The United Nations is the embodiment of multilateralism / Die Vereinten Nationen sind der Inbegriff des Multilateralismus
Rede des Präsidenten der 64. Sitzung der UN-Generalversammlung zur Eröffnung der Generaldebatte / H.E. Dr. Ali Treki, President of the sixty-fourth session of the United Nations General Assembly: OPENING OF THE GENERAL DEBATE
Statement by H.E. Dr. Ali Treki, President of the sixty-fourth session of the United Nations General Assembly
OPENING OF THE GENERAL DEBATE
New York, 23 September 2009
Heads of State and Government,
Mr. Secretary-General,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a great honour for me, for my country Libya, and
its leadership to preside over the sixty-fourth session of the
General Assembly. I am humbled by the trust and
confidence you have bestowed upon me. But first, I would
like to commend His Excellency President Miguel d'Escoto
Brockmann for his tireless efforts during the sixty-third
session. I would like to thank the Secretary-General, Mr.
Ban Ki-moon, for his support and cooperation. We are
determined to work together for a more effective and
strengthened organization that is responsive to the daunting
challenges facing the world today.
The sixty-fourth session of the General Assembly is
taking place at an important critical juncture. The
international community is faced with multiple crises and
enormous challenges. These include the challenges of
international peace and security which continue to threaten
peace in various parts of the world through protracted interstates
conflicts, civil wars, weapons of mass destruction,
terrorism and organized transnational crimes. The
challenge of environmental degradation and climate
change, extreme poverty and deadly infectious disease,
such as HIV AIDS, requires innovative and concerted
actions. The set-backs to the achievement of the
Millennium Development Goals, the economic, financial,
food and energy crisis, disarmament and non-proliferation
issues are all challenges that form the backdrop of the
sixty-fourth session of the General Assembly.
Let us be clear about one important issue. These
challenges can only be addressed through international
cooperation among States. They can only be addressed
through a well-functioning multi-lateral system.
Multilateralism is the way forward to address global
common-shared problems and it is also the only way to
ensure effective and collective action.
The international community has learned from
experience that transnational threats and the multiple crises
facing the world today can only be addressed through
responsible international cooperation. We learned also that
unilateral actions can only exacerbate conflicts and delay
the search for more sustainable solutions.
The United Nations is the embodiment of multilateralism. It is therefore the most legitimate forum for ensuring concerted global action. The General Assembly is the 'chief deliberative policy-making organ of the United
Nations,' holding a global membership and universal
legitimacy unmatched by any other organization.
I am very pleased to see consensus on the need to
revitalize the United Nations to ensure that the organization
is responding effectively to the emerging transnational
threats and crises. Political will and leadership are critical
to achieving this objective. An effective and credible rulebased
multilateral system requires an energized and
reformed United Nations.
It is in this context that I pledge to work with all
Member States to facilitate consensus on a revitalized
General Assembly, a more representative and reformed
Security Council and other initiatives aimed at improving
the effectiveness and management of the organization. As
President of the General Assembly, I commit to work with
all Member States to ensure effective responses to global
crises: strengthening multilateralism and dialogue among
civilizations for international peace, security and
development.
Climate change is one of the greatest challenges to our
shared planet. During this session, we therefore must
intensify our efforts to confront the negative man-made
effects on the climate system. No Member State, regardless
of geography, development status or political creed, can
afford to ignore this issue. Nor can any Member State solve
this issue alone. The peoples of the world are looking to the
General Assembly for leadership. We must respond in
unity and with resolve. Thus, let us cast our differences
aside as we work towards a global climate change
agreement in Copenhagen in December. As President of the
General Assembly, I am deeply committed to this cause
and pledge my readiness to work with the membership to
achieve this goal.
Despite international consensus and many initiatives,
progress has been mixed in efforts to promote durable
peace and sustainable developments in Africa. The bulk of
UN peacekeeping remains in Africa. However, greater
focus on conflict prevention and resolution and a
strengthened partnership with the African Union and subregional
organizations are required. We need a more
substantive, comprehensive and coherent approach to
peace, security and development in Africa. The General Assembly can play an important role in this regard. The General Debate provides an ideal forum for an exchange of views on these important issues.
I am very pleased that the General Assembly decided
'to convene in 2010, at the commencement of the sixtyfifth
session of the General Assembly, a high-level plenary
meeting of the Assembly, with the participation of Heads of
State and Government'. This high-level meeting of the
Assembly will be held just five years before the deadline
for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals
and other internationally-agreed development goals. It will
take place at a time of great insecurity in a global economy
weakened by the financial crises and at a time when we are
witnessing the erosion of the development gains made in
previous decades, with a particular impact on the most
vulnerable. This important event will be an opportunity to
assess the progress made so far. It will be an opportunity to
identify impediments to progress and to develop new ideas
to ensure progress towards the Millennium Development
Goals. Ensuring adequate preparations for this unique
event will be a high priority for me during this session of
the General Assembly.
Supporting post-conflict Peacebuilding will continue
to be a major concern for Member States. The international
community's record in this area is mixed. The
establishment of the Peacebuilding Commission in 2006
was meant to fill a gap by giving the necessary attention to
countries emerging from conflict by marshalling resources
and coordinating international assistance. The founding
resolution establishing the Peacebuilding Commission
provided for a review after five years. I will work with
Member States to develop and facilitate a process for this
review; and I hope that new ideas will emerge on how to
make this United Nations body more effective and
responsive.
In 2005, our Heads of States and Government
reiterated that the promotion and protection of human rights
is one of the three principal purposes of this organization,
and declared that human rights stood, alongside
development and peace and security, as 'a pillar of the
organization'. Let us commit to ensuring that the 'third
pillar' is a pillar of stone, buttressed by the resources,
respect and credibility, benefiting an institution dedicated
to the cause of human dignity and justice. I will work with
Member States to reaffirm our collective commitment to
universality, non-selectivity, and the indivisible,
interdependent and interrelated nature of all human rights:
civil and political, economic, social and cultural rights and
the right to development. Let us approach this pillar with
humility, mindful of the fact that all Member States have
human rights challenges. And let us embrace it with
purpose, knowing that those challenges must be met, both
for the cause of human rights itself, and for the benefit of
peace and development.
During this session, we will be called upon to followup
on the outcome of the Durban Review Conference, at a
moment when the scourge of racial discrimination,
xenophobia, and related intolerance challenge societies
across the globe. We will be required to support the further
development of the Human Rights Council and to begin to
prepare ourselves for its five year review. If we do so with
dedication to the cause, and in a spirit of principled,
constructive engagement, I am confident that we will leave
the 'third pillar' of human rights stronger than when we
began.
The question of Palestine and the situation in the
Middle East have been on the agenda of the plenary of the
General Assembly for many years. Despite many efforts,
the question of Palestine and the Arab-Israeli conflict
remain unresolved and continue to constitute a serious
threat to international peace and security. There is a
universal recognition that with the rapidly deteriorating
conditions in the occupied territories, the situation has
become unsustainable. A comprehensive and lasting
settlement is urgently needed. Despite the enormous
challenges, new opportunities may be emerging, and the
General Assembly with its mandates and international
legitimacy must play its part in contributing constructively
to realizing the objective of comprehensive peace in the
region.
Mr. Secretary-General,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Every year frequent references are made by Heads of
State and Government, both the most powerful and the
smallest, on the importance of the rule of law in their
national affairs. Yet, it is in striving for the rule of law
within international affairs, the so-called rule of law at the
international level, that this organization has a unique
responsibility.
Strengthening the rule of law at the international level
requires a shared vision. For me, this vision consists of an
international system in which the exercise of power, not
only by States but by others, including the organization
itself, is subject to law. The Charter of the United Nations
does this, in particular in managing the use of force by
Member States. This General Assembly is, since its
inception, the universal center for international standard
setting in various fields of international law. Yet, the rule
of law means little in the absence of accountability of law.
In the face of violations of international law, there must be
effective means of redress. Our international system will
always be complex and multifaceted and means of ensuring
such accountability of States, individuals and other actors,
likewise. While the international community is constantly
strengthening accountability mechanisms including means
of dispute resolution, we have far to travel to fulfill this
essential part of the vision. Accountability to law is not
enough for an international rule of law in harmony with all
of our shared fundamental values. The law itself, even at
the international law, must reinforce our common belief in
the fundamental dignity of all human beings. Our vision
must involve an international system of States, this
organization and other actors subject to and effectively
accountable to law, which resonates fully with the pursuits
of justice and universal human rights.
Thank you.
United Nations Headquarters, New York, 23 September 2009; www.un.org
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