ACP-EEC Joint Assembly discusses the future of the Lomé Convention
Much manuvang in Luxembourg:
The 15th session will go down in the history of the Joint
Assembly, some said, as the meeting began, and they did not know how right they
were, although it was ultimately for reasons they could not have foreseen.
Democracy and human rights were indeed dealt with frankly and openly - some
speakers going so far as to admit that a discussion of this sort would have been
out of the question only a few years ago - and AIDS, one of the big issues of
the close of the century, was on the agenda, with a resolution to boost the
arsenal of weapons lined up against this terrible epidemic. These two things
alone would have made the meeting unforgettable, but this latest Joint Assembly
will be remembered for a quite different reason: that, for the very first time,
a general rapporteur decided to withdraw his resolution. After the voting of a
hundred or so amendments which comprehensively changed his original draft, Mr
Pons Grau - for it was he - first called for the meeting to be suspended to
allow all the European members to consult among themselves and then announced
that, as the text as it stood could not be accepted by the European side, he was
withdrawing it to avoid having to vote against it. However, he did add that he
would use it as a working document in seeking the compromise resolution which he
would be putting before the next meeting of the Joint Assembly in Gaborone,
Botswana, on 22-26 March next year.
'Those who hoped to see the text referred to the next meeting
have got what they wanted' was the clearly disgruntled Mr Pons Grau's parting
shot. Yet he had been tireless in trying to head off this development. ACP guns
had been lined up on the draft resolution from the start and rumours about the
vote being put off, or a separate vote (which would inevitably have led to it
being thrown out), began to run round the Luxembourg chamber. But the situation
did not seem irretrievable at this stage and, with hard bargaining in the wings
to reconcile differing points of view, Mr Pons Grau was fairly sanguine when the
voting started, believing that compromises had been reached on all the bones of
contention. But they had not, as he was soon to, realise. Compromises had indeed
been struck by ACP negotiators Adrien Houngbedji, the President of Benin's
National Assembly, and Marcel Ibinga-Magwangu, Gabon's Ambassador to the EEC,
but, as Senegalese Ambassador Falilou Kane made clear, this was on an ad
referendum basis, which meant that, for the ACPs, it was then a case of take it
or leave it. This was something which had obviously not been made clear to the
general rapporteur - hence his surprise at the maintaining of some of the
amendments on which he thought agreement had been reached.
Hara kiri
There were two types of article in the resolution which provoked
ACP anger - those setting out new conditions on the implementation of the
Convention (especially the criteria for respecting human rights in the different
projects and referring to the level of military spending) and those involving
terminating or at least revising the current Convention to integrate it into the
Community's new, more worldwide, development policy. It was the well-known
Articles 81 and 83 which were at issue here. The report said that the majority
of treaties and agreements which the Community and other countries and
international organisations had signed with the developing countries,
particularly in the ACP Group, were set up before the Eastern European rmes
collapsed, so the changes in post-Maastricht Europe and the world affected
countries other than the contracting parties. This meant that the treaties and
agreements in question needed to be revised or assessed. The preferential links
provided for in Lomad done little for trade, it said, and the Community
should therefore devise a new development cooperation model which treated Lomountries and other countries consistently and led to an overhaul of the
machinery, instruments and procedures involved in all the agreements and all the
different Community policies.
The ACPs will not hear of renegotiating LomV before its time
is up. As Ambassador Kane put it, they have no wish to commit 'hare kiri'. The
convention, they point out, lasts for ten years and has five-year protocols and
they want to stick to the letter of the agreement signed in 1989 and ratified
both by them and the Member States since. By a strange quirk of fate, they are
now clinging to the ten-year term which they all but threw out three years ago
when some of them hesitated to commit themselves for such a long time... and
they could in fact have signed for an indeterminate period.
Although the voting on the Pons Grau rsolution was not without
acrimony, the debate-on the report was harmony itself. As Maria Luisa
Cassanmagnagoretti Co-President of the Joint Assembly, was pleased to tell a
press conferee, not one ACP or EEC speaker had come down against the
report on democracy, human rights and development in the ACP countries. Quite
the contrary, in fact. All those who spoke in the debate which followed the
presentation of the paper - and there were nearly 30 of them - had nothing but
praise for it.
Yet there were some fairly harsh passages on the absence of
democracy in the developing countries, the corruption of their leaders and the
level of their military spending - a situation which calls for democratic
intervention, as no-one really would deny any longer. And if further proof of
the consensus on human rights were needed, it was there in the insistence with
which some countries told the Assembly of their progress along the road to
democracy and pluralist elections. Delegates from Sudan, Togo, Zaire, Burundi
and Ethiopia in turn recounted their transition to democracy, new democracies -
Benin, Burkina Faso, Mali and Mauritania, often represented at the highest level
by their Parliamentary Presidents - proudly recorded successful transitions and
the Kenyan delegate pleaded for every country to be allowed to move towards
democracy at its own pace.
Measures positive and negative
It was clear to us all that human rights are now at the very
heart of ACP-EEC relations, as Development and Fisheries Commissioner Manud
Marin pointed out. European public opinion, he added, was very alert to any
violation of these rights and the Community was running three broad types of
schemes to:
1) strengthen the State of law;
2) support the democratic
transition process;
3) strengthen civil society.
An ECU 6 million line of credit, for example, had enabled the
Commission to help with elections, particularly in Angola, Madagascar, Burkina
Faso, Mauritania, Mali, Guinea and Ghana. Mr Marin emphasised the help he had
received from the many ACPs which had agreed to use part of their indicative
programmes to finance the move to democracy, something which would have been
seen as unacceptable interference only a short time ago. He regretted that what
he called negative measures - in the shape of threats to stop or suspend
Community aid - had nonetheless been unavoidable in rtain cases of serious
violation of human rights. This Community action had sometimes halted the
violation in its tracks and sometimes enabled the democratic pross to get
under way again.
In conclusion, Mr Marin said that the disappearance of the old
structures and the absence of any new and valid points of reference were
creating tensions everywhere and making the quest for a new world order very
difficult. He believed that human rights, democracy and development should be a
driving force rather than a bone of contention.
Top priority to AIDS
The second report, Mrs J. Rwabyomere's paper on AIDS, was the
subject of an even stronger consensus than the Pons Grau report. The only
problem was how much money was available. The report, which had taken 18 months
to produce, drew on the results of all the AIDS conferences held in Florence and
Dakar and Amsterdam and Brazzaville between June 1991 and September 1992 and
looked at the development of the pandemic, methods of transmission, behaviour,
risk factors and economic and social consequences in the ACP countries. Obvious
progress had been made in our understanding of the disease, Mrs Rwabyomere said,
but it was deplorable that there was still no cure in view. Prevention was the
only weapon.
Simone Veil, who chaired this working party, said she had never
come across a problem of such magnitude in all her 13 years with the European
Parliament. AIDS created a special situation, and urgent and specific means were
needed to deal with it, she said, because there were not just the victims to
take care of, but prevention campaigns to run and the effects of the disease on
the economies to tackle as well. She thought that the current plans of the WHO
or the EEC (ECU 50 million from the EDF) were inadequate to cope with a disease
which had already claimed the parents of a million children in Africa - where
there would be ten million orphans and 40 million HIV-positive by the end of the
century. What was needed, she maintained, was a political commitment in the form
of a specific priority, involving the release of special funds from outside the
Convention and the creation of special structures and procedures. She regretted
that the Commission was planning to take the money to control AIDS from the
already sadly inadequate funds earmarked for public health.
Peter Pooley, Deputy Director-General at the EC Commission,
assured the meeting that the AIDS campaign would get all the money it needed.
'It will cost what it costs,' was how he put it, and it would not be to the
detriment of other programmes either, as Manuel Marin had made clear at question
time the evening before. ECU 50 million had indeed been set aside for the AIDS
control campaign for the moment, but that was by no means the limit. Mr Pooley
believed that the AIDS campaign had now entered a new phase in which it was
important to look at the horizontal dimension of the epidemic.
This was why the special budgets and the task forces had to be
dropped and an integrated campaign had to take over. Any development programme
has to reckon with AIDS, he said, which is why 'we propose using Lomunds'.
In the resolution, confortably adopted with only one or two
amendments, the Joint Assembly said it was essential to deal with this subject
at all levels of the education system and to provide sex education combined with
AIDS information to make the younger generations aware of the dangers of
high-risk behaviour. It called for absolute priority to go to the search for
ways of helping children with HlV-positive mothers and the many AIDS orphans and
children in the streets. It also called on the ACP States to try to spend more
of their budgets on health and social services, because of the HIV-AIDS
epidemic, and to introduce laws to prevent HIV and AIDS victims from being
discriminated against and ostracised.
The tragedy of Somalia
There was little change in the tone of the speeches when the
meeting moved on to the debate on the situation in Somalia. The register,
ranging from tragedy to abject horror, was the same. Three hours earlier,
Baroness Chalker, Co-President of the ACP-EEC Council of Ministers, had
described what she had seen in Somalia, as a prelude to the discussions. This is
what she said.
'Two weeks ago I visited Somalia with my Troika colleagues. It
was a deeply soberisg experience. We visited Hoddur, the northernmost tip of the
Baddoa-Barbera-Hoddur famine triangle. It had been completely destroyed; not a
single building remined intact. All supplies were virtually cut off; and there
appeared to be little will or effort to remedy the situation. We saw thousands
of children - mostly orphans - herded together in feeding centres. In Mogadishu
the only commodity of which there was an abundance was weaponry, especially in
the southern part of the town. On every corner there were vehicles crowded with
youngsters aged 10-14 carrying the most extraordinary assortment of arms, guns
and large quantities of live ammunition. Few men or even children were unarmed
The problems in Somalia are not confined to Somalia. We saw the refugee
situation at first hand in Mandera in northeastern Kenya. Thousands of refugees
were crowded together in a camp with few facilities and little shelter.
Conditions win worsen when the rainy season starts in a month's time.'
It is no exaggeration to say that the situation in Somalia
weighed heavy on the 15th meeting from beginning to end. It was brought up in
the very first speech to the Assembly, by Egon Klepsch, the President of the
European Parliament, who said that the tragedy of Somalia was at the very
forefront of his concern. Then it was Erskine Simmons, ACP Co-President of the
Joint Assembly, who drew everybody's attention to Somalia, not just because of
the civil war and the famine that came in its wake, but because of the attempts
which some European firms had made to store toxic waste there. Dacia Valent, an
Italian Euro-MP of Somalian origin, urged the Joint Assembly, which is a
political institution, to display its political will to put an end to the war in
Somalia. The EEC Co-President, Mrs Cassanmagago-Cerretti, took up this theme.
Emergency food aid was of course vital, she said, but the important thing was to
stop the fighting by sending out an Assembly mission, with the assistance of the
Commission, to meet the different protagonists and get them round the
negotiating table.
Mr Marville, Barbadian Ambassador to the EEC, first wondered how
the Assembly went about helping a member in deadly danger and then criticised
the fact that Somalia's indicative programme resources had to be used to finance
the 500-strong Belgian UN peace-keeping force when the money would have come in
very useful with rehabilitation of the devastated economy afterwards.
Manuel Marin assured the meeting that the Commission would be
using every means available to work to find a solution to Somalia's suffering
through the UN's 100-day plan. He explained that it could use budget monies to
pay for protection for humanitarian convoys and run part of the programme in
Kenya, where thousands of Somalis had taken refuge.
A worldwide approach
The 15th session ended with voting on 30 or so individual
resolutions reflecting the Convention partners' concern on a variety of subjects
- the situation in southern Africa, in Haiti, in Ethiopia, in Angola, in Zaire
and in Mozambique, the price of coffee and of sugar and of cocoa and
desertification and famine.
For many, the Luxembourg mting was a turning point.
Matters as delicate as corruption, the ACP leaders filling their own pockets,
were tackled frankly (in the Pons Grau report), in the belief that these funds
should be blocked and arrangements made to hand them back to the democratically
elected authorities of the countries in question. There were no longer any taboo
subjects in an increasingly 'parliamentary' Joint Assembly and this was clear
for all to see. There was not even a protest, or a sign of one, when Barbara
Simons asked Ministers and Ambassadors, who have their own places of discussion,
to refrain from attending Assembly mtings in future.
Another sign of the times was the fact that, with what is now a
more international approach to cooperation, the session was open to other people
too. Antoine Bianca, Deputy Secretary-General of the UN, addressed the Assembly,
for example, as did Nicolas Bwakira, representing the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees, and Emmanuel Gasana, OAU representative to the EEC, and Mr Kato,
Japanese Ambassador to Benelux, who described his country's development aid. The
Assembly was supposed to have heard an American delegate too, but he was unable
to make the trip to Luxembourg.
Will these new trends be confirmed at the next session in
Gaborone on 22-26 March?
Amadou
TRAORE