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Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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15 September 2003
Press Release No: L/30/2003
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
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MESSAGE TO THE 5TH MEETING OF STATES PARTIES
TO THE CONVENTION ON THE PROHIBITION
OF THE USE, STOCKPILING, PRODUCTION AND TRANSFER
OF ANTI-PERSONNEL MINES AND ON THEIR DESTRUCTION
Bangkok, 15 September 2003
Delivered by Mr. Hak-Su Kim
Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic and Social
Commission
for Asia and the Pacific
It gives me great pleasure to convey my greetings
to all participants in the Fifth Meeting of States Parties to
the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production
and Transfer of Anti-personnel Mines and on Their Destruction.
The multilateral commitment embodied in the Convention
to renounce an entire category of indiscriminate weapons has
been achieved through the combined efforts of many actors -
governments, the United Nations, the International Committee
of the Red Cross, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines,
and civil society as a whole. This impressive partnership has
achieved a great deal in a short time, and contributed to the
rapid emergence of an international norm banning anti-personnel
mines.
Since the entry into force of the Convention
in 1999, more than two-thirds of all states have banned anti-personnel
mines and joined efforts to address their impact on people.
I call on those states that have not yet accepted the Convention
to become part of this process without delay.
I also urge all states affected by anti-personnel
mines to do their utmost to develop and implement plans to clear
mined areas, to destroy stockpiles, and to provide victim assistance
and mine risk education. As they do so, I encourage them to
bear in mind the needs of local communities, pay due regard
to gender concerns, and incorporate mine action into development
planning and budgeting. And I strongly encourage those states
and other partners in a position to do so to provide adequate
and sustained technical and financial assistance to states affected
by mines.
Finally, allow me to express the hope that you
will decide to hold the Convention's First Review Conference
in Nairobi, Kenya - a decision that would highlight both the
terrible impact of mines in Africa, and the progress that has
been made towards eliminating the threat of mines on the continent.
Please accept my best wishes for a successful
meeting.
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