Global Policy Forum

General Comments on Council Transparency

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Statement by Ambassador Antonio Monteiro
Permanent Representative of Portugal

Fifty-Second Session of the General Assembly

October 28, 1997


Mr. President,

The President of the Security Council, Ambassador Somaví­a, has already outlined the main elements in the present report of the Council and has pointed out relevant questions addressed during the period under consideration, namely regarding the improvement of the methods of work of the Council.

Portugal welcomes the decision taken by the Council according to which, starting next year, a new type of annual report from the Security Council will be submitted to the General Assembly. The new type of report will include a more user-friendly analytical description of the Council's work, and brief monthly assessments by former Presidents of the Council will be attached to the report as an addendum.

My delegation is pleased to have contributed to this outcome of the discussions entered into by Council members this year in the informal Working Group on Documentation and Procedural Questions. We believe this is not only a serious response from the Council to the specific measures requested by General Assembly resolution 51/193, but also a positive step towards enhancing the transparency of the Council.

This is a dynamic evolutionary process and more can certainly be done. For example, since last year we have in the annual report a reference to the activities of the Sanctions Committees. It seems reasonable, therefore, to expect that the reports of these Committees would be attached to the annual report of the Security Council.

My delegation, as a member of the Council since last January, is now in a position to consider the practice of the Council from an inside perspective and has submitted to Council members a number of its own observations for discussion.

One of these observations concerns the manner in which the decision-making process of the Council is presently developed in informal meetings, the so-called "consultations of the whole". In our experience, the prevalence of "informal consultations" has not brought substantial gains in expediting the Council's work or making it more efficient. Rather it has made the Council less transparent and has widened the gap between the Council and the rest of the membership.

Informal consultations can and should take place whenever necessary to assist members in the consideration of certain matters, as occurs in any other UN body. But they should not systematically replace regular formal sessions of the Council at which members should state their views on the matters under consideration and hear other UN members, if the Council so decides. On the other hand, according to the Charter and the existing Provisional Rules of Procedure, the Council can always meet in private formal sessions, whenever confidentiality is required. Clearly, in this matter, a balance must be found.

In fact, the main distinctive element that distinguishes formal meetings from "informal consultations of the whole" is the fact that in the latter there are no written records. We believe that dispensing with written records, which is currently the established practice because most of the work is conducted in informal meetings, does not contribute to the enhancement of the credibility of the Council. Records promote not only the consistency of Security Council decisions, but also assert the responsibility of each member, thus ensuring their accountability before the entire UN membership.

Formal sessions, public or private, with written records will improve transparency. According to the Charter, all UN members are entitled to follow closely the Council's activities. Not only should they be able to obtain information directly by attending regular formal sessions, but also by having access to reliable written records, including those of privately hold sessions, if their particular interest is recognized by the Council.

In our view, the current practice in which non-members of the Council gather information at the end of the consultations of the whole is most improper. Information can be easily manipulated or is one-sided. Unfortunately, a majority of UN members choose this way of gathering information, instead of attending the Presidency's daily briefings, which should be truly informative.

Another way to increase the contribution of the entire UN membership to the activities and decisions of the Council, as other delegations have stressed, would be to ensure an active participation by troop-contributing countries in the decision-making phase of the Council's deliberations regarding peace-keeping or peace-enforcement operations. We are not alone in our dissatisfaction with the manner in which meetings of troop-contributing countries are now conducted.

One other related aspect, which my delegation has also brought to the attention of the Council and which is currently under discussion in the informal Working Group on Documentation and Procedural Questions, concerns the use - or rather the misuse - that has been made of the so-called "Arria formula" meetings.

We realize that, somehow, inaccurate ideas have spread among the UN membership, even among Council members, on this extremely useful mechanism. The value of the Arria formula meetings lies precisely in the informal and flexible manner of channeling information and input from essentially non-State actors directly into the Council. The most authoritative source on this formula for meeting, its creator, Ambassador Diego Arria, confirmed recently to Council members, at an "Arria style" meeting organized by Portugal, that this was what the formula was designed for, which started with guests such as a Bosnian priest, a British parliamentarian on the situation of the Iraqi marsh population, and a representative of the NGO "Africa Watch"…

Yet, in the list of "Arria formula" meetings which we were able to trace back to 1993, when it started, we find at least 10 Heads of State and Government and over 15 Ministers among them. That means that almost 60% of all guests, so far, have been representatives of States or Governments. Did they all prefer the Arria formula, knowing that there would be no written records? Were they fully aware of the implications of that informal format? Why were they not accorded formal meetings of the Council, as provided for by Articles 31 and 32 of the Charter and Rules 37and 38 of the Provisional Rules of Procedure?

We will be pleased to share with interested delegations a paper with more detailed Portuguese views on the use and the merits of the "Arria formula", which we find to be a tool with extraordinary potential . Here, I would just like to stress that we believe that Arria style meetings should be used whenever there is a need to preserve informality, They are informal by nature. We should not, therefore, attempt to create norms to regulate them. They have their own function within the informal activities of Security Council members. But, their use should not preclude the utilization of other formal mechanisms provided for by the Charter and the Provisional Rules of Procedure.


Mr. President,

As a non-permanent member of the Security Council, Portugal shares with the majority of UN members a particular concern with the transparency of the Council. Indeed, in this respect, our experience in the Security Council since last January has led us to conclude how crucial it is to promote a serious review of the working methods of the Security Council if we really wish to strengthen the Council's transparency, credibility and efficiency.

This is particularly decisive at a moment when the enlargement of the Security Council is very much on the agenda of the global reform of the United Nations. Let us not have any illusions: if its methods of work remain the same, the enlargement of the Council will not, by itself, bring about a more efficient, accountable and credible organ.

 

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