McCully Speech to UN General Assembly
Hon Murray McCully
Minister of Foreign Affairs
30 September 2012
Speech
Speech to United Nations General Assembly
Mr President
I bring
greetings from the South Pacific.
For the past year
New Zealand has had the privilege of chairing the Pacific
Islands Forum - a regional body that represents some of the
smallest and most vulnerable states on this
planet.
For us this has been an important
responsibility.
Because we are a small country with
modest resources, we choose to focus much of our attention
on our own region.
Over 60% of our ODA is spent in
our own neighbourhood.
Serving as Pacific Islands
Forum Chair has caused us to reflect on the role of regional
organisations, and also on the extent to which we all depend
upon the United Nations for solutions to challenges that are
truly global in character.
I say with some
confidence that we have been making good progress in dealing
with those challenges that are capable of regional
solutions.
But I must also say that we need and
expect more from this institution.
The Pacific
Islands Forum has sixteen members, of which fourteen are
small island states.
I was pleased to attend this
week the first meeting between the UN Secretary-General and
Pacific Islands Forum Leaders, which I hope will mark a new
era of enhanced high level engagement between this
organisation and our region, and a greater understanding of
our needs.
The Pacific has had its share of
stability and security challenges in recent
times.
As a region, we have done reasonably well in
dealing with them.
Most recently it has been in the
Solomon Islands that a regional initiative has been
required.
The regional assistance mission, RAMSI,
has involved a truly regional approach, with the
participation of police and other personnel from every
member of the Pacific Islands Forum.
And I am
pleased to report that the security element of that
initiative has been scaled down and will soon be fully
withdrawn.
But there is also more this
organisation, particularly the Security Council, can do to
acknowledge and support regional leadership, in the Pacific
and elsewhere, on peace and security
matters.
Concerns about democracy, the rule of law
and human rights are not mere abstract considerations within
the Pacific.
These principles have been challenged
in a number of states, most notably in recent years in
Fiji.
In that respect I am pleased to report that
progress is being made towards the holding of elections in
2014, and that support has been forthcoming to ensure that
such elections are free and fair.
Stability and
security issues are not the only priorities for our regional
body.
In our year as Forum Chair, New Zealand chose
to focus on a number of development priorities, two of which
I wish to mention in my remarks today.
For many of
the poorer states within our region, their fisheries
resource is the major economic asset they hold.
Yet
due to illegal fishing practices, unreported catch and
inadequate management regimes, these countries have received
far too small a return on the resource.
Because of
the highly migratory character of the tuna resource, this
truly is a matter requiring regional management and solid
progress is being made in such areas as improved
surveillance, the training of monitors, and improved
management practices, both to protect the last really
healthy fishery on the planet, and to ensure that its owners
receive their fair share of the resource they
own.
One of the highest priorities within our
region is the need for practical initiatives in the area of
renewable energy.
Ours is a region heavily
dependent upon fossil fuels for the generation of
electricity.
The cost of expensive imported diesel
on most small Pacific economies is absolutely
crippling.
The climate change impact is
obvious.
After a decade of climate change
conferences and hundreds of millions of dollars in so-called
climate change initiatives, one might be forgiven for
imagining that the Pacific, over-endowed as it is with good
sunlight, would be by now positively festooned with solar
power plants.
Sadly, Mr President, I must report
that this is not in fact the case.
Indeed, one of
the most striking features of our region has been the
complete lack of progress in putting lofty climate change
rhetoric into any form of renewable energy
practice.
In our year as chair of the regional body
we have set out to correct this serious
shortcoming.
A small but important illustration
lies in our work in the tiny Tokelau Islands.
Until now,
Tokelau has been 100% dependent upon fossil fuels for the
generation of electricity.
By the end of this year
– 2012 – Tokelau will be over 90% resourced with
renewable solar electricity.
Good progress has been
made too in Tonga, where I recently participated in the
opening of a solar plant supplying around 20% of the
electricity requirements of the main island,
Tongatapu.
And we are working with the Cook Islands
government to assist in meeting their bold aspiration of 50%
renewable electricity by 2015, mostly through solar
initiatives.
These New Zealand-funded programmes
are an important part of our overall commitment in the
region.
Our parting legacy from our year in the
Chair of the regional body is a renewable energy pledging
conference to be held early next year with the objective of
matching donors, suppliers of concessional and commercial
finance, and others with the renewable energy plans of our
Pacific neighbours.
Here I must acknowledge the
commitment of the European Union in co-leading this
initiative, and the support of the World Bank, Asian
Development Bank, and the governments of Australia, the
United States and others who are generously supporting this
initiative.
Mr President, while there is much that
can be achieved by regional action; we must acknowledge that
sometimes regional solutions are just not enough.
That goes right to the heart of the very reason
for the existence of this organisation.
My point is
most vividly illustrated today in relation to
Syria.
It would be difficult for me to overstate
the level of frustration of the people I represent with the
complete inability of the United Nations Security Council to
act in relation to Syria.
And it would be even more
difficult to overstate the extent to which the Security
Council is at risk of losing its credibility in the eyes of
reasonable and fair minded people through its inability to
act.
People in my country ask a very simple
question:
If 25,000 deaths, countless thousands
injured, and many more thousands displaced and homeless, is
not enough to get the Security Council to act, then what
does it take?
What does it take?
I welcome
the leadership which the Arab League and Arab States have
shown on this issue – as we have also seen on some of the
other difficult issues in their region.
And I
welcome the fact that the General Assembly has been looking
for opportunities to be more engaged.
In the
absence of leadership from the Security Council, I suggest
that this Assembly will need to find ways to play a more
activist role.
But from all of this, the case for
reform of the Security Council has become utterly
compelling.
Indeed, increasingly, the future
credibility of the United Nations may depend upon it.
If we are to make progress in that respect we will
need to see members move past the extravagant attempts to
maximise individual positions and try to find some
meaningful, practical reforms that actually hold the
prospect of widespread support.
I represent a small
nation of practical, constructive people.
And it
is because we seek practical, constructive reform that our
Government supports the so-called intermediate solution: the
creation of a new category of seat for the group of larger
countries that feel under-represented in comparison with the
P5, but seats they would need to win in open elections –
to make them fully accountable to the broader
membership.
I do not intend in these remarks to
canvass other specific proposals we would like to see
considered – with one exception:
There are now
compelling reasons for us to ask the P5 to voluntarily
accept restrictions on the use of veto.
To go
further, and seek its abolition is pointless – it simply
will not happen.
But to ask the P5 to acknowledge
and respect the genuine concerns of the wider membership by
voluntarily accepting a curb on the exercise of the veto, is
an entirely reasonable and achievable objective.
My country was one of those that led the
opposition to the veto when this institution was being
established; indeed, it was the only Charter issue that was
forced to a vote.
The permanent members argued at
that stage that the veto was necessary in order to protect
their vital national interests.
Yet today, we
routinely see the exercise of the veto in circumstances
which have little to do with national interests.
My request to the five permanent members is simply
that they stick with what they said in 1945.
And my
challenge to them today is to consider a process by which
they collectively and voluntarily agree to confine their use
of the veto to those issues that clearly and directly affect
their vital national interests; and that they voluntarily
agree not to use their veto in situations involving mass
atrocities.
Mr President, while on the topic of the
Security Council, I take the opportunity to urge the Council
and relevant organs of the General Assembly to respond
positively to requests from ECOWAS for support in dealing
with the conflict in Mali and the Sahel.
Too often
we have seen the Security Council fail to make a timely
response to requests for help – in Rwanda, in Guinea, in
Darfur and in Somalia.
Too often it has been a case
of too little, too late.
In all of these cases we
have seen good leadership from the African Union – and
that leadership deserves a timely and constructive response
from New York.
Many of you will be aware that New
Zealand is an energetic candidate for election to the
Security Council for the 2015-16 term.
You will
hear more from us on these topics over the next two years.
We are a small country, with a big voice, and an
approach that is fair minded and constructive.
Mr
President, in the past few days this Assembly has heard from
both Prime Minister Netanyahu, and President
Abbas.
We are now on notice that the issue of
Palestinian status in the UN will come before this Assembly
this session.
We look forward to seeing the text
of a resolution, and engaging in the consultations that have
been signalled.
I said earlier that New Zealanders
are constructive and practical.
They are also fair
minded people; and they expect to see their Government bring
all of those attributes to the consideration of this
resolution – and that we will do.
Having said
that, let me also be clear that we see such a resolution as
a very poor substitute for the direct discussions that need
to occur between two leaders who live half an hour down the
road from each other.
In his address to this
Assembly earlier this week Prime Minister Netanyahu set out
clearly the grave implications for the Middle East – and
for the global community more generally - of a nuclear
‘break out’ in the region.
Like other Member
States, New Zealand believes Iran must be told to step back
from a course that risks a further dangerous escalation of
the situation.
And we hope the international
community will stand firm in sending this message.
In return, however, I suggest it is fair for the
international community to make a request of Prime Minister
Netanyahu.
And that is to put a hold on the
settlements, at the very least while negotiations proceed,
and engage in the direct talks with his Palestinian
counterpart that represent the only basis for a durable
solution to this issue, and an essential step in removing
the seeds of wider conflict in the region.
Mr
President: I remind the Assembly that these are very
difficult times for Governments around the
world.
Budget economies have affected Foreign
Ministries, my own included.
It is only fair that
we should in turn ask this large institution to find
economies and improved working methods in order to deliver
better value for our taxpayers.
Smaller countries
like New Zealand depend more than most on good multi-lateral
institutions.
We need a United Nations that is
modern, efficient and able to meet changing
needs.
We all need a Security Council that is more
responsive to the needs of the wider membership, and more
effective at dealing with the significant challenges we all
confront
today.
ENDS