Unofficial Transcription of the question & answer during Mr. Staffan de
Mistura's press conference before his departure
Question and Answer
1. You have repeatedly insisted on all the parties to seize the moment. Now as you leave are you satisfied that the moment has been seized or are you disappointed?
No, I am not disappointed, but we always expect the momentum to go
faster than what sometimes happens. But I am quite optimistic that the
momentum regarding the confidence building measure, are going to produce
effects. Now, I could have liked to have those confidence building measures
immediately. But even if they are announced in the next two or three days
while they are being absorbed by everyone, its fine. What matters is that
the momentum is not left and everybody goes back waiting and hoping that
somebody else makes the concession. In peace process we need compromise and
flexibility and I think that various parties are detecting them.
2. What are the major differences you are finding regarding the management of arms?
The major differences are well known to you very well, so I am not going
to repeat them. What I have detected is there is lack of trust in some
cases. There is lack of knowledge about some of the techniques of confidence
building. In both cases the United Nations can help, but at the end of the
day they are the ones who are to respond to the people of Nepal in trying to
bridge this lack of trust going into a process quickly. We are there to help
them. Having said that, during the last few days, particularly in the last
few hours, I've detected coming much closer to a clear understanding of what
is needed in terms of peace building measures. So, the trust needs to be
nurtured, like a plant with water, but there is a need to put a lot of
water
at the moment.
3. When shall the final UN assessment team come to work?
The process is the following from the UN point of view: first of all
this report will be prepared by this mission, submitted it to the Secretary
General, by the middle of next week. The Secretary General will analyze it,
study it. And his won judgment and decision will be crucial, but at the same
time I'm sure he will also listen to the advise of member countries and that
of Government of Nepal. While this is happening of course, the mission will
not have returned. We are hoping that meanwhile we may be getting further
news about a decision here about confidence building measures that we have
been advising them to take and they are very much aware of, and they've been
discussing it. If those confidence building measures are adopted and
announced while we are in New York then of course the report which will be
presented to the Secretary General, will take those into substantive account
and will probably help in the acceleration of the decision. Following that
if the Secretary General decides that one of those areas, are the ones -all
four in which the UN can start working, then the UN normally gets, in this
type of important case like Nepal, active quite quickly.
4. What are some of the confidence building measure that you would advocated?
That is exactly something that I would not elaborate, you understand
why, it is really in the hands of various sides and they are related to arms
management and armies management, and they are concreted signals that each
others can give to the other side obviously with the assistance of the UN,
in order to start building confidence about the solutions. Sometimes
problems like arms management don't need to be solved in one slot. Because
then you get wall to wall and principled approaches, they can be solved by
small slices building confidence and we have some experience in that and we
shared it with the two sides.
5. Did you propose any formula for the decommissioning of arms and the time frame?
We have shared with both sides, both in the field actually and in
Kathmandu, what has been the experience that the UN has been applying in
many other places. But you know and we have said it from the first day we've
arrived, Nepal is a special case. While we've been presenting various
formulas, for Nepal there is a need of special formula adapted to the local
current environment, but those experiences we have and the expertise we
have, have been shared. And I believe that much of it can be implemented if
there is a decision by the two sides to come up with at-least these
confidence building measures, on arms and armies management.
6. Are you clear on what kind of assistance the UN can provide in Nepal's arms management?
Well, we are clearly having very much a clear idea of what the UN can do
in not only in similar cases, that's why the assessment mission is meant to
analyze its possible scope of possible nature of UN involvement, in arms
management and in any other areas. For instance, in area such as electoral
assistance the UN has been doing in many countries and can easily do so if
so requested and if so decided by the Secretary General, and if so supported
by funding through donors, implement an active operation in electoral
assistance. In the case of Human Rights, we already have substantial
activity in presence on human rights and that can be expanded depending on
the decision by the Secretary General, and donor countries and Nepalese
authorities. Regarding the question or assisting the monitoring of the code
of conduct that is something we can also provide through the observers and
monitors, the same would apply and could apply in the monitoring of arms and
armies management, provided we are seeing a beginning of confidence
building
measures from both sides.
7. What if the parties do not reach to a minimum agreement?
We are in Nepal, and in the UN is always optimistic. So I would not even
consider that option. Peace and peace process in Nepal in particular is too
important. There has been too much sufferings and I don't even want to
consider that option. I feel that all want peace now. We have to help them
and you can help too, to make sure that they are delivering on those
confidence building measures.
03-08-2006
Source: UN Information Center, Kathmandu, Nepal