Address by Secretary-General Kofi Annan
to the United Nations General Assembly, New York, 21
September 2004
Mr. President, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is good to see so many countries represented here
at such a high level. I know this reflects your understanding
that, in these difficult times, the United Nations is
- as you stated four years ago in the Millennium Declaration
- "the indispensable common house of the entire
human family".
Indeed today, more than ever, the world needs an effective
mechanism through which to seek common solutions to
common problems. That is what this Organization was
created for. Let's not imagine that, if we fail to make
good use of it, we will find any more effective instrument.
This time next year you will be meeting to review progress
in the implementation of the Millennium Declaration.
By then I hope you will be ready to take bold decisions
together on the full range of issues covered in the
Millennium Declaration, helped by the report of the
eminent Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change, which
will be available before the end of this year.
As I said a year ago, we have reached a fork in the
road. If you, the political leaders of the world, cannot
agree or reach agreement on the way forward, history
will take the decisions for you, and the interests of
your peoples may go by default.
Today I will not seek to pre-judge those decisions,
but to remind you of the all-important framework in
which they should be taken - namely, the rule of law,
at home and in the world.
The vision of "a government of laws and not of
men" is almost as old as civilisation itself. In
a hallway not far from this podium is a replica of the
code of laws promulgated by Hammurabi more than three
thousand years ago, in the land we now call Iraq.
Much of Hammurabi's code now seems impossibly harsh.
But etched into its tablets are principles of justice
that have been recognised, if seldom fully implemented,
by almost every human society since his time:
Legal protection for the poor.
Restraints on the strong, so that they cannot oppress
the weak.
Laws publicly enacted, and known to all.
That code was a landmark in mankind's struggle to build
an order where, instead of might making right, right
would make might. Many nations represented in this chamber
can proudly point to founding documents of their own
that embody that simple concept. And this Organization
- your United Nations - is founded on the same simple
principle.
Yet today the rule of law is at risk around the world.
Again and again, we see fundamental laws shamelessly
disregarded - those that ordain respect for innocent
life, for civilians, for the vulnerable - especially
children.
To mention only a few flagrant and topical examples:
In Iraq, we see civilians massacred in cold blood,
while relief workers, journalists and other non-combatants
are taken hostage and put to death in the most barbarous
fashion. At the same time, we have seen Iraqi prisoners
disgracefully abused.
In Darfur, we see whole populations displaced, and
their homes destroyed, while rape is used as a deliberate
strategy.
In northern Uganda, we have seen children mutilated,
and forced to take part in acts of unspeakable cruelty.
In Beslan, we have seen children taken hostage and brutally
massacred.
In Israel we see civilians, including children, deliberately
targeted by Palestinian suicide bombers. And in Palestine
we see homes destroyed, lands seized, and needless civilian
casualties caused by Israel's excessive use of force.
And all over the world we see people being prepared
for further such acts, through hate propaganda directed
at Jews, Muslims, against anyone who can be identified
as different from one's own group.
Excellencies,
No cause, no grievance, however legitimate in itself,
can begin to justify such acts. They put all of us to
shame. Their prevalence reflects our collective failure
to uphold the rule of law, and instil respect for it
in our fellow men and women. We all have a duty to do
whatever we can to restore that respect.
To do so, we must start from the principle that no
one is above the law, and no one should be denied its
protection. Every nation that proclaims the rule of
law at home must respect it abroad; and every nation
that insists on it abroad must enforce it at home.
Yes, the rule of law starts at home. But in too many
places it remains elusive. Hatred, corruption, violence
and exclusion go without redress. The vulnerable lack
effective recourse, and the powerful manipulate laws
to retain power and accumulate wealth. At times even
the necessary fight against terrorism is allowed to
encroach unnecessarily on civil liberties.
At the international level, all states - strong and
weak, big and small - need a framework of fair rules,
which each can be confident that others will obey. Fortunately,
such a framework exists. From trade to terrorism, from
the law of the sea to weapons of mass destruction, States
have created an impressive body of norms and laws. This
is one of our Organization's proudest achievements.
And yet this framework is riddled with gaps and weaknesses.
Too often it is applied selectively, and enforced arbitrarily.
It lacks the teeth that turn a body of laws into an
effective legal system.
Where enforcement capacity does exist, as in the Security
Council, many feel it is not always used fairly or effectively.
Where the rule of law is most earnestly invoked, as
in the Commission on Human Rights, those invoking it
do not always practise what they preach.
Those who seek to bestow legitimacy must themselves
embody it; and those who invoke international law must
themselves submit to it.
Just as, within a country, respect for the law depends
on the sense that all have a say in making and implementing
it, so it is in our global community. No nation must
feel excluded. All must feel that international law
belongs to them, and protects their legitimate interests.
Rule of law as a mere concept is not enough. Laws must
be put into practice, and permeate the fabric of our
lives.
It is by strengthening and implementing disarmament
treaties, including their verification provisions, that
we can best defend ourselves against the proliferation
- and potential use - of weapons of mass destruction.
It is by applying the law that we can deny financial
resources and safe havens to terrorists - an essential
element in any strategy for defeating terrorism.
It is by reintroducing the rule of law, and confidence
in its impartial application, that we can hope to resuscitate
societies shattered by conflict.
It is the law, including Security Council resolutions,
which offers the best foundation for resolving prolonged
conflicts - in the Middle East, in Iraq, and around
the world.
And it is by rigorously upholding international law
that we can, and must, fulfil our responsibility to
protect innocent civilians from genocide, crimes against
humanity and war crimes. As I warned this Assembly five
years ago, history will judge us very harshly if we
let ourselves be deflected from this task, or think
we are excused from it, by invocations of national sovereignty.
The Security Council has just requested me to appoint
an international commission to investigate reports of
human rights violations in Darfur and determine whether
acts of genocide have been committed. I shall do so
with all speed. But let no one treat this as a respite,
during which events in that devastated region continue
to take their course. Regardless of their legal definition,
things are happening there which must shock the conscience
of every human being.
The African Union has nobly taken the lead and the
responsibility in providing monitors and a protective
force in Darfur - as well as seeking a political settlement,
which alone can bring lasting peace and security to
that society. But we all know the present limitations
of this new-born Union. We must give it every possible
support. Let no one imagine that this affair concerns
Africans alone. The victims are human beings, whose
human rights must be sacred to all of us. We all have
a duty to do whatever we can to rescue them, and do
it now.
Excellencies,
Last month, I promised the Security Council that I
would make the Organization's work to strengthen the
rule of law and transitional justice in conflict and
post-conflict societies a priority for the remainder
of my tenure.
By the same token, I urge you to do more to foster
the rule of law at home and abroad. I ask all of you
here today to take advantage of the arrangements we
have made for you to sign treaties on the protection
of civilians - treaties that you yourselves negotiated
- and then, go back home, and implement them fully and
in good faith. And I implore you to give your full support
to the measures I shall bring before you, during this
session, to improve the security of United Nations staff.
Those non-combatants, who voluntarily put themselves
in harm's way to assist their fellow men and women,
surely deserve your protection, as well as your respect.
Throughout the world, Excellencies, the victims of
violence and injustice are waiting. They are waiting
for us to keep our word. They notice when we use words
to mask inaction. They notice when laws that should
protect them are not applied.
I believe we can restore and extend the rule of law
throughout the world. But ultimately, that will depend
on the hold that the law has on our consciences. This
Organization was founded in the ashes of a war that
brought untold sorrow to mankind. Today we must look
again into our collective conscience, and ask ourselves
whether we are doing enough.
Excellencies,
Each generation has its part to play in the age-old
struggle to strengthen the rule of law for all - which
alone can guarantee freedom for all.
Let our generation not be found wanting.
Thank you very much.
|