Afghanistan’s Future Discussed In UN Security Cn.
HEADLINES:
- Challenge of Afghanistan at ‘most urgent
stage,’ Annan tells Security Council
- Brahimi lays out
plan for political transition in Afghanistan
- Welcoming
Kabul's release from 'oppressive' Taliban, Annan urges
respect for law
- UN officials urge parties in
Afghanistan to respect human rights
Challenge of
Afghanistan at ‘most urgent stage,’ Annan tells Security
Council
13 November – The challenge that Afghanistan
poses to the United Nations was now at its most “urgent
stage” and the international community must be ready to
respond, Secretary-General Kofi Annan told the Security
Council today as it met to discuss the situation in that
country.
Addressing the 15-member body at the outset of
an open meeting this morning, Mr. Annan said the sustained
engagement of the Council would be needed “if we are to help
set Afghanistan on the path to a stable and lasting peace,
and address the dire humanitarian needs of the Afghan
people.”
Among the challenges lying ahead, the
Secretary-General stressed that -- “first and foremost”--
everything must be done to help meet the humanitarian needs
of the Afghan people, who have suffered from decades of
conflict, repression, drought and famine.
“Next, the
rapid march of events on the ground requires that we focus
on the challenge we will face in a post-Taliban period,” he
said. “This means taking urgent action so as to avoid a
political and security vacuum.”
The Secretary-General
noted that if all the Afghan parties – as well as the
neighbours and the wider international community – gave
their full support, there was a real opportunity to create
the sort of broad-based, fully representative government
which the United Nations had long been trying to help the
Afghan people achieve.
“A stable Afghanistan, living in
peace, carrying out its international obligations and posing
no threat to any of its neighbours, must be our common
objective,” he said. “To achieve it, any arrangement arrived
at must reflect the will, the needs and the interests of the
Afghan people, and enjoy their full support.”
Brahimi lays out plan for political transition in Afghanistan
13 November – The United Nations chief
envoy for Afghanistan, Lakhdar Brahimi, today outlined plans
for a political transition in the war-torn country and
stressed an urgent need for a UN-convened meeting that would
bring together the key players to agree on a framework for
the changeover process.
Addressing a high-level meeting
of the Security Council, Mr. Brahimi, who is
Secretary-General Kofi Annan's Special Representative for
the country, stressed that while there was agreement on the
goal of establishing a representative and accountable
government in Afghanistan, difficulties were encountered in
how to achieve this end. Since time was now of the essence,
he said, it was indispensable that the efforts of the
various Afghan groups be brought together in a single
process.
"[T]he Secretary-General thinks that instead of
continuing with the shuttle diplomacy from one group to the
other in the various capitals, the need for nimbleness in
finding a political solution now requires that the Northern
Alliance and the representatives of the existing initiatives
should meet with the United Nations as early as humanly
possible," the envoy said.
Based on ideas widely
discussed by Afghans themselves, Mr. Brahimi said the
approach might begin with a UN-convened meeting of
representatives of the Northern Alliance and the Rome and
Cyprus processes, among others, that would be later
complemented with representatives of other groups, to agree
on a framework for the process of political transition. The
meeting would suggest concrete steps to convene a
provisional council, composed of a large and representative
group of Afghans and chaired by an individual recognized as
a symbol of national unity. Deputy chairmen could conduct
day-to-day proceedings.
The council would propose a
transitional administration and programme of action for the
period of political transition, to last no more than two
years, as well as security arrangements, he said. An
emergency Loya Jirga would then be convened to approve the
proposals and to authorize the transitional administration
to prepare a constitution. The transitional phase would
result in the convening of second Loya Jirga, which would
approve the constitution and create the Government of
Afghanistan.
Mr. Brahimi stressed the crucial need to
have Afghans constitute their own administration.
"Parachuting a large number of international experts into
Afghanistan could overwhelm the nascent transitional
administration and interfere with the building of local
capacity," he said. At the same time, he emphasized the need
for a "robust security force able to deter and if possible
defeat challenges to its authority."
Options included an
all-Afghan security force, a multinational force, or a UN
peacekeeping operation. He said the first option was the
best, but since it would take time to constitute, serious
consideration should be given to deploying an international
security presence. He also emphasized that a UN force was
not recommended.
Mr. Brahimi also called attention to
the looming humanitarian catastrophe in Afghanistan,
pledging the UN's commitment to assisting all people in need
and urging the international community to support this
effort. At the same time, he highlighted the need for
significant international resources for the reconstruction
of Afghanistan.
"The processes being proposed are not
perfect," he said. "The provisional institutions, whose
creation is suggested, will not include everyone who should
be there, and it may include some whose credentials many in
Afghanistan have doubt about, but let everyone please
remember that what is hopefully to be achieved is the
elusive peace the people of Afghanistan have been longing
for so long."
Welcoming Kabul's release from
'oppressive' Taliban, Annan urges respect for law
13
November - With Afghanistan's capital now liberated from
Taliban rule, Secretary-General Kofi Annan today emphasized
that all forces in the country must respect international
law.
Mr. Annan welcomed the fact that the people of
Kabul and other cities in Afghanistan "have been freed from
the oppressive and intolerant Taliban regime," a spokesman
for the Secretary-General said in a statement. Spokesman
Fred Eckhard said Mr. Annan reminded the United Front and
other Afghan forces of the need to adhere strictly to their
obligations under international humanitarian and human
rights law.
"The Secretary-General reiterates the urgent
need to establish a broad-based and fully representative
Government in Afghanistan," Mr. Eckhard said. "To this end,
he has instructed his Special Representative, Ambassador
Lakhdar Brahimi, to re-double his ongoing efforts."
Asked to comment on the rapidly changing circumstances
in Afghanistan, the spokesman said that "the sudden fall of
Kabul - that I don't think was predicted by anybody - must
also affect our thinking on how quickly we have to move to
try to get these parties working on a formula for
power-sharing."
Concerning the humanitarian relief
effort for Afghanistan, Mr. Eckhard said that if some level
of security could be established quickly in the cities
recently taken by the Northern Alliance, it would facilitate
UN food delivery.
He noted that with international
relief workers slated to return to Faizabad in the coming
days, followed by UN civil affairs officers, "the idea is to
start establishing an international presence in Afghanistan
immediately."
Asked to explain why a UN peacekeeping
force was not considered the best option for Afghanistan,
the spokesman explained that mounting such a force "takes
months - we don't have that much time."
He also pointed
out that the security situation must be considered.
"Peacekeepers can do their best job when there is a nice,
firm, political agreement among the combatants on which to
base a peace arrangement, and then peacekeepers can go in to
bolster that," he said. "When you have an unstable
situation, as you have now, where you're not sure whether
fighting is going to resume, that's not the environment you
put in peacekeepers - that's where you need professional
soldiers."
UN officials urge parties in
Afghanistan to respect human rights
13 November - With
the situation on the ground in Afghanistan changing rapidly,
United Nations officials today called for both sides in the
conflict to respect international humanitarian and human
rights law.
Recalling the history of retaliation and
loss of civilian life that has accompanied previous changes
of power in Afghanistan, the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights, Mary Robinson, urged the compliance by all forces
with humanitarian principles.
In Islamabad, Stephanie
Bunker, spokesperson for the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for
Afghanistan, told a press briefing that according to reports
from several sources over 100 Taliban troops, mostly young
recruits hiding in a school, had been killed in
Mazar-i-Sharif by Northern Alliance forces Saturday evening.
“Overall, the security situation remains somewhat
unstable, and the picture is mixed,” Ms. Bunker said. “As of
this morning, we heard reports that along with occasional
looting there is also ‘punitive action’ that is being
carried out. We have also heard that fighting is continuing
in and around the city.”
As for the situation with
providing relief aid to fleeing Afghans, Ms. Bunker said the
UN Coordinator for Afghanistan was asking all parties to the
conflict to ensure security to the assistance community
throughout the country. “It is essential that staff and
property be protected so that humanitarian assistance to the
needy civilian population of Afghanistan can continue,” she
said.
ENDS