21/1/2005
Counter-Terrorism Meeting In Kazakhstan
The
Security Council’s Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC)
meeting later this month in Kazakhstan will allow the United
Nations to expand the global anti-terror network, especially
in an area haunted by terrorist activity, the Permanent Representative
of Russia, who chairs the committee, and the committee’s
Executive Director said this week.
Kazakhstan was chosen for the
CTC’s fourth meeting, to
be held from 26 to 28 January, because it is a member of the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and “quite a number
of CIS countries, including Russia, which is currently chair
of the CIS, are victims of terrorist attacks,” Russian
Ambassador Andrey Denisov told a news conference at UN Headquarters
in New York.
With Afghanistan as a neighbour,
Central Asia was one of the areas where “terrorism has deep roots,” he said, “and
it is very important to streamline the activities of the Central
Asian countries and to focus attention on this part of the world
in order to increase the global counter-terrorism capacity.”
Dozens of international organizations and UN Member States had
expressed a wish to take part and Kazakhstan had had a great
deal of experience in staging large conferences, he said.
The Executive Director of the
Counter-Terrorism Executive Directorate (CTED), UN Assistant
Secretary-General Javier Rupérez,
said the location of the meeting would permit those attending
to take a close look at an area that is full of promise, but
also full of problems springing out of terrorism.
In a separate statement, he said
the more than 70 organizations attending “have vast experience
and established networks and many of them fund technical assistance
programmes that can
help poorer nations bring their laws into harmony with international
conventions and resolutions against terrorism.”
Many countries had the will but
not the capacity to secure their borders and financial systems
against terrorist intrusions, or
to share vital information with their neighbours. “The
challenge before us is to establish coherent policies and share
the best practices and resources to win” the counter-terrorism
fight, Mr. Rupérez said.
The meeting’s two-day agenda
will include stopping money laundering, regulation of formal
and informal money transfers,
the activities of charities, freezing and seizing illicit assets,
cooperation over financial intelligence, as well as port security,
border monitoring, preventing illegal trafficking in arms and
hazardous materials and the safe international and legal transit
of people and goods.
Mr. Denisov said the next stage
of the CTC’s work, after
reading country reports and assessing technical and judicial
needs, would be to provide UN Member States with assistance in
improving their ability to take steps against counter-terrorism.
In addition, the Russian Federation will step down from the
chairmanship at the end of March and be succeeded by Denmark,
he added.
The new chair would be Danish
Ambassador Ellen Margrethe Løj,
with Algeria, Brazil and Greece elected as vice-chairs, he said.
The previous CTC meetings were held on 6 March 2003 at UN Headquarters,
on 7 October 2003 in Washington, DC, and on 11 and 12 March 2004
in Vienna, Austria.