THE UNITED NATIONS: ORGANIZATION
|
In 1945, representatives of 50
countries met in San Francisco at the United Nations Conference on
International Organization to draw up the United Nations Charter. The
Organization officially came into existence on 24 October 1945, when the
Charter had been ratified by China, France, the Soviet Union, the United
Kingdom, the United States and a majority of other signatories. United Nations
Day is celebrated on 24 October.
|
Charter
|
The Charter is the constituting
instrument of the United Nations, setting out the rights and obligations of
Member States, and establishing the Organization's organs and procedures.
|
Purposes
|
The purposes of the United
Nations, as set forth in the Charter, are to maintain international peace and
security; to develop friendly relations among nations; to cooperate in
solving international economic, social, cultural and humanitarian problems
and in promoting respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms; and to be
a centre for harmonizing the actions of nations in attaining these ends.
|
Structure
|
The six principal organs of the
United Nations, are the: General Assembly, Security Council, Economic
and Social Council, Trusteeship Council, International Court of
Justice and Secretariat.
General
Assembly
It consists of all member states
of the U.N. Each member nation can send five delegates but each nation has
only one vote. The General Assembly meets in regular session beginning in
September each year.
Security
Council
It is the executive body of the
U.N. It consists of total 15 members, out of which 5 members are permanent
and the remaining 10 members are non-permanent. China, France, Russia, UK and
USA are the permanent members. tHe non-permanent members are elected by the
General Assembly for 2 years from among the member states. The permanent
members of the security council have got veto power. Any matter supported by the
majority of the members fails to be carried through if negative vote is cast
by any of the permanent members.
Economic
and Social Council
This organ of the U. N. consists
of 54 representatives of the member countries elected by a two third majority
of the General Assembly.
International
Court of Justice
It is the principal judicail organ
of the United Nations. The headquarters of the International court of justice
is at the Hague (Netherland). The court consists of 15 judges.
Trusteeship
Council
This organ consists of 14 members
out of which five are the permanent members of the security council.
Secretariat
This organ of the United nations
is the chief administrative office which coordnates and supervises the
activites of the U. N. This secretariat is headed by a Secretary General who
is appointed by the General Assembly on the recomendation of the Security
Coulcil' Secretary General of the U. N. is elected for five years and
eligible for re-election. The present Secretary General is Baan ki Moon
The United Nations family, however, is much larger, encompassing 15 agencies
and several programmes and bodies.
|
Budget
|
The budget for the two years
2000-2001 is $2,535 million. The main source of funds is the contributions of
Member States, which are assessed on a scale approved by the General
Assembly.
|
The fundamental criterion on which
the scale of assessments is based is the capacity of countries to pay. This
is determined by considering their relative shares of total gross national
product, adjusted to take into account a number of factors, including their
per capita incomes. In addition, countries are assessed -- in accordance with
a modified version of the basic scale -- for the costs of peacekeeping
operations, which stood at around $2 billion in 2000.
|
The United Nations family
|
The United Nations family of
organizations is made up of the United Nations Secretariat, the United
Nations programmes and funds -- such as the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and
the UN Development Programme (UNDP) -- and the specialized agencies. The
programmes, funds and agencies have their own governing bodies and budgets,
and set their own standards and guidelines. Together, they provide technical
assistance and other forms of practical help in virtually all areas of
economic and social endeavour.
|
INTERNATIONAL PEACE AND SECURITY
|
One of the primary purposes of the
United Nations is the maintenance of international peace and security. Since
its creation, the United Nations has often been called upon to prevent
disputes from escalating into war, to persuade opposing parties to use the
conference table rather than force of arms, or to help restore peace when
conflict does break out. Over the decades, the United Nations has helped to
end numerous conflicts, often through actions of the Security Council — the
primary organ for dealing with issues of international peace and security.
|
The Security Council, the General
Assembly and the Secretary-General all play major, complementary roles in
fostering peace and security. United Nations activities cover the areas of
prevention and peacemaking, peacekeeping, peace-building and disarmament.
|
Civil conflicts
|
During the 1990s, there have been
major changes in the patterns of conflict with more than 90 per cent of
conflicts taking place within, rather than between, states.
|
The United Nations has therefore
reshaped and enhanced the range of instruments at its command, emphasizing
conflict prevention, continually adapting peacekeeping operations, involving
regional organizations, and strengthening post-conflict peace-building.
|
To deal with civil conflicts, the
Security Council has authorized complex and innovative peacekeeping
operations. In El Salvador and Guatemala, in Cambodia and in Mozambique, the
UN played a major role in ending war and fostering reconciliation.
|
Other conflicts, however — in
Somalia, Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia — often characterized by ethnic
violence, brought new challenges to the UN peacemaking role. Confronted with
the problems encountered, the Security Council did not establish any
operation from 1995 to 1997.
|
But the essential role of
peacekeeping has once more been dramatically reaffirmed.
|
Continuing crises in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Central African Republic, East Timor,
Kosovo, Sierra Leone, and Ethiopia-Eritrea led the Council to establish six
new missions in 1998-2000.
|
Peace-building
|
The experience of recent years has
also led the United Nations to focus as never before on peace-building —
action to support structures that will strengthen and consolidate peace.
Experience has shown that keeping peace, in the sense of avoiding military
conflict, is not sufficient for establishing a secure and lasting peace. Such
security can only be achieved by helping countries to foster economic
development, social justice, human rights protection, good governance and the
democratic process.
|
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
|
Although most people associate the
United Nations with the issues of peace and security, the vast majority of
its resources are devoted to economic development, social development and
sustainable development. United Nations development efforts have profoundly
affected the lives and well-being of millions of people throughout the world.
Guiding the United Nations work is the conviction that lasting international
peace and security are possible only if the economic and social well-being of
people everywhere is assured.
|
Many of the economic and social
transformations that have taken place globally in the last five decades have
been significantly affected in their direction and shape by the work of the
United Nations. As the global centre for consensus-building, the United Nations
has set priorities and goals for international cooperation to assist
countries in their development efforts and to foster a supportive global
economic environment.
|
Common interests
|
International debate on economic
and social issues has increasingly reflected the common interest of rich and
poor countries in solving the many problems that transcend national
boundaries. Issues such as the environment, refugees, organized crime, drug
trafficking and AIDS are seen as global problems requiring coordinated
action. The impact of poverty and unemployment in one region can be quickly
felt in others, not least through migration, social disruption and conflict.
Similarly, in the age of a global economy, financial instability in one
country is immediately felt in the markets of others.
|
Coordinating development
activities
|
The Economic and Social Council
(ECOSOC) is the principal body coordinating the economic and social work of
the United Nations. It is serviced by the Department for Economic and Social Affairs.
The entire family of United Nations organizations works for economic, social
and sustainable development.
|
HUMAN RIGHTS
|
Virtually every United Nations
body and specialized agency is involved to some degree in the protection of
human rights.
|
One of the great achievements of
the United Nations is the creation of a comprehensive body of human rights
law, which, for the first time in history, provides us with a universal and
internationally protected code of human rights, one to which all nations can
subscribe and to which all people can aspire.
|
Not only has the United Nations
painstakingly defined a broad range of internationally accepted rights; it
has also established mechanisms with which to promote and protect these
rights and to assist governments in carrying out their responsibilities.
|
Human rights law
|
The foundations of this body of
law are the United Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, adopted by the General Assembly in 1948. Since then, the United
Nations has gradually expanded human rights law to encompass specific
standards for women, children, disabled persons, minorities, migrant workers
and other vulnerable groups, who now possess rights that protect them from
discriminatory practices that had long been common in many societies. Rights
have been extended through groundbreaking General Assembly decisions that
have gradually established their universality, indivisibility and
interrelatedness with development and democracy.
|
Human rights action
|
Education campaigns have
tirelessly informed the world’s public of their inalienable rights, while
numerous national judicial and penal systems have been enhanced with United
Nations training programmes and technical advice. The United Nations
machinery to monitor compliance with human rights covenants has acquired a
remarkable cohesiveness and weight.
|
The United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights works to strengthen and coordinate United
Nations work for the protection and promotion of all human rights of all
persons around the world. The Secretary-General has made human rights the
central theme that unifies the Organization’s work.
|
DECOLONIZATION
|
More than 80 nations whose peoples
were under colonial rule have joined the United Nations as sovereign
independent states since the UN was founded in 1945. Many other Territories
have achieved self-determination through political association with other
independent states or through integration with other states. The United
Nations has played a crucial role in that historic change by encouraging the
aspirations of dependent peoples and by setting goals and standards to
accelerate their attainment of independence. The Organization has also
supervised elections leading to independence — in Togoland (1956 and 1968),
Western Samoa (1961), Namibia (1989) and most recently a popular consultation
in East Timor (1999).
|
Self-determination and
independence
|
The decolonization efforts of the
United Nations derive from the Charter principle of “equal rights and
self-determination of peoples”, as well as from three specific chapters in
the Charter devoted to the interests of dependent peoples. Since 1960, the
United Nations has also been guided by the General Assembly’s Declaration on
the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, by which
Member States proclaimed the necessity of bringing colonialism to a speedy
end. The Organization has also been guided by General Assembly resolution
1541 (XV) of 1960, which defined the three options offering full
self-government for Non-Self-Governing Territories.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment