CONFERENCE
ON DISARMAMENT HEARS STATEMENT FROM COLOMBIA
5 August 2008
The Conference on Disarmament this morning heard a general
statement from Ambassador Clemencia Forero Ucros of Colombia,
in which she reiterated Colombia’s support for Presidential
Draft Decision CD/1840, which aims to get the Conference back
to substantive work, and highlighted efforts in the fields
of combating illicit flows of small arms and light weapons
and the use of anti-personnel mines.
Ms. Forero Ucros observed that draft decision CD/1840, which
was the result of the efforts undertaken by the Six Presidents
of 2007 and 2008, provided continuity to the work of the Conference,
as well as an opportunity to make progress in building a consensus
which remained difficult, but not impossible, to achieve.
On numerous occasions Colombia had displayed its flexibility
in supporting different proposals with a view to trying to
find a programme of work that would restart this important
forum. It was imperative that the Conference on Disarmament
go back to its roots, that it exercise its functions as the
sole forum for multilateral disarmament negotiations and that
it avoid a further deterioration of its credibility.
Turning to another disarmament theme that was of vital importance
for Colombia, Ms. Forero Ucros drew attention to the recent
holding, from 14 to 18 July 2008, of the Third Biennial Meeting
of States in the framework of the United Nations Programme
of Action on Small Arms and Light Weapons, which was attended
by representatives of 136 States in New York. The meeting
had addressed the issues of cooperation, international assistance
and national capacity-building as an independent and cross-cutting
theme; an instrument on the marking and tracing of such arms;
illegal trafficking; and the management and destruction of
stockpiles. After a week of intense debate, a final document
was adopted, which reflected the interest of countries in
moving forward in the implementation of the Programme of Action
and to set up a monitoring mechanism for it. Nationally, Colombia
had boldly combated the terrorist acts of illegal armed groups,
which acquired vast quantities of weapons on the black market
financed by drug money. It was essential that the international
community step up its efforts to deal with such non-State
actors, whose actions had serious consequences for the civilian
population and eroded democratic institutions.
On the issue of anti-personnel mines, Ms. Forero Ucros was
proud to announce the launching of a national mine action
training programme, which would benefit people in 16 provinces
of the country that were affected by those deadly devices.
That initiative, launched by the Vice President last week,
sought to train people in occupational health; to aid the
recovery of the population in situations of emergency or disaster;
to provide education to assist victims of anti-personnel mines;
to strengthen the social fabric in at-risk areas; and to promote
efforts to reduce the risk of anti-personnel mines, among
others. The goal was to train 960 officers in the “Community
Education Officer” programme. In addition, they aimed
to reach out to more than 6,000 persons linked to the productive
programmes of the national training service. The graduates
would work in the mine-affected regions of Colombia, as well
as in the public and the private sector, and in international
cooperation efforts. In Colombia there were three victims
of anti-personnel mines daily. From 1990 to 14 July 2008,
there had been 7,084 victims of anti-personnel mines. Colombia
was one of the countries most affected by that scourge because
of their use by illegal armed groups on the territory. Colombia
would continue to respond to the challenge of implementing
the Ottawa Convention.
According to draft decision CD/1840 by the 2008 Presidents
of the Conference, the Conference would appoint Chile as Coordinator
to preside over substantive discussions on nuclear disarmament
and the prevention of nuclear war; appoint Japan as Coordinator
to preside over negotiations, without any preconditions, on
a non-discriminatory and multilateral treaty banning the production
of fissile material for nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive
devices, thus providing all delegations with the opportunity
to actively pursue their respective positions and priorities,
and to submit proposals on any issue they deem relevant in
the course of negotiations; appoint Canada as Coordinator
to preside over substantive discussions dealing with issues
related to prevention of an arms race in outer space; appoint
Senegal as Coordinator to preside over substantive discussions
dealing with appropriate arrangements to assure non-nuclear
weapon States against the use or threat of use of nuclear
weapons; and would request those Coordinators to present a
report to the Conference on the progress of work before the
conclusion of the session. The Conference would also decide
to request the Coordinators for the agenda items previously
appointed by the 2008 Presidents (i.e., new types of weapons
of mass destruction and new systems for such weapons, radiological
weapons; comprehensive programme of disarmament; and transparency
in armament) to continue their work during the current session.
Draft Decision CD/1840 builds on an earlier proposal submitted
by the 2007 P-6 (CD/2007/L.1), and its related documents CRP.5
and CRP.6, combining those three texts in a single document.
The next plenary meeting of the Conference on Disarmament
is scheduled to take place at 10 a.m. on Thursday, 14 August.
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