Resolution on Strengthening the Responsibility to Protect
in Africa
We, the participants of the NGO Forum preceding the 42nd
Ordinary Session of the African Commission on Human and
Peoples’ Rights and the 16th African Human Rights Book Fair,
held at Le Meridian Hotel, Brazzaville, Congo.
Recall the report of the International Commission on
Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS) of 2001 which set
the foundation for governmental and civil society effort in
achieving international consensus on the Responsibility to
Protect,
Note the report of the Panel of Eminent Persons on United
Nations – Civil Society Relations dated 7 July 2004 which
among other things proposed increased civil society
participation in the activities of the United Nations,
Mindful of the report of the High – Level Panel on Threats,
Challenges and Changes (A more secure world: our shared
responsibility) dated 1 December 2004 with particular
reference to pages 29 – 30 which called for Member States to
endorse the Responsibility to Protect,
Further note the report of the United Nations Secretary
General entitled ‘In Larger Freedom: Towards Security,
Development and Human Rights for All’ particularly paragraph
18 and 19 which call for collective action in tackling human
security challenges,
Re-affirm paragraph 138 and 139 of the United Nations Summit
Declaration of September 2005, where the international
community expressed its determination to its responsibility
and readiness to act where national authorities fail to
protect their population from genocide, war crimes, ethnic
cleansing and crimes against humanity,
Further Re-affirm the September 2005 United Nations Summit
Declaration calling for the cooperation of relevant regional
organisations to help protect populations from these grave
threats and the common African position on the proposed
reform of the United Nations otherwise known as the
‘Ezulwini Consensus’ where the African Union in its 7th
Extraordinary Session of March 2005 in Addis Ababa adopted
the Responsibility to Protect,
Deeply concerned at the slow response of the international
community to past acts of genocide and crimes against
humanity in Rwanda and the continued slow response to the
allegations of genocide and crimes against humanity in
Darfur,
Call on the African Commission on Human and Peoples’
Rights to:
Re-affirm paragraph 138 and 139 of the September 2005 United
Nations Summit Declaration, where governments endorsed their
collective responsibility to protect population from
genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against
humanity when individual states “manifestly fail” to protect
their own populations from these grave threats,
Urge the African Union to accelerate the promotion and
protection of human and peoples’ rights by ensuring good
governance and take steps to progressively protect their
citizens from avoidable conflicts and provide fair and
equitable participation in resource allocation and
distribution,
Call on African States, African Union and the United Nations
to expedite the operationalization of the UN-AU hybrid force
in Darfur,
Call on all actors of the Darfur conflict to stop
hostilities and give ways to dialogue and negotiation.
Done in Brazzaville, 12 November 2007.
Related documents:
• NGO Forum Resolution on enforced disappearances
• NGO Forum Resolution on the situation of human rights defenders in
Africa (Res. 008)
• NGO Forum Resolution on Migration and Human Rights
• NGO Forum Resolution on the exploitation of natural resources in
Africa
• NGO Forum Resolution on sexual violence in armed conflict
• NGO Forum Resolution on the human rights situation in Somalia
• NGO Forum Special Interest Group: prevention and prohibition of Torture
in Africa
• HURISA Statement on the situation of democracy and human
rights in SADC.
• HURISA Statement on NGO's relationship with the African
Commission.
• Final communique of
the 42nd Ordinary session of the African Commission on Human
and Peoples' Rights