well as
all the other resolutions and decisions taken by the
OAU on this matter;
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REGRETS the fact that the United
Nations Security Council has, up to now, not
definitively lifted the unjust sanctions and embargo
imposed on Libya and which no longer have legal or
moral justification, given the positive attitude and
full cooperation shown by Jamahiriya in handling
this issue and URGENTLY REQUESTS the Security
Council to take the necessary measures to
immediately and definitively lift these sanctions
and embargo which have already caused untold
suffering to the Libyan people;
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ALSO REGRETS that the Court of
Appeal pronounced judgment on 14 March 2002
rejecting the appeal lodged by Mr. Al Megrahi;
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FURTHER REGRETS the decision taken
on 7 January 2002 by the United States of America to
extend for a period of one year the measures to
boycott the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya by virtue of the
special law they promulgated since 1986 in the
aftermath of the crisis;
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COMMENDS the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
for the spirit of cooperation it demonstrated
throughout the judicial process and for the efforts
it has invested to find a just and equitable
solution to the Lockerbie Affair;
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RECOMMENDS that the Current Chairman
and the members of his Bureau use their good offices
to make the necessary contacts with a view to
ensuring a rapid and permanent settlement of the
case.
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DECISION ON THE STATUS
REPORT ON GLOBAL ALLIANCE FOR VACCINES AND IMMUNIZATION
(GAVI) - AHG/Dec. 174 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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TAKES NOTE of the Report;
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ACKNOWLEDGES that vaccines
constitute one of the most effective means of
improving health and reducing the suffering and
mortality occasioned by infectious diseases;
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ALSO ACKNOWLEDGES that the Global
Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) is a
public-private partnership established in 1999 to
reinforce the commitment to immunization;
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URGES Member States to take all
necessary measures to ensure that every child in
Africa is fully immunized by widening, for all
children, the range of basic vaccines (measles,
poliomyelitis, BCG and DTC) to include Hepatitis–
B Vaccines;
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FURTHER URGES Member States to
establish more effective linkages between
immunization and health sector development in
general, and create technical partnerships between
low and medium income countries to promote
experience and resource sharing so as to reduce the
gap between children born in different environments;
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APPEALS to GAVI partners to support
efforts aimed at combating measles which accounts
for 50% of infant mortality each year in Africa;
formulate strategies to ensure the sustainability of
immunization services in the poorest countries, with
over 80% coverage; and help low-income African
countries to identify mechanisms which will enable
them to increase their national immunization
budgets;
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URGES GAVI partners to undertake to
increase the number of African governments on the
Governing Body of GAVI in order to reflect the
priority needs of the Continent, and to collaborate
with the vaccine industry partners to guarantee
adequate supply of essential vaccines
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FURTHER URGES donors, international
organizations and all institutions working in the
health and development sector to provide adequate
and sustained official development assistance for
long-term funding, as well as other financial
incentives related to poverty reduction strategies,
such as debt cancellation and additional technical
assistance;
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FINALLY REQUESTS the Secretary
General to take all the necessary measures to
follow-up on the implementation of the present
decision and report to subsequent sessions of
Council.
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DECISION ON THE
CONFERENCE ON SECURITY, STABILITY, DEVELOPMENT AND
COOPERATION (CSSDCA) - AHG/Dec. 175 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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WELCOMES the efforts deployed by the
Secretary General in the implementation of the
Solemn Declaration on the Conference on Security,
Stability, Development and Cooperation (CSSDCA)
adopted by the Assembly of Heads of State and
Government in Lomé, Togo, in July 2000;
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APPROVES the Memorandum of
Understanding on Security, Stability, Development,
Cooperation as elaborated by the Experts’
meetings, enriched by the OAU-Civil Society
Conference and recommended by the Council of
Ministers;
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REQUESTS the Member States to take
steps required for the implementation of the
Memorandum of Understanding and to keep the
Secretariat informed of the progress made in this
direction in order to facilitate the monitoring and
evaluation process of the CSSDCA, including through
review conferences and meetings, as provided for in
the CSSDCA Solemn Declaration adopted in Lomé,
Togo, in July 2000;
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WELCOMES the convening of the second
OAU-Civil Society Conference on Developing
Partnership between the OAU and African Civil
Society Organizations, held in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, from 11 – 15 June 2002 and TAKES NOTE of
the recommendations of the Conference, in
particular, those relating to the African Union and
the CSSDCA Process;
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COMMENDS Nigeria and South Africa
for their generous contribution of five hundred
thousand dollars (US$500,000) each for the
operationalization of the CSSDCA and CALLS upon OAU
Member States, the United Nations and all OAU
Partners to provide financial support for the CSSDCA
Process;
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REAFFIRMS the centrality of the
CSSDCA Process as a policy development forum, a
framework for the advancement of common values, and
as a monitoring and evaluation mechanism for the
African Union;
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REQUESTS the Secretary-General to
pursue efforts aimed at strengthening the CSSDCA
Unit to enable it to carry out its functions
effectively and to take the necessary steps to
ensure the follow-up of these recommendations.
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DECISION ON THE PLACE OF
THE AFRICAN POPULATION COMMISSION (APC) IN THE AFRICAN
UNION - AHG/Dec. 176 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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RECOGNIZES the objectives, functions
and achievements of the Commission, since its
inception in 1994, under the Joint Secretariat of
ADB, ECA and OAU;
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COMMENDS the efforts of the African
Population Commission (APC) in the implementation of
the Dakar/Ngor Declaration and the International
Conference on Population and Development and URGES
for intensification of these efforts;
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REQUESTS the OAU/AU to continue
spearheading the realization of the APC Programmes;
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CALLS UPON Member States to provide
sustained and adequate support to National
Population Councils, local focal points of the APC;
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FURTHER CALLS UPON the United
nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA) and
other relevant partners to continue supporting and
working with the APC;
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REQUESTS the Secretary General to
take the necessary measures to determine the
position of this commission within the African
Union, and make recommendations in this regard to
the Assembly.
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DECISION ON THE PLACE OF
THE OAU LABOUR AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS COMMISSION IN THE
AFRICAN UNION - AHG/Dec. 177 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly
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ACKNOWLEDGES the multifarious human,
social and economic problems hindering sustainable
development in the African continent;
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RECOGNIZES that the Labour and
Social Affairs Commission is one of the most dynamic
and fruitful organs of the OAU;
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RECOGNIZES ALSO the numerous
achievements of the Commission in improving the
social and economic conditions of the African
peoples during its twenty-five years of existence;
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COMMENDS the spirit of tripartism
that exists in the Commission and the collaboration
among Governments, Employers and Workers which is
unique in the world, thus making the Labour and
Social Affairs Commission a unique Regional
Commission of this nature in the world;
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AFFIRMS that with the promotion of
tripartism as the bedrock of social dialogue and
democracy, faster and sustainable development,
social justice, peace, stability and good governance
can be achieved;
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FURTHER RECOGNIZES that in the
context of globalisation and the attendant
challenges which Africa should take up in the
economic and social fields, in particular
employment, it is imperative to maintain the
Commission in its present tripartite form and to
strengthen it with a view to enhancing its
effectiveness;
-
REQUESTS that the social dimension
be adequately addressed in the New Partnership for
Africa’s Development (NEPAD) programme;
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REQUESTS the Secretary General to
take the necessary measures to determine the
position of this Commission within the African Union
and make recommendations in this regard to the
Assembly.
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DECISION ON THE WORLD
SOLIDARITY AND POVERTY REDUCTION FUND - AHG/Dec. 178
(XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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RECALLS decision AHG/Dec. 4 (XXXV)
by which the Heads of State and Government
reiterated their support for the initiative launched
by H.E. Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, the President of
the Republic of Tunisia aimed at the establishment
of the World Solidarity Fund;
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RECALLS Decision CM/Dec. 645 by
which Council requested the Secretary General to
seize the United Nations Secretary General of this
Decision as the African Common Position, and seek
his support to speed up the implementation of
Resolution 56/207 on the mechanisms, operational
modalities, powers and management modalities for the
Fund, thereby making it operational;
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REAFFIRMS its conviction that the
Fund will contribute to the strengthening of
international solidarity and cooperation with a view
to eradicating poverty in the world, especially on
the African continent, pursuant to the objectives
the poverty reduction programme adopted at the
Millennium Summit held in September 2000;
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FURTHER REAFFIRMS that this fund
will constitute one of the instruments for the
realization of the objectives of the African Union
and NEPAD;
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TAKES NOTE of the report of the
Secretary General on consultations with the United
Nations Secretary General to accelerate the process
of establishing this Fund;
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REQUESTS the Secretary General to
continue his efforts as well as his consultations
with the United Nations Secretary General and
closely monitor negotiations on the implementation
mechanisms to be conducted during the next session
of the United Nations General Assembly.
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FURTHER REQUESTS the Secretary
General to report on progress made in the
implementation of this decision to the next session
of the Assembly of the African Union.
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DECISION ON THE CONTROL
OF ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION IN AFRICA - AHG/Dec. 179 (XXXVIII)
We, Heads of State and Government of the
Member States of the Organization of African Unity meeting
in Durban, South Africa on 8th July 2002,
Anxious to ensure the sustainable
preservation and protection of health as a basic necessity
of the individual, an inalienable right and an
international public good,
Recalling the New African Initiative
adopted by the Assembly of Heads of State and Government
of the African Union in Lusaka, Zambia, in July 2001 and
later renamed NEPAD which recognizes that poverty
eradication, necessary for placing our countries on the
path of sustainable growth and development, requires the
revitalization of teaching, technical training and health
services,
Recognizing that the reduction and
eventual elimination of poverty requires bold leadership,
building an international partnership and the adoption of
policies and strategies aimed at promoting development and
strengthening dependable and efficient health systems,
Noting that the objectives set with
regard to health promotion need not be solely limited to
the control of major communicable diseases, and that
non-communicable diseases equally record very high
morbidity and mortality rates,
Stressing that the prevalence of
cardiovascular diseases, especially arterial hypertension,
has assumed alarming dimensions with the tendency towards
early occurrence and increased severity,
Further stressing that these diseases
which are becoming the major cause of morbidity and
invalidity, with the attendant consequences of increased
human suffering and health loss in Africa call for a
preventative public health approach characterized by a
determination to act and by resource mobilization,
Bearing In Mind, the Victoria (Canada)
Declaration of 28 May 1992 on Cardiovascular Health, as
well as the will to promote Cardiovascular Health
awareness in the Third Millennium, which emphasizes
prevention and calls for inter-sectoral and
interdisciplinary collaboration,
Considering the conclusions and
recommendations of the "First Symposium on the
Problem of Arterial Hypertension among Black People"
organized in Brussels on 11 December 2000, which stressed
the urgent need for concerted and collective action with
regard to the control of cardiovascular diseases, not only
by way of testing and management, but through preventive
measures,
Further Considering the conclusions
and recommendations of the Libreville Declaration on the
Control of Arterial Hypertension in Africa of 6 November
2001,
REAFFIRM the importance of addressing the
problem of Non-Communicable Diseases as one that requires
a multi-sectoral approach involving all the sectors
concerned, especially with regard to health and
development policy, production and marketing of
pharmaceutical products and research,
DECIDE that the fight against Arterial
Hypertension should feature prominently in the development
policies of our respective countries;
REQUEST the Secretary General to ensure
that this matter is drawn to the attention of the relevant
Specialized Technical Committees, upon the establishment
of these committees, in order to ensure the promotion and
coordination of research and control activities for
arterial hypertension and other cardiovascular diseases..
INVITE the International Community to
respond positively to this Declaration by supporting
financially and otherwise our efforts to fight against
arterial hypertension in Africa.
MANDATE COUNCIL to review each year, the
progress made in the implementation of this Declaration
with a view to ensuring better control of arterial
hypertension in Africa.
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DECISION ON SUPPORT FOR
MR JUAN SOMAVIA - AHG/Dec. 180 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly :
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TAKES NOTE of the Motion of Support
for the candidature of Mr. JUAN SOMAVIA for a second
term as ILO Director General, adopted by the 25th
Ordinary Session of the OAU Labour and Social
Affairs Commission held in Ouagadougou, Burkina
Faso, from 16 to 21 April 2002;
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ENDORSES this Motion and SUPPORTS
the candidature of Mr. Juan Somavia for re-election
for a second term as Director General of the ILO;
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REQUESTS the Secretary General and
the African Tripartite Representatives on the ILO
Governing Body to ensure implementation of this
Decision.
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DECISION ON AFRICAN
PROCESS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT AND PROTECTION OF THE MARINE
AND COASTAL ENVIRONMENT IN AFRICA - AHG/Dec. 181 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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RECALLS Decision AHG/Dec. 163 (XXXVII)
of its 37th Ordinary Session, held in
Lusaka, Zambia in July 2001, which further endorsed
the African Process for the Development and
Protection of the Marine and Coastal Environment in *[reservation
by Libya] Sub-Saharan
Africa and decided to hold its Partnership
Conference at the level of Heads of State in
conjunction with the World Summit on Sustainable
Development;
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AFFIRMS that the African Process is
an important contribution of African countries to
the World Summit in Sustainable Development and
ACKNOWLEDGES the outstanding quality of the work
carried out by African experts in the development of
the Global Environment Facility (GEF MSP) for the
Development and Protection of the Marine and Coastal
Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa through which the
African Process has been implemented to date;
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ENDORSES the proposal made at the
Second Meeting of the Steering Committee of the GEF
MSP on the Environmental Component of the New
Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) to
include the African Process as the component of its
oceans segment, and to recommend the application of
its methodology to other thematic areas;
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INVITES all participating countries
in the process to provide adequate financial
resources, as well as institutional, administrative,
policy and regulatory support, for the
implementation of the African Process, and in
particular for selected project proposals and URGES
all Member States to support and actively
participate in the implementation of the African
Process;
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APPEALS TO the G8 countries and
other external partners, bilateral and multilateral,
as well as international financial Institutions, to
assist with financing projects which are to be
presented at the Partnership Conference of the
African Process;
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REQUESTS the Global Environmental
Facility and the World Bank to fund the second
generation of the African Process project
development cycle, with a view to enabling other
Member States to participate and to assist in the
development of viable "win-win" projects
which address root causes of environmental
degradation and promote sustainable development;
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COMMENDS the innovative approach
developed by the African Process, executed by a
representative of civil society, the Advisory
Committee on Protection of the Sea (ACOPS) in
partnership with UNEP, the GPA Co-ordination Office
and IOC, of UNESCO, and recommends that such
multi-stakeholder partnerships be further promoted
for addressing pressing environmental issues, and
that such mechanism should also include the OAU/AU;
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EXPRESSES ITS APPRECIATION to the
Government of Nigeria, and in particular to His
Excellency President Olusegun Obasanjo, for his
vision and leadership in fulfilling the mandate
given to his country as Presidency of AMCEN, and his
decision to host the Super Prep-Com as well as in
ensuring that the Partnership Conference be held at
the level of Heads of State during WSSD Conference;
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FURTHER REQUESTS the Secretary
General to report on the conclusions of the
Partnership Conference to the next Summit of the
African Union.
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DECISION ON THE
IMPLEMENTATION AND UNIVERSALITY OF THE CONVENTION ON THE
PROHIBITION OF THE DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCTION, STOCKPILING
AND USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS AND ON THEIR DESTRUCTION -
AHG/Dec. 182 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly:
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TAKES NOTE of the Convention on the
Prohibition of the Development, Production,
Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on their
Destruction (hereinafter "the Convention")
that aims to achieve the effective prohibition of
the development, production, acquisition, transfer,
stockpiling and use of chemical weapons and their
destruction,
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RECALLS United Nations General
Assembly Resolution A/RES/55/33 of 20 November 2000
which notes with appreciation the ongoing work to
achieve the objective and purpose of the Convention,
to ensure the full implementation of its provisions
and to provide a forum for consultation and
cooperation among States parties,
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ALSO RECALLS the steadfast position
of Africa regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction and
in particular to the Pelindaba Treaty,
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ACKNOWLEDGES the conclusions and
recommendations of the workshop devoted to Africa on
the Chemical Weapons Convention held in Khartoum,
the Sudan, from 9 to 11 March 2002,
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WELCOMES the recommendation for an
effective implementation of the Chemical Weapons
Convention in Africa through sustained technical
assistance from the Technical Secretariat of the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons,
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ENCOURAGES the call to achieve
universality of the Chemical Weapons Convention in
Africa,
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REQUESTS the Secretary General to
inform Council, at its regular sessions, of
developments regarding the implementation of the
Chemical Weapons Convention and the progress made on
the issue of universality.
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DECISION ON DEVELOPMENTS
IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND PALESTINE - AHG/Dec. 183 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly
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TAKES NOTE of the Report;
-
RECALLS UN General Assembly
resolutions on the Middle East and Palestine, in
particular resolutions 181 and 194 and Security
Council Resolutions 242, 252, 338, 465, 478, 1397,
1402 and 1403 and CALLS for the implementation of
these resolutions;
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FURTHER RECALLS all relevant
resolutions of the Assembly of Heads of State and
Government and the Council of Ministers on the
Middle East, which affirm that the Question of
Palestine is at the core of the Middle East conflict
and that no comprehensive, just and lasting peace
can be established unless Israel fully withdraws
from all occupied Palestinian and Arab territories,
including East Jerusalem, the Syrian Golan Heights,
the Lebanese territory to the borders of 4th
June 1967;
-
REAFFIRMS its solidarity and support
for the just and legitimate struggle of the
Palestinian people, under the leadership of the
Palestine Liberation Organization, their sole and
legitimate representative, to exercise their
inalienable national rights, including their right
to return to their homes, recover their property,
self-determination and the establishment of an
independent state on their national soil, with East
Jerusalem as its capital, in accordance with the
principles of international law and other pertinent
resolutions of the UN;
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EXPRESSES full solidarity with and
support for the elected President of the Palestinian
National Authority, the Leader of the Palestinian
People, H.E. Yasser Arafat, and DEMANDS the
immediate end of the Israeli brutal military siege
imposed on President Arafat in Ramallah and CALLS
for international efforts and assistance to rebuild
the Palestinian institutions destroyed by the
Israeli occupation army;
-
FURTHER CONDEMNS the repeated
military incursions and reoccupation of areas under
Palestinian control, the marginalization of the
Palestinian National Authority, the wave of killings
and assassinations, the policy of collective
punishment and premeditated destruction of the
Palestinian economy, infrastructures, official and
public institutions, including the Presidential
buildings in Gaza and Ramallah, and the suffocating
blockage against the Palestinian people, all of
which, will only jeopardize the prospects of peace
in the region; also condemns the policy of Israel to
desecrate Christian and Moslem places of worship in
the occupied Palestinian territory and demands that
Israel respect the sanctity of these religious
institutions and Israel’s commitment to the
principles of international humanitarian law in the
occupied Palestinian territory.
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ALSO CONDEMNS the policy of
destruction and demolition of homes carried out by
the Israeli forces in the Palestinian refugee camps,
villages and towns as well as the refusal of the
Israeli Government to allow the UN Fact-Finding
Mission charged with establishing the facts about
alleged crimes and atrocities committed in the Jenin
refugee camp, Nablus and other places. Also condemns
the policy of Israel to forbid the entry and
provision of medical and food supplies to the
refugee camps, villages and towns in the occupied
Palestinian territory;
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TAKES NOTE WITH APPRECIATION of the
initiative of the Saudi Crown Prince, adopted by the
Arab League Summit in Beirut, Lebanon, which
provides a historic opportunity and basis for a
global, lasting and comprehensive settlement of the
conflict in the Middle East, and CALLS UPON the
parties and the International Community to support
the initiative;
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CALLS for the implementation of the
Declaration adopted by the reconvened Conference of
High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva
Convention on 5 December 2001 and CALLS for concrete
action on the national, regional and international
levels to ensure respect by the occupying power of
the provisions of the Convention;
-
HAILS the efforts deployed by the UN
Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights
of the Palestinian People and URGES it to continue
to pursue its initiatives with all the parties
concerned;
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WELCOMES the recent resolutions
adopted by the UN Security Council on Development in
the Middle East and Palestine, especially Resolution
1397 (2002) of 12 March 2002 which inter alia
reaffirms a vision of a region where two states,
Israel and Palestine, live side by side within
secure and recognized borders;
-
EXPRESSES CONCERN over the stalled
peace process attributed to the lack of commitment
of the Israeli Government in pursuing the
negotiations that will ensure a just and
comprehensive peace and guarantee security and
stability for all the peoples of the region and
REITERATES ITS CALL for the resumption of
negotiations between Israel and Palestine on the one
hand, and between Israel and Syria and Lebanon on
the other, on the basis of Resolutions 242, 338, 425
and tenets of the peace process established at the
Madrid Conference as well as the full implementation
of all other agreements and commitments undertaken
on all tracks of the peace process in the region;
-
ALSO EXPRESSES ITS SUPPORT for all
peace initiatives aimed at achieving just, lasting
and comprehensive peace, including the
recommendations of the Mitchell Report and the Tenet
Work Plan on security intended to ensure the
stoppage of the cycle of violence and facilitate the
resumption of the peace negotiations as well as the
initiatives of the US Secretary of State, Mr. Colin
Powell, and the "Quartet" amongst other
things, the immediate cessation of hostilities and
the establishment of a ceasefire regime and URGES
the sponsors and the international community at
large, to revive the peace process and guarantee its
success and for the parties concerned, to honour
their commitments in order to create the necessary
conditions for the establishment of a ceasefire
regime that will usher in lasting peace and security
in the region;
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WELCOMES the proposals of the
Secretary General of the United Nations on the
establishment of a robust and credible multinational
force under Chapter VII of the Charter of the UN.
CALLS on the members of the Security Council to
quickly consider the proposal of the Secretary
General and to take the necessary measures in this
regard since the presence of such a Force in
Palestine could make an important, positive
contribution towards the rapid achievement of a
final settlement between Palestine and Israel
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AGREES to set up a Committee of 10
Members in order to activate the peace process in
the Middle East.
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RESOLUTION ON THE RETURN OF THE PILLAGED
AFRICAN MONUMENT THE OBELISK OF AXUM - AHG/Dec. 184 (XXXVIII)
The Assembly of Heads of State and Government:
Recalling the Convention on the Means of
Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of
Ownership of Cultural Property adopted on 14 November 1970, by the General
Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO),
Recalling also the Convention regarding the
protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage adopted on 16 November
1972, by UNESCO,
Recalling further United Nations General Assembly
resolutions on the return or restitution of cultural property to the
countries of origin, adopted since 1972, and in particular resolutions 33/50
of 14 December 1978, 34/64 of 29 November 1979 35/128 of 11 December 1980,
36/64 of 27 November 1981, 38/34 of 25 November 1983, 40/19 of 21 November
1985, 42/7 of 22 October 1987, 44/18 of 6 November 1989, 50/56 of 11
December 1995, 52/24 of 25 November 1997, 45/190 of 17 December 1999 and
56/97 of 14 December 2001,
Convinced that cultural property constitutes a basic
element of civilization and national culture,
Cognizant of the singular importance attached by the
countries of origin to the return of cultural property which is a
fundamental spiritual and cultural value to them,
Reiterating the solemn appeal made on 7 June 1987, by
the Director-General of UNESCO for the return of irreplaceable cultural
heritage to the countries of origin,
Bearing in mind the United Nations General
Assembly Resolution 56/8 on the proclamation of 2002 as the United Nations
Year for Cultural Heritage,
- DECLARES that the return or restitution to a country of its cultural
property contributes to the strengthening of international cooperation
between developed and developing countries.
- Affirms the importance of the provisions of the convention on Stolen
or Illegally Exported Cultural Objects.
- DEPLORES the systematic delaying tactic deployed by the government
of Italy regarding the pillaged African historical monument, namely
the Obelisk of Axum.
- CALLS upon the government of Italy to abide by its commitment
entered into in 1947, 1956 and 1997 to return the Obelisk of Axum to
its country of origin;
- URGES UNESCO to put the necessary pressure on the government of
Italy to return the Obelisk of Axum to Ethiopia without further delay.
- APPEALS to the international community to pressure the Italian
Government to return the Obelisk of Axum pursuant to the United
Nations General Assembly Resolutions.
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