Security Council
5028th Meeting (Night)
Security Council declares support for free, fair presidential election
in Lebanon; calls for withdrawal of foreign forces there
Resolution 1559 (2004) Adopted by Vote
Of 9 in Favour, to None Against, with 6 Abstentions
The Security Council this evening declared its support for a free and fair
presidential election in Lebanon conducted according to Lebanese constitutional
rules devised without foreign interference or influence and, in that connection,
called upon all remaining foreign forces to withdraw from Lebanon.
By a vote of 9 in favour (Angola, Benin, Chile, France, Germany, Romania, Spain,
United Kingdom, United States) to none against, with 6 abstentions (Algeria,
Brazil, China, Pakistan, Philippines, Russian Federation), the Council adopted
resolution 1559 (2004), reaffirming its call for the strict respect of Lebanon’s
sovereignty, territorial integrity, unity, and political independence under the
sole and exclusive authority of the Government of Lebanon throughout the
country. In a related provision, the Council called for the disbanding and
disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias. It also called upon all
parties concerned to cooperate fully and urgently with the Council for the full
implementation of all its resolutions concerning the restoration in Lebanon of
territorial integrity, full sovereignty and political independence.
Requesting the Council to withdraw its consideration of that resolution before
the vote, Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants of
Lebanon, Mohamad Issa, said that friendly Syria had helped Lebanon to maintain
stability and security within its borders. Syrian troops had been deployed and
redeployed at Lebanon’s request, and had contributed to rebuffing the radical
reactions emanating from repulsive Israeli actions. Also, the matter was purely
internal and related to the upcoming presidential elections in Lebanon.
Asserting that the Syrian actions in the past week had made a “crude mockery”
of the principle of a free and fair presidential electoral process, the United
States’ representative said the Syrian Government had imposed its political
will on Lebanon and had compelled the Cabinet and Lebanese National Assembly to
amend its constitution and abort the electoral process by extending the term of
the current President by three years. Clearly, the Lebanese Parliament had been
pressured, and even threatened, by Syria and its agents to make them comply.
Similarly, the representative of France, who, along with the United States, had
introduced the resolution, worried that persistent serious interference in the
political life of Lebanon might cause it to retreat from the objectives that had
been reaffirmed constantly by the international community. That was why a rapid
mobilization and a decisive reaction from the Council had seemed essential. By
refraining to act, the Council would have sanctioned interference in the
internal affairs of another State. By acting in a robust manner, it was showing
its confidence in Lebanon’s future, which must include its full restoration of
sovereignty, and not the intensification of interference. Having abstained in
the voting, China’s representative said that respect for the principles of
sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and non-interference in
internal affairs constituted a centrepiece of China’s foreign policy and were
principles of the United Nations. In adherence to those principles, he supported
safeguarding the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Lebanon.
But, the draft resolution touched on the question of the presidential elections
in Lebanon, and such questions fell within Lebanon’s internal affairs and
should be decided by the Lebanese people themselves. The representative of the
Russian Federation said that, with tensions high in the region, any wrong step
might exacerbate the situation and lead to a new focal point of instability. He
had tabled amendments to the text, aimed at moving it towards the context of a
Middle East settlement as a whole and preventing the document from being
one-sided and from concentrating solely on domestic Lebanese affairs. His
proposals would have improved the draft by making it more acceptable to Council
members. Their lack of acceptance, however, had made it impossible for him to
support the resolution.
Pakistan’s speaker said he had also abstained, as the resolution was not
consistent with the Council’s functions and responsibilities. Moreover, there
was no evidence of any urgent threat to peace. There had been no complaint from
the country whose sovereignty and integrity the draft purported to uphold. On
the contrary, the Lebanese representatives had communicated to the Council their
opposition to consideration of the resolution. Besides, the text addressed the
wrong threat. If there were a threat to Lebanon, that was well known and did not
arise from Syria. Explanations of vote were also made by the representatives of
Algeria, Brazil, Chile, Angola, Philippines and Benin.
The meeting began at 7:38 p.m. and was adjourned at 8:38 p.m.
Resolution
The text of resolution 1559 (2004) reads as follows:
“The Security Council, “Recalling all its previous resolutions on Lebanon,
in particular resolutions 425 (1978) and 426 (1978) of 19 March 1978, resolution
520 (1982) of 17 September 1982, and resolution 1553 (2004) of 29 July 2004 as
well as the statements of its President on the situation in Lebanon, in
particular the statement of 18 June 2000 (S/PRST/2000/21), “Reiterating its
strong support for the territorial integrity, sovereignty and political
independence of Lebanon within its internationally territorially recognized
borders, “Noting the determination of Lebanon to ensure the withdrawal of all
non-Lebanese forces from Lebanon, “Gravely concerned at the continued presence
of armed militias in Lebanon, which prevent the Lebanese government from
exercising its full sovereignty over all Lebanese territory, “Reaffirming the
importance of the extension of the control of the Government of Lebanon over all
Lebanese territory, “Mindful of the upcoming Lebanese presidential elections
and underlining the importance of free and fair elections according to Lebanese
constitutional rules devised without foreign interference or influence, “1.
Reaffirms its call for the strict respect of the sovereignty, territorial
integrity, unity, and political independence of Lebanon under the sole and
exclusive authority of the Government of Lebanon throughout Lebanon; “2. Calls
upon all remaining foreign forces to withdraw from Lebanon; “3. Calls for the
disbanding and disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias; “4.
Supports the extension of the control of the Government of Lebanon over all
Lebanese territory; “5. Declares its support for a free and fair electoral
process in Lebanon’s upcoming presidential election conducted according to
Lebanese constitutional rules devised without foreign interference or influence;
“6. Calls upon all parties concerned to cooperate fully and urgently with the
Security Council for the full implementation of this and all relevant
resolutions concerning the restoration of the territorial integrity, full
sovereignty, and political independence of Lebanon; “7. Requests that the
Secretary-General report to the Security Council within thirty days on the
implementation by the parties of this resolution and decides to remain actively
seized of this matter.” Statements MOHAMAD ISSA, Secretary-General of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants of Lebanon, said that there were no
militias in Lebanon. There was only the national Lebanese resistance, which
appeared after the Israeli occupation and which would remain so long as Israel
remained. The resistance force existed alongside the Lebanese national forces.
Lebanon determined the presence and size of the force, depending on the country’s
need. The authority of Lebanon extended to all parts of Lebanon except those
areas occupied by Israel. He said that submitting the draft resolution confused
two matters. The first was the distinguished relations linking Lebanon and
Syria, which achieved their joint interests, particularly the interests of
Lebanon. Friendly Syria had helped Lebanon to maintain stability and security
within its borders. It had warded off radicalism and violence, fed by the
violence exercised by Israel against the Palestinians. Secondly, the matter was
purely internal, and related to the presidential elections to be held in
Lebanon. Syrian troops came to Lebanon in accordance with legitimate requests.
Their presence was guarded by an agreement concluded by two sovereign States.
Those troops had been redeployed several times. They contributed to rebuffing
the radical reactions emanating from repulsive Israeli actions.
Hence, saying that Syria supported radical movements in Lebanon was not true. To
the contrary, Syria supported the Lebanese national resistance, which desired to
liberate the territories occupied by Israel. The draft resolution was talking
about supporting free and just elections in Lebanon. He did not believe that
that internal matter had ever been discussed in the Council relating to any
MemberState. It was an internal matter, he stressed. The United Nations had not
interfered in that matter with regard to any other State. There was no
justification for the draft resolution, which constituted an interference in the
internal affairs of a MemberState.
In addition, it discussed bilateral relations between two friendly nations,
neither of which had filed any complaint concerning those relations. He called
for the withdrawal of the draft resolution.
Action on Text
Next, the Council adopted the resolution by a vote of 9 in favour (Angola,
Benin, Chile, France, Germany, Romania, Spain, United Kingdom, United States) to
none against, with 6 abstentions (Algeria, Brazil, China, Pakistan, Philippines,
Russian Federation).
Speaking after the vote, JOHN DANFORTH (United States) said that the Security
Council had consistently affirmed that it supported the full sovereignty and
independence of Lebanon, free of all foreign forces. Lebanon should be allowed
to determine its own future and assume control of its own territory, yet the
Lebanese people were still unable to exercise their rights as a free people.
With France, the United States had introduced the resolution, joined by several
other co-sponsors. He had asked for a vote tonight because the situation in
Lebanon was moving very quickly.
He explained that the Syrian Government had imposed its political will on
Lebanon and had compelled the Cabinet and Lebanese National Assembly to amend
its constitution and abort the electoral process by extending the term of the
current President by three years. The final vote in the Assembly was scheduled
for Friday so it was imperative for the Council to address the issue now. The
Lebanese Parliament and Cabinet should express the will of the Lebanese people
through a free and fair presidential electoral process. What the Lebanese people
and he had witnessed in the past week in terms of Syrian actions was a “crude
mockery” of that principle. Clearly, he continued, the Lebanese Parliament had
been pressured, and even threatened, by Syria and its agents to make them
comply. He strongly supported the extension and control of Lebanon’s
Government over all Lebanese territory, including southern Lebanon, as called
for by the Council for the past four years. The continued presence of armed
Hezbollah militia and the presence of Syrian military and Iranian forces in
Lebanon hindered that goal. He said that that situation, 14 years after the end
of Lebanon’s civil war and four years after the Council had accepted
unanimously the Secretary-General’s report that Israel had complied fully with
Council resolution 425, was simply unacceptable. It was wrong for Syria to
continue to maintain forces in Lebanon in “flat contravention” of the spirit
and clear intent of the Taif Accord, and it would be very wrong for it to
continue to interfere in the presidential electoral process in Lebanon.
JEAN-MARC DE LA SABLIERE (France) welcomed the adoption of the resolution.
Lebanon had been through several decades of upheaval. After the war it had
started to rebuild and had committed itself to a strengthened rule of law,
faithful to its democratic aspirations. After a very troubled period, Lebanon
must be able to restore confidence and prosperity, and that included the full
restoration of its sovereignty and the free exercise of democracy. The Council
had, since 1978, and well after that, noted Israel’s withdrawal and had been
calling for respect for the territorial integrity, political independence and
sovereignty of Lebanon. It had also regularly reaffirmed those objectives.
Today, he said, serious dangers threatened the future of Lebanon. Serious
interference had persisted in the political life of the country, particularly in
the electoral process, and occupation and the presence of armed militias had
been maintained. France was deeply concerned that Lebanon might retreat from the
objectives that had been reaffirmed constantly by the international community.
That was why a rapid mobilization and a decisive reaction from the Council
seemed essential. Withdrawal of foreign forces should no longer be delayed and
the electoral process should carry on without any foreign interference. Those
demands were in keeping with the Council’s position for more than 25 years and
did not constitute interference in a State’s internal affairs. By refraining
to act, he added, the Council would sanction interference in the internal
affairs of another State. By acting in a robust manner, the Council was showing
its confidence in Lebanon’s future, which must include its full restoration of
sovereignty, and not the intensification of interference. WANG GUANGYA (China)
said that respect for the principles of sovereignty, independence, territorial
integrity and non-interference in internal affairs constituted a centrepiece of
China’s foreign policy and were principles of the United Nations. In adherence
to those principles, he supported the safeguarding of the sovereignty,
independence and territorial integrity of Lebanon. The draft resolution touched
on the question of the presidential elections in Lebanon. Such questions fell
within the internal affairs of Lebanon and should be decided by the Lebanese
people themselves. China had abstained in the vote on the draft. China had
closely followed the developments in Lebanon and hoped that Lebanon would
maintain stability and economic development, which would be in the interest of
peace and stability in the Middle East. He reiterated the hope that the parties
concerned would be able to satisfactorily resolve all problems, including those
on the Israeli/Palestinian, Israeli/Lebanese and Israeli/Syrian tracks so that
lasting peace could be achieved in the Middle East.
ABDALLAH BAALI (Algeria) said that his country was staunchly committed to the
sovereignty, unity and independence of Lebanon, as well as to respect for
non-interference in its internal affairs, and had decided to abstain on the
draft resolution for the following reasons. First, the situation in Lebanon did
not appear to constitute a threat to international peace and security.
Therefore, it was not of a nature to prompt an examination by and decision of
the Council.
Secondly, it was Israel, by its policies of occupation and aggression, and its
repression of the Palestinians, which constituted an undeniable threat to
international peace and security, he said. That should have required an urgent
consideration and effective measures on the part of the Security Council. He had
hoped to see the Council display towards Israel the same firmness shown today
towards Lebanon, by demanding Israel’s withdrawal from Arab lands. Thirdly,
the Council must not interfere in the internal affairs of States or in bilateral
affairs between States. The Council’s consideration of an internal matter for
Lebanon constituted a harmful precedent which must not be repeated, unless the
Council was to be led into serious excesses, running counter to the United
Nations Charter. Only a just, lasting and comprehensive settlement could bring
about a definitive peace in the Middle East. MUNIR AKRAM (Pakistan) said he had
abstained for a number of reasons, including that the resolution was not
consistent with the Council’s functions and responsibilities, especially under
Article 41 of the Charter. In the present case, there was no evidence of any
urgent threat to peace. There had been no complaint from the country whose
sovereignty and integrity the draft purported to uphold. On the contrary, the
Lebanese representatives had communicated to the Council their opposition to
consideration of the resolution. In addition, he said that the resolution
addressed the wrong threat. If there was a threat to Lebanon, that was well
known and did not arise from Syria. He construed the provisions of operative
paragraph 2 as now worded as constituting a reference to those foreign forces
which had entered Lebanon uninvited and by the use of force. Also, the
resolution went beyond the Council’s mandate and authority, as described in
Article 24 (2) of the Charter. The resolution, in preambular paragraph 6 and
operative paragraph 5 intervened in the internal affairs of Lebanon. Such
intervention was unacceptable and contrary to the Charter. That had also set an
unfortunate precedent. He said the text was also unclear, since it would be
impossible for the Council to determine whether and when the constitutional
rules of any country were “devised without foreign interference or influence”.
For that reason, that provision was also unimplementable. Indeed, the Council
would find it impossible to enforce changes in the national constitutions and
rules of sovereign States. Action was taken on the text under an item on the
Middle East. The Council must address the real threat to peace in the region,
arising from the occupation of Palestinian and Arab territories, including the
territory of Syria. He trusted it would not be deflected or diverted from that
objective by the resolution it adopted today. ANDREY DENISOV (Russian
Federation) said the main purpose of the draft had been to prevent further
escalation in the Middle East. Tension was high; any wrong step might exacerbate
the regional situation and lead to a new focal point of instability, in addition
to the existing Palestinian/Israeli conflict and Iraq. There was also a
possibility that the fragile political balance in Lebanon might be in danger.
So, he had tabled amendments, the purpose of which was to move the draft towards
the context of a Middle East settlement as a whole and to prevent the document
from being one-sided and from concentrating solely on domestic Lebanese affairs.
Russia’s proposals improved the draft by making it more acceptable to Council
members. Unfortunately, they had not been adopted, and he, therefore, had been
unable to support the resolution. RONALDO MOTA SARDENBERG (Brazil) said he had
abstained on the vote. His delegation was following closely the events in
Lebanon, as a result of its friendly historic ties to the Lebanese people.
Bilateral relations with Lebanon were a high priority for Brazil. Resolution
1559 dealt with matters within the domestic jurisdiction of Lebanon. The
existence of a dispute likely to endanger international peace and security had
not been properly characterized in the text. He reiterated his commitment to a
lasting peace in the Middle East, in conformity with, among other things,
Council resolutions and various peace initiatives.
CRISTIAN MAQUIEIRA (Chile) said he had voted in favour of the text because he
supported its philosophy. The amendments to the original text had addressed his
delegation’s concerns. At the same time, he stated that the resolution meant
that once again a double standard had been imposed in the Middle East conflict
because of the clear lack of political will to deal with Israel’s occupation
of Arab lands. Also, there was no mention of the peace plan, which was the only
viable mechanism to achieve lasting peace in the Middle East. ISMAEL ABRAAO
GASPAR MARTINS (Angola) said he voted in favour of the resolution, as the
concerns expressed and the proposed amendments had been taken into account
sufficiently. While it was not a perfect resolution, it was a “possible”
resolution. He hoped that in adopting the resolution, the Council would be able
to give an effective contribution to the political independence and sovereignty
of Lebanon in its territorially recognized borders. He also hoped that its
adoption would not have undesirable effects, since the situation in Lebanon did
not represent an immediate threat to peace and security. The approach adopted by
the Council could have been better balanced. Also, the Council could have taken
a more proactive role to the problems in the region. He would have preferred to
seize the opportunity for an encouragement by the Council to the Governments of
Lebanon and Syria to conclude a bilateral agreement, under the auspices of the
Council. That approach might have safeguarded the interests of all the parties
concerned and better achieved the objectives set by the international community.
LAURO L. BAJA, JR. (Philippines) said he had abstained because the resolution
could not be justified as part of the role given to the Council in the
collective security system under the Charter. There was a fine but clear
boundary that marked the Council’s role, as embodied in Article 39. Resolution
1559 had crossed that line and had collided “head on” with the principle of
non-interference. He said he had understood the promotion of Lebanon’s
enhanced territorial sovereignty and integrity, but no matter how noble its
motives, the resolution placed the Council in a situation of acting in a manner
which it sought to avoid in the first place, namely, not to interfere in the
internal affairs of a country. The amendments tabled by Russia would have moved
the resolution out of a distinct Lebanese internal affairs context. As a
founding member of the Organization, he had felt a special duty to defend the
Charter and its principles. JOEL W. ADECHI (Benin) said he had supported the
draft, as the initiative had been aimed at stabilizing Lebanon. He voted in
favour of it because he had wished to reaffirm Council support for Lebanon’s
sovereignty and independence. Resolution 1559 dealt with the situation in the
Middle East. He reaffirmed his support for the efforts to bring about a
comprehensive political settlement in that region, including the withdrawal of
all foreign forces present in the countries of the region. Accordingly, he had
repeatedly expressed his commitment to peace and security in the region. * *** *
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