|
Annan Names High-Level Panel
to Study Global Security Threats
New York, November 4th, 2003
In a letter sent this morning to Assembly
President Julian R. Hunte of St. Lucia, Mr. Annan says former
Prime Minister Anand Panyarachun of Thailand will chair the High-Level
Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change.
The Secretary-General
says the Panel is "tasked with examining the major threats
and challenges the world faces in the broad field of peace and
security, including economic and social issues insofar as they
relate to peace and security, and making recommendations for the
elements of a collective response."
The other 15
members of the Panel include Robert Badinter of France, Member
of the French Senate and former Minister of Justice; João
Clemente Baena Soares of Brazil, former Secretary-General of the
Organization of American States (OAS); former Prime Minister Gro
Harlem Brundtland of Norway and former Director-General of the
World Health Organization (WHO); and Mary Chinery-Hesse of Ghana,
Vice-Chairman of the National Development Planning Commission
and former Deputy Director-General of the International Labour
Organization (ILO).
Gareth Evans
of Australia, President of the International Crisis Group and
former Minister of Foreign Affairs; David Hannay of the United
Kingdom, former UK Permanent Representative to the United Nations
and UK Special Envoy to Cyprus; Enrique Iglesias of Uruguay, President
of the Inter-American Development Bank; Amre Moussa of Egypt,
Secretary-General of the League of Arab States; and Satish Nambiar
of India, former Lt. General in the Indian Army and Force Commander
of the UN Protection Force in the former Yugoslavia (UNPROFOR);
are also on the panel.
The remaining
members are Sadako Ogata of Japan, former UN High Commissioner
for Refugees; former Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov of the Russian
Federation; former Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign
Affairs Qian Qichen of China; Nafis Sadik of Pakistan, former
Executive Director of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA); Salim Ahmed
Salim of Tanzania, former Secretary-General of the Organization
of African Unity (OAU); and Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft (ret.) of
the United States, former US National Security Adviser.
In his letter
to Mr. Hunte, the Secretary-General notes, "The past year
has shaken the foundations of collective security and undermined
confidence in the possibility of collective responses to our common
problems and challenges. It has also brought to the fore deep
divergences of opinion on the range and nature of the challenges
we face, and are likely to face in the future.
"The aim
of the High-Level Panel is to recommend clear and practical measures
for ensuring effective collective action, based upon a rigorous
analysis of future threats to peace and security, an appraisal
of the contribution collection action can make, and a thorough
assessment of existing approaches, instruments and mechanisms,
including the principal organs of the United Nations."
The Secretary-General
stresses that the Panel is not being asked to formulate policies
on specific issues, nor on the UN's role in specific places. "Rather,
it is being asked to provide a new assessment of the challenges
ahead, and to recommend the changes which will be required if
these challenges are to be met effectively through collective
action," he says.
Specifically,
the Panel is charged with examining today's global threats and
providing an analysis of future challenges to international peace
and security, the Secretary-General adds. "Whilst there may
continue to exist a diversity of perception on the relative importance
of the various threats facing particular Member States on an individual
basis, it is important to find an appropriate balance at a global
level. It is also important to understand the connections between
different threats," he says.
The Panel will
also identify clearly the contribution that collective action
can make in addressing these challenges and recommend the changes
necessary to ensure effective collective action, including but
not limited to a review of the principal organs of the United
Nations, the letter says."The Panel's work is confined to
the field of peace and security, broadly interpreted," Mr.
Annan concludes. "That is, it should extend its analysis
and recommendations to other issues and institutions, including
economic and social, to the extent that they have a direct bearing
on future threats to peace and security."
For more details
go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news
|