austraLasia 1128
East Timor - a view from Japan: time for
peace-building?
TOKYO: 11th May 2005 -- The Japan Times yesterday ran an
article which is well-informed and possibly not syndicated elsewhere.
Readers of austraLasia may be interested in a very brief summary of its
contents.
The immediate issue in East Timor has been the
demand for repeal of a law which would have seen the teaching of religion made
optional in the schools. Another issue was lurking not far below - general
dissatisfaction with the Government and its leadership and a call for dismissal
or resignation of the Prime Minister. The first of the issues appears to
have found a resolution, but Ramesh Thakur, JT columnist, addresses the more
general question of what role the UN might still play for a nation which it has
only recently assisted to achieve initial stability.
UN statistics show that half of the countries emerging
from conflict slide back into armed violence within five years. East Timor has
been a success story for the first part of postconflict relief but has barely
begun the more arduous journey to recovery and development.
In this respect East Timor joins Kosovo, Afghanistan and
Iraq as an example of countries emerging from lengthy conflict with their
peoples traumatised, communities divided, economies wrecked, infrastructure
gutted and political institutiions stressed.
In the light of this - and Thakur is senior vice rector
of the UN University in Tokyo, so is speaking with knowledge of UN
developments - Thakur says that Kofi Annan has endorsed the establishment
of a UN Peace-Building Commission (PBC) to identify countries sliding toward
collapse, to institute measures to halt the slide and assist in a transition to
self-sustaining peace.
The PBC would be a forum for many actors with the role
of formulating and implementing case-specific plans and to monitor and adjust
them as needs be.
But the core work would be to ensure effective support
to national authorities, propose priorities that reflect national realities,
mobilise resources and consolidate best practice in issues like human rights,
gender, demobilisation, disarmament, reintegration and rehabilitation.
Thakur presented his view of UN peace-building at an
April symposium on UN peace-keeping operations in the Democratic Republic of
Timor Leste. PBC is not yet in place, but it is Thakur's view that
conflict management in a situation such as East Timor's is an urgent issue, and
that the UN has a role to play. "It would mark a milestone in recognising the
importance of engaging with postconflict peace-building", he says "so that
efforts at conflict management do not go to waste".
Recent events in East Timor
would suggest that as a UN member state, it has some call on assistance of
this kind.
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