The full text of the Chief Minister’s address at the United Nations
Committee of 24 on 18 June 2008.
Mr. Chairman, thank you for allowing me to address the Special
Committee again this year.
This is my thirteenth successive annual address to you as Chief
Minister, that is as the elected political leader of Gibraltar, its
people and Government. On each of those occasions, that is twelve
times, I have set out the position, wishes and inalienable rights
of the people of my country. I am not going to do so again, lest
continued repetition should sound like a plaint in the face of the
Special Committee’s apparent disinclination to adopt a clear
position in support of the rights and aspirations of the people of
Gibraltar.
As this Committee knows, Gibraltar has been one of the most
consistent supporters of its work, which we have supported by
annual visits to New York to address the Committee here at the UN
and attendance at your regional seminars. But, despite the strength
and persistence of our arguments and our support for your works we
appear to have failed to recruit your support of our decolonisation
based on the core elements of our position, namely:
1. That under the Charter and doctrine of the United Nations, and
under established principles of international law, decolonisation
can only be brought about by the application of the principle of
self determination;
2. That there is no rule or principle that enables, still less
requires, decolonisation to be other than by self determination in
cases where there is a sovereignty dispute. In other words , such
cases are not, and cannot be an exception to the general rule, and
that there is no UN doctrine to this effect;
3. Accordingly, whether it be on the application of the properly
applicable principles of international law, or the correct doctrine
of the UN, or the principle of territorial integrity to the facts of
the case of Gibraltar during the last 300 years and today, only the
principle of self determination applies to our decolonisation;
Instead, you have allowed the principles applicable to a colonial
peoples’ decolonisation to be contaminated by the anachronistic and
competing territorial sovereignty claims of neighbours. You have
allowed arguments in support of such claims to stand above sacred
principles and doctrines that exist to protect the very peoples
whose rights you are mandated to uphold.
I do not believe that this has happened as a result of any objective
consideration of the issues and principles, but rather as a result
of the machinations, and disproportionate influence on the work of
this Committee of sovereignty claimants and other countries that are
their diplomatic friends. This is not a measure of the merit of our
case or of the extent of our rights, or of UN doctrine, but rather,
it is a measure of our inferior diplomatic strength and horse
trading power as a very small country. Indeed, this Special
Committee exists to protect colonial peoples from that very thing,
which the Committee has singularly failed to do in our case.
The Special Committee needs to be clear in its mind whether its
mandate and function is to promote and defend the sovereignty claim
of the territorial claimant, or to promote and defend the rights
and aspirations of the people of the listed territory.
These things of which I speak are sharply illustrated by the wholly
unacceptable goings on at Regional Seminars, which by slight of
hand and total lack of integrity of process, submit reports to this
Special Committee that certain principles have been adopted by the
participants, which have never even been discussed by the
participants, and which are in reality, simply the fruit of the
manipulation in the drafting committee room of sovereignty claimants
and their friends, who, as member states, have access to the
drafting committee room , which is denied to participants from the
Territories .
We had understood that Regional Seminars were intended to be for the
benefits of the Territories. This is why the Government of
Gibraltar no longer attends the regional seminars, and will not do
so while our presence might add legitimacy and credibility to these
shocking practices, about which I have complained before.
To make matters worse the Special Committee then receives and adopts
those Reports, containing as they do outrageous misrepresentations
of facts and self serving distortions of principles amounting, in
effect, to a denial of the existence of the right to self
determination (in flagrant breach of the Charter, Covenants and
Doctrine of the United Nations) in colonial cases where a
sovereignty dispute exists. This is intellectually, politically and
legally preposterous.
And so, by these means, it is pronounced in the Reports that listed
territories which have the misfortune to be the subject of a
sovereignty dispute are not entitled to decolonisation by self
determination (despite this then being described as a fundamental
human right!).
Further, we may not participate in the development of work
programmes, nor benefit from Special Committee focal points, nor
from electoral assistance regarding any act of self determination,
nor receive visits or special missions by the Special Committee.
Mr. Chairman, it is a complete misconception to mix up and confuse
decolonisation and sovereignty disputes in this way. But in so far
as concerns this Special Committee, I believe that it’s obligations
are very clear. If you think that Gibraltar is a colonial case that
remains pending decolonisation, then you are obliged to apply the
principle of self determination to its decolonisation, since self
determination is, under UN doctrine and international law, the only
principle applicable in the decolonisation process.
On the other hand, if you think, for any reason, that Gibraltar is
not really a colony, but a sovereignty dispute, then this Committee
has no jurisdiction in the case of Gibraltar, because you simply
have no mandate or other jurisdiction to deal with sovereignty
disputes, and you should therefore ask the General Assembly to
relieve you of responsibility for the case of Gibraltar, by
delisting us.
But, whatever may be the case the Special Committee has no mandate
to establish decolonisation principles that mixes up the two cases.
While we are on your list as a decolonisation case, you are
entitled to apply only the principle of self determination.
The principle of territorial integrity is not a principle that is
applicable to the decolonisation of a territory on your list, since
such a territory is not part of a state that would be disintegrated
by such decolonisation.
Spain and others will point to non binding Resolutions of the 1960s
which they say have precisely the effect which I am denouncing.
Such resolutions, whatever may be their correct interpretation have
ceased to be relevant in a world which has moved on. They are
certainly irrelevant to the decolonisation of Gibraltar, which as
far as we are concerned has already happened.
In all these circumstances that I have described, Mr. Chairman, it
is not surprising that the people and Government of Gibraltar no
longer look to this Special Committee or to the UN to help us bring
about our decolonisation, legitimately in accordance with our rights
and wishes. We have resorted to self help. I no longer come here
asking the Special Committee to recognise our right to self
determination, or to help us exercise it, still less do I
acknowledge the Special Committee, or the UN, as the authoritative
arbiter or judge or gatekeeper of Gibraltar’s decolonisation.
As I reported to you last year, we have negotiated a new
constitutional relationship with the United Kingdom, which the
people of Gibraltar have freely accepted in an act of self
determination, namely a referendum. If the Special Committee is
interested in knowing whether the result of that referendum
constituted the informed, genuinely and freely expressed will of
the people of Gibraltar, you are welcome to establish that by
whatever means you consider appropriate.
This new constitutional relationship, which includes the formal
acknowledgement in our Constitution by the UK of our right to self
determination, is acknowledged and understood by the Governments of
both the United Kingdom and Gibraltar, to be a modern, non colonial
relationship which results in Gibraltar no longer being a colony.
The UK has so declared publicly, including here at the UN, in
Gibraltar and in its own Parliament.
The status of Gibraltar, and its relationship with the United
Kingdom for the future, has thus been settled in a way which is
entirely acceptable and agreeable to the people of Gibraltar. As
far as we are concerned the decolonisation of Gibraltar is no longer
a pending issue.
If the UN wishes to define decolonisation differently, or to cling
to outdated and unrealistic delisting criteria, that amongst other
consequences will result in the Special Committee never being able
to finish its work, that is a matter for you. But, that does not
alter the reality of our circumstances as I have just described
them. We no longer regard that matter, namely, our presence on that
list as signifying that we are a colony pending decolonisation. In
its letter to the Committee submitting its annual report on
Gibraltar for the year 2007 under article 73E of the Charter, the
United Kingdom has made it clear that following the new
Constitution, and as a result of it, its relationship with Gibraltar
is now non colonial in nature (a statement with which we agree )
and that accordingly Gibraltar should not remain on the UN list of
non self governing territories. The UK also makes it clear that it
submits the report only because the Charter requires them to do so
while Gibraltar actually remains on the list. The Committee should
be aware that the report was in fact prepared by the Gibraltar
Government.
Nor does the UK’s continuing subscription to an annual Consensus
Resolution on the case of Gibraltar signify that it continues to
believe that Gibraltar should remain on the list, or that it
remains a colony pending decolonisation. The dispute between the UK
and Spain relates to the Sovereignty of Gibraltar, not its
decolonisation. The UK has not agreed to discuss, still less
negotiate with Spain the issue of our decolonisation.
Furthermore, the text of that annual Consensus Resolution is now a
fiction. There is no such process ongoing between the UK and Spain.
There have been no meetings under the Brussels Process for many
years. What is more, the UK has told us, Spain and the UN that it
will not resume any such process unless we are content. We are not
content, and will never be content for our affairs to be discussed
in a process that is bilateral between the UK and Spain, and
consequently that process is for all practical and political
purposes dead and defunct.
Mr Chairman, this is what the UK Permanent Representative Sir John
Sawers said to the Fourth Committee on 15th October 2007, on behalf
of the United Kingdom:
"Her Majesty’s Government therefore confirms that it would not enter
into a process of sovereignty negotiations with which Gibraltar is
not content. Given these previously stated commitments, while this
year the UK will again be part of the consensus decision on
Gibraltar, any reference to the Brussels Process needs to be
understood in this context. In light of this, the implications of
Gibraltar’s well-known view of the Brussels Process, as regards to
both sovereignty and bilateralism between Spain and the UK, are
clear."
In other words, the Brussels Process is dead because Gibraltar is
opposed to it and the UK will not participate in it if Gibraltar is
opposed to it.
It is thus wholly inappropriate that a process that is known by all
to be, and is actually, defunct should be misrepresented to be
extant and in operation, and continue to be placed, year after
year, at the centre of the Consensus resolution, when in reality its
existence is now a fiction.
Mr Chairman, the only process of dialogue that now exists is the
Trilateral Forum of Dialogue between the Governments of Spain,
Gibraltar and the United Kingdom. If the Consensus Resolution is to
be accurate and realistic, and not remain a make believe consensus
based on a fiction, it must reflect this now inescapable and
permanent reality, namely, that the Brussels Process has now
effectively been consigned to the history books, and has been
replaced by the Trilateral Forum.
The Government of Gibraltar is totally committed to its
participation in this trilateral forum, which is open agenda, thus
allowing any and all issues to be raised for discussion. It has
already done good work and produced good agreements, and it will
continue to do so if all the parties continue to participate
constructively and in good faith, as will the Gibraltar Government.
Finally Mr Chairman, even though we profoundly disagree with the
Special Committee on many issues of fundamental importance to us,
and even though there is no longer any need for us to look to the
Committee to help us bring about our decolonisation, we continue to
acknowledge the essential work that the Committee has carried out
in the past, and its contribution to the advancement of the world
over decades. We do of course remain willing to co operate with the
Special Committee on any matter that it wishes, not least its
delisting criteria and how Gibraltar can now be removed from the
UN’s list of non self governing territories.
I thank the Special Committee and its staff for the many courtesies
that it , and they have shown the Gibraltar Government now and in
the past, and through the Gibraltar Government, to the people of
Gibraltar.