Louis Michel: “Only a regional solution can put an end to the crisis” in DRC

29-11-2012 — /europawire.eu/ — Only an inclusive and regional solution, bringing together the presidents of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Congo-Brazzaville and Uganda can put an end to the conflict in the eastern part of DRC, Louis Michel, Co-President of the ACP-EU Joint parliamentary assembly, said on Tuesday at the opening of the 24th session of the Assembly in Paramaribo (Suriname). He called for a “profound reform of the security system” in the DRC.

The UN stabilization mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) must “use all necessary means to ensure the protection of the population,” said Mr Michel. “The establishment of a permanent dialogue between the countries of the region, in particular between the DRC and Rwanda” must be supported by the international community, he continued, adding that it was “high time to find structural solutions to the problems of the two Kivus.”

The Joint Parliamentary Assembly of MEPs and their counterparts from African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries will focus on the current situation in the Great Lakes region, Mali and Somalia. Parliamentarians will also discuss ICT-based entrepreneurship, the importance of access to energy and the post-2015 Millennium development goals. The Assembly will adopt resolutions on Thursday.

Madagascar: time to act

Free, credible and democratic elections in Madagascar cannot take place unless the neutrality of the political transition, the return of exiles and participation by all in the presidential election are guaranteed, Mr Michel said. He urged the Southern African Development Community to “take all necessary measures”, including “the use of sanctions,” for a full implementation of its roadmap for Madagascar.

JPA fact-finding mission to Mali early 2013

The international community must help to “solve the crisis in the north of Mali and ensure the stability of the central government in Bamako,” ACP Co-President of the Assembly Musikari Kombo (Kenya) said. “Terrorist organisations must be effectively neutralized,” he added. Like Mr Michel, he called on Algeria to play a more active part, especially when it comes to putting an end to arms supplies to the rebels in Mali.

The Bureau (praesidium) of the JPA decided to send a fact-finding mission to Bamako at the end of January 2013.

Economic partnership agreements: more than trade

Economic partnership agreements (EPAs) between the ACP countries and the EU, which are to replace the system of preferential trade tariffs, “must be used as instruments of development,” said Mr Kombo. He wondered whether one reason why negotiations have dragged on so long was not that “EU trade negotiators have been obsessed with a narrow liberalization agenda with an exclusive focus on trade aspects.”

Mr Michel stressed that the Caribbean region, the first to implement a complete EPA, “understood that only an agreement accompanied by appropriate support can boost its trade with the EU as well as with the region’s neighbours.”

Speaker of the Suriname National Assembly Dr Jennifer Geerlings-Simons commended the fact that holding the JPA in Suriname definitively makes her country an independent one in the eyes of the entire world. She advocated seeking new ways of growth “towards more sustainable societies in every part of the world, in every sense of the word.”

The ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly (JPA) brings together elected representatives of the European Union and the ACP countries, with MEPs and MPs from 78 states that are signatories of the Cotonou Agreement, which is the basis for ACP-EU development cooperation.

Other topics on the agenda in Suriname include a debate with Emmanuel Nganou Djoumessi, Minister of economic affairs, planning and regional development of Cameroon; Erato Kozakou-Marcoullis, Minister of foreign affairs of Cyprus for the presidency of the Council of the EU; and representatives from the European Commission. They will also discuss the post-2020 future of the ACP-EU partnership and Cuba.

The Assembly will vote on Thursday 29 November on three resolutions:

  • “Responding to the political and humanitarian crisis in Somalia: the challenges for the European Union and the ACP Group”, Co-Rapporteurs: Véronique De Keyser (S&D,BE) and Ali Soubaneh (Djibouti)

  • “ICT-based entrepreneurship and its impact on development in the ACP countries”, Co-Rapporteurs: Rabindre T. Parmessar (Suriname) and Younous Omarjee (GUE/NGL, FR)

  • “The importance of access to energy for sustainable economic development and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals”, Co-rapporteurs: Manuel Jímenez (Dominican Republic) and Horst Schnellhart (EPP, DE)

List of speakers:

Louis MICHEL, Co-President of the ACP-EU Joint parliamentary assembly

Musikari KOMBO, Co-President of the ACP-EU Joint parliamentary assembly

Jennifer Geerlings-Simons, Speaker of the National Assembly of Suriname

Venue:

Kamer van Koophandel en Fabrieken (KKF), Prof. W.J.A. Kernkampweg 37, Paramaribo, Suriname

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Contacts

Marjory VAN DEN BROEKE
Head EP press service
Mobile number(+32) 498 98 35 86
Mobile number(+597) 8730778 (local phone)
marjory.vandenbroeke@europarl.europa.eu

Václav LEBEDA
EP Press officer
Mobile number(+32) 498 98 33 27
Mobile number(+597) 8730026 (local phone)
vaclav.lebeda@ep.europa.eu

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