Oxfam welcomes historic anti-genocide move at UN summit
September 15th 2005
Leaders meeting today at the UN World summit are poised to endorse an
historic measure to help prevent future genocides, said Oxfam International
today.
Though the UN summit has so far agreed little on poverty reduction and
nothing on small arms, important and significant progress has been made on
the 'Responsibility to Protect' civilians from genocide and similar
atrocities
"Amid the overall disappointment about the summit so far, we must find time
to celebrate the one historic achievement.
The agreement that leaders will endorse obliges the international community
to protect civilians facing genocide and other similar atrocities. This
could help make tragedies like the Rwandan genocide a thing of the past.
This is an achievement worthy of the 60th anniversary of an organisation
set up to save generations from the scourge of war.
After each genocide in the past, world leaders have said never again. Now
at last, the world has agreed that 'never again' should mean 'never
again'," said Nicola Reindorp, head of Oxfam in New York.
In the course of negotiations some governments blocked or diluted agreement
on many of the big issues for the summit. The one area where champions
moved opponents and kept the agreement strong was on the 'Responsibility to
protect civilians'.
The agreement on the responsibility to protect civilians looks set to
become a new international norm. In the past Governments have used the
excuse of state sovereignty and non-intervention to avoid having to act to
protect civilians. In Rwanda, the UN Security Council quibbled over
definitions of what was taking place and failed to act while nearly one
million people died in one hundred days. This new measure should end
semantic debates that prevent action to save lives and is testament to
increased political will to stop such atrocities.
In cases where the national government 'manifestly fails' to protect its
civilians from genocide and similar atrocities, governments have accepted
their shared responsibility to fill that gap through collective action,
using force as a last resort. Oxfam has been calling for this historic
measure for many years.
"This commitment is as clear as it is historic. This strong agreement
allows no wriggle room. Today we congratulate world leaders on agreeing
their responsibility to protect civilians. Tomorrow we will begin holding
them to it," said Nicola Reindorp, head of Oxfam in New York.
For more information call Caroline Green on 202 321 7858
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