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Incoming President of Conference
on Disarmament Outlines His Plans for the Next Four Weeks
22 February 2005
Ambassador Tim Caughley of New Zealand, the incoming President
of the Conference on Disarmament, today outlined his plans for the
next four weeks in order to help the Conference start substantive
work.
Ambassador Caughley thanked his predecessor Ambassador Chris Sanders
of the Netherlands for the committed, energetic and transparent
way with which he had discharged his presidential responsibilities,
and for passing on the baton in a smooth change-over. In order to
help overcome the limitations of rapidly rotating presidencies,
New Zealand would continue what Ambassador Sanders had begun. He
would also keep his successor, the distinguished Ambassador of Nigeria,
very closely informed. Ambassador Sanders had tapped into a reservoir
brimming with desire to get down to real work in the priority areas
in the Conference. This level of concern seemed to be based not
only on the intrinsic importance of those issues in the current
international security environment but also on the need to shore
up the "credibility" of the Conference.
Ambassador Caughley said that everyone was aware that the current
review cycle of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) was about
to reach its culmination. The New Zealand presidency was the last
full presidency before the NPT review Conference and his concluding
statement in one month’s time would offer a timely opportunity
to make an assessment reflecting not only progress made within the
Conference but also drawing attention to the specific obstacles
that stood in the way. Significantly, the last week of the New Zealand
presidency would see a number of Ministers address this body, and
this would afford an opportunity to sensitize them and perhaps their
counterparts more universally on the prospects for and health of
the Conference.
In order to get down to business and settle the programme of work
of the Conference, New Zealand hoped that the regional coordinators
would convene their groups and concentrate during the next two weeks
on gauging the acceptability of the approach that was taken in Ambassador
Sanders "food for thought" paper. Ambassador Sanders had
said that his idea was not intended as an alternative to any existing
proposal, but as a focus for the collective thoughts as the Member
States confronted a crossroads for this Conference. Ambassador Caughley
said that he would wait until Wednesday 2 March to ask the regional
coordinators about the outcome of the group discussions, and he
would report back to the plenary on Thursday 3 March. He would ask
the group coordinators to answer questions on whether there were
any members of the group that would be obliged by their capitals
to block consensus on the establishment of subsidiary bodies in
the manner contemplated in the "non-paper". And if so,
what was the specific difficulty or difficulties confronting those
delegations and what alternative formulation or proposal would overcome
such a problem or problems, yet at the same time stand a real prospect
of consensus in the Conference. Unless and until these problems
were made transparent, the Conference could not hope to find consensus
and the shadow over its usefulness may darken.
The presidency of the Conference rotates among the Member States
of the Conference for four-week periods according to the English
alphabet.
The next plenary of the Conference will be held at 10 a.m. on Thursday,
3 March.
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