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Chairman-In-Office Of OSCE Sees Preconditions For Optimism InSettlem

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  • Chairman-In-Office Of OSCE Sees Preconditions For Optimism InSettlem

    CHAIRMAN-IN-OFFICE OF OSCE SEES PRECONDITIONS FOR OPTIMISM IN
    SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONFLICT

    YEREVAN, MARCH 7. ARMINFO. The Chairman-in-Office of the OSCE,
    Slovenian Foreign Minster Dimitrij Rupel, urged Permanent Members
    of the UN Security Council on Friday to use their influence to help
    end some long- standing conflicts in the OSCE region. Addressing the
    Security Council in New York, he said there were signs that conflicts
    in parts of Moldova and Georgia and in Nagorno-Karabakh, sometimes
    referred to as "frozen", were starting to thaw. "It is difficult for
    inter-state organizations to deal with non-state actors, even if -
    as in some cases - they are de facto authorities," Minister Rupel said.

    "There are times when the leverage of powerful states - including
    Permanent Members of this Council - can be crucial. I urge you to
    exert that pressure in the context of OSCE mediation efforts to help
    resolve these long- standing conflicts."

    The OSCE Chairman-in-Office said he had noted with interest the report
    of the UN High Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change. The
    OSCE had gone through a similar process two years ago which resulted
    in its Strategy to Address Threats to Security and Stability in the
    Twenty-first Century. "Through the implementation of this Strategy,
    I believe that the OSCE can take on some of the UN s burden in the
    OSCE area," he said.

    "As the UN Panel noted, the Security Council s ability to more
    proactively prevent and respond to threats could be strengthened by
    making fuller and more productive use of regional organizations. The
    OSCE is well positioned and well-equipped to do so."

    The Chairman-in-Office said that in addressing new threats to security,
    the bottom line for the OSCE was upholding the rule of law.

    "For example, we have to be sure that efforts to combat terrorism are
    not done in a way that violates human rights. And that border guards
    learn sophisticated techniques and a proper code of conduct. And
    that human trafficking is tackled by effective investigation, law
    enforcement and prosecution." He singled out policing as a good example
    of the type of hands-on work that the OSCE was doing effectively to
    address the needs of participating States.

    "Good policing has a vital role to play in the prevention of conflict,
    the preservation of social stability during political crises and the
    post-conflict rehabilitation of societies," Minister Rupel said.

    "No other international organization currently possesses the
    potential to strengthen long-term law enforcement capacity- and
    institution-building in the OSCE region in the States most susceptible
    to crime, corruption and human rights violations."
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