Dansk Interparlamentarisk Gruppes bestyrelse 2020-21
IPU Alm.del Bilag 27
Offentligt
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142nd IPU Assembly
and related meetings
Virtual session
24 – 27 May 2021
Results of the proceedings
Inter-Parliamentary Union – 2021
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page(s)
Meetings and other activities
142nd Assembly
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Opening of the Assembly .....................................................................................................
Participation ..........................................................................................................................
Virtual Event Platform ............................................................................................................
Interactive debate ..................................................................................................................
Debates and decisions of the Standing Committees ...........................................................
Conclusion of the Assembly .................................................................................................
4
6
7
7
8
10
207th session of the Governing Council
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Adoption of the Special Rules of Procedure for the virtual sessions of
the Assembly and Standing Committees .............................................................................
Vision of the IPU President and report on his activities since the
206th session of the Governing Council ...............................................................................
Annual Impact Report by the Secretary General on the activities
of the IPU in 2020 ..................................................................................................................
Elections to the Executive Committee and other IPU bodies ................................................
Financial results for 2020 .....................................................................................................
Questions relating to the IPU Membership ...........................................................................
Future inter-parliamentary meetings ....................................................................................
Reports of plenary bodies and specialized committees .......................................................
11
11
12
13
13
14
14
15
285th session of the Executive Committee
1.
2.
3.
4.
Debates and decisions .........................................................................................................
Questions relating to the IPU membership and the situation of certain parliaments ...........
Financial questions ...............................................................................................................
Questions relating to the Secretariat of the Inter-Parliamentary Union ................................
15
16
17
18
Forum and Bureau of Women Parliamentarians .....................................................................
Forum and Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians of the IPU ..................................
Subsidiary bodies of the Governing Council
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians .........................................................
Committee on Middle East Questions ..................................................................................
Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law ...................................
Advisory Group on Health ....................................................................................................
High-Level Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism (HLAG) ........
18
19
20
20
21
22
22
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Elections, appointments, media and communications, and membership
of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
Elections and appointments
1.
2
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Executive Committee ...........................................................................................................
Vice-Presidents of the Executive Committee ......................................................................
Sub-Committee on Finance .................................................................................................
Bureau of Women Parliamentarians ...................................................................................
Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians ..................................................................
Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians ........................................................
Committee on Middle East Questions ..................................................................................
Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law ..................................
High-Level Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism (HLAG) .......
Working Group on Science and Technology .........................................................................
Bureaus of the Standing Committees .................................................................................
Rapporteurs to the 144th Assembly ....................................................................................
23
23
24
24
25
25
25
25
26
26
27
29
Media and communications ......................................................................................................
Membership of the Inter-Parliamentary Union .........................................................................
29
31
Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly of
the Inter-Parliamentary Union
Agenda .....................................................................................................................................
President’s Summary of the debate on the overall theme of the 142nd IPU Assembly
Overcoming the pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments
......
Resolutions
Parliamentary strategies to strengthen peace and security against threats
and conflicts resulting from climate-related disasters and their consequences ..........
Mainstreaming digitalization and the circular economy to achieve the SDGs,
particularly responsible consumption and production ..................................................
36
42
32
33
Reports of the Standing Committees
Report of the Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights ........................
Report of the Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs ......................................
47
49
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
Statement on the occasion of the 2021 United Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS .....
Statement on Parliamentary action in support of ending statelessness ..................................
Statement on Yemen ................................................................................................................
Reports, decisions and other texts
Special Rules of Procedure to regulate the conduct of virtual sessions of the Assembly
and Standing Committees .............................................................................................
Cremer-Passy Prize Rules ...........................................................................................
Voting: Election Results ................................................................................................
Report of the Forum of Women Parliamentarians ........................................................
Report of the Forum on Young Parliamentarians of the IPU ........................................
56
59
61
62
65
52
54
55
2
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Report of the Committee on Middle East Questions ....................................................
Report of the Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law .....
Report of the Advisory Group on Health .......................................................................
Report of the High-Level Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism
and Violent Extremism (HLAG) ....................................................................................
Statistics of the Gender Partnership Group .................................................................
66
68
70
71
74
Future meetings
Future meetings and other activities ............................................................................
Agenda of the 143rd Assembly ....................................................................................
76
79
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1.
Opening of the Assembly
The 142nd IPU Assembly was officially opened on the IPU’s dedicated virtual event platform at
14:00 CEST on Wednesday, 26 May 2021. The proceedings began with opening remarks by the IPU
President and a panel discussion moderated by Ms. Claire Doole on the overall theme of the Assembly:
Overcoming the pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments.
Mr. Duarte Pacheco, President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union,
welcomed the participants, over
750 MPs from some 135 countries, to the first ever IPU Assembly held entirely in virtual format.
Although a virtual Assembly was undoubtedly a historic milestone, the scourge of the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic cast a considerable shadow over the occasion, having entailed the loss of more
than 3 million lives worldwide, an economic recession on a scale not seen in nearly a century and the
reversal of decades of progress in human development.
Only societies that were resilient, equitable, inclusive and fair could successfully confront the
unpredictable and complex challenges of the moment. Parliaments, as the custodians of human rights
and the rule of law, needed to be at the centre of a response to the pandemic that served people above
all else. Over the previous weeks, during meetings of the Standing Committees, the Forum of Women
Parliamentarians and the Forum of Young Parliamentarians, delegates had discussed how parliaments
could play a central role in post-pandemic recovery efforts, and four areas in particular had stood out.
Firstly, many delegates had noted that access to vaccines for COVID-19 was too fragmented, uneven
and slow. Efforts were needed to bridge the gaps between vaccination programmes in different
countries and regions and to defend vaccine accessibility as a global public good.
Secondly, delegates had observed that public institutions contributed significantly to development and
growth. Parliamentarians needed to ensure that such institutions were fit for purpose and met the needs
of society. A new social contract was also needed between people and government, grounded in human
rights.
Thirdly, delegates had noted that women and youth had borne the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic and
the multiple other crises it had provoked. Women and youth therefore had to take their rightful place in
the world of politics, where decisions about the future were made.
Finally, delegates had expressed the importance of pursuing an economic recovery underpinned by
new ways of thinking about sustainable production, consumption, environmental preservation and the
care economy. The 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals should serve as the
foundation for all COVID-19 recovery strategies.
He encouraged parliamentarians to seize the momentum of the virtual IPU Assembly to rethink the
foundations of the pre-pandemic world and pave the way for a resilient, equitable, smart, green,
inclusive and fair future, by reinvigorating the global multilateral system and continuing to build strong
and democratic national parliaments.
The IPU needed to further strengthen its role as the global organization of national parliaments,
providing a platform for political dialogue, parliamentary diplomacy and cooperation, in search of
solutions for a better tomorrow.
Ms. Anuradha Gupta, Deputy CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance,
said that the points raised by the
President were a timely reminder of the importance of multilateral cooperation and proactive leadership
in tackling the COVID-19 crisis. To end the acute phase of the pandemic, countries needed to unite to
ensure that vaccination programmes were truly global and that no-one was left behind.
The COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) programme, co-directed by Gavi, was coordinating
rapid and equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines, with a view to ensuring that all countries received
sufficient vaccine doses to protect their vulnerable and high-risk populations. COVAX had already
delivered vaccines to over 100 countries but had faced numerous challenges.
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Countries, particularly wealthy countries, needed to be aware that no one would be safe from the
pandemic until everyone was safe. Even small increases in transmission of the virus would lead to new
variants, prolonging the pandemic and its impact on the poorest in society. Further efforts needed to be
made to scale up manufacturing and distribution, and support was needed for mechanisms to transfer
the knowledge and technology required to produce the vaccines. Public trust in vaccines was another
urgent issue to address.
The collateral damage of the pandemic also needed to be considered, particularly increasing poverty,
disruption to essential health services and a reversal of many years of progress with childhood
vaccination. Many children around the world, known as Zero-Dose Children, continued to be deprived of
the basic course of childhood vaccines.
The COVID-19 pandemic had pushed the question of equity to the forefront of the policy agenda and
thus presented a valuable opportunity to create a more equal world. The IPU’s resolution on universal
health coverage in 2019 had been a particularly positive and visionary initiative in that regard. Health
should not be politicized and parliaments should endeavour to always uphold the principles of equity,
fairness and social justice.
Dr. Jomo Sundaram, former chief economist at the United Nations and prominent academic at
Columbia University and the International Islamic University in Malaysia,
said that the world faced
two related but distinct challenges in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic: how to fight the virus itself
and how to build economies back better. Parliaments could contribute considerably to the first challenge
by reducing barriers to the global distribution of vaccines, tests, medicines and equipment. It was
important to recognize that the current range of vaccines would not eradicate COVID-19, but merely
reduce the severity of infections and the likelihood of death.
While countries had mobilized considerable resources to address the crisis, their efforts had often been
hindered by disruption to global supply chains and trade. At a national level, the measures taken in
response to the pandemic had been extremely disruptive to economies and people’s lifestyles.
Vaccinations were now resulting in a return to normality in some wealthy countries, but a huge divide
between richer and poorer countries prevailed. The international community needed to redouble its
efforts to ensure that the necessary resources for relief, recovery and reform were in place for all
countries.
The International Monetary Fund had recently approved the issue of around US$ 650 billion in Special
Drawing Rights, but they would be distributed according to the relative wealth of countries. A
redistribution of those funds via the World Bank and regional development banks was urgently needed.
Any delay to economic recovery ran the risk of temporary recessions becoming protracted depressions,
which would seriously set back recent progress in reducing poverty and hunger. Parliaments should
work together to address both aspects of the problem: improving equal access to vaccines and other
medical resources, and redistributing financial resources to kickstart the global economy.
Ms. Helen Clark, former Prime Minister of New Zealand and current Chair of the PMNCH Board
and Co-Chair of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response,
said that the
Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response had released a report on 12 May 2021
concluding that most countries had not been prepared for the COVID-19 pandemic despite many years
of warnings and recommendations. Considerable time had been lost in the early stages of the pandemic
in January and February 2020 due to the hoarding of vital information, the World Health Organization’s
(WHO) initial investigations being hampered, and the adoption of a wait-and-see approach by many
countries for several weeks after the declaration of a public health emergency on 30 January 2020. The
response of some countries, often those which had been most affected by the SARS and Ebola
outbreaks, had been better than others, thanks to strong leadership, good governance and proactive
deployment of public health measures.
The report went on to make two sets of recommendations: those for which implementation was urgently
required and those which were longer-term and transformational in nature. In the first category, every
country should deploy proven public health measures to stop transmission of the virus. Vaccination
should not be seen as a panacea, as the rollout was progressing too slowly. To address the inequitable
distribution of vaccines, high-income countries should commit without delay to sharing their surplus
orders. At least 1 billion doses should be provided to the COVAX programme in 2021, reaching 2 billion
in 2022. A waiver on the intellectual property rights relating to vaccines was urgently required to allow
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the necessary knowledge and technology transfer for vaccine production to take place where it was
needed. The WHO’s Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator needed more funding, which the
report called on the G7 and G20 countries to provide. The WHO should elaborate a strategy with
appropriate timelines and benchmarks to definitively end the pandemic as a global health threat.
In the longer term, a transformation of the international system was required. A global health threats
council should be established at the level of Heads of State in order to maintain and mobilize the current
commitment to responding to the pandemic. Such a council should be coupled with a dedicated
pandemic financing facility with preparedness funding of at least US$ 10 billion, which could be rapidly
scaled up to US$ 100 billion if necessary. The ACT Accelerator should be transformed into a durable
convention and the WHO should be further strengthened. Finally, the report called for a special session
of the UN General Assembly later in 2021 with a view to reaching an agreement on the political
declaration needed for such reforms.
The Secretary General
said that health should not be politicized; health care was a right, not a favour
by governments to their citizens. All States had survived the COVID-19 pandemic but many individuals
had lost their lives or their livelihoods, and the focus of the recovery should be people, not abstract
ideas. Parliaments had become more relevant than ever in the crisis and had proven their resilience in
defending people’s rights. It was clear that the post-pandemic period would not be a return to business
as usual and thus provided a valuable opportunity to build forward better. Multilateralism was the means
to achieve that, but needed to evolve accordingly. A new brand of multilateralism was required, in the
service of the people and with the partnerships evoked by the panellists at its core.
In the ensuing discussion, the panellists responded to questions raised by the delegations of
Austria,
Canada, Guyana, Togo and the United Arab Emirates,
on the subjects of a potential waiver of the
Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement for COVID-19 vaccines; the potential
implementation of a natural capital system to recognize the link between economic recovery and the
environment; the slow speed of approval of the vaccines developed in China and Russia; a suggestion
that the IPU should exert more pressure to ensure that vaccines were distributed more equitably
worldwide; and support to small- and medium-sized enterprises and young entrepreneurs in the
post-COVID-19 recovery.
2.
Participation
Delegations from 133 Member Parliaments took part in the work of the Assembly:
*
Afghanistan, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bahrain,
Bangladesh, Belarus, Belgium, Benin, Bhutan, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Brazil, Burkina Faso,
Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Comoros,
Côte d’Ivoire,
Croatia,
Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Denmark, Djibouti, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Guinea, Guyana, Hungary,
Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan,
Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Lao
People’s Democratic Republic, Latvia,
Lebanon, Lesotho,
Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Mauritius,
Mexico, Monaco, Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Nepal, Netherlands, New
Zealand, Nicaragua, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Panama,
Paraguay, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Republic of Moldova, Romania,
Russian Federation, Rwanda, San Marino, Sao Tomé and Principe, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia,
Seychelles, Singapore, Slovenia, Somalia, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Sweden,
Switzerland, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago,
Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Uruguay, Uzbekistan,
Viet Nam, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
The following five Associate Members also took part in the Assembly: the Arab Parliament, the East
African Legislative Assembly (EALA), the Latin American and Caribbean Parliament (PARLATINO), the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (PABSEC), the Parliamentary
Assembly of la Francophonie (APF).
*
For the complete list of IPU Members, see
page 31
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Observers included representatives of:
(i) the World Health Organization (WHO); (ii) parliamentary assemblies and associations: African
Parliamentary Union (APU), Asian Parliamentary Assembly (APA), Commonwealth Parliamentary
Association (CPA), Forum of Parliaments of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region
(FP-ICGLR), Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic Speaking Countries (TurkPA), Parliamentary Assembly
of the Union of Belarus and Russia; and (iii) international political party federations: Liberal International
(LI), Socialist International; and the Committee to Represent the Union Assembly of Myanmar (CRPH).
Of the 1,073 delegates who attended the Assembly, 755 were members of parliament. Those
parliamentarians included 52 Presiding Officers, 38 Deputy Presiding Officers, 288 women MPs (38.1%)
and 193 (25.6%) young MPs.
The figure of 38.1% of delegates being women (see
page 74)
was a record high. The previous record
was 32.9% women delegates, which was reached twice, in 2016 and 2018. In addition, 44 out of
133 delegations (33.1%) were gender-balanced, i.e. they included no less than 40% of members of
either sex (see list on
page 75).
This was up from 30 gender-balanced delegations (20.1%) at the
141st Assembly. Of the 133 delegations in attendance, 129 were composed of at least two delegates.
Among those, eight were composed exclusively of men (6.2%) and two were composed exclusively of
women (1.6%). Five delegations were sanctioned at the 142nd Assembly for being composed
exclusively of representatives of the same sex for two Assemblies in a row.
3.
Virtual Event Platform
In January 2021, the Executive Committee decided that
in light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic
the 142nd IPU Assembly would be held in virtual format. The Assembly programme would include
meetings of the IPU’s statutory bodies, adoption of resolutions, interactive debates, pre-recorded video
submissions, elections for the various IPU bodies, as well as decision-making by the Governing Council.
In the same way as the
IPU’s
in-person meetings, the virtual event had to be accessible, inclusive and
offer an equal opportunity for all Members’ voices to be heard.
When the Secretariat analysed the meeting requirements, budget constraints and tight deadlines, it was
determined that a combination of platforms would provide the best solution. The smaller drafting
committee, Bureau and Executive Committee meetings were held on Zoom. The first Standing
Committee meetings were held on a Simultaneous Interpretation Delivery Platform (SIDP), namely
Interprefy. Larger meetings, spread over three weeks in May, took place on the dedicated IPU 142
Virtual Event Platform (VEP)
The custom-branded VEP provided registered participants with a single online entry point to the
142nd Assembly. Members of Parliament and guest speakers had access to the WebEx meeting where
they could take the floor, use the chat feature, and listen to the debates in their preferred language.
Delegates without speaking roles followed the live sessions through the portal, where interpretation was
also available. The VEP had a Video on Demand section with recordings of all sessions, as well as a
Programme page. The documents section included the CVs and videos of candidates for the vacancies
on various IPU bodies.
The ease of access for the user, the centrality of all related information, the integration with the various
other tools that the IPU uses such as the Assembly App and WhatsApp, together with the diversity of
the content delivery options all made the VEP the right
“venue”
for the 142nd Assembly. Statistics from
the VEP showed that IPU Members whole-heartedly adopted the virtual experience. During the
Assembly week itself, more than 300 MPs from over 110 Parliaments connected daily to the WebEx
sessions, with another 800 delegates following proceedings through live-streaming.
4.
Interactive debate
The IPU President introduced the interactive debate on the overall theme,
Overcoming the pandemic
today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments,
and invited the newly elected President of
the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians and the newly elected President of the Board of the Forum of
Young Parliamentarians to take the floor.
Ms. Lesia Vasylenko (Ukraine), President of the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians,
outlined the
deliberations of the Bureau and the Forum of Women Parliamentarians on a gender-responsive
recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting four main points. Firstly, parliaments must strive for
complete gender parity in decision-making, ensuring inclusive leadership in both the public and private
sectors with a view to setting an ambitious, gender-responsive and green recovery agenda.
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Secondly, the gender inequalities in the economy exposed by the pandemic must be addressed,
through stronger social protection schemes, affordable childcare services and robust support to the care
economy.
Thirdly, parliaments must step up their efforts to prevent and address the shadow pandemic of
increasing violence against women, including online.
Finally, parliaments must be models of gender sensitivity, as spaces where women could fully
contribute, with family-friendly and anti-harassment policies, free of stereotypes, and where every policy
was analysed through a gender lens.
Ms. Sahar Albazar (Egypt), President of the Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians,
spoke on the recent work of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians, noting in particular the recently
launched IPU campaign
I Say Yes to Youth in Parliament.
With a view to ensuring a youth-responsive recovery from the pandemic, the Forum called on
parliamentarians to encourage greater investment in education to ensure no one was left behind; to pay
greater attention and increase access to youth health services, notably mental and sexual health; and to
increase investment in youth employment, access to credit and stronger social safety nets.
A stronger, more united and more resilient recovery could only be assured if the needs and interests of
the young generation were kept high on the agenda.
During the ensuing deliberations, 56 legislators from Member Parliaments, including 16 Presiding
Officers and two young parliamentarians, as well as the Presiding Officer of an Associate Member,
contributed to the debate. Pre-recorded video messages from 13 Member Parliaments and one
Associate Member were also shown. All
speeches and statements
submitted to the IPU Secretariat, for
the Assembly and the Standing Committees, were made available on the IPU website.
5.
(a)
Debates and decisions of the Standing Committees
Standing Committee on Peace and International Security
The Standing Committee on Peace and International Security held two virtual sittings, on 26 April and
17 May, chaired by its President, Mr. J.I. Echániz (Spain).
During its first sitting, the Committee discussed the general theme of the 142nd Assembly,
Overcoming
the pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments
from the perspective of
peace and
security, with a view to contributing to the Assembly’s
final declaration. After an introduction
by the keynote speaker, Mr. O. Fernandez-Taranco, Assistant Secretary-General for Peacebuilding
Support at the United Nations, 17 parliamentarians from 16 Member Parliaments took the floor to
express their views. During the sitting, two videos were shown: one on the work done by the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) during the COVID-19 pandemic and the second on women,
peace and security to celebrate 20 years since UN Security Council resolution 1325.
The resolution
Parliamentary strategies to strengthen peace and security against threats and conflicts
resulting from climate-related disasters and their consequences
could not be negotiated in plenary
session due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In accordance with the Special Rules of Procedure for the
virtual sessions of the Assembly and Standing Committees, a drafting committee was mandated to
finalize the resolution, which it did in a meeting on 22 April 2021. This drafting committee, composed of
the co-rapporteurs and parliamentarians nominated by the geopolitical groups, the Forum of Women
Parliamentarians and the Forum of Young Parliamentarians examined 130 proposals for amendments
to the resolution submitted by 16 Member Parliaments. 45 per cent of the amendments received before
the deadline and numerous sub-amendments were approved. The version thus reviewed by the drafting
committee was then submitted to all Member Parliaments for adoption through the silence procedure.
During its second sitting, the Committee was informed of the result of the silence procedure for adoption
of the resolution, taking note that it was thus considered adopted. It was also informed of reservations
expressed on the resolution in its entirety by India and Turkey and on specific points and paragraphs by
China, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Nicaragua, Poland and Thailand. A short debate was then held to
allow Members to explain their position on the resolution or how they intended to implement it. The
debate was introduced by Ms. C. Roth (Germany), co-rapporteur of the resolution, and gave
10 parliamentarians the opportunity to take the floor. In the afternoon of 27 May, the Committee’s
resolution was submitted to the Assembly in its plenary session, which adopted it by consensus.
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The Bureau of the Standing Committee met on 13 April to discuss
the Committee’s next subject
item
and work programme. On the basis of proposals drafted by the Secretariat in the absence of subject
item proposals
from the Member Parliaments, the Bureau unanimously agreed that the Committee’s
next subject item would be:
Rethinking and reframing approaches to peace processes with a view to
fostering lasting peace.
This subject item was submitted to the Members for adoption via the silence
procedure and no objections were received. The President informed the Committee of this decision
during its final sitting and announced that Ms. C. Widegren (Sweden) had put herself forward as a
co-rapporteur. He added that the designation of the other co-rapporteurs would be left to the IPU
President, in accordance with the Standing Committee Rules. In its plenary session on 27 May, the
Assembly took note of the choice of subject item, which will thus be the subject of a resolution at the
144th Assembly, and of the nomination of one co-rapporteur.
During its final sitting, the Committee also approved its work programme for the 143rd Assembly on the
proposal of the Bureau. It agreed to focus its work on the following activities: a hearing with experts on
the theme of its next resolution and two panel discussions. The first of these would be on the role of
parliaments in addressing the risks of diversion in arms transfers and the second on the application of
traditional and human security concepts in assessing security threats to devise ways to foster peace
globally.
A presentation of the process for revising the IPU’s
five-year
Strategy concluded the Committee’s
work.
In particular, the members of the Committee were informed of the various ways in which they could
participate in that process. To close the sitting, the video presenting the work of the IAEA during the
COVID-19 pandemic was shown again.
(b)
Standing Committee on Sustainable Development
The Standing Committee on Sustainable Development held its sittings on 27 April and 18 May with its
President, Ms. V. Muzenda Tsitsi (Zimbabwe), in the chair. The first sitting, which was held jointly with the
Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs, debated the overall theme of the Assembly
Overcoming the
pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments.
Details of the debate are provided
in the
report
of the Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs.
Due to the constraints of the virtual format, the draft resolution
Mainstreaming digitalization and the circular
economy to achieve the SDGs, particularly responsible consumption and production
was revised by a
drafting committee. The drafting committee was composed of members of parliament nominated by the
geopolitical groups; the representatives of the Forum of Women Parliamentarians and the Forum of Young
Parliamentarians; and the co-Rapporteurs, Ms. S.
Dinică (Romania)
and Mr. A. Gryffroy (Belgium). They
considered 88 amendments submitted by 12 Member Parliaments. The revised draft was submitted to the
Members for adoption through the silence procedure, during which the Parliaments of India and Nicaragua
submitted reservations on the text.
In its second sitting the Committee took note that the resolution had been adopted through the written
silence procedure. It also took note of the reservations. The Committee held a debate on the theme
How
can the IPU resolution inspire and guide parliamentary work and action on digitalization and the circular
economy?
Representatives of eight parliaments took the floor. They highlighted the relevance of the
resolution and the need for countries to step up their efforts on digitalization and the promotion of the
circular economy. It was also emphasized during the debate that issues such as privacy, and challenges
related to technology and human rights were becoming increasingly important and should be considered
going forward.
The Committee approved the 10 nominations for Bureau membership received from the geopolitical
groups. It also approved a second mandate for the Bureau members from Armenia, Netherlands, Pakistan
and Thailand, and took note that the Bureau members from Iraq and Morocco had not expressed their wish
to continue serving for a second term.
The Committee approved the theme of the next resolution titled
Leveraging Information and
Communication Technology as an enabler for the education sector, including in times of pandemic.
The
Committee approved the nomination of Mr. S. Patra (India) and Ms. H. Järvinen (Finland) as
co-Rapporteurs. It also approved a work plan for the next Assembly, which included a debate on the theme
of the next resolution and a panel on the theme
Impact of climate change on natural resources: How can
parliaments ensure inclusive water access and availability?
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At the end of the Committee’s session,
Ms. F. Martonffy (consultant) updated the members on the
preparations underway for the next IPU Strategy.
(c)
Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights
The Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights held two sittings in the run-up to the
142nd IPU Assembly.
On 28 April, the Committee met to discuss the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on democracy and
human rights, and on the functioning of parliaments. On 18 May, the Committee held a preparatory
debate on the theme of the next resolution
Legislation worldwide to combat online sexual child
exploitation.
The Committee appointed a third co-Rapporteur for the resolution, Mr. P. Limjaroenrat
(Thailand), to join Ms. A. Gerkens (Netherlands) and Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), who had been appointed as
co-Rapporteurs at the 141st IPU Assembly.
At its last sitting on 18 May, the Committee elected a number of new members to the Bureau, on the
basis of the nominations from the geopolitical groups.
(d)
Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs
The Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs met on 27 and 29 April in two virtual sittings: the first
sitting was held in cooperation with the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development on the overall
theme of the Assembly, and at the second sitting the Committee members considered the implications
of the Declaration issued at the conclusion of the September 2020 High-level Meeting to Commemorate
the Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the United Nations (UN75).
On 27 April, 75 members of parliament participated in and at least 150 others observed the meeting.
Three key messages emerged: the post-COVID-19 recovery must lead to systemic changes; the green,
circular and care economies were key to sustainable development with health being the key to true
prosperity; the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted governance weaknesses and stark inequalities within
and between many nations. Vaccine access inequality affected all humans on the planet, not just those
in poor countries.
On 29 April, 45 members of parliament participated along with three prominent United Nations
ambassadors and a representative of the UN Secretary-General. The sitting included a live poll on key
elements of the UN75 Declaration
Our Common Agenda.
Multilateral approaches were needed to
respond to the pandemic and tackle pressing challenges such as climate change.
People’s trust in
governments and in the multilateral regime could only be restored by effectively addressing problems on
the ground.
6.
Conclusion of the Assembly
Concluding the second and final sitting of the Assembly on 27 May, the IPU President said that the
outcome document on the overall theme,
Overcoming the pandemic today and building a better
tomorrow: the role of parliaments
was clear in its call for parliamentarians to work towards a future
where no-one would be left behind. The document provided concrete evidence of the success of the
virtual Assembly despite the COVID-19 pandemic. Parliamentarians had been able to make the most of
the unique opportunity to discuss important issues, find solutions and reach a consensus on tangible
actions for the future.
Mr. Martin Chungong, Secretary General of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
summarized the content
of the outcome document, which he believed fully captured the deliberations of the interactive debate,
the Standing Committees, the Forum of Women Parliamentarians and the Forum of Young
Parliamentarians.
The Assembly unanimously endorsed the outcome document.
The Secretary General expressed his personal satisfaction with the way in which the virtual Assembly
had proceeded, which he believed had shown that the IPU had been able to adapt and successfully
transform itself in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He thanked the IPU President and all
participants for their contributions, which would be used to inform the ongoing revision of the IPU’s
five-year strategy.
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In his closing remarks, the President expressed his thanks to the Member Parliaments for approving the
special rules of procedure, without which it would not have been possible to hold the Assembly and its
related meetings in virtual form. The 142nd Assembly had been an important occasion for
parliamentarians to demonstrate to the world their tireless work in fighting against the COVID-19
pandemic, reinvigorating the economy and pushing their governments to take the right actions to build a
better future for all. Those efforts must continue and in the coming months they would be facilitated by
many more virtual meetings and events organized by the IPU. He hoped that as many delegations as
possible would be able to attend the in-person segment of the Fifth World Conference of Speakers of
Parliament in Vienna in September 2021.
A video message from
Mr. Wolfgang Sobotka, President of the Austrian National Council,
inviting
delegates to the in-person segment of the Fifth World Conference of Speakers of Parliament, was
shown.
Thanking all the participants again for their support and engagement, the IPU President declared the
142nd IPU Assembly closed.
207th session of the Governing Council
1.
Adoption of the Special Rules of Procedure for the virtual sessions of the
Assembly and Standing Committees
In January 2021, the Executive Committee established a Working Group to propose special rules of
procedure to regulate the conduct of virtual sessions of the Assembly and Standing Committees
(142nd Assembly as well as possible future Assemblies held in virtual format) based primarily on the
Special Rules of Procedure adopted for the virtual session of the Governing Council in November 2020.
The Special Rules of Procedure
prepared by the IPU Secretariat in collaboration with an independent
legal counsel, Professor G.L. Burci of the Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development
Studies
were subsequently approved by the Executive Committee in March 2021.
Following their approval, the Executive Committee submitted the Special Rules to the Member
Parliaments. By the specified deadline, no Member Parliament had expressed objections to the Special
Rules. Having concluded that there was overwhelming support for the Special Rules of Procedure, the
Executive Committee considered them adopted and submitted them to the Governing Council.
The Council therefore formally adopted the Special Rules of Procedure for the virtual sessions of the
Assembly and Standing Committees (see
page 56).
2.
Vision of the IPU President and report on his activities since the 206th session of
the Governing Council
The Governing Council took note of the activities of the new President, Mr. D. Pacheco, since his
election in November 2020 and his vision for the future.
The President stressed the necessity of working together as a basis for the successful implementation
of the activities of the IPU, and expressed his belief that inclusiveness was critical to that aim. The
geopolitical groups should therefore be further involved in the
IPU’s activities
so as to make the
Organization more inclusive, as all IPU Members and their contributions were equally important.
The President articulated his vision around the following points: consolidating the principles of good
governance; reinforcing the
IPU’s visibility and
status as an important actor in the international arena;
strengthening democratic principles and human rights in all geographical regions; consolidating gender
and youth equality in politics; and promoting universal membership of the IPU.
The President’s
activities
had been based on that vision, and included attendance at sixty-one meetings
and six official visits within the six months following his election in November 2020, despite the
restrictions resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. The President commended the conducive
environment put in place by the Secretary General and his team to support him in carrying out his
activities.
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Representatives of delegations then took the floor to concur with the President on the values his vision
conveyed and acknowledge his efforts to give new impetus to the Organization. They pledged support
to the implementation of his initiatives during his tenure as challenges were growing due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Members of the Governing Council invited him to share his vision with national
parliaments on the occasion of more regional visits.
On the recommendation of the Executive Committee, the Governing Council approved the creation of
the Cremer-Passy Prize. The prize was intended as an incentive and symbolic recognition for significant
actions by parliamentarians in favour of citizens.
3.
Annual Impact Report by the Secretary General on the activities of the IPU in 2020
The Governing Council took note of the
Annual Impact Report
by the Secretary General on the activities
of the IPU in 2020, a year of smooth transition that had witnessed the change of the IPU presidency and
the holding of numerous virtual meetings due to the restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Governing Council welcomed the specific tools developed by the Secretariat to tackle the
pandemic-related challenges that had particularly impacted several areas of interest. These included
the guidelines for addressing violence against women, which was growing during the pandemic; and a
guidance note for parliaments on human rights and COVID-19.
In the same vein, the Governing Council welcomed the
IPU’s
increasing efforts to promote dialogue,
which had proved relevant both to address global challenges and to find lasting solutions, especially for
a resilient post-COVID-19 era.
The Governing Council also endorsed several recommendations of the Executive Committee that had
already been submitted for approval through the written silence procedure. These included:
-
new Memorandums of Understanding with specialized agencies of the United Nations, namely
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR); the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR), and the Office of the UN Secretary-General’s
Special Representative
on Sexual
Violence in Conflict;
the terms of reference and modalities for the new IPU Working Group on Science and
Technology;
the Report of an independent consultant on a Comprehensive Transparency, Accountability and
Openness Strategy for the IPU, regarding which the Governing Council gave its green light to the
Secretary General to move ahead with the implementation of the main recommendations.
-
-
The Governing Council encouraged the ongoing efforts to promote cooperation between the IPU and
the United Nations, considered as two sides of the same coin, which helped to give a parliamentary
perspective to discussions on global issues.
The Governing Council was appraised of the progress of the roadmap for the update of the IPU
Strategy for 2022 to 2026. In light of the primary parliamentary commitment to defend citizens’ interests,
the Governing Council concurred that people should be put at the centre of the Strategy and that the
necessary arrangements should be made so that the Strategy would be ready for endorsement during
the next IPU Assembly in November 2021 as planned. Those
arrangements included parliamentarians’
contribution to the process through their responses to a recently issued survey.
The Governing Council was thankful to the Secretary General and his team for the valuable support
provided to the ongoing process.
The Governing Council acknowledged and commended the resilience shown by both the IPU and its
Secretariat despite the major constraints they had faced in 2020. It welcomed and encouraged the close
collaboration of the IPU President and the Secretary General, which was testimony of a healthy working
environment at the top of the Organization.
The Governing Council also paid tribute to the staff of the Secretariat for their tireless efforts to keep
business running especially during the difficult times of the pandemic.
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4.
Elections to the Executive Committee and other IPU bodies
The Governing Council conducted a number of elections during its 207th session.
Firstly, it elected Mr. Ali Rashed Al Noaymi (United Arab Emirates) of the Arab Group to the Executive
Committee for a four-year term ending in April 2025.
It then endorsed the nominations by the different geopolitical groups to the other bodies, as reflected in
document CL/207/6-R.1.
The Governing Council then proceeded with a series of votes for the election of the members of the
Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians and the Committee on Middle East Questions, for
which the members were elected in their individual capacity and in line with the usual gender
requirements.
The following members were elected to the:
(a)
Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians:
- Mr. S. Cogolati (Belgium)
- Mr. S. Spengemann (Canada)
- Mr. B. Mbuku Laka (Democratic Republic of Congo)
- Ms. L. Quartapelle (Italy)
- Ms. C. Urbano de Sousa (Portugal)
- Ms. C. Asiain Pereira (Uruguay)
Committee on Middle East Questions
- Mr. G. Migliore (Italy) and
- Ms. R. Kavakci Kan (Turkey), who was elected unopposed as the only woman MP among the
candidates.
(b)
5.
Financial results for 2020
The Governing Council considered the Financial Report and Audited Financial Statements for 2020.
The Financial Statements had been prepared in full compliance with the International Public Sector
Accounting Standards (IPSAS) and the accounts of the IPU and the closed Pension Fund were
consolidated into a single set of financial statements.
The financial results for 2020 were introduced by Ms. C. Widegren (Sweden), Chair of the
Sub-Committee on Finance. She reported that the new External Auditor had expressed to her that the
financial statements were accurate and that he had received constant support from the IPU finance
team. The audit was carried out remotely, offsite, due to travel restrictions. The auditors found the IPU
to be a healthy organization with strong internal controls. During the year under review, the net assets
had increased by CHF 1.7 million due to the COVID-19 pandemic having resulted in the cancellation
and postponement of in-person meetings. Investment performance had ended 2020 positively after a
difficult period and had continued to increase in 2021. At the end of 2020, the Working Capital Fund
stood at 96 per cent of its target level.
Voluntary contributions and related expenditure remained stable and new countries and partners were
now bringing their support to the IPU. The Chair of the Sub-Committee drew attention to the fact that
three quarters of the 2021 assessed contributions had already been paid and thanked Members for their
commitment despite the global crisis. Nevertheless, the number of Members in arrears of their assessed
contributions had increased, and twelve Members were currently at risk of potential suspension of their
IPU membership rights later in the year. All IPU bodies should work together in making every effort to
prevent this.
The Internal Auditor’s
report was presented by Mr. A. Gryffroy (Belgium). He conveyed his opinion that
the accounts gave a true and fair reflection of the financial situation of the IPU at 31 December 2020
and complied with all current standards and rules. The External Auditor had expressed no reservations
on the Financial Statements, noting the good quality of the financial statements and confirming that all
previous recommendations had been fully implemented. Two new recommendations were made, to
continue to tailor the IPU risk assessment framework to the COVID-19 environment, and to adapt the
format of Note 15 to mirror the budget document more closely. The overall result for the year 2020 was
to increase the reserves of the IPU. The financial management of the IPU had a strong foundation
based on internal controls and its financial position was healthy.
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The Secretary General supplemented these reports with a summary of the mobilization of voluntary
funds towards implementation of the IPU’s
Strategy.
The voluntary funding base was solid and new
partners were coming forward with support.
There were several comments from the floor, congratulating the Sub-Committee on Finance and the
Secretariat for the excellent results achieved and for the adherence to strong and effective financial
management. The commitment to transparency and accountability in
the IPU’s financial
processes was
very much appreciated.
The Governing Council approved the
Secretary General’s financial administration of the IPU and the
financial results for 2020.
6.
Questions relating to the IPU membership
The Governing Council was appraised of the ongoing efforts by the President and the Secretary
General to ensure universal IPU membership, including the return of the US Congress. However, it
noted that it was beholden on Member Parliaments and the geopolitical groups to take appropriate
action
namely drawing on their relationship with the leadership of the non-Member Parliaments
to
achieve an increase in membership. In this view, the Governing Council was grateful for the efforts of
Mr. N. Manzoor, Speaker of the National Assembly of Guyana, as well as the Secretariat of GRULAC
with regard to outreach to non-Member Parliaments in the Caribbean. It further welcomed both Australia
and New-Zealand’s support in encouraging the non-Member Parliaments in the Pacific to join the IPU.
In light of the exceptional circumstances that had prevented Mali and Zimbabwe from paying their
arrears, the Governing Council authorized their participation, with full rights, in the 142nd IPU Assembly.
The Council was appraised of the situation of certain parliaments and endorsed the related
recommendations made by the Executive Committee, as follows.
Regarding Yemen, the Governing Council endorsed the recommendation of the Executive Committee to
recognize the Parliament of Seiyun, as the representative of Yemen to the IPU, in line with the
recognition by the United Nations of the government with which that parliament was aligned. It
encouraged the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians to continue its review of the cases
of parliamentarians in Yemen. It instructed the Secretary General to support the parliament of Seiyun in
becoming a fully fledged parliament.
The Governing Council endorsed the recommendation by the Executive Committee to postpone any
decision on Venezuela’s membership to the next IPU Assembly, when it would be provided with a report
containing first-hand information gathered by an IPU mission to the country.
The Governing Council expressed its concern about the ongoing political situation in Myanmar. The
Governing Council endorsed the recommendation of the Executive Committee, to invite, in solidarity
with the people of Myanmar, the Committee Representing the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (Union Parliament)
as observer to the IPU Assembly. It requested the Secretary General of the IPU to continue monitoring
the situation.
The Governing Council endorsed the recommendation of the Executive Committee to remove Thailand
and Burundi from its list of countries of concern, in light of positive developments in those countries, but
recommended to continue working closely with and providing technical assistance to the two
parliaments concerned.
7.
Future inter-parliamentary meetings
The Council approved the list of future meetings and other activities
to be funded by the IPU’s regular
budget and by external sources (see
page 76).
The Council endorsed the recommendation of the Executive Committee, on the request of the
Parliament of Rwanda, to postpone the IPU Assembly due to be held in Kigali in November 2021 to
October 2022 in light of ongoing uncertainty with regard to holding the meeting in person due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In this view, the Governing Council asked the Secretary General of the IPU to
make alternative proposals for the holding of the 143rd Assembly in autumn 2021 as soon as possible.
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In line with ongoing uncertainty due to the pandemic, and considering the benefits of in-person
meetings, the Governing Council mandated the Secretary General to explore further the possibilities of
holding hybrid meetings.
The Governing Council endorsed the recommendation of the Executive Committee to hold the
144th Assembly in Indonesia on 20-24 March 2022.
8.
Reports of plenary bodies and specialized committees
The Governing Council took note of the reports on the activities of the
Forum of Women
Parliamentarians,
the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians, the
Committee on Middle
East Questions,
the
Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law
and the
Advisory Group on Health,
the
Forum of Young Parliamentarians of the IPU,
and the
High-Level
Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism (HLAG)
The Council endorsed the
statement on parliamentary action in support of ending statelessness
by the
Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law, the
statement on the occasion of
the 2021 United Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS
by the Advisory Group on Health, and the
statement on Yemen
by the Committee on Middle East Questions (page
54, 52
and
55).
The Council approved
eight decisions
concerning 152 parliamentarians submitted by the Committee on
the Human Rights of Parliamentarians. The Council noted the reservations of the delegations of Egypt,
Turkey and Zimbabwe concerning the cases in their respective countries, and the comments by
Palestine related to its cases.
285th session of the Executive Committee
1.
Debates and decisions
The Executive Committee held its 285th session virtually over seven sittings, on 18 and 22 January,
8 February, 22 March, 9 and 19 April, and 19-20 May 2021 respectively.
The President of the IPU chaired the meetings and the following members took part in at least one
sitting:
Mr. D. McGuinty (Canada), Mr. G. Gali Ngothé (Chad), Mr. J.P. Letelier (Chile), Mr. Chen Guomin
(China), Mr. R. Rabbani (Pakistan), Ms. A.D. Mergane Kanouté (Senegal), Mr. M. Grujic (Serbia),
Ms. C. Widegren (Sweden), Ms. L. Fehlmann Rielle (Switzerland), Ms. P. Krairiksh (Thailand),
Ms. E. Anyakun (Uganda), Ms. B. Argimón (Uruguay), Mr. A. Saidov (Uzbekistan), Mr. J.F.N. Mudenda
(Zimbabwe), Ms. S. Kihika (Kenya) in her capacity as President of the Bureau of Women
Parliamentarians, and Mr. M. Bouva (Suriname) in his capacity as President of the Board of the Forum
of Young Parliamentarians. Mr. A. Abdel Aal (Egypt) was absent.
The Secretary General attended all the sittings, assisted by staff members of the Secretariat where
relevant. Ms. F. Martonffy (Consultant for the IPU Strategy) attended the session on 19 April.
The Executive Committee took note of a report by the President on his vision for the IPU, in particular
his hopes that a virtual Assembly could be held in the first part of 2021, that the visibility of the IPU
could be improved, that links with the United Nations could be further strengthened and that the IPU
could reach universal membership.
Members of the Executive Committee concurred with and pledged their support for the
President’s
vision. They recommended that the IPU continue promoting and evolving its core values, including
peace, democracy, human rights, gender equality, youth empowerment, multilateralism and achieving
the SDGs. They suggested that the Secretariat come up with a programme of meetings for the
geopolitical groups and Standing Committees even if a full Assembly could not be held, as it was
important to engage parliamentarians locally and regionally with a view to promoting the work of the
IPU.
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The Executive Committee believed that, in light of
the President’s vision, the
IPU must adopt a people-
centred, cost-effective and results-oriented approach. In that view, they suggested that the IPU play a
leading role in: fighting the COVID-19 pandemic by mobilizing all resources towards a targeted,
science-based response and enhancing international solidarity and cooperation; promoting peace and
development; accommodating the needs of developing countries, especially African countries; and
turning the diversity of the world into a constant source of inspiration for human progress. The vision for
the Organization must be
worthy of the people’s trust,
with all stakeholders working together as a team.
The Executive Committee was briefed on plans for holding the 142nd Assembly in virtual format and
convened a working group to examine special rules of procedure for virtual sessions of the Assembly
and Standing Committees. The Executive Committee welcomed and further revised the proposals
presented by the Chair of the working group, Mr. Mudenda, Speaker of the Parliament of Zimbabwe.
The Executive Committee subsequently endorsed the special rules of procedure and recommended to
submit them to Member Parliaments for approval through the written silence procedure.
The Executive Committee approved a roadmap for the update of the IPU Strategy for 2022-2026 on
22 January and held an extensive discussion on 19 April with a view to gathering input into the process
from members.
The Executive Committee examined and approved a memorandum of understanding between the IPU
and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
The Executive Committee endorsed the proposed terms of reference for the Working Group on Science
and Technology.
The Executive Committee approved a proposal by the President to institute the Cremer-Passy Prize, to
be awarded annually to a parliamentarian or group of parliamentarians who had made an outstanding
contribution to the defence and promotion of the
IPU’s
objectives as well as those who had contributed
to a more united, fair, secure, sustainable and equitable world. The Executive Committee endorsed the
proposed rules and modalities for the prize and submitted them to the Governing Council.
The Executive Committee discussed the list of future inter-parliamentary meetings and took note of the
difficulties encountered with the organization of the 143rd Assembly in Kigali, Rwanda in
November 2021 due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The Executive Committee expressed its
desire for a hybrid Assembly to be held in autumn 2021 if the Kigali Assembly could not proceed as
planned.
The Executive Committee examined the Impact Report for 2020 and heard a report from the Secretary
General on the Organization’s activities. The Executive Committee congratulated the Secretary General
and the Secretariat on a successful year, particularly given the difficult circumstances of the pandemic.
2.
Questions relating to the IPU membership and the situation of certain parliaments
The Secretary General presented the note on the situation of universal membership as it currently
stood. The note was intended as a call for more robust action not only by the Executive Committee but
also by the Governing Council and the wider membership. Universal membership should not only exist
in terms of numbers but also in terms of quality, namely active participation in the
Organization’s
work.
The IPU had seen a substantial increase in its membership in recent years, growing from 155 to
179 Member Parliaments since 2010. The increase could be attributed to the fact that the IPU was
being considered more and more relevant by the global parliamentary community. Nevertheless, it was
important to further expand the membership and embrace the totality of parliaments around the world.
Out of the 193 Member States of the United Nations, the IPU was lacking 14. Among those were a few
small island developing States in the Pacific and the Caribbean, and two founding Members: Liberia and
the United States. The Executive Committee had discussed the situation of the US Congress at length,
stressing the importance of having such a key player in the IPU. Liberia had not been able to engage
with the IPU as a result of political instability. However, the IPU had been relentless in its efforts to get
the country back. It was hoped that certain actors in the Middle East could help with relations with the
Liberian Parliament.
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The Executive Committee took note of a number of encouraging actions undertaken in view of
supporting universal membership. These included the Parliamentary Solidarity Fund, established by the
IPU to support non-Member Parliaments that wished to attend IPU meetings. The IPU also organized
regular information seminars to which non-Member Parliaments were invited so that they could
familiarize themselves with the benefits of IPU membership.
The Executive Committee welcomed and encouraged the implementation of the list of general
recommendations in the note aimed at achieving universal membership. These included: putting
universal membership as a standard affair on the agenda of the President and the Secretary General;
organizing virtual consultations between the President, the Secretary General and the leadership of
those parliaments in arrears; establishing a programme of visits by the President and the Secretary
General, with support from the Executive Committee and the Governing Council; organizing specific
activities in the countries concerned, including capacity building programmes; and reviewing the
modalities of the Parliamentary Solidarity Fund to make it more agile and effective in promoting
universal membership.
The Executive Committee extensively discussed the situation in Venezuela over the course of its seven
sittings. On 9 April, the Executive Committee agreed to delay its decision on Venezuela’s
membership
of the IPU until a mission to the country could be carried out and the delegation had reported back on its
findings. On 19 April, the Executive Committee approved draft terms of reference for such a mission to
take place in May.
The Executive Committee subsequently agreed to report to the Governing Council that it had not been
possible to carry out the mission before the 142nd Assembly as initially planned, as it needed to be
prepared with great care, including in terms of determining the composition of the delegation and
identifying experts in elections to join the mission (discussions were under way in this regard with the
Kofi Annan Foundation). In the meantime, no delegation from Venezuela would attend the 142nd IPU
Assembly. The Governing Council was expected to receive the report of the IPU mission to Venezuela
at its 208th session in November 2021.
The Executive Committee discussed the situation in Myanmar and decided not to recommend the
suspension
of Myanmar’s membership in the
IPU, as this would intrinsically signify recognition of the
military coup of January 2021. The Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw (CRPH), which
included freely elected parliamentarians, would be invited to attend the 142nd Assembly as an observer.
The Executive Committee heard a report from the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians
(CHRP) on the various cases under consideration in Turkey, as well as a response from the Turkish
delegation to the IPU. The Executive Committee adopted a number of follow-up actions, namely to
continue to monitor the situation in Turkey closely, for the CHRP to pursue its efforts with regard to the
cases under consideration, and for Member Parliaments to raise the human rights cases in their
bilateral engagements or through other appropriate platforms.
The Executive Committee considered the situation in Yemen and agreed to recognize the House of
Representatives in Seiyun as the legitimate representative of Yemen to the IPU. The Executive
Committee also agreed on several follow-up actions, namely to encourage pluralistic participation by
Yemen in the IPU based on the 2003 parliamentary elections, to make efforts to facilitate a resolution to
the Yemeni conflict through parliamentary action, to raise the situation of Yemen and human rights
cases in bilateral engagements or through other appropriate platforms, and to encourage support for
humanitarian efforts in the country.
The Executive Committee further considered the situation of certain other parliaments that were not
functioning (Haiti and Sudan), that were experiencing a major political crisis (Chad, Libya and Mali) or
that were undergoing other political crises (Bolivia, Burundi, Cambodia, Guinea-Bissau, Kyrgyzstan,
Palestine, South Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic and Thailand). The Executive Committee agreed that the
situations in Burundi and Thailand had improved to the extent that they could now be removed from the
list of parliaments being monitored closely.
3.
Financial questions
The Executive Committee heard the report of Ms. C. Widegren, Chair of the Sub-Committee on
Finance, who recommended the 2020 financial statements and the external audit report to the
Executive Committee for its approval.
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Forum and Bureau of Women Parliamentarians
The Sub-Committee on Finance had met on 18 May 2021 to prepare and facilitate the Executive
Committee’s
consideration
of financial and budgetary matters. It had carefully examined all the financial
documents including the financial results, the External
Auditor’s report, the current
financial situation
and voluntary funding update. It had been pleased to note from the positive audit opinion and report
from the new External Auditor (the Comptroller and Auditor General of India) that the IPU’s
financial
situation was healthy, its internal controls were strong and the
IPU’s accounts were again
fully
IPSAS-compliant. Net assets had increased by CHF 1.7 million, with the operational surplus being
explained by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on travel, meeting and operating costs following the
cancellation or postponement of certain meetings during the year. Investment performance had ended
the year positively and the Working Capital Fund stood at 96 per cent of its target level. The Chair of the
Sub-Committee drew attention to the fact that the arrears of assessed contributions from Members were
higher than in previous years and asked the geopolitical groups to draw Members’
attention
to their
responsibility to pay their dues.
The Sub-Committee had noted the positive trends in mobilizing voluntary contributions. It looked
forward to its preparations for the 2022 budget once the pillars of the new Strategy had been defined by
the Executive Committee.
The Executive Committee thanked the Sub-Committee and the Secretariat for the work performed and
recommended that the Governing Council should approve the financial administration of the IPU and
the financial results for 2020.
4.
Questions relating to the Secretariat of the Inter-Parliamentary Union
The Executive Committee was informed of staff movements and promotions.
Forum and Bureau of Women Parliamentarians
The 31st session of the Forum of Women Parliamentarians was held virtually on 10 and 12 May 2021. It
brought together 78 participants, including 57 delegates from 34 countries. There were 53 women and
4 men among the parliamentarians who attended the Forum.
The President of the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians, Ms. S. Kihika (Kenya), presided over the
31st session of the Forum. The President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Mr. D. Pacheco, opened the
session and welcomed the participants.
By way of contributing to the General Debate of the Assembly on the overall theme
Overcoming the
pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments,
participants engaged in an
interactive discussion on the gendered dimensions of the COVID-19 pandemic and gender-responsive
recovery post-COVID-19. Participants called for the equal participation of women in decision-making
and urged parliaments to prioritize parliamentary actions that: included women
of marginalized groups
as well
in the design and implementation of pandemic relief and recovery economic policies; aimed at
the adoption of measures to reintegrate women in the labour market and addressed the gender pay
gap; ensured access to affordable childcare; promoted long-term investment in social protection
systems for all women, including those in the informal sector; and ensured prevention of violence
against women and girls and the provision of essential services to protect and support survivors.
The Forum also examined the two draft resolutions on the agenda of the 142nd Assembly and the
inclusion of a gender perspective in each of them. Ms. C. Roth (Germany), co-Rapporteur of the draft
resolution considered by the Standing Committee on Peace and International Security, gave a brief
overview of the draft resolution
Parliamentary strategies to strengthen peace and security against
threats and conflicts resulting from climate-related disasters and their consequences.
Ms. Kihika, on
behalf of the Bureau, further explained how a gender perspective was integrated in the resolution.
Ms. S. Dinică (Romania), co-Rapporteur of the draft resolution
Mainstreaming digitalization and the
circular economy to achieve the SDGs, particularly responsible consumption and production,
considered by the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development, briefed the participants on the
resolution. On behalf of the Bureau, Ms. H. Al-Helaissi (Saudi Arabia), gave an overview of how gender
was mainstreamed in the resolution. Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), co-Rapporteur of the Standing Committee
on Democracy and Human Rights, introduced the theme of that
Committee’s
next resolution entitled
Legislation worldwide to combat online sexual child exploitation
to be considered at the
143rd Assembly. Following a discussion on that theme, the Forum proposed to share their first
preliminary gender considerations with the co-Rapporteurs of the upcoming draft resolution.
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Forum and Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians
The Forum held a panel discussion titled
Generation Equality in and through parliaments.
The
discussion focused on the role of parliaments in achieving gender equality, with emphasis on the
empowerment and leadership of youth and adolescent girls. The exchange opened with presentations
by: Ms. L. Banerjee (Executive Coordinator of the Generation Equality Forum, UN Women),
Mr. H. Vasconcelos (Mexico), Ms. C. López Castro (Mexico), and Khesavi (Mauritius), a female youth
empowerment advocate. Participants addressed the IPU’s
role as co-leader
of
Generation Equality’s
Action Coalition on feminist movements and leadership, and how parliaments could promote gender
parity in politics and ensure the presence of diverse groups of young women leaders in all areas of
decision-making. Strategies to repeal discriminatory laws and push for new legislation that guaranteed
women’s rights and
gender equality, as well as to achieve gender-responsive budgeting and the
elimination of gender-based violence both in politics and in domestic life were also discussed.
The Forum elected representatives to fill half of the seats of regional representatives and other
vacancies on the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians. Since, due to the pandemic, elections had not
been held in 2020, the Forum decided to extend by one year the term of the regional representatives
whose terms were due to end in 2022 in keeping with the Rules of the Forum. The updated list of
members of the Bureau can be found on
page 64.
Following the
Bureau’s
proposal, the Forum also elected Ms. L. Vasylenko (Ukraine) to fill the post of
President, and Ms. H. Ramzy Fayez (Bahrain) to the post of First Vice-President of the Bureau of
Women Parliamentarians. The position of Second Vice-President remained vacant and would be filled
when the Bureau and Forum met again at the 143rd Assembly.
Forum and Board of the Forum
of Young Parliamentarians of the IPU
The Forum of Young Parliamentarians convened on 13 and 17 May 2021. The Forum was presided by
the President of the Forum Mr. M. Bouva (Suriname). It brought together 46 participants, including
40 delegates from 24 countries. There were 20 women and 20 men among the young parliamentarians
who attended the Forum.
Marking the beginning of a new chapter in the advancement of youth participation and in the
implementation of the 2010 IPU resolution
Youth participation in the democratic process,
the Forum
launched the fourth IPU report entitled
Youth participation in national parliaments
and the IPU campaign
I Say Yes to Youth in Parliament!
The participants stressed that young people were a key part of any democracy and that it was their right
to be included in political decision-making. They praised the role that young people were playing in
supporting the elderly and other vulnerable groups and countering disinformation during the COVID-19
pandemic in addition to promoting democracy, climate action and combatting racism and exclusion.
They considered the Outcome document of the Seventh Global Conference of Young Parliamentarians,
held on 28 and 29 April 2021, and agreed to have it as the contribution from a youth perspective to the
142nd IPU Assembly. Further, they stressed the importance of stepping up investments in sectors that
impacted youth empowerment and rallied behind the central participation of young men and women in
decisions both during the pandemic and in its aftermath.
The Forum approved the nominations made by the geopolitical groups for membership of the Board of
the Forum of Young Parliamentarians for the period 2021–2023 and the election by the new Board of
Ms. S. Albazar (Egypt) as the new President of the Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians.
In preparation for the 143rd IPU Assembly, the Forum appointed Mr. U. Lechte (Germany) to prepare a
youth overview report, with the aim of contributing a youth perspective to the draft resolution to be
considered by the Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights entitled
Legislation worldwide
to combat online sexual child exploitation.
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Subsidiary bodies of the Governing Council
The Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians convened on 10 March, 6 May and 14 May 2021.It
considered means to keep outgoing members of the Board involved in its work and agreed to propose a
revision of the definition
of “young
parliamentarian”
by reducing the age limit currently
applied.
Subsidiary bodies of the Governing Council
1.
Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians
The Committee held its 165th session in virtual format on 6, 7, 10 and 11 May for four sittings of three
hours each. The Committee continued its exchanges in writing until 21 May, the day on which it adopted
its decisions.
Mr. N. Bako-Arifari (Benin), President, Ms. A. Reynoso (Mexico), Vice-President, Mr. A.A. Alaradi
(Bahrain), Ms. L. Dumont (France) and Mr. A. Caroni (Switzerland) took part in the Committee’s
165th session.
At its session, the Committee examined the situation of 170 parliamentarians (158 men and 12 women)
in 13 countries, of which 4 concerned new complaints affecting 22 parliamentarians. The Committee
also held five hearings with authorities, complainants and other interested parties.
The Committee submitted decisions to the Governing Council for adoption concerning
152 parliamentarians from the following countries: Egypt, Libya, Myanmar, Philippines, Turkey, Yemen
and Zimbabwe.
2.
Committee on Middle East Questions
The Committee held two virtual sittings, on 14 April and 10 May 2021. The Committee’s
President,
Ms. S. Ataullahjan (Canada), Ms. F. Benbadis (Algeria), Mr. H. Julien-Laferrière (France),
Mr. A. Al-Ahmad (Palestine), Ms. H. Martins (Portugal), Mr. L. Wehrli (Switzerland) attended both
sittings. Mr. A.A. Jama (Somalia) attended the 14 April sitting. Ms. I. Al Madhy (Iraq) and Mr. A. Dichter
(Israel) attended the sitting on 10 May. Also present at the sittings were Mr. M. Chungong (IPU
Secretary General), Mr. M. Omar (Senior Advisor to the IPU Secretary General), Ms. J. Vanian (IPU
Peace and Security Consultant), and Ms. M. Hermes (IPU CT/VE and Peace and Security Team).
The Committee members examined the situation in the region, with a focus on developments in Libya,
Palestine, and Yemen, as well as on the peace and normalization agreements for the region. The IPU
Secretariat provided an overview of the communications it had received regarding the situation in the
region and on how the IPU had responded to them.
The Committee noted that the humanitarian situation in Yemen was dire and expressed its support for a
political solution under United Nations auspices. The Committee emphasized that the IPU must give
priority to promoting access to humanitarian assistance in Yemen, expressing its concern about food
insecurity in particular. The Committee condemned the continued sale of weapons by many countries to
the parties in conflict.
With regard to Yemen’s representation
in the IPU, the Committee recommended
that the IPU governing bodies consider recognizing the House of Representatives in Seiyun led by
Mr. S. Al-Burkani. It emphasized the need for inclusiveness and involvement of all parliamentarians
elected in 2003 in the country’s
parliamentary processes.
The Committee agreed to submit a statement
regarding the situation in Yemen for endorsement by the Governing Council.
The Committee welcomed the recent political agreements in Libya and encouraged the implementation
of those agreements, as well as the carrying out of the elections announced for 24 December 2021. It
condemned foreign interference in the conflict and called for the removal of foreign terrorist fighters. The
Committee encouraged all stakeholders to work together and come to a common understanding on a
way forward. It also expressed concern about Ms. S. Sergiwa, a parliamentarian who had been
abducted from her home in July 2019, and encouraged the relevant parties to shed light on this case.
The Committee encouraged the House of Representatives in Tobruk to continue engaging with the IPU.
The Committee welcomed the peace and normalization agreements which Israel had signed with
Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, and the United Arab Emirates, while noting that it was important for all peace
to be inclusive and that the fate of Palestine should not be ignored while fences were being mended
with other countries in the region. The Committee encouraged the parties concerned to work towards
comprehensive and sustainable peace, and welcomed the desire expressed by Committee members for
peace in the region.
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Subsidiary bodies of the Governing Council
On 14 April, the Committee heard an update on the parliamentary elections in Palestine which had been
scheduled for 22 May 2021. It welcomed the elections, hoping that they would run smoothly and in
keeping with free and equitable electoral standards. The IPU had been invited by the Palestinian
Central Elections Commission to observe the elections. The Committee agreed that the IPU should
invite its Member Parliaments to do so in their individual capacity. The IPU Secretary General had thus
written to all IPU Member Parliaments informing them of the elections and encouraging them to observe
the elections in their individual capacities.
On 10 May, the Committee noted that the elections had been postponed and highlighted that the
elections were needed for the legitimate representation of the people of Palestine. It reiterated its hope
that the elections would take place under free and fair conditions. The Committee agreed that Palestine
was entitled to full statehood within the territories agreed by international resolutions. It also expressed
its deep concern over the recent alarming escalation of violence and tensions in East Jerusalem, and
agreed to produce a statement regarding those recent developments. Both the Israeli and Palestinian
Committee members objected to the violence. The Committee stressed the need for restraint and
dialogue.
3.
Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law
The Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law (the Committee) met on 16 April
2021. The meeting was chaired by the Committee’s
President,
Ms. A. Vadai (Hungary).
The Committee pursued the discussions held at its preceding sitting on 2 October 2020 on the impact of
the COVID-19 pandemic on refugees, stateless persons and people fleeing conflict. It heard updates
from the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The pandemic had turned into a pandemic of hunger, caused an
increase in the number of cases of forced marriages, a historic rise in school dropouts within the
refugee communities and more intense stigmatization of refugees. The year 2020 had also seen the
lowest number of refugee resettlements. The question of access to testing and vaccination remained a
priority in 2021. Furthermore, measures to mitigate the impact of the pandemic needed to place special
attention on stateless people. That included affording them full access to health services, such as
COVID-19 testing and treatment, without requiring proof of legal status or identity, and access to
services without fear and risk of being arrested or detained. Finally, in order to avoid further
instances of statelessness,
registration of births should be maintained as an “essential” service.
Challenging conditions also applied to people fleeing conflict or living in conflict situations. Access to
services, including health services, remained difficult, especially in regions dominated by non-State
armed groups, who would also have to facilitate access to health services. The Committee decided to
continue to monitor the situation and would support parliaments in taking the mentioned considerations
into account in their daily work and efforts to rebuild societies post-pandemic.
The Committee was briefed on recent developments in combatting statelessness. It noted that several
countries had revised their legal frameworks to address discrimination in nationality laws. The
Committee agreed to pursue awareness raising efforts and encouraged its regional representatives to
open a debate within their geopolitical groups and take the lead in hosting (with the support of the IPU
and UNHCR) regional webinars on the issue.
The Committee furthermore noted that 2021 was a key year as it marked the sixtieth anniversary of the
1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness. The Committee adopted a statement to that effect
(see
page 54)
which was endorsed by the Governing Council.
Follow up to the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR) and Global Refugee Forum (GRF) were also
discussed. The IPU Members were invited to follow up on pledges made by their countries (see:
https://globalcompactrefugees.org/index.php/).
The Committee decided to carry out a survey of the IPU
Members to identify good parliamentary practices in following up on the GRF pledges.
With regard to implementation of international humanitarian law (IHL), the Committee agreed to focus
efforts in 2021 and 2022 on ratifying and implementing the Additional Protocols to the Geneva
Conventions in view of the celebration of their 45th anniversary in 2022. That would entail developing a
mobilization and awareness-raising campaign, in cooperation with the ICRC.
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Subsidiary bodies of the Governing Council
With regard to immediate initiatives, the Committee agreed to organize a panel discussion on the
Ottawa Convention on Anti-Personnel Mines, as well as a discussion on humanitarian impacts of
conflicts.
Committee members re-elected Ms. A. Vadai (Hungary) as its Chair for another term ending
March 2022. Ms. Vadai had been elected as Chair in March 2019. In view of the exceptional
circumstances linked to the pandemic and the impossibility to meet during the past year, Committee
members agreed to consider the 2019-2021 period as the Chair’s
first
mandate. The Committee also
noted the absence of participation in its meetings of the regional representative from Mexico for more
than three times in a row. It agreed not to immediately suspend her membership, as allowed for by the
rules, pending feedback from the member concerned, on challenges faced regarding participation.
4.
Advisory Group on Health
The IPU Advisory Group on Health met on 28 April with 8 out of 11 members in attendance. Technical
partners from the World Health Organization (WHO), the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child
Health (PMNCH), UNAIDS, and the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria were also
present.
As focal point for parliamentary accountability, the Advisory Group discussed the implementation of the
IPU resolution on universal health coverage (UHC). The Group agreed on the importance of UHC in the
context of the COVID-19 pandemic and praised the efforts of the IPU Secretariat to raise the visibility of
that key health issue. More data were needed on the impact of the pandemic on health budgeting and
the protection of the right to health in legislation and in practice. The social determinants of health also
needed to be taken into account to invest in health prevention. The Group’s
discussion
would inform the
2021 report
on the resolution’s implementation.
Referring to the United Nations High-level Meeting on HIV/AIDS to be held from 8 to 10 June 2021, the
Advisory Group reiterated the importance of keeping HIV/AIDS high on political agendas. As a
parliamentary contribution to the High-level Meeting, the Group adopted a statement calling on
parliaments to use their powers to ensure prevention and access to HIV and health services without
discrimination. The statement was presented to the IPU Governing Council and would be transmitted to
the High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS.
The Advisory Group noted that the IPU health activities continued promoting and facilitating
parliamentary
action on global health security, UHC, and women’s, children’s
and adolescents’
health
during the COVID-19 pandemic. Group members were also active in their parliaments in the COVID-19
response and in ensuring that other health priorities were not sidelined.
The Advisory Group unanimously approved an extension of mandate for a period of one year for its
Chair, Ms. G. Katuta Mwelwa (Zambia), and Vice-Chair, Mr. J.I. Echániz (Spain).
5.
High-Level Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism
(HLAG)
The HLAG held the following three sittings: (in-person) fifth sitting on 16 and 17 January 2020, (virtual)
sixth sitting on 16 June 2020, and (virtual) seventh sitting on 17
May 2021. The HLAG’s
Chairperson
Mr. R. Lopatka (Austria), the Vice-Chairperson Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), Mr. Chen Fuli (China),
Ms. A. Vadai (Hungary), Mr. G. Migliore (Italy), and Ms. S.J. Marri (Pakistan) attended all three sittings.
Mr. S. Chiheb (Algeria), Ms. A. Karapetyan (Armenia), Mr. A. Abdel Aal (Egypt), Mr. J.F. Merino (El
Salvador), Ms. A. Husin (Malaysia), and Ms. I. Passada (Uruguay), attended the fifth sitting. Mr. R. del
Picchia (France) attended the fifth and sixth sittings and was represented by Mr. L. Vance at the
seventh sitting. Mr. O. Tinni (Niger) attended the fifth and sixth sittings. Mr. M. Fawzy representing
Mr. A. Abdel Aal (Egypt) attended the sixth sitting. Mr. V. Suárez Díaz (Dominican Republic) attended
the seventh sitting.
HLAG members stressed the importance of addressing the situation in the Sahel region, as well as the
importance of supporting the victims of terrorism. Members reviewed the IPU Secretariat’s
work
including on: progress made in the development of products to be launched, activities regarding victims
of terrorism, the protection of the internet, and cooperation with regional parliaments.
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Elections and appointments
Members emphasized the importance of raising awareness about the situation in the Sahel both
nationally and internationally. They decided to hold a parliamentary meeting for the G5 Sahel countries
and their international partners and approved the proposal to provide capacity-building for that region. It
was agreed to recommend to the IPU governing bodies that the IPU adopt a resolution recommending
that parliaments request the executive branches of their governments to lobby the United Nations to
increase their financial support to the G5 Sahel Joint Force. Members also recommended to the IPU
governing bodies to include in the Fifth World Conference of Speakers of Parliament (5WCSP)
declaration a paragraph calling upon the United Nations to make the fight against terrorism a higher
priority, in particular in the Sahel, and to underline the need to defend the victims of terrorism. Members
also reviewed work done within the framework of the IPU-UN Joint Programme on countering terrorism
and violent extremism on the model legislative provisions for victims of terrorism. Members were also
informed of consultations that the IPU Secretariat had had with the Arab Parliament on holding activities
with the G5 Sahel countries to strengthen relations on issues relating to counter terrorism.
Members reviewed three projects presented by the IPU Secretariat that were under way: the Global
Parliamentary Network, the interactive map, and the mobile application for parliamentarians. HLAG
members agreed that the use of such tools had positive aspects, such as accessing shared
documentation. The products were being developed with funding from
the National People’s Congress
of China. Collaboration was also envisaged with GRULAC to produce the aforementioned tools in
Spanish, and with the Arab Parliament to produce the tools in Arabic, to further ensure robust security of
the mobile application and interactive map, and to provide chat and video conference features for users.
HLAG members agreed on the importance of holding the First Global Parliamentary Summit on
Counter-Terrorism immediately following the 5WCSP. The Summit had been approved by the IPU
governing bodies in the context of the
HLAG’s
work programme and had been endorsed by the 5WCSP
Preparatory Committee. The IPU Secretariat informed the members that during the Summit the
Secretariat would launch the tools mentioned above
the model legislative provisions for victims of
terrorism, the mobile application, the Global Parliamentary Network, and the interactive map.
HLAG members reaffirmed
the Group’s founding
terms of reference, endorsed by the Governing
Council, as the global parliamentary focal point for counter-terrorism related parliamentary activities.
Members stressed that there was a need for better coordination between the IPU, United Nations Office
on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), and United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT) as
parliamentarians lacked clarity on the mandate of UNODC and UNOCT. The IPU Secretariat reported
on consultations it had been carrying out with the Arab Parliament on a broader cooperation agreement
which would include other fields of cooperation, in addition to activities in countering terrorism (CT) and
preventing violent extremism (PVE).
Members were informed that the IPU-UN Joint Programme on CT/VE, which had been launched two
and half years ago, would end in June 2021. The IPU Secretariat informed the members that the IPU
had not received any direct financial support from the UN for any of its activities. Nevertheless, technical
cooperation between the United Nations and the IPU would continue where necessary, and the
continuation of CT/VE activities would be ensured.
Elections and appointments
1.
Executive Committee
The Governing Council elected the following member to the Executive Committee:
Arab Group
Mr. A.R. Al Noaymi (United Arab Emirates)
2.
-
-
-
-
-
Vice-Presidents of the Executive Committee
Mr. D. McGuinty (Canada)
Ms. A.D. Mergane Kanouté (Senegal)
Mr. A.R. Al Noaymi (United Arab Emirates)
Ms. B. Argimón (Uruguay)
Mr. A. Saidov (Uzbekistan)
The following members of the Executive Committee were designated as IPU Vice-Presidents:
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Elections and appointments
The IPU Vice-President representing the Asia-Pacific Group, as well as the Vice-President of the
Executive Committee, will be elected at the next sitting of the Executive Committee.
3.
Sub-Committee on Finance
Mr. A.R. Al Noaymi (United Arab Emirates) was elected to the Sub-Committee on Finance representing
the Arab Group. The mandate of Ms. A.D. Mergane Kanouté (Senegal) was renewed for a further two
years until the end of her term on the Executive Committee.
4.
Bureau of Women Parliamentarians
The Forum of Women Parliamentarians elected Ms. L. Vasylenko (Ukraine) as its President and
Ms. H. Ramzy Fayez (Bahrain) as its First Vice-President for a term ending in April 2023. The post of
Second Vice-President remains vacant.
The new composition of the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians, which includes the new members
nominated by the Geopolitical Groups with a term that ends in April 2025, is as follows:
African Group
Ms. S.W. Kihika (Kenya)
April 2023
Ms. O. Sanogo (Mali)
[to fill a vacant position which has a term ending in April 2023]
Ms. M. Baba Moussa Soumanou (Benin)
April 2025
Ms. N. Bujela (Eswatini)
April 2025
Arab Group
Ms. M. Mohammed Saleh (Syrian Arab Republic)
[to fill a vacant position which has a term
ending in April 2023]
Ms. M.S. Al Suwaidi (United Arab Emirates)
[to fill a vacant position which has a term ending in
April 2023]
Ms. H. Ramzy Fayez (Bahrain)
April 2025
Ms. A. Nassif Ayyoub (Egypt)
April 2025
Asia-Pacific Group
Ms. P. Maadam (India)
April 2023
Vacancy
Ms. P.A. Komarudin (Indonesia)
April 2025
Ms. E. Azad (Islamic Republic of Iran)
April 2025
Eurasia Group
Ms. Z. Greceanîi (Republic of Moldova)
April 2023
Ms. E. Vtorygina (Russian Federation)
April 2023
Ms. M. Vasilevich (Belarus)
April 2025
Ms. E. Afanasieva (Russian Federation)
April 2025
Group of Latin American and the Caribbean
Ms. C. Mix (Chile)
[to fill a vacant position which has a term ending in April 2023]
Ms. V. Persaud (Guyana)
[to fill a vacant position which has a term ending in April 2023]
Ms. A.F. Sagasti (Argentina)
April 2025
Ms. W.P. Andrade Muñoz (Ecuador)
April 2025
Twelve Plus Group
Ms. L. Wall (New Zealand)
[to fill a vacant position which has a term ending in April 2023]
Ms. L. Vasylenko (Ukraine) - April 2023
Ms. V. Riotton (France)
April 2025
Ms. M. Grande (Italy)
April 2025
Members of the Executive Committee
(ex officio, for the duration of their term on the Executive
Committee)
Ms. L. Fehlmann Rielle (Switzerland)
October 2021
Ms. A.D. Mergane Kanouté (Senegal)
April 2023
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Elections and appointments
Ms. C. Widegren (Sweden)
October 2023
Ms. P. Krairiksh (Thailand)
October 2023
Ms. E. Anyakun (Uganda)
October 2023
Ms. B. Argimón (Uruguay)
October 2024
5.
Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians
The Forum elected the following members to its Board for a two-year term ending in April 2023.
Ms. S. Albazar (Egypt) has been elected President of the Board.
African Group
Mr. R. Miarintsoa Andriantsitonta (Madagascar)
Ms. T. Jutton (Mauritius)
Arab Group
Ms. S. Albazar (Egypt)
Mr. A. Al-Kattan (Kuwait)
Asia-Pacific Group
Ms. R. Nikhil Khadse (India)
Mr. I. Sereewatthanawut (Thailand)
Eurasia Group
Ms. M. Vasilevich (Belarus)
Mr. A. Aslonov (Uzbekistan)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Ms. S. Browne (Guyana)
Mr. P.P. Kemper Thiede (Paraguay)
Twelve Plus Group
Mr. U. Lechte (Germany)
Ms. O. Rudenko (Ukraine)
6.
Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians
The Governing Council elected the following members for a five-year term ending in April 2026 (see
results on
page 61):
Mr. S. Cogolati (Belgium)
Mr. S. Spengemann (Canada)
Mr. B. Mbuku Laka (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Ms. L. Quartapelle (Italy)
Ms. C. Urbano de Sousa (Portugal)
Ms. C. Asiain Pereira (Uruguay)
7.
Committee on Middle East Questions
The Governing Council elected the following members for a four-year term ending in April 2025 (see
results on
page 62):
Mr. G. Migliore (Italy)
Ms. R. Kavakci Kan (Turkey)
8.
Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law
The Governing Council elected
four members.
The Geopolitical Groups have nominated the following
members for a four-year term ending in April 2025.
African Group
Mr. J. Kiarie (Kenya)
Arab Group
Mr. A. Al-Salihi (Iraq)
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Elections and appointments
Asia-Pacific Group
Ms. D. O'Neill (Australia)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. G. Asiskumar (Suriname)
9.
High-Level Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism
(HLAG)
The Governing Council elected
six members, with one vacancy remaining.
The Geopolitical Groups
have nominated the following members for a four-year term ending in April 2025.
African Group
Mr. A. Aly (Mali)
Ms. H.N. Murangwa (Rwanda)
Arab Group
Ms. F. Zainal (Bahrain)
Asia-Pacific Group
Mr. A. Suwanmongkol (Thailand)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. J. Gandini (Uruguay)
Vacancy
Twelve Plus Group
Ms. J. Gapany (Switzerland)
10.
Working Group on Science and Technology
The Governing Council elected
21 members.
The Geopolitical Groups have nominated the following
members for a four-year term ending in April 2025.
African Group
Mr. F. Tchaou (Benin)
Ms. S. Kasanga (Kenya)
Mr. R.B.O. Tovondray (Madagascar)
Mr. A. Ramdhany (Mauritius)
Ms. A. Muzana (Rwanda)
Arab Group
Mr. A. Althawadi (Bahrain)
Ms. S. Attia (Egypt)
Asia-Pacific Group
Ms. Tong Yi (China)
Ms. H. Vijaykumar Gavit (India)
Mr. C. Wong (Malaysia)
Mr. K. Wongtrangan (Thailand)
Eurasia Group
Mr. V. Bologan (Republic of Moldova)
Ms. L. Gumerova (Russian Federation)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. F. Ollisco Barrero (Bolivia)
Ms. R.A. Campain Brambilla (Ecuador)
Mr. M. Bouva (Suriname)
Twelve Plus Group
Mr. M. Larive (France)
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Elections and appointments
Mr. D. Naughten (Ireland)
Ms. P. Geerdink (Netherlands)
Ms. S. Dinică (Romania)
Mr. T. Hurter (Switzerland)
11.
Bureaus of the Standing Committees
Standing Committee on Peace and International Security
The Standing Committee elected
six members.
The Geopolitical Groups have nominated the following
members for a two-year term (renewable) ending in April 2023. A vacancy remains for a representative
from the Group of Latin America and the Caribbean.
African Group
Mr. A. Kharchi (Algeria)
Arab Group
Mr. D. El Idrissi (Morocco)
Asia-Pacific Group
Mr. B. Mahtab (India)
Ms. A.Y. Paris (Indonesia)
Mr. A. Naderi (Islamic Republic of Iran)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. J. Taiana (Argentina)
Vacancy
Arab Group
Ms. S. Falaknaz (United Arab Emirates) will replace Ms. A. Al Jassim (United Arab
Emirates) to complete the term which will end in April 2022.
Eurasia Group
Mr. S. Rachkov (Belarus) will replace Mr. S. Rahmanov (Belarus) to complete the term
which will end in April 2022.
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. R.M. García (Chile) will replace Mr. J.C. Mahía (Uruguay).
Standing Committee on Sustainable Development
The Standing Committee elected
ten members.
The Geopolitical Groups have nominated the following
members for a two-year term (renewable) ending in April 2023.
African Group
Ms. J. Naisula Lesuuda (Kenya)
Mr. P. Gervais Assirvaden (Mauritius)
Mr. W. William (Seychelles)
Arab Group
Ms. I. Ezzedine (Lebanon)
Asia-Pacific Group
Mr. V.D. Ram (India)
Eurasia Group
Ms. M. Baratova (Uzbekistan)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. C.P. Muñoz López (Ecuador)
Ms. S. Parag (Guyana)
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Elections and appointments
Twelve Plus Group
Ms. M. McPhedran (Canada)
Mr. F. Notari (Monaco)
Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights
The Standing Committee elected
six new members
representing the following Geopolitical Groups for
a two-year term (renewable) ending in April 2023. Vacancies remain for representatives from the Asia-
Pacific and Eurasia Groups.
African Group
Mr. E. Uwizeyimana (Rwanda)
Vacancy
Asia-Pacific Group
Mr. F. Zon (Indonesia)
Ms. J. Mahmood (Maldives)
Eurasia Group
Mr. N. Tilavoldiev (Uzbekistan)
Vacancy
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Ms. S. Nane (Uruguay)
Twelve Plus Group
Mr. D. Larsson (Sweden)
Arab Group
Mr. D. Al Hamad (Qatar) will replace Mr. Y. Al-Khater (Qatar) to complete the term which
will end in April 2022.
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. G. Boric (Chile) will replace Mr. M. Texeira (Venezuela)
Ms. S. Sapag (Argentina) will replace Ms. L. Crexell (Argentina) to complete the term which
will end in April 2023.
Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs
The Standing Committee elected
eight members.
The Geopolitical Groups have nominated the
following members for a two-year term (renewable) ending in April 2023.
African Group
Ms. S. Abdi Noor (Kenya)
Arab Group
Ms. E. Al Maksossi (Iraq)
Mr. M.T. Bani Yassin (Jordan)
Mr. A. Al-Hamad (Kuwait)
Asia-Pacific Group
Ms. D. Kumari (India)
Eurasia Group
Mr. A. Savinykh (Belarus)
Group of Latin America and the Caribbean
Mr. A. Lins (Brazil)
Ms. K.M. González Villanueva (Paraguay)
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Media and communications
12.
Rapporteurs to the 144th Assembly
The Standing Committee on Peace and International Security appointed Ms. C. Widegren (Sweden) as
Rapporteur for the subject item entitled
Rethinking and reframing the approach to peace processes with
a view to fostering lasting peace.
It mandated the IPU President to conduct consultations to identify a
second rapporteur.
The Standing Committee on Sustainable Development appointed Ms. H. Järvinen (Finland) and
Mr. S. Patra (India) as co-Rapporteurs for the subject item entitled
Leveraging Information and
Communication Technology as an enabler for the education sector, including in times of pandemic.
Media and communications
The 142nd virtual IPU Assembly saw solid engagement from participants and parliaments around the
world. However, due to the virtual nature of the Assembly, there was less interaction from Members and
less media interest than in an in-person meeting.
Live streaming and video
In the lead up to the Assembly, the IPU encouraged Member Parliaments to send video contributions on
the Assembly theme for promotional purposes on YouTube and social media. The IPU communications
team received 33
video interventions
from delegations
most of them messages although some were
also used by Member Parliaments to make political statements. Preliminary figures show that the
playlist was viewed over 1,000 times in the space of two weeks and generated good engagement on
social media.
The general debate of the Assembly was live-streamed on the IPU website on 26 and 27 May.
Hundreds of people were thus able to follow the proceedings including the interactive debate between
keynote speakers Ms. H. Clark (former Prime Minister of New Zealand and UNDP Administrator),
Ms. A. Gupta (Deputy CEO of GAVI) and Mr. J. Sundaram (former UN Assistant Secretary General for
Economic and Social Affairs) which generated the most views.
Recordings of the meetings of the Standing Committees were also posted on YouTube as were the
opening session and interactive debate of the Assembly.
During the Assembly, to break up the speeches and interventions, 1-minute videos produced by IPU
Communications
on some of the IPU’s key themes
(gender equality, youth empowerment and human
rights) were shown thus raising awareness of other
areas of the IPU’s work.
Social media
IPU Communications produced a sustained social media campaign
over April and May to support the Assembly. The campaign involved
multiple posts every day, in English and in French, on key messages
and themes of the Assembly. Posts on the elections of new MPs to
the IPU’s
various governing bodies did particularly well.
The communications team also used the opportunity of the Assembly
to launch the
2020 IPU Impact Report.
Parliamentarians from over twenty countries shared content on social
media platforms promoting the Assembly. The event hashtag
#IPU142
featured prominently.
In the two weeks before the Assembly,
@IPUParliament
gained
216 new followers on Twitter. Tweets earned 309K impressions over
that period. Posts promoting the event pushed 350 people through to
the Assembly website and were shared by over 330 followers.
Assembly content was liked by more than 600 accounts, with
engagement levels peaking between 25 and 27 May.
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Media and communications
LinkedIn
posts promoting the Assembly accumulated 3,200 impressions across the platform with an
average engagement rate of 8 per cent. Solid engagement on
Instagram
and
Facebook
was also
generated with multiple posts and stories.
Website
In the month leading up to the Assembly, 36,048 users accessed the
IPU website
with 134,000 page
views. That included 33,000 new users to ipu.org. On average, users spent just under three minutes
exploring the content.
Media and general outreach
Two press releases during the Assembly were issued
one for the closure and one on the human rights
cases examined by the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians. The press releases were
sent to
IPU’s
database of over 1,000 media outlets around the world in Arabic, English, French and
Spanish. The press releases generated some limited media attention around the world.
In the weeks leading up to the Assembly, IPU Communications issued a news flash in English and
French which was sent to over 7,000 subscribers to encourage registration. At the end of the Assembly,
a news flash in English and in French was also issued to report on the conclusions of the Assembly.
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Members
Membership of the Inter-Parliamentary Union*
Members (179)
Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan,
Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belarus, Belgium, Benin, Bhutan, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Cambodia, Cameroon,
Canada, Central African Republic, Chad, Chile, China, Colombia, Comoros, Congo, Costa Rica, Côte
d'Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Denmark, Djibouti, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Equatorial
Guinea, Estonia, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Fiji, Finland, France, Gabon, the Gambia, Georgia, Germany,
Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras
**
, Hungary, Iceland,
India, Indonesia, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Libya,
Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Marshall
Islands, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mexico, Micronesia (Federated States of), Monaco, Mongolia,
Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Myanmar, Namibia, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua,
Niger, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Palau, Palestine, Panama, Papua New
Guinea*, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Republic of Moldova,
Romania, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, San
Marino, Sao Tome and Principe, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore,
Slovakia, Slovenia, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Sweden,
Switzerland, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Togo, Tonga, Trinidad and
Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United
Kingdom, United Republic of Tanzania, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu, Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic
of), Viet Nam, Yemen, Zambia and Zimbabwe
Associate Members (13)
Andean Parliament, Arab Parliament, Central American Parliament (PARLACEN), East African
Legislative Assembly (EALA), European Parliament, Interparliamentary Assembly of Member Nations of
the Commonwealth of Independent States (IPA CIS), Inter-Parliamentary Committee of the West
African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU), Latin American and Caribbean Parliament
(PARLATINO), Parliament of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Parliament
of the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC), Parliamentary Assembly of the
Black Sea Economic Cooperation (PABSEC), Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE)
and Parliamentary Assembly of La Francophonie (APF)
*
**
As at the close of the 142nd Assembly.
Non-participating Members (all rights suspended)
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
Agenda, resolutions and other texts
of the 142nd Assembly
1.
2.
General Debate on the theme
Overcoming the pandemic today and building a better tomorrow:
the role of parliaments
Parliamentary strategies to strengthen peace and security against threats and conflicts resulting
from climate-related disasters and their consequences
(Standing Committee on Peace and International Security)
Mainstreaming digitalization and the circular economy to achieve the SDGs, particularly
responsible consumption and production
(Standing Committee on Sustainable Development)
Reports of the Standing Committees
Approval of the subject items for the Standing Committee on Peace and International Security
and for the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development for the 144th Assembly and
appointment of the Rapporteurs
3.
4.
5.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
President’s summary of the debate on the overall
theme of the 142nd IPU Assembly
Overcoming the pandemic today and building
a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments
Endorsed by the 142nd IPU Assembly
(Virtual session, 27 May 2021)
In addition to the discussions that took place during the debate on the overall theme at the 142nd
Assembly, the present summary draws on the deliberations at sessions that the four Standing
Committees of the IPU (Peace and International Security, Sustainable Development, Democracy and
Human Rights, and United Nations Affairs) held from 26 to 28 April. The deliberations of the Forum of
Women Parliamentarians held on 10 May 2021 and of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians held on
13 May 2021 have also informed this summary. The summary captures the key messages conveyed by
panel presentations and interventions from
the floor. It is provided as a contribution to the IPU’s overall
response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the need to build a better tomorrow.
The IPU Members were unanimous in their determination to contribute robustly to efforts designed to
control and stop the devastating COVID-19 pandemic. They recognized the need for a stronger
response in order to save lives and end the pandemic as soon as possible. In this context, MPs
recommended bold new steps to advance peace, sustainable development, gender equality, youth
empowerment, democracy and human rights.
The COVID-19 pandemic has created social, economic and political crises. It has exacerbated
inequalities within and between countries, and stalled progress on sustainable development, youth
empowerment and gender equality. Women and youth have been disproportionately affected, with more
women than men losing jobs and taking on an even greater share of household work, and many young
people being left without access to work or education.
The pandemic has also contributed to an increase in violence against women and girls, including
through the internet, giving rise to a need for greater investment in services for survivors as well as
more extensive regulatory frameworks for online platforms and tech companies. As reflected in this
summary, the particular concerns of women and youth should inform parliamentary action in all policy
areas, from peace to democracy and sustainable development. Parliaments must continue efforts to
enhance women’s leadership
and gender parity in all sectors, as well as to increase the representation
of women and youth in politics.
Guided by these considerations, participants committed to ensuring that relief efforts reached the most
vulnerable groups, and that vaccines, tests and treatments were affordable and accessible to all. They
agreed that a crisis of this magnitude demanded a global solution, which multilateralism was best
placed to deliver.
Key messages on peace and security
Parliaments are the main venue for managing conflict in a non-violent manner and a central forum for
inclusive debates on policies for building resilience, strengthening institutions and improving people's
security. In order to build resilience and strengthen capacity so that countries can recover from future
pandemics and other shocks, parliaments must focus on emerging risks and preventive action.
The COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated the need to reduce military spending and shift budget priorities
in order to respond to the health crisis and its ripple effects. Official development assistance must be
increased and funding must be allocated directly to the COVID-19 recovery.
Parliaments need to support more systematic funding for peacebuilding and conflict prevention, which
not only works, but is cost-effective. Including women in peacekeeping efforts is critical to the success
of these efforts and to the sustainability of peace agreements. It is also imperative for every government
to have a well-funded women, peace and security plan. To prevent instability, parliaments must also
focus on youth and ensure they have access to work and education opportunities.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
To improve peace and security and build up resilience and human security, parliaments must prioritize
emerging risks, act early and strengthen capacities for local response, including that of local law
enforcement and the security sector. More attention needs to be paid to tools to respond to such risks
that can be scaled up and adapted to different contexts at local, regional and global levels.
Conflict resolution and the maintenance of peace depend on parliaments working together with all
stakeholders, including the executive, the private sector, academia and civil society. In keeping with the
IPU’s support of
multilateralism, dialogue among parliamentarians needs to reach further and go deeper
at all levels
local, national, regional and global.
There can be no lasting peace, security and development without addressing climate change and
securing the environment. Parliamentarians need to deepen their efforts to ensure the implementation
of all relevant international commitments in this regard.
Key messages on sustainable development
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown that, over and above wealth, real prosperity should be about
health. Prosperity should be thought of more in terms of a healthy environment, better quality of life and
more time for self-improvement, as well as for the community. The care economy
which includes
front-line workers and those who care for children and the elderly
epitomizes this vision and must
therefore be better valued and financed. Care workers deserve stronger social protection. Institutions,
rules and policies that allow for proper financing of jobs in the health sector, environmental preservation,
education and other components of the care economy need to be strengthened.
Parliaments need to better recognize the role of women in the care economy. Women need financial
support for their unpaid work, help in finding jobs outside of hard-hit sectors and greatly expanded
access to affordable childcare. Cash transfers and other such programmes need to be better targeted at
women as a way of distributing benefits to their communities.
Greater investment in decent jobs for youth and incentives for entrepreneurship are also needed to curb
the high level of youth unemployment. Access to quality education and vocational training has been
disrupted by the pandemic and parliaments should prioritize the building of resilient education systems
that allow equality of access to all children and youth.
Caring for people and caring for the planet go hand in hand. Parliaments must support the shift towards
the green economy through a more progressive tax system, universal basic income and other
innovative policies. The current food system
which leaves millions of people hungry or malnourished,
creates enormous waste and relies on vulnerable supply chains
needs to be reimagined. In particular,
parliaments need to monitor the food security situation and ensure that countries achieve food self-
sufficiency. Food systems need to be more grounded in local communities and access to key
agricultural inputs must be more equitable.
Key messages on vaccine access
The COVID-19 pandemic will not end until the vast majority of people in each country are vaccinated.
As a public good, vaccines need to be readily accessible to all people on the planet, including the most
vulnerable populations, namely refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced people, stateless people,
indigenous people, migrants irrespective of legal status, persons with disabilities, detained persons, and
people living in areas under the control of non-state armed groups.
Parliaments must stand against vaccine nationalism and advocate for vaccines to be free and
accessible to everyone, not just those in wealthy countries. High-income countries need to step up
support to COVAX and other multilateral efforts to tackle the pandemic. It is also essential to strengthen
public health infrastructure and communications with the public, including through digital technologies,
and take appropriate public health measures to protect people.
With few exceptions, the parliamentarians who spoke on the issue of a temporary waiver of vaccine
patents, currently before the WHO, were generally supportive of such a waiver. Enabling generic
production of the vaccines could boost vaccine access to developing countries where only a fraction of
the population has been vaccinated so far. In settling this issue, claims that patents provide a key
financial incentive to research and development of new vaccines should be weighed against public
health concerns, as well as the considerable support provided to patent holders through government
subsidies, public investment and purchase guarantees.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
Key messages on democracy and human rights
By all accounts, the pandemic has put a strain on democracy. Many countries have declared states of
emergency, which in some cases have unduly limited personal freedoms. Freedom of expression has
been sacrificed under the guise of combating disinformation. There have been restrictions on media
integrity, including the incarceration of journalists; as well as restrictions on personal integrity and
security, including excessive use of force and arbitrary arrests. In a number of countries, electoral
processes have been postponed, some without a new date.
Parliaments need to conduct strong and swift oversight of any emergency measure or restriction on
fundamental freedoms and human rights. Measures must be taken democratically, be proportionate,
time-limited, necessary and legal. Parliaments must fight against conspiracy theories and
misinformation, and confront hate, racism, xenophobia and nationalism, which have been on the rise.
Decision-making and political dialogue in general need to be informed by facts and scientific evidence.
Taken together, these steps can help build trust between governments and citizens.
The pandemic provides a critical opportunity for parliaments to become stronger. With many
parliaments resorting to remote or hybrid ways of working, modernization has accelerated, allowing
parliaments to become more flexible and efficient. Still, nothing can fully replace the in-person
interactions between parliamentarians and constituents, which are so essential to dialogue, negotiation
and compromise.
In reflecting on the many impacts of the pandemic on peace and security, sustainable development and
democracy, parliaments and decision-makers everywhere should retain one overarching lesson: there is
only one humanity coexisting on one planet.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
Parliamentary strategies to strengthen peace and security
against threats and conflicts resulting from climate-related
disasters and their consequences
Resolution adopted by consensus by the 142nd IPU Assembly*
(Virtual session, 27 May 2021)
The 142nd Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union,
Recalling
the 2015 Paris Agreement, including its goals to strengthen the global response
to climate change and to enhance adaptive capacity, increase resilience and reduce vulnerability to
climate change; the outcomes of the Climate Change Conferences in Marrakesh (COP 22), Bonn
(COP 23), Katowice (COP 24) and Madrid (COP 25), emphasizing the appeal in the
Chile Madrid Time
for Action
to elaborate and implement measures to avert, minimize and address the adverse impacts of
climate change, as well as the IPU resolutions of the corresponding Parliamentary Meetings in
Marrakesh, Bonn, Krakow, and Madrid,
Recalling also
the IPU resolutions
The role of parliaments in ensuring sustainable
development through the management of natural resources, agricultural production and demographic
change
(adopted at the 124th IPU Assembly, Panama, April 2011),
Towards risk-resilient development:
Taking into consideration demographic trends and natural constraints
(adopted at the 130th IPU
Assembly, Geneva, March 2014),
Sustaining peace as a vehicle for achieving sustainable development
(adopted at the 138th IPU Assembly, Geneva, March 2018),
Addressing climate change
(adopted at the
141st IPU Assembly, Belgrade, October 2019), and the Hanoi Declaration
The Sustainable
Development Goals: Turning Words into Action
(adopted at the 132nd IPU Assembly, Hanoi,
April 2015),
Guided by
the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs), which emphasize that climate policy, sustainable development, poverty
reduction and universal peace are all inextricably linked,
Mindful
of UN Security Council resolutions and UNSC Presidential Statements addressing
the adverse effects of climate change on international stability, peace and security, such as UNSC
resolutions 2349 (2017), 2408 (2018), 2423 (2018), 2429 (2018), 2431 (2018), 2457 (2019) and 2558
(2020), and appreciating the fact that the Security Council has repeatedly discussed the impact of
climate change, including of climate-related disasters, on international peace and security,
Mindful also
of UNSC resolutions 1325 (2000), 2467 (2019) and 2493 (2019) highlighting
the impact on women of war, conflicts and displacement as well as strengthening the role of women in
conflict management and women’s
involvement in peace and security issues; and of UNSC
resolutions
2250 (2015), 2419 (2018) and 2535 (2020) highlighting the importance of increasing the representation
of youth in decision-making on peace and security issues,
Recalling
the 1996 UN Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary
Watercourses and International Lakes and the 2015
Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction
2015-2030,
which provide an important foundation for sustainable, low-carbon, resilient development,
Welcoming
the international community’s continuing engagement in numerous
global
initiatives to address climate change, such as the UN Climate Action Summit in September 2019, the
Climate Ambition Summit in December 2020, and the Climate Adaptation Summit in January 2021,
which have led to States’ affirmation and extension
of emission reduction targets, and have showcased
the many opportunities for prevention, mitigation, resilience-building and adaptation through the
contributions of national governments, provinces, cities and villages, business corporations, financial
institutions and civil society,
Recalling
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as well as the International
Covenants on Human Rights and other human rights agreements, and welcoming the discussion on
climate change as a rapidly growing, global threat to human rights and to peace at the 42nd session of
the Human Rights Council in September 2019,
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
Emphasizing
the recommendations of the 2015 Agenda for the Protection of Cross-Border
Displaced Persons in the Context of Disaster and Climate Change being implemented by the Platform
on Disaster Displacement, which works towards strengthening the management of disaster
displacement risks as well as addressing displacement and migration in the context of disasters and
climate change,
Appreciating
the contribution of the International Mechanism of Warsaw regarding climate-
related losses and damages, their financing, technological transfer and capacity-building in developing
countries particularly vulnerable to these adverse impacts, and, in particular, the recommendations of
the Task Force on comprehensive approaches to avoid, minimize and manage climate-related
displacement,
Aware
that the world would face unprecedented challenges and irreversible processes,
including the crossing of so-called tipping points, with a temperature rise beyond 1.5 degrees Celsius,
as referred to in the 2018 special report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
Recalling
that natural resources, such as
water and land, shape billions of people’s
livelihoods, food security, well-being and identity, notably those of Indigenous peoples, and that,
therefore, transparency, access to information, inclusive and meaningful public participation, in
particular women’s
full, equal, and meaningful participation in all levels of
decision-making, as well as
dialogue and cooperation, especially with vulnerable and marginalized groups, are key to equitable and
peaceful natural-resource management,
Concerned about
the concrete and existential threat to humanity and human security
caused by climate change, which adversely affects global peace and stability, and particularly about the
severe consequences of sea level rise, drought, desertification, land degradation, changes to the fragile
ecosystems of the polar regions, loss of infrastructure and biodiversity, food insecurity, an increasing
scarcity of natural resources, including water, and non-economic loss and damages,
Reaffirming
its concern about new and/or intensified displacement and migrant movements
as climate phenomena increase and parts of the world become uninhabitable, as well as about their
effects in particular on young people and their future, while aware that concerted action to mitigate and
adapt to climate
change and plan countries’ development can significantly reduce
the number of
persons forced
to migrate as concluded in the World Bank’s 2018 Groundswell report,
Worried
about the particular effects of climate change on individuals and groups in already
vulnerable situations, mainly women and children, Indigenous peoples and communities, and people
living with disabilities, as well as refugees and displaced people including internally displaced people;
noting that people displaced for environmental reasons, by disasters or adverse effects of climate
change, do not benefit per se from any official refugee status nor from international protection granted
by the 1951 Refugee Convention; taking note, however,
of the Human Rights Committee’s view of
20 January 2020 that countries may not deport individuals who face climate change-induced conditions
that violate the right of life,
Concerned
that climate-related tensions and disasters may lead to heightened
marginalization, discrimination and abuse, including an increase in sexual and gender-based violence
perpetrated mainly against women and girls,
Aware of
the adverse effect of climate change on existing economic, social and political
inequalities as well as distributional conflicts throughout the world; highlighting that, through these
negative impacts on human security, climate change increases already existing risks and discriminatory
practices
especially when governance structures are already weak; recalling that the negative long-
term implications of climate change may lead to an increase in political tensions, both within and beyond
national borders; noting that fragile societies, including societies plagued by conflict, tend to have
weaker adaptation capacities to climate change than others, and that they lack the capacity to
contribute for their part to climate change mitigation effectively,
Concerned
that these and other human security impacts such as heightened food and
water insecurity may exacerbate existing and create additional risks to national, regional and
international security, and that the most vulnerable and marginalized peoples and parts of the world are
particularly hit by both the climate crisis and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which is another crisis of
global proportion, with one crisis exacerbating the other,
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
Bearing in mind
that access to the resources and means required to cope with situations of
dramatic change such as the climate crisis is structurally obstructed by existing forms of discrimination
and vulnerability based on gender, race, ethnicity, religion, political or other affiliation, national or social
origin, property, birth or other status, ability, indigeneity, age, tradition and institutional mistreatment, all
of which can intersect and combine and should be duly considered in concepts of peacebuilding and
conflict management as well as resilience and adaptation strategies,
Stressing
that politics determine long-term sustainable climate action, which is why the
responsibility to create a just transition through climate-sustainable policies cannot be shifted onto
individuals and their individual choices as consumers, at least not predominantly,
1.
Calls for
immediate and multilateral action to address climate change and mitigate its
effects on international stability and security with the same urgency as the fight against the
COVID-19 pandemic; and therefore calls on all parliaments to expedite and facilitate the
ratification and human-rights based implementation of the Paris Agreement in their
respective countries;
Calls on
the IPU Member Parliaments and their governments to invest in climate-resilient
development programmes aimed at implementing the 17 Sustainable Development Goals;
Welcomes
the many and diverse national commitments to address the climate-security
nexus, confine climate change, and address climate-induced security threats through
mitigation, resilience-building and adaptation; and stresses that measures tend to be more
conflict-sensitive if both men and women, as well as marginalized and vulnerable groups,
including Indigenous communities, are involved;
Invites
the IPU Member Parliaments to encourage their governments to work with relevant
regional and international institutions to advance robust climate-resilience strategies,
especially regarding climate-related security risks, including joining and supporting the
Group of Friends on Climate and Security established by Nauru and Germany, made up of
more than 50 States, which works to ensure that the UNSC considers the relationship
between climate and security in all its decisions so that the international community is
prepared before conflicts erupt or escalate, wherever climate change threatens peace and
security;
Encourages
the IPU Member Parliaments to engage in civil conflict prevention and to
support partnerships and meaningful consultations with affected communities in order to
anchor risk analysis and forecasts in their policies, with a special focus on security related
tipping points in the context of climate change, based inter alia on human rights indicators
such as the incidence of sexual and gender-based violence;
Stresses
the need to strengthen opportunities for cooperation among all stakeholders and
affected communities to promote research, data collection and analysis of climate-related
security risks including displacement resulting from rapid- and slow-onset disasters in the
context of climate change, in order to be prepared for future challenges and develop
prevention strategies;
Calls on
parliaments to strengthen local and community governance capacities and
adaptation capabilities in order to avoid human rights abuses and the destabilization of
sub-regions or nations as a result of climate change;
Encourages
parliaments concerned to adopt enabling climate-responsive and gender- and
conflict-sensitive legislation, including key budget laws, as well as relevant public policies
with due consideration of the effects of climate change on Indigenous communities and
other marginalized populations, aimed at advancing the SDGs and sustaining peace
agendas so that the climate-security nexus features appropriately in their parliamentary
debates; and, in this context, to ensure that all peacebuilding and development efforts are
assessed, where appropriate, for climate sensitivity to minimize predictable future
destabilizing effects of climate change on security and prosperity; and conversely, that
climate mitigation and adaptation programmes and strategies are conflict-sensitive and
designed for maximising peacebuilding synergies;
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
9.
Calls on
governments to take concrete measures to mitigate climate risks and promote
resilience to climate change, while basing these measures on the principle of common but
differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities in light of different national
circumstances; and, in this context, calls on governments and parliaments to support
countries affected by climate-related disasters and to provide predictable and sustainable
financial, technical and capacity-building assistance, in accordance with the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Paris Agreement; also
calls on parliaments to urge their governments to commit to providing financial support to
middle- and low-income economies by contributing to the Green Climate Fund;
Also calls on
parliaments to hold their respective governments accountable for achieving
the progress required in addressing climate-related disasters and security risks, and to
urge their governments to address funding gaps for activities redressing the consequences
of climate change and for adaptive measures to equip the United Nations system, other
multilateral institutions, States and other relevant actors to deal with the looming changes
regarding food security, displacement, and increased risk of disasters;
Further calls on
parliaments to monitor climate-change mitigation and adaptation
processes in line with the commitments made under the Paris Agreement; to promote
strong disaster risk governance to help all stakeholders coordinate at the community,
regional and national levels in order to manage and reduce disaster and climate-related
risks; to pay due regard to marginalized and vulnerable communities, such as Indigenous
peoples, particularly affected by climate change; to pursue disaster risk prevention and
reduction, as well as long-term financing in support of resilient, climate-proof infrastructure
and nature-based solutions; and to effectively control State finances by ensuring full
transparency of expenses;
Urges
parliaments and their respective governments to take action to strengthen our
common understanding of climate-related challenges; including drawing from traditional
knowledge sources such as those held by Indigenous and local communities; to support
initiatives that ensure that public awareness campaigns and proper educational
programmes are implemented and included in school curricula; and to encourage the
development of easily accessible early-warning systems;
Calls on
parliaments to examine all means of enhancing the resilience of people adversely
affected by climate change; to develop comprehensive gender-responsive national
resilience mechanisms by fully including women and representatives of marginalized
communities, such as Indigenous peoples, in the design and implementation of such
mechanisms; to strengthen disaster risk reduction and prevention; and to enhance disaster
preparedness;
Urges
parliaments to promote and increase predictable, multi-year, unearmarked,
collaborative and flexible humanitarian financing, including for disaster displacement; to
connect the humanitarian-development-peace nexus with the effects of climate change;
and to enable transition aid to cover urgent needs and the possibility of a stronger, faster
and more inclusive rebuilding policy, according to the "build back better" approach;
Calls on
parliaments to support partnerships involving civil society in order to strengthen
political will to address the adverse impacts of climate change in a constructive,
participative and forward-looking manner; and also calls in particular on all
parliamentarians to engage in dialogue with youth, as they are the main group to face the
consequences of climate change;
Also calls on
parliaments to support the introduction of stronger corporate social
responsibility measures in the private sector in order to mitigate tensions between
enterprises and local communities over scarce resources;
Encourages
governments to fully support international working groups on climate-related
disaster displacement and migration; and to implement, within the architecture of the
UNFCCC,
the recommendations of the Warsaw International Mechanism’s Task
Force on
Displacement;
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
18.
Calls on
parliaments to support safe, orderly and legal migration for those who have to
leave their home as a result of climate change; and to enable planned and dignified
relocation;
Encourages
governments and parliaments to fully implement the UN Guiding Principles on
Internal Displacement; to strengthen rights and local agreements on mobility of migrant
workers, nomads and pastoralists; and to take into consideration the objectives and
principles of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration;
Also encourages
governments to reflect upon the concept of "climate passports" that would
allow people who are existentially threatened by the effects of climate change and have no
choice but to leave their home to exercise self-determination in deciding about their
migratory options and enjoy the possibility of entering and settling in secure countries; and,
in this context, to consider granting full access to civic rights to migrants who, expecting or
following the complete disappearance
of their country’s territory, de facto or de jure
lose
their citizenship;
Invites
the IPU Member Parliaments to make use of their right to speak at the UN General
Assembly to request follow-up on displacement and migration including in the context of
climate change as well as on the implementation of the Global Compacts on Migration and
Refugees;
Recommends
that all States concerned agree on a common position in order to impose an
embargo on the export of arms to actors in States suffering from insecurity, fragility and
conflicts
including as a result of climate-related disasters;
Encourages
governments to include the attenuation of climate-change-related security
risks in all operational areas of peacebuilding, including early warning, conflict prevention,
crisis management, mediation and peace support operations and post-conflict
rehabilitation; to enable the UN system to better recognize, assess and act on climate-
security interlinkages; to call on the UNSC to acknowledge the threat that climate-related
risks pose to international peace and security; and to support the newly created UN
Climate Security Mechanism in facilitating the creation and dissemination of adequate risk
assessments and risk management strategies by relevant UN actors;
Calls on
parliaments to ensure increased international, regional, and cross-border
cooperation on climate-related security risks in a quest to find appropriate collective
responses to addressing current and future security risks related to climate change while
drawing upon the experiences and good practices of countries;
Welcomes,
in this regard, concrete initiatives to strengthen capacities in the field, that is by
establishing the first climate and security advisor at the UN Mission in Somalia;
Reminds
all States that ambitious climate protection, resilience-building and foresighted
behaviour that places human beings and their needs at the centre of all political
considerations is a prerequisite not only for achieving climate justice, but also for pursuing
the sustaining peace agenda;
Also reminds
all States of commitments made in the Universal Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples relating, among other matters, to their right to live in peace and
security, to the conservation and protection of the environment and the productive capacity
of their lands or territories and resources, to be consulted on priorities for the use of their
lands or territories and other resources, and to the just and fair resolution of conflicts and
disputes with States or other parties;
Encourages
the IPU Member Parliaments to set up or step up regional
"climate parliaments" and follow the examples of initiatives in Asia (Bangladesh, China and
India), Latin America (Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador and Peru, as well as more broadly the
ParlAmericas Parliamentary Network on Climate Change), the Middle East and North
Africa (Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia), Sub-Saharan
Africa (Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Congo,
Senegal and Tanzania, as well as cooperation with the Pan-African Parliament), and
Europe (within the European Parliament) with the aim of educating and empowering
parliamentarians in this context;
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
29.
Urges
parliaments to adopt, implement and monitor national action plans in line with the
commitments made under the Paris Agreement and thereby establish strategies that
prepare for the above-described challenges, threats and conflicts resulting from
climate-related disasters and their consequences;
Also urges
parliaments as part of the COVID-19 pandemic recovery measures to
encourage a shift to cleaner energy alternatives, such as solar and wind energy, and to
give priority to investment in clean energy, or to link aid and bank loans to companies to
drastic reductions in their emissions, especially in carbon-intensive sectors, which
contributes to promoting the concept of "green loans" directed to financing environmentally
friendly projects, green stimulation, smart buildings, and green and public transportation;
Invites
the IPU Member Parliaments to reinforce criminal law to prevent and punish
widespread, long-term and severe damage to the environment, whether caused in
peacetime or war, and to examine the possibility of recognizing the crime of ecocide to
prevent the threats and conflicts resulting from climate-related disasters and their
consequences;
Urges
the IPU Member Parliaments and their governments to take stock of lessons
learned from how the pandemic has been handled worldwide, as lessons from international
cooperation and crisis management could prove to be of a significant value when it comes
to meeting climate-related threats or other future threats in general;
Also urges
the IPU Member Parliaments and their Governments to enact and execute
policies that will reduce and eradicate non-climate stressors and man-made threats to the
environment, such as illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and the
unsustainable and inequitable utilization of water resources, among others, which further
contribute to food and water insecurity caused by climate change;
Invites
the IPU Member Parliaments to communicate to the secretariat of the IPU Standing
Committee on Peace and International Security by the 146th Assembly the measures
taken to achieve implementation of this resolution.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
*
The resolution was negotiated in keeping with the Special Rules of Procedure governing virtual sessions of the
IPU Assembly and Standing Committees. Reservations were received from:
India
and
Turkey,
which expressed a reservation to the entire text of the Resolution.
Nicaragua,
which expressed reservations to operative paragraphs 3, 8, 11, 12, 13, 18, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32,
and 33.
Hungary,
which expressed reservations to preambular paragraphs 9, 14, and 20, and to operative
paragraphs 17, 18, 19, 20, and 21.
China,
which expressed reservations to preambular paragraph 5, and operative paragraphs 9, 23, and 25.
Czech Republic
and
Poland,
which expressed reservations to operative paragraphs 19 and 21.
Thailand,
which expressed reservations to operative paragraphs 20 and 22.
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
Mainstreaming digitalization and the circular economy
to achieve the SDGs, particularly responsible
consumption and production
Resolution adopted by consensus by the 142nd IPU Assembly
*
(Virtual session, 27 May 2021)
The 142nd Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union,
Fully endorsing
the Political Declaration of the Sustainable Development Goals Summit
(September 2019), which reaffirms the commitment to advance the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development, and calls for accelerated action in order to achieve the SDGs,
Recalling
the Ministerial Declaration of the 2019 United Nations Environment Assembly,
particularly the commitment made by governments worldwide to "improve national resource
management strategies with an integrated full life-cycle approaches and analysis to achieve
resource-efficient and low-carbon economies", while taking into account national circumstances,
Noting
the establishment of the Global Alliance on Circular Economy and Resource
Efficiency, which aims to support the transition to a global circular economy for more efficient and
equitable use of resources so as to achieve sustainable consumption and production, and inclusive and
sustainable industrialization,
Underlining
that the circular economy and digitalization, and the interplay between them,
can make a major contribution to reaching the SDGs, particularly responsible consumption and
production,
Mindful
that due to the COVID-19 pandemic we are facing major disruptions that will force
us to use our limited means even more efficiently against the background of the crisis,
Stressing
that the COVID-19 pandemic has reversed hard-won development gains,
particularly in achieving gender equality and reducing poverty, and has exposed the deep economic and
social inequalities and the challenges addressed by the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,
thus making the achievement of the SDGs all the more necessary and urgent,
Emphasizing
that responsible consumption and production are pivotal and cross-cutting
elements of the SDGs, and are crucial means to build back better and greener, as they enable the
efficient use of natural resources, minimize environmental degradation, pollution and waste, and
consider each stage of the life cycle while creating opportunities for social and economic development,
thus contributing to poverty eradication and shared prosperity,
Aware
that the pandemic crisis has revealed the precariousness of long and complex value
chains, and the flaws of the linear "take-make-use-dispose" pattern of production and consumption,
Noting
that the price of products does not always reflect environmental or social costs,
such as pollution effects
or underpaid labour, which have a negative impact on people’s
health and
quality of life,
Encouraging
the disclosure of appropriate product information to consumers, and
promoting the development of measures to increase transparency in production chains,
Stressing
that circular economy transformation, although predominantly associated with
product manufacturing or resource intensive industries and value chains, refers to the economy as a
whole, including service dominated industries, thus requiring the engagement of the full range of actors
across each industry and sector,
Noting
that the world is currently in the midst of the creation of a more circular economy,
through policy initiatives such as the European Circular Economy Action Plan, and of the digital
revolution, both of which have the power to transform our economy and society,
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Noting also
that big efforts are currently being made by national and international
policymakers to promote and regulate both transitions, and the increasing need to align their efforts or
create bridges between policies,
Underscoring
that, through the "digital for development" (D4D) policy, consideration is
being given
to how digitalization could change people’s lives
and result in inclusive, equitable, efficient,
affordable, faster and, above all, sustainable universal growth,
Noting
that digitalization gives rise to novel digital platforms, helps create new kinds of
markets, which can be based on the virtualization of products and processes, and facilitates easier and
more efficient networking, collaboration and co-creation with stakeholders,
Bearing in mind
that digitalization helps to cut costs and increase efficiency, including
efficiency of resources,
Underscoring
the important role of international digital learning and collaboration platforms,
often with virtual technologies, for learning, networking and co-creation, while the COVID-19 pandemic
poses severe challenges to education across the world due to limited access to infrastructure and
technologies,
Aware
that digitalization is not a goal in itself but an enabler and an accelerator to
effectively achieve all 17 SDGs,
Highlighting
the fact that the COVID-19 crisis has accelerated digitalization,
Mindful that because of the restrained mobility of people due to the prescribed health
protocol of physical distancing as a result of the pandemic, consumer behaviour towards digitalization
has radically changed, especially in terms of transactions of both private and public goods,
Underscoring
that any future disaster risk reduction strategy will be (big) data driven,
Paying due regard
to avoiding the most vulnerable people becoming victims of the circular
economy and digital transition by including solidarity in the recovery process in order to fully seize the
opportunities of the current crisis,
Stressing
that the shift to a circular economy has the potential to allow countries to
decouple growth from resource use and environmental impact, generate economic opportunities, build
long-term resilience, protect the environment and human health,
Underlining
that the implementation of the circular economy principles in key sectors can
play an important role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and successfully addressing climate
change,
Bearing in mind
that creating consumer demand for resource efficient products can be a
challenge, as environmentally sustainable products may not be easily available, affordable, user-friendly
or functional and attractive to consumers, especially at the early stages of their development,
Acknowledging
the potential of digitalization to strengthen the circular economy, and
stressing that circular economy and sustainability principles should be at the heart of digitalization,
Noting
that digitalization and the circular economy are driven by the following "bridging
technologies": the internet of things, artificial intelligence, robotics, big data, 3D printing, augmented
reality, and blockchain,
Recognizing
that the circular economy and digitalization have the potential to contribute to
equitable economic growth and enable the economic empowerment of women and vulnerable
populations, and youth-led collective action,
Emphasizing
that mainstreaming digitalization and the circular economy requires ambition,
political will and a fundamental change of vision at all levels, which go far beyond the standard digital
and environmental political agendas, and must be based on a systemic national approach with the
participation of all sectors of society, as well as on enhanced international cooperation,
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Agenda, resolutions and other texts of the 142nd Assembly
1.
Invites
parliaments to give digitalization and the circular economy more prominence on the
political agenda, as part of their efforts to address the SDGs, particularly responsible
consumption and production;
Calls on
parliaments to mainstream digitalization and circular economy principles into
public policies and national strategies, and to adopt an enabling framework for their
implementation;
Notes
that reducing existing inequalities in terms of access to digital platforms on the part
of women and many vulnerable populations as well as marginalized segments of society,
including Indigenous people, racialized communities, and persons with disabilities in order
to enhance their full participation in the digital economic transition should be duly regarded;
Encourages
parliaments to promote adequate regulatory frameworks, including economic
and financial incentives, with a view to enabling circular economy models to deliver
sustainable products and services that are both scalable and competitive in terms of price,
quality and convenience;
Calls on
all actors to make the right innovative choices against the background of the
pandemic and to prioritize future-proof and sustainable sectors and technologies while
benefitting from the huge social, economic and ecological advantages of smart
digitalization;
Invites
parliaments to recognize the need for and opportunity of a resilient and low-carbon
inclusive recovery from COVID-19, as an enabler for achieving the 2030 Agenda, and
calls on them to ensure that recovery plans incorporate responsible consumption and
production practices, based on digitalization and circular economy principles, among
others, while taking into account national circumstances;
Calls on
parliaments to adopt legislation that addresses food waste and loss at every
phase and level of the food supply chain, and to stimulate the use of new technologies for
the creation of an integrated agricultural and food system whereby food utilization is
optimized and loss and waste of resources are minimized;
Urges
parliaments to support policies that encourage repair, reuse and resource recycling,
including the design of products suitable for recycling; the reduction of primary material
consumption; and the utilization of secondary resources to facilitate sustainable resource
management, and invites them to encourage new business and service models that are not
dependent on mass consumption of disposable products;
Requests
parliaments to ensure that the functioning of all public institutions, central and
local, takes a more holistic approach to sustainability, while incorporating both digital and
circular economy principles, including the adoption of green and sustainable procurement
legislative frameworks and monitoring systems;
Invites
parliaments to encourage international policy coordination of standards, regulations
and policies for the circular economy;
Calls on
parliaments to create an environment conducive to the development and
application of digital solutions, such as the internet of things, artificial intelligence and
blockchain, aimed at maximizing the potential of the circular economy;
Also calls on
parliaments, as part of efforts to create an enabling environment for
digitalization and the circular economy, to place special emphasis on data policies and
common data architecture;
Invites
parliaments to encourage research and development to increase innovation and
knowledge-sharing including the transfer of technology, particularly to developing countries
on mutually agreed terms for the uptake, upscaling and replication of resource-efficient and
clean technologies and innovative business practices based on digitalization and the
circular economy;
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
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14.
Encourages
parliaments to promote collaboration with the Technology Bank for Least
Developed Countries, established by UN General Assembly resolution 71/251, which has a
critical role to play in the digital transformation of the LDCs, to attain sustainable
development by facilitating access to and implementation of digital technologies and
providing assistance with data management issues;
Calls on
parliaments from donor countries to encourage international development
cooperation agencies to mainstream digitalization and circular economy principles in their
financial assistance and capacity-building programmes aimed at supporting COVID-19
economic recovery and SDG implementation;
Also calls on
governments to integrate digital skills and a circular way of life in education at
the earliest possible stage; and to conduct awareness campaigns to encourage
consumers’
engagement in sustainable
practices;
Invites
parliaments to create an
enabling environment for citizens’ access to digital
solutions for their digital empowerment;
Also invites
parliaments and governments to allocate appropriate financial resources to
encourage the development of both digital and circular economy business models, while
specifically empowering young and women entrepreneurs;
Further invites
parliaments to promote gender-inclusive education frameworks and policies
to boost education opportunities and digital skills development for women and girls in
STEAM-subjects to narrow the gender digital divide;
Encourages
parliaments to support efforts by regional and local institutions to foster urban
sustainability through the development of inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable smart
cities that digitally optimize communication, transport, energy, water and sanitation
systems, according to circular economy and digitalization principles;
Emphasizes
the urgent need to work towards a circular built environment by adopting
building practices that minimize the use of raw materials to decrease emissions, by
increasing the recovery rate of construction and demolition waste, and by improving the
energy efficiency and extending the lifespan of existing buildings;
Calls on
parliaments to encourage the integration of circular economy models into the
national response to climate change, and invites them to ensure that climate change
policies and strategies include measures to optimize the utility of products by maximizing
their use and extending their lifespan and enhance recycling (using waste as a resource),
while promoting a circular design that reduces material consumption and uses lower-
carbon alternatives;
Also calls
on parliaments to encourage full transparency pertaining to all used materials in
manufacturing in order to limit any introduction of harmful chemical substances in the
production cycle, and furthermore to promote the use of fully recyclable materials;
Invites
parliaments to support the adoption, including through public-private partnerships,
of sound environmental and social standards for the extractive industries, as well as of
standards and policy frameworks that enhance the sustainable recycling of secondary
materials and mitigate challenges associated with the digital economy;
Calls on
parliaments to promote digitalization and circular solutions, including circular
procurement, circular design and services instead of products, as a means to develop a
more resilient, and economically and environmentally sustainable travel and tourism
industry;
Requests
parliaments to ensure that governments invest in adequate digital infrastructure
for secure, accessible and affordable internet coverage, connectivity, regulatory
frameworks for data protection/privacy, and cybersecurity standards and governance, in
order to enable the circular economy and D4D to reach their full potential;
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
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27.
Invites
parliaments to incentivize the implementation of circular business models with long-
term benefits, such as changing consumer behaviour, stimulating innovation, and the
scaling and diffusion of technologies;
Calls on
parliaments to stimulate national and international networking and collaboration
between schools, research institutions and networks, and other relevant stakeholders (for
example, companies, NGOs and international organizations) to find digital solutions to
challenges related to the circular economy, for example by encouraging co-creation
through competitions and hackathons;
Invites
parliaments to ensure that efforts to accelerate the transition to digitalization and the
circular economy address potential risks, such as increasing material and energy use,
increasing greenhouse gas emissions, deepening the digital gap among and within
countries, and increasing the environmental footprint of the IT industry, as well as the
transition’s negative consequences
in terms of security and human health;
Calls on
the IPU to enhance cooperation with Member Parliaments and other organizations
in order to gather evidence on the circular economy, environment and digitalization, to map
the interplay between them and to promote guidelines for parliamentary action;
Also calls on
parliaments to see to it that digitalization and circular-economy principles, and
strengthened goals to this effect, are incorporated while approving future free trade
agreements, which require parliamentary ratification;
Invites
parliaments to support the use of standardized, comparable and high-quality digital
data which is properly mined, investigated and managed, and stresses that promoting
digitalization is an important tool to support efficient and reliable information collection and
delivery, which are key elements for a safe and sustainable circular economy;
Requests
parliaments to rationalize the discussion on data sharing by distinguishing
between different types of data and to establish fair and functional data regulation based
on common sense by securing fair access to data, as well as fair protection of data
according to the internationally accepted data protection principles, intellectual property
rights and other relevant legal frameworks as per national circumstances;
Encourages
parliaments and governments to engage in dialogue with stakeholders (for
example, civil society, companies and administrations) in order to increase their awareness
of the importance of providing open data and turn them into active participants of the data
economy and co-creators of knowledge when legally possible;
Calls on
parliaments to envisage
measures aimed at tackling people’s lack
of basic digital
skills and e-literacy, and at increasing the number of IT, artificial intelligence, blockchain
and other digital professionals, as a means to proactively shape a digital transformation
centred around sustainable ecological, social and economic development dimensions;
Invites
parliaments to exchange information and best practices and implement
capacity-building programmes with a view to increasing awareness and knowledge among
parliamentarians about the interplay between digitalization and the circular economy, and
its potential in promoting a resilient and green recovery and achieving the SDGs,
particularly responsible consumption and production.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
*
The resolution was negotiated in keeping with the Special Rules of Procedure governing virtual sessions of the
IPU Assembly and Standing Committees. Reservations were received from:
India,
which expressed reservations on preambular paragraphs 7 and 29.
Nicaragua,
which expressed reservations on operative paragraphs 3, 8, 20, and 28.
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Report of the Standing Committee on
Democracy and Human Rights
Noted by the 142nd IPU Assembly
(Virtual session, 27 May 2021)
The Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights held two sittings in the run-up to the
142nd IPU Assembly.
On 28 April, the Committee met to discuss the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on democracy and
human rights, and on the functioning of parliaments. With Committee Vice-President Ms. A. Gerkens
(Netherlands) in the chair, the Committee heard opening remarks from Ms. L. Thornton (Director for
Global Programmes, International IDEA) and Mr. N. Bako-Arifari (member of the National Assembly,
Benin), and later from Mr. A. Williamson (Senior Researcher, Centre for Innovation in Parliament, IPU)
and Ms. C. López Castro (member of the Chamber of Deputies, Mexico).
During the debate, delegates observed that the pandemic had had a wide range of negative impacts on
democracy and human rights. Fundamental rights such as the freedom of association had been
restricted in the name of public health imperatives. A number of countries had declared a state of
emergency. Delegates observed that restrictions on human rights must be time-limited, specified in law
and proportional to the requirements of the situation. The full enjoyment of human rights and practice of
democracy must be resumed as soon as the situation permitted.
Parliaments, like all institutions, had been severely challenged by the pandemic. Many parliaments had
demonstrated an impressive capacity to find innovative solutions to continue to meet in virtual, hybrid or
socially-distanced settings. The long-term impact of the pandemic on parliaments remained to be seen.
On one hand, remote working had created new possibilities for parliamentarians to spend more time
closer to the people they represented. On the other, it had made it more difficult to hold substantive
debates and to discuss solutions to complex political issues.
Like everybody, delegates expressed the hope that the pandemic would soon be brought under control
by the rapid and equitable distribution of vaccines, so that the Committee, the IPU and indeed society
as a whole would be able to resume their normal functioning.
On 18 May, the Committee held a preparatory debate on the theme of the next resolution
Legislation
worldwide to combat online sexual child exploitation,
with the Committee President, Mr. A.Y. Desai
(India) in the chair. The debate started a process that would lead to the adoption of the resolution at the
143rd IPU Assembly later in 2021.
The Committee appointed a third co-Rapporteur, Mr. P. Limjaroenrat (Thailand) to join Ms. A. Gerkens
(Netherlands) and Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya) who had been appointed as co-Rapporteurs at the preceding
Assembly.
Ms. M. F. Singhateh (UN Special Rapporteur on sale and sexual exploitation of children) highlighted
that many laws already existed, as well as the difficulty that was frequently observed in implementing
them. The internet knew no boundaries, and perpetrators might be in one country, victims in another
and images of abuse stored on servers in yet another jurisdiction. Meanwhile, it was very difficult to
gather evidence that met the standards required by the courts, suggesting that new approaches would
be required. Ms. Singhateh laid out the case for developing model legislation to combat online sexual
child exploitation that could be adopted by all countries.
Mr. J. Carr (Technical Adviser to ECPAT International) cited data about the scale of online sexual child
exploitation and drew attention to the role of technology companies in taking action to remove abusive
images. He reinforced the point that legislation was only one of the steps towards effectively addressing
the problem. Parliamentarians could greatly contribute to raising public awareness of the issue, which in
turn would increase the pressure on technology companies to step up their efforts.
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During the debate, the rapporteurs and delegates shared experience from their countries and sought
advice from the experts on possible courses of action. The inputs would help inform the preparation of
the draft resolution.
The Bureau of the Committee met on 11 May to exchange perspectives on the major challenges to
democracy and human rights, in the context of the revision of the IPU Strategy. Bureau members
identified a range of pressing issues, such as online disinformation, hate speech and the fight against
discrimination in all its forms, including on the basis of sexual orientation. They expressed the wish that
the Committee be able to discuss any issue and thereby play its role in advancing democracy and
human rights to the fullest extent possible.
At its last sitting on 18 May, the Committee elected a number of new members to the Bureau, on the
basis of the nominations from the geopolitical groups.
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Report of the Standing Committee on
United Nations Affairs
Noted by the 142nd IPU Assembly
(Virtual session, 27 May 2021)
Joint meeting with the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development on the overall theme of
the 142nd Assembly (27 April)
This first sitting of the Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs was held jointly with the Standing
Committee on Sustainable Development to debate the overall theme of the 142nd Assembly
Overcoming the pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments.
The President of the Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs, Mr. J.C. Romero (Argentina), and
the President of the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development, Ms. V. Muzenda Tsitsi
(Zimbabwe), opened the session. The Committees adopted the agenda and the Standing Committee on
United Nations Affairs approved the summary record of its session held at the 141st Assembly in
Belgrade.
Mr. J.C. Romero chaired the first panel which focused on the main components of the pandemic
recovery phase, opportunities to advance towards a green economy, as well as renewed multilateral
cooperation and dialogue to tackle global challenges, including new pandemics. Ms. S. Dinică
(Romania), member of the Bureau of the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development, moderated
the second panel on vaccines accessibility as a public good.
The two panels featured the following speakers: Ms. S. Rehman (Pakistan), Ms. M. Aubry (member of
the European Parliament), Mr. T. Jackson (Professor, University of Surrey), and Mr. M. Frick (Deputy
Special Envoy to the UN Food Systems Summit). About 75 members of parliament participated in the
debate while 150 parliamentary staff members followed as observers.
Panel presentations gave rise to a total of 15 interventions (including two received in the chat line) from
representatives of the following parliaments: Bahrain, Burundi, Canada, China, France, Germany, India,
Iran, Japan, Mongolia, Netherlands, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, and the United Arab
Emirates.
The main takeaways from the discussion can be summarized as follows:
1.
The COVID-19 pandemic magnified existing problems such as growing inequalities, and
unsustainable development patterns nationally and globally. The post-COVID-19 recovery must
bring about systemic change in the development model but also in the underlying commitment
that people and countries needed to make to each other and to the international community. The
development model should refocus on what matters to people most, namely, their health and that
of their environment, particularly in developed countries where growth had already reached its
limits. The underlying commitment must be centred more on solidarity rather than competition
and must affirm the value of multilateralism as the best way for countries to tackle borderless
problems such as climate change and pandemics.
The green economy and the circular economy were key to making the current development
model more sustainable. However, the care economy, which consisted of the services to people
(the old, the most vulnerable, the unemployed, etc.) that required relatively little material input but
dramatically improved the quality of life and human security, must also be integrated into that
model. Prosperity needed to be redefined in terms of good health and more time for oneself and
family, rather than in terms of more high-input material production and consumption that involved
more carbon emissions and extraction of finite resources. Steps in this direction would require,
among other things, a new financial architecture, a more progressive tax system, and new
programmes such as a universal basic income.
The current dysfunctional global food system that left hundreds of millions of people hungry or
malnourished, led to enormous food waste, and caused a host of health and social problems, was
a good illustration of what needed to change going forward. The pandemic had shown the
vulnerability of global supply chains that also included food and basic staples. The food system
needed to be more grounded within national borders and the ownership of key inputs protected
from corporate monopolies.
2.
3.
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4.
A stronger focus on women was key to the post-pandemic recovery and to sustainability in
general. Refocusing the development model on the care economy would benefit women in
particular as they occupied the greater share of jobs in the service sector. Foreign aid needed to
target women better. Women were also key to the food system and to food security in general as
they were often the backbone of the informal sector and of rural economies.
The way in which the COVID-19 vaccine was being produced and distributed to people and
countries around the world evinced a dramatic lack of global solidarity and would ultimately prove
self-defeating unless corrective measures were adopted soon. The pandemic would not end until
the vast majority of people in each country was vaccinated and herd immunity was reached. That
objective was not attainable presently as the supply of vaccines was controlled by a handful of
patent-holding pharmaceutical companies with limited productive capacities and more interest in
profit making than in global public health. Governments needed to recognize the global
emergency as one
akin to a state of “war” and
from there, act accordingly to deploy every
conceivable tool to bring the pandemic under control as fast as possible and everywhere. One
such tool should be the temporary waiving of vaccine patents so that every pharmaceutical
company in the world with capacity to add to the global supply of vaccines could do so with no
penalty. Patent-holding companies should be compensated for sharing their vaccine formula and
technical know-how with others. At the same time, other tools already being deployed, such as
the Covax facility, needed to be considerably more strengthened.
5.
Discussion on the UN75 Declaration follow-up (29 April)
The second sitting of the Committee on United Nations Affairs considered the implications of the
Declaration issued at the conclusion of the September 2020 High-level Meeting to Commemorate the
Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the United Nations (UN75).
The UN75 Declaration comprised 12 commitments
referred to as
“Our
Common Agenda”
on the
currently most critical global challenges, from reversing climate change to reforming multilateralism. The
Declaration requested the UN Secretary-General to report to the General Assembly in September 2021
with recommendations on how to advance the Common Agenda. As part of that endeavour, the UN was
conducting a global consultation with key constituencies via an online facility at
https://un75.online/take-
action/.
Moderated by the Committee President Mr. J.C. Romero, the meeting proceeded in two parts: the first
part featured a panel discussion with Ms. M. Joyni (Ambassador, Permanent Representative of South
Africa to the United Nations), Mr. B. Rae (Ambassador, Permanent Representative of Canada to the
United Nations), and Ms. E. Cousens (President and CEO of the UN Foundation). The second part
featured a live poll built on the nine leading questions of the UN global consultation on the Common
Agenda. The elements of the consultation were introduced by Ms. M. Griffin (Senior Advisor, Office of
the United Nations Secretary-General).
About 45 members of parliament participated in the session while over a hundred observers followed
online. Interventions were voiced or submitted in writing from the following 13 Members: Bahrain,
Belarus, Burundi, China, Costa Rica, India, Iran, Kuwait, Madagascar, Mongolia, Saudi Arabia,
Thailand, and Turkey.
The panel discussion in the first part of the sitting highlighted the following points:
1.
The current pandemic provided a powerful reminder of the value of multilateralism. For the
pandemic to end the whole world needed to work together in solidarity toward common solutions.
The solutions should also aim at making the response to future inevitable pandemics much more
effective than had been the case with COVID-19, when countries and multilateral organizations
alike had been caught totally unprepared.
The United Nations was not perfect but remained a key pillar of multilateralism. A stronger
multilateral system necessarily needed to include all key constituencies, not just governments.
Along with the private sector, civil society, and youth, parliaments and parliamentarians must play
a greater role in developing innovative policy solutions and in implementing international
commitments. Narrowing the digital divide was one important way to bring people together
nationally and globally.
2.
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3.
Putting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) back on track toward implementation by
2030 was critical to restore faith in government and
in multilateralism. People’s trust
in governments and in the multilateral regime could only be restored by effectively addressing
their problems on the ground.
Parliaments’
role in implementing international agreements
through the legislative and budget
process, as well as by exercising effective oversight was
key. The IPU’s capacity to bring all
political parties to multilateral forums added value to the
UN’s one-country-one-voice
institutional
set up.
4.
As noted, the survey exercise with participants during the second part of the session focused on the
same nine questions at the heart of the UN global consultation. The IPU had added multiple choice
answers to those questions and had invited participants to choose their top two preferences.
Additionally, participants could add one or more answers of their own. Top choices from the nine
leading questions highlighted the following points:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Strengthening data collection was key to analysing trends and future projections.
Introducing a culture of peace curricula into schools was most important to bringing peace to the
world.
Investing massively in renewable energy and green industries was the most important step to
curb climate change.
Global public goods were best defined as all assets and services that must be accessible to all.
Ensuring that all government documents were publicly accessible was key to restoring trust
between people and institutions.
Decision-making was most effective when the public was well informed of the relevant process in
a timely manner.
Ensuring access to education and health care to all was key to levelling the playing field in
society.
Enabling more parliamentary dialogue around global issues through the IPU was most important
to global governance.
Making the UN more inclusive and representative of the global community required amending the
Charter of the United Nations to recognize the role of parliaments in global governance.
At the end of the session, the Committee President Mr. J.C. Romero announced that he had completed
his second term as Committee president and wished every success to his successor, who would be
appointed after the 142nd Assembly. Mr. Romero thanked the IPU Secretariat for its support and his
fellow Bureau members for their work during his four-year tenure.
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Statement on the occasion of the 2021
United Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS
Endorsed by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
The Governing Council,
Noting
the Inter-Parliamentary
Union’s
continued support over the years to the global AIDS
response and engagement in United Nations high-level meetings on HIV/AIDS,
Recalling
United Nations General Assembly resolution 75/260 of 23 February 2021 on the
organization of the 2021 High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS inviting the Inter-Parliamentary Union
to contribute to the meeting,
Recalling also
the United Nations Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS adopted on
27 June 2001 and the political declarations on HIV/AIDS adopted at the high-level meetings of
the General Assembly in 2006, 2011 and 2016,
Underlining
that the world’s governments have set a target to end
the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as
part of the Sustainable Development Goals (in particular Goal 3, target 3),
Welcoming
the significant gains achieved in the AIDS response yet noting with concern that
progress has been uneven among and within countries, and that gains remain fragile and
reversible without renewed commitment, increased investments and accelerated action,
Expressing
deep concern that prior to the COVID-19 pandemic the world was not on track to
meet the time-bound targets set out in the 2016 Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS, which
expired at the end of 2020, and that the modelling of the COVID-19
pandemic’s long-term
impact
on the HIV response shows a setback with an estimated 123,000 to 293,000 additional new HIV
infections and 69,000 to 148,000 additional AIDS-related deaths between 2020 and 2022,
Noting
that 2021 marks 40 years since the first case of AIDS was reported, 25 years since
UNAIDS commenced its valuable work and 20 years since the creation of the Global Fund to
Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis & Malaria, which provides 21 per cent of all international financing for
the global HIV response; as well as that a new Global AIDS strategy for 2021-2026 has been
adopted,
Expressing
concern that 38 million people globally were living with HIV in 2019, that more than
12 million people still do not have access to HIV treatment, and that 1.7 million people became
infected with HIV in 2019 because they did not have access to essential HIV services,
Noting
that HIV is not only driven by but also entrenches gender inequality, leaving HIV infected
women more vulnerable to violence, coercion, stigma and discrimination, including violations of
their sexual and reproductive rights, and that they are six times more likely to develop cervical
cancer,
Noting also
with concern that every week, around 5,500 young women aged between15 and
24 years become infected with HIV, and that young women in Sub-Saharan Africa are twice as
likely as men to be living with HIV,
Noting further
that structural, legal, economic and other inequalities that foster stigma and
discrimination increase HIV vulnerability, impede access to services and make key populations
more likely to die of AIDS-related illnesses, as well as that, as reported by the
Global AIDS
Strategy 2021-2026,
the risk of acquiring HIV is 13 times higher for transgender people, 26 times
higher among gay men and other men who have sex with men, 29 times higher among people
who inject drugs, and 30 times higher for sex workers,
Calls on parliaments to:
Work to have States realize the right to health and implement health targets as part of the
Sustainable Development Goals, including ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030.
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Bring HIV back to the public discourse since HIV continues to be a major public health crisis.
Respond to the specific health needs of young women and adolescent girls and other groups of
people disproportionately affected by HIV, particularly underserved communities such as
indigenous and transgender populations, by raising awareness, ensuring prevention and access
to treatment, and providing relevant services.
Use both their mandate and public trust to engage communities and act in the interest of every
citizen and every community, including people living with HIV and key populations, to build large
scale public awareness and enable community mobilization towards
a collective people’s
movement to achieve the promise of better health outcomes and a reduction in disparities.
Promote evidence-based, people-centred guidance and tools to promote the autonomy and self-
efficacy of people living with and at risk of HIV, including through access to self-care
interventions.
Review existing legislation and repeal or amend laws, including age-restrictive laws, that
undermine access to HIV and health services for all, and that criminalize HIV transmission to
ensure that no one is left behind.
Enact laws that protect and promote the human rights of all citizens, including their right to health;
that protect people living with HIV, in particular young women and adolescent girls, and key
populations against stigma and discrimination; and that ensure access to quality, affordable
sexual and reproductive health services and rights.
Use their oversight and budgetary powers and engage with global partners to enable effective
prioritization and more efficient allocation of resources for HIV and health, given the fiscal
pressures exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, and support gender-sensitive budgeting as a
tool for addressing women’s, girls’ and transgender people’s
health needs.
Commit to resume health services disrupted on account of the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure
equitable access to HIV testing and treatment.
The Governing Council renews its call on all countries to:
Renew at the 2021 United Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS their commitment to global
efforts to end the AIDS epidemic and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.
Protect the human rights of all persons without distinction in law and in practice and ensure all
health policies and interventions are in conformity with international human rights standards.
Strengthen already established strategic partnerships and create new ones that include
governments, parliaments, affected communities, civil society, the private sector, academics,
scientists and philanthropists.
Mobilize adequate resources and funds to support the implementation and realize the objectives
of the new
Global AIDS Strategy 2021-2026,
and also to mobilize all sources, public and private,
domestic and international, to reverse the decrease in international support and close the US$ 7
billion funding gap for the global AIDS response.
Apply the lessons learned from the colliding HIV epidemic and COVID-19 pandemic and, at
the 2021 United Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS, urge for more investments in global
pandemic responses and the adoption of a new set of bold, ambitious but achievable HIV targets
to end AIDS as a public health threat by 2030.
Use the scientific progress achieved in developing effective mRNA vaccines against COVID-19
for the quick development of an HIV vaccine.
Ensure that intellectual property rights are not an obstacle for any person living with HIV to
receive modern antiretroviral therapy.
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Parliamentary action in support of
ending statelessness
Statement to mark the 60th anniversary of the Convention
on the Reduction of Statelessness
Endorsed by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
Statelessness, or the lack of possession of any nationality, affects millions of people worldwide, often
denying them access to fundamental rights such as education, medical treatment, work and travel, and
leaving them vulnerable to extreme forms of exploitation and abuse.
Article 15 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights recognizes that all people have the right to
a nationality, which in turn often serves as a gateway to other fundamental rights. The right to a
nationality is also enshrined in numerous widely ratified international human rights treaties, including the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women.
Recognizing that 2021 marks the 60th anniversary of the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of
Statelessness (1961 Convention),
Recalling that the problem of statelessness has persisted over the years owing to gaps in nationality
laws, weak birth registration systems and discriminatory legislation, including nationality laws that
prevent women from conferring their nationality on their children on an equal basis to men,
We, Members of the IPU, call for renewed and urgent parliamentary action to help end the plight of
stateless persons by:
Taking appropriate legislative measures, such as reforms to nationality and related laws to
ensure that they conform to the international standards that prevent and reduce statelessness
and protect stateless persons, in particular by ensuring that nationality laws are free from
discrimination and contain the safeguards that prevent statelessness;
Encouraging relevant States to accede to and implement treaties that contain these international
standards, including the 1961 Convention and the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of
Stateless Persons; and to support universal adherence to and implementation of these
Conventions;
Considering providing necessary support for the implementation of the 360 pledges to address
statelessness made at the 2019 High-Level Segment on Statelessness and the 2019 first Global
Forum on Refugees, as many of these require action to be taken by parliaments;
Speaking out for stateless men, women, boys and girls in our countries and raising awareness of
their situation;
Making use of the tools produced by the IPU and the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), such as the 2005 IPU-UNHCR handbook for parliamentarians
Nationality
and Statelessness
(updated in 2014 and translated into 13 languages) and the 2018 handbook
Good practices in nationality laws for the prevention and reduction of statelessness
(available in
eight languages); and
Systematically upholding the right to a nationality for all and supporting efforts to meet the goals
of the #IBelong Campaign to End Statelessness by 2024.
With less than four years remaining in the #IBelong Campaign to End Statelessness by 2024, and less
than ten years to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and leave no one behind, the time for
action is now.
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Statement on Yemen
Endorsed by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
The IPU Committee on Middle East Questions expresses its strong concerns over the recent escalation
in the brutal conflict in Yemen, causing what has become known as the world’s
worst humanitarian
crisis.
The Committee strongly condemns the violations of UN Security Council resolutions regarding Yemen,
especially as regards the embargo on arms sales to parties to the conflict, and requests the parliaments
of relevant countries to conduct oversight of their governments in the implementation of such
resolutions.
The Committee is disturbed by the increasing levels of famine in Yemen, adding higher levels of tragedy
to this grave crisis, and thus calls upon the members of the global parliamentary community to assume
their role in saving Yemeni lives.
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Special Rules of Procedure to regulate the conduct of virtual
sessions of the Assembly and Standing Committees
Adopted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th session
(Virtual session, 24 May 2021)
I.
Special Rules of Procedure for the Assembly (meeting in virtual format)
The Rules of the Assembly shall continue to apply in full, except to the extent that they are inconsistent
with these Special Rules of Procedure, in which case the decision of the Assembly to adopt these
Special Rules of Procedure shall constitute a decision to suspend the relevant Rules of the Assembly to
the extent necessary.
The Rules of the Assembly that shall be suspended are the following:
Rules 4 to 6 with regard to the venue and duration of a physical Assembly
Rule 9 with regard to the Steering Committee
Rules 11,12 and 15.3 with regard to emergency items
Rules 17 to 20 with regard to amendments and sub-amendments
Rules 28 to 32 with regard to voting
Rule 33 with regard to quorum
Rule 34 with regard to majorities
1.
ATTENDANCE
1.1 Attendance by Members, Associate Members and Observers shall be through secured access to
videoconference or other electronic means allowing representatives to hear other participants and to
address the meeting remotely as appropriate.
1.2 For the purpose of attendance, and voting, the gender inclusiveness of delegations of Members
under Articles 10 and 15(c) of the Statutes will be assessed on the basis of the list submitted by each
Member for the purpose of registration by the deadline indicated below.
2.
REGISTRATION
2.1 Registration shall take place through an online system in accordance with established practice.
Each IPU Member participating in the session shall communicate the name, gender, age and contact
details of its delegates as well as the scan of an official letter from the Speaker of parliament or the
President of the IPU Group concerned.
2.2 The deadline for registration shall be 15 days before the opening of the session. No further
changes to the composition of delegations will be possible after that date except in case of force
majeure preventing a registered member from attending the session. The existence of such a situation
must be certified by the Speaker of the Parliament or the President of the IPU Group concerned through
a written communication to the Secretary General.
3.
QUORUM
The number of registered delegations at the registration deadline indicated in Rule 2.2 of these Special
Rules of Procedure shall be used to establish the quorum.
4.
4.1
ADDRESSING THE ASSEMBLY
During the virtual session, statements by delegates shall be limited to two minutes.
4.2 Delegates may also submit written statements in either English or French (the official languages
of the Organization) with an indication of the agenda item to which they refer, in advance of the opening
of the session of the Assembly. Written statements shall be in lieu of live interventions. These shall be
posted on a dedicated web page and shall form part of the official records of the session.
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4.3
Delegates may also submit pre-recorded video statements with an indication of the agenda item
to which they refer, in advance of the opening of the session. Pre-recorded video statements shall be in
lieu of live interventions.
4.4 Any delegate wishing to take the floor should signal their wish to speak. A delegate wishing to
raise a point of order in relation to a statement made during the session should signal their intention to
do so. The President will rule on the point of order in accordance with Rule 23 of the Rules of the
Assembly.
4.5 Observers are invited to submit written statements in either English or French (the official
languages of the Organization) with an indication of the agenda item to which they refer, in advance of
the opening of the session of the Assembly. Such statements shall be posted on a dedicated web page.
5.
DECISION-MAKING
All decisions of the Assembly taken in a virtual session shall be, as far as possible, adopted by
consensus. In view of the virtual nature of the session and of technical limitations, resolutions prepared
by the Standing Committees and outcomes of the General Debate endorsed by the Executive
Committee shall be submitted for adoption by the Assembly through the written silence procedure as
outlined in Rule 6 below.
6.
WRITTEN SILENCE PROCEDURE
6.1 The following written silence procedure shall apply in respect of any proposal that the IPU
President determines, following informal consultations, is suitable for adoption without further discussion
by the Assembly.
6.2 At the request of the President, the Secretary General shall transmit to Members any such
proposal for consideration under this written silence procedure.
6.3 The communication shall contain the text of the proposal(s) to be considered under this written
silence procedure. Any such objection shall be conveyed in writing, including by email, and addressed
to the Secretary General. The objection must have been received within 15 days of the date of the
dispatch of the communication.
6.4 In the absence of the receipt by the stipulated deadline of written objections from one third or
more of Members, the proposal concerned shall be considered as having been validly adopted by the
Assembly. Objections shall be reproduced in footnotes appended to the text of the resolution or decision
once adopted.
6.5 The Secretary General shall communicate the outcome of the written silence procedure to all
Members as soon as possible after the set deadline referred to above. In the case of a proposal that is
adopted pursuant to the written silence procedure, the date of the Secretary General’s
communication
to that effect shall be the date of adoption of the proposal.
6.6 Without prejudice to the above, a Member may explain their position in respect of a proposal that
is subject to the written silence procedure by submitting a written statement relating thereto, for posting
on the IPU website. Written statements should be received by the Secretary General by the date set for
receipt of objections. Written statements shall be made available on the IPU website for information
purposes only. They shall appear as submitted and in the language(s) of submission. Submission of a
written statement in accordance with this paragraph shall not be considered as an objection.
II.
Special Rules of Procedure for the Standing Committees (meeting in virtual format)
The Rules of the Standing Committees shall continue to apply in full, except to the extent that they are
inconsistent with these Special Rules of Procedure, in which case the decision of the Governing Council
to adopt these Special Rules of Procedure shall constitute a decision to suspend the relevant Rules of
the Standing Committees to the extent necessary.
The Rules of the Standing Committees that shall be suspended are the following:
Rule 7, paragraph 6, with regard to the election of Bureau members by secret ballot
Rule 13, paragraph 2, with regard to the deadline for submission of amendments
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Rule 18 with regard to the deadline for the submission of proposals for subject items
Rules 24 to 26 with regard to the treatment of amendments and sub-amendments
Rule 32 with regard to procedural motions
Rule 33 with regard to public meetings
Rules 35 and 36 with regard to the method of voting
Rule 37 with regard to division of proposals
Rule 38 with regard to interruption and explanation of the vote
Rule 39 with regard to quorum
Rule 40 with regard to the decisions of the Standing Committees and their Bureaux
1.
ATTENDANCE
Attendance by Members, Associate Members and Observers shall be through secured access to
videoconference or other electronic means allowing representatives to hear other participants and to
address the meeting remotely as appropriate.
2.
QUORUM
A Standing Committee may meet and deliberate irrespective of the number of members present.
3.
3.1
ADDRESSING THE STANDING COMMITTEES
During the virtual session, statements by members shall be limited to two minutes.
3.2 Members may submit written statements in either English or French (the official languages of the
Organization) with an indication of the agenda item to which they refer, in advance of the opening of the
session of the Standing Committee concerned. Written statements shall be in lieu of live interventions.
These shall be posted on a dedicated web page and shall form part of the official records of the session.
3.3 Any member wishing to take the floor should signal their wish to speak. A member wishing to
raise a point of order in relation to a statement made during the session should signal their intention to
do so. The President will rule on the point of order in accordance with Rule 28 of the Rules of Standing
Committees.
3.4 Observers may submit written statements in either English or French (the official languages of the
Organization) with an indication of the agenda item to which they refer, in advance of the opening of the
session of the Standing Committee concerned. Such statements shall be posted on a dedicated web
page.
4.
DECISION-MAKING
All decisions of Standing Committees taken in a virtual session shall be, as far as possible, adopted by
consensus. Ad-hoc rules shall be established for the adoption of resolutions and subject items, through
a transparent and inclusive process.
5.
WRITTEN SILENCE PROCEDURE
5.1 The following written silence procedure shall apply in respect of any proposal that the IPU
President determines, following informal consultations, is suitable for adoption without further
discussion.
5.2 At the request of the President, the Secretary General shall transmit to Members any such
proposal for consideration under this written silence procedure.
5.3 The communication shall contain the text of the proposal(s) to be considered under this written
silence procedure. Any such objection shall be conveyed in writing, including by email, and addressed
to the Secretary General. The objection must have been received within 15 days of the date of the
dispatch of the communication.
5.4 In the absence of the receipt by the stipulated deadline of written objections from one third or
more of Members, the proposal concerned shall be considered as having been validly adopted.
Objections shall be reproduced in footnotes appended to the text of the resolution or decision once
adopted.
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5.5 The Secretary General shall communicate the outcome of the written silence procedure to all
Members as soon as possible after the set deadline referred to above. In the case of a proposal that is
adopted pursuant to the written silence
procedure, the date of the Secretary General’s communication
to that effect shall be the date of adoption of the proposal.
5.6 Without prejudice to the above, a Member may explain their position in respect of a proposal that
is subject to the written silence procedure by submitting a written statement relating thereto, for posting
on the IPU website. Written statements should be received by the Secretary General by the date set for
receipt of objections. Written statements shall be made available on the IPU website for information
purposes only. They shall appear as submitted and in the language(s) of submission. Submission of a
written statement in accordance with this paragraph shall not be considered as an objection.
Cremer-Passy Prize Rules
Approved by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
PREAMBLE
The Inter-Parliamentary Union (hereinafter "the IPU") is an international organization of the parliaments
of sovereign states, which was established in 1889 with the aim of promoting peace, cooperation among
peoples and the consolidation of representative institutions by fostering personal relations between the
members of all Parliaments, bringing them together in a joint action aimed at maintaining and ensuring
the full participation of Member Parliaments.
The IPU advocates for the peaceful resolution of international conflicts through concrete action by
parliamentarians globally, engaging in effective parliamentary diplomacy in the following areas of
activity: representative democracy, peace and international security, sustainable development, human
rights and humanitarian law, gender equality, international trade, and education, science and
technology.
With a view to encouraging such parliamentary diplomacy and fostering concrete action by
parliamentarians in the pursuit and promotion of more lasting peace and effective democratic societies,
the IPU Governing Council, on the proposal of the Executive Committee, adopted Resolution no. XX
establishing the "Cremer-Passy Prize", to be awarded annually to a parliamentarian or group of
parliamentarians who make an outstanding contribution to the
defence and promotion of the IPU’s
objectives as well as those who contribute to a more united, fair, secure, sustainable and equitable
world.
Article XX of Resolution no. XX mentioned above provides for the adoption of the criteria and the rules
of procedure for awarding the Cremer-Passy Prize.
The Cremer-Passy Prize Rules and criteria are hereby approved as follows:
Article 1
The Inter-Parliamentary Union hereby establishes a parliamentarians’ award for excellence entitled the
"Cremer-Passy Prize".
Article 2
1.
The Cremer-Passy Prize is awarded by the IPU and is intended to reward a parliamentarian or
group of parliamentarians who make an outstanding contribution to the defence and promotion of
the objectives of this organization and to a more united, fair, secure, sustainable and equitable
world.
The Cremer-Passy Prize shall be awarded annually, at the second IPU Assembly of each year.
2.
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3.
4.
The winner of the prize shall be invited to attend the IPU Assembly referred to in Article 2.2 and to
address the Assembly in recognition of their achievement and to serve as an inspiration to the
work of other Members of Parliament.
The Cremer-Passy Prize shall not be awarded posthumously.
Article 3
All parliamentarians from IPU Member Parliaments, who at some point in the year to which the prize
relates were sitting Members of Parliament, shall be eligible for the award.
Article 4
1.
In accordance with their own rules of procedure, the geopolitical groups shall accept nominations
for the Cremer-Passy Prize from their parliamentary delegations, and submit them by 18:00
(CET) on 31 May of each year to the IPU Secretariat by filling in a specific form available at
www.ipu.org.
Each geopolitical group may submit more than one nomination, stating an order of preference.
The nominations shall be accompanied by a cover letter signed by the Chair of the geopolitical
group, setting out the reasons why they consider that the parliamentarian or group of
parliamentarians deserve to be awarded the Cremer-Passy Prize.
Failure to comply with the time limit laid down in Article 4.1 cannot be remedied.
2.
3.
4.
Article 5
1.
2.
3.
4.
The IPU Secretariat shall check the content of the nominations submitted by the geopolitical
groups within 20 days of the deadline for submitting nominations in order to assess whether the
nominees have met the criteria.
The IPU Secretariat shall gather all the nominations deemed valid and submit them to the Prize
Selection Board, together with a report on the nominations that have been rejected, setting out
the reasons for their exclusion.
In the event of failure to comply with any of the criteria for the nominations, the IPU Secretariat
shall inform the nominee(s) accordingly.
Where the geopolitical group does not remedy the non-compliance, the nomination in question
shall be rejected by the IPU Secretariat.
Article 6
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
The Prize Selection Board shall be composed of seven members, including the current IPU
President, who shall chair the Board without voting rights except for the purposes of
paragraph 6.8, and the last President Emeritus from each geopolitical group.
Geopolitical groups that cannot be represented by a President Emeritus shall nominate, in
accordance with their rules of procedure, a retired Speaker.
The Secretary General of the IPU shall attend the Prize Selection Board as a non-voting observer
in order to ensure that the proposals are assessed based on up-to-date knowledge of the current
Members of the IPU.
The members of the Prize Selection Board shall have 30 working days from the date of receipt of
the nominations from the Secretariat to consider them.
The Prize Selection Board shall meet within a maximum of five days from the expiry of the period
referred to in paragraph 6.4 in order to discuss and decide on the prize winner or winners.
The Cremer-Passy Prize winner(s) will be decided through a majority vote of the Prize Selection
Board members.
In the event of a tie, the Prize Selection Board shall hold a second vote between the two
nominees with the most votes.
Where the tie remains after the second vote count, the Prize Selection Board Chairman shall
have a casting vote to determine the winner(s).
The Prize Selection Board may unanimously decide not to award the Cremer-Passy Prize in a
given year whenever unforeseen circumstances emerge (force majeure).
The IPU Secretariat shall make all the necessary arrangements to hold the meeting stipulated in
paragraph 6.5 above.
Article 7
The prize to be awarded consists of a trophy with an appropriate inscription.
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Article 8
All actors involved in the award procedure shall keep all nominations confidential.
Article 9
1.
2.
The periods referred to in these Rules shall be counted in working days.
In the event that the country of any IPU Member has a public holiday on 31 May, that day, for the
purposes of the submission of nominations laid down in Article 4.1, shall be considered a working
day.
Article 10
To ensure the implementation of Resolution no. XX, which establishes the Cremer-Passy Prize, it shall
be mandatory that the annual IPU Budget has a specific allocation for the Cremer-Passy Prize.
Article 11
Any amendments to the present Rules shall be adopted at the first IPU Assembly in any given year prior
to award of the prize at the second IPU Assembly of that year.
Article 12
All these Cremer-Passy Prize Rules contained herein are constituted as the whole Rules of Procedure
for the Cremer-Passy Prize.
VOTING: Election Results
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
The Governing Council held a remote vote to fill the
vacancies
on the Committee on the Human Rights
of Parliamentarians and the Committee on Middle East Questions. The voting opened at 17:00 CEST
on Monday, 24 May and closed at 11:00 CEST on Tuesday, 25 May.
The quorum for the Governing Council session was set at 123.
Election for the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians (CHRP)
There were nine candidatures for six vacancies to be filled.
Rule 1.4 of the Rules of the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians stipulates that "there
shall be no fewer than four members of either sex". Taking into account the current composition of the
Committee, this means that at least two of the vacancies needed to be filled by male parliamentarians
and at least two by female parliamentarians.
A total of 233 votes were cast in this election. The quorum was therefore met.
The candidates and the number of votes they received are listed below in the same order as they were
listed on the ballot paper, which was the order in which their candidacies had been received:
Name
Ms. C. Urbano de Sousa
Mr. S. Cogolati
Mr. S. Spengemann
Ms. L. Quartapelle
Mr. F.A. Silva Facetti
Mr. B. Mbuku Laka
Mr. H. Traore
Ms. C. Asiain Pereira
Mr. Kim Yeat CHHIT
Country
Portugal
Belgium
Canada
Italy
Paraguay
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Mali
Uruguay
Cambodia
Votes
149
111
131
148
76
96
74
125
88
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The following candidates were duly elected (in order of country name):
Mr. S. Cogolati
Mr. S. Spengemann
Mr. B. Mbuku Laka
Ms. L. Quartapelle
Ms. C. Urbano de Sousa
Ms. C. Asiain Pereira
(Belgium)
(Canada)
(Democratic Republic of the Congo)
(Italy)
(Portugal)
(Uruguay)
Election for the Committee on Middle East Questions
There were two vacancies to be filled. One needed to be filled by
a male parliamentarian, and the
other by a female parliamentarian.
There was only one woman candidate, Ms. R. Kavakci Kan (Turkey). Ms. Kavakci Kan was therefore
elected unopposed.
Remote voting was held for the one seat to be filled by a male candidate.
A total of 231 votes were cast. The quorum was therefore met.
The candidates and the number of votes they received are listed below in the same order as they were
listed on the ballot paper, which was the order in which their candidacies had been received:
Name
Mr. M.E. Al-Sisi Al-Buainain
Mr. G. Migliore
Mr. M.O. Almheri
Country
Bahrain
Italy
United Arab Emirates
Vote
41
101
77
Mr. G. Migliore (Italy) was duly elected.
Report of the Forum of Women Parliamentarians
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
1.
The 31st session of the Forum of Women Parliamentarians was held virtually on 10 and 12 May
2021. It brought together 78 participants, including 57 delegates from 34 countries. There were
53 women and 4 men among the parliamentarians who attended the Forum.
2.
The President of the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians, Ms. S. Kihika, presided over the
31st session of the Forum. The President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Mr. D. Pacheco, welcomed
the participants with opening remarks.
Bureau of Women Parliamentarians
3.
The President of the Bureau, Ms. S. Kihika, reported on the work of the Bureau at its 44th session
held in October 2019 in Belgrade and 45th session held virtually in March 2021. The participants were
also informed about the IPU’s recent and future activities on gender equality
and were briefed on the
preparations for the new IPU Strategy (2022-2027).
Contribution to the work of the 142nd Assembly from a gender perspective
(a)
Gender-related impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and prioritizing parliamentary action for
gender-responsive recovery
4.
By way of contributing to the General Debate of the Assembly on the overall theme
Overcoming
the pandemic today and building a better tomorrow: the role of parliaments,
participants engaged in an
interactive discussion on the gender dimensions of COVID-19 and gender-responsive recovery
post-COVID.
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5.
In preparation for that discussion, the IPU, in partnership with UN Women, had organized in
March and April 2021 a series of three virtual strategic Inter-Parliamentary Dialogues on gender-
responsive post-COVID-19 recovery. Reports on the online meetings were presented by: Ms. S. Kihika
(Kenya) on parity in political participation; Ms. H. Al-Helaissi (Saudi Arabia) on
women’s economic
empowerment; Ms. S. Koutra-Koukouma (Cyprus) on violence against women and girls; and
Ms. S. Sirivejchapun (Thailand) on gender-sensitive parliaments and gender-responsive legal reforms.
6.
The debate in the Forum highlighted the disproportionate impacts that the COVID-19 pandemic
had on women and girls. Women were on the frontline of the pandemic response, as they formed the
majority of workers in the health sector and care economy. Participants stressed that with lockdown
measures and the economic downturn due to COVID-19, women were more affected by job losses,
increased unpaid household and care responsibilities, as well as amplified gender-based violence. The
shift of health resources to the pandemic response also reduced access to sexual and reproductive
health. This situation was even more critical for women with disabilities, adolescent girls, domestic
workers, migrant women, women in contexts of conflict and displacement, indigenous women and
women members of the LGBTQ community.
7.
Participants called for the equal participation of women in decision-making and the full inclusion
of their needs and perspectives in a gender-responsive recovery post-COVID-19. Building on an
exchange of good practices, regarding the post-COVID-19 response, participants urged parliaments to
prioritize parliamentary actions that: included women
of marginalized groups as well
in the design
and implementation of pandemic relief and recovery economic policies; aimed at the adoption of
measures to reintegrate women in the labour market and addressed the gender pay gap; ensured
access to affordable childcare; promoted long-term investment in social protection systems for all
women, including those in the informal sector; and ensured prevention of violence against women and
girls and the provision of essential services to protect and support survivors.
(b)
Mainstreaming gender equality in the draft resolutions under consideration at the
142nd and 143rd Assemblies
8.
Participants were briefed on the two draft resolutions on the agenda of the 142nd Assembly and
the inclusion of a gender perspective in each of them. Under the special procedure put in place in light
of the pandemic, the respective Standing Committees had met in the weeks preceding the Assembly
and had endorsed the resolutions through a written silence procedure. Members of the Bureau of
Women Parliamentarians had taken part as ex officio members in the drafting committees of those
Standing Committees, in order to ensure that a gender perspective was integrated in the resolutions.
9.
Ms. C. Roth (Germany), co-Rapporteur of the draft resolution of the Standing Committee on
Peace and International Security, gave a brief overview of the draft resolution
Parliamentary strategies
to strengthen peace and security against threats and conflicts resulting from climate-related disasters
and their consequences.
Ms. Kihika, on behalf of the Bureau, further explained that the resolution
recognized UN Security Council resolutions on women, peace and security, as well as the specific
impact of war, conflict, displacement, and climate-related tensions and disasters on women and girls,
which included an increase in sexual and gender-based violence. The resolution also emphasized the
need for meaningful participation of women at all levels of decision-making in the development and
implementation of gender-responsive solutions and resilience mechanisms to tackle climate change and
climate-related crises and their close connection to sustainable peace and security.
10.
Ms. S.M. Dinică (Romania),
co- Rapporteur of the draft resolution
Mainstreaming digitalization
and the circular economy to achieve the SDGs, particularly responsible consumption and production,
of
the Standing Committee on Sustainable Development, briefed the participants on the resolution. On
behalf of the Bureau, Ms. H. Al Helaissi, noted that the resolution stressed the urgency to reverse
losses in hard-won gender equality gains due to COVID-19, in particular in terms of economic
empowerment and ending violence against women and girls. The resolution also recognized the
potential of the circular economy and digitalization in enabling the economic empowerment of women, in
particular through appropriate financial resources allocated to young and, in particular, women
entrepreneurs. Furthermore, it called for bridging the gender digital divide through the promotion of
gender-inclusive education frameworks, and policies to boost education opportunities and digital skills
development for women and girls in the areas of science, technology, engineering, art and
mathematics.
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11. Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), co-Rapporteur of the Standing Committee on Democracy and Human
Rights, introduced the theme of the next resolution entitled
Legislation worldwide to combat online
sexual child exploitation
to be considered at the 143rd Assembly. Following her presentation,
participants expressed great concern at the growing phenomenon of online sexual child exploitation,
further exacerbated by isolation and increased internet use during the COVID-19 pandemic. They
agreed that the issue required the urgent involvement, at both the national and international levels, of all
parliaments, governments, ICT companies but also parents and teachers, to ensure accountability in the
physical and psychological protection of children. It was underlined that parliaments must bring national
laws on that matter in line with the Convention of the Rights of the Child and its Protocol on the Sale of
Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography. It was emphasized that investments must be made
in the protection
and
education of children, including through age-appropriate sex education in schools
to empower children to understand their rights, protect themselves, report online sexual exploitation and
ask for help. Participants agreed to share their first preliminary considerations with the co-Rapporteurs
of the upcoming draft resolution.
Panel discussion: Generation Equality in and through parliaments
12. The panel discussion titled
Generation Equality in and through parliaments
focused on the role of
parliaments to achieve gender equality, with emphasis on the empowerment and leadership of youth
and adolescent girls. The exchange opened with presentations by: Ms. L. Banerjee, Executive
Coordinator of Generation Equality, UN Women; Mr. H. Vasconcelos (Mexico), Senator; Ms. C. López
Castro (Mexico), member of parliament; and Khesavi (Mauritius), a female youth empowerment
advocate. The panellists addressed the IPU’s
role as co-leader of Generation Equality’s Action Coalition
on feminist movements and leadership and how parliamentarians could contribute to making women
and girls feel empowered to participate in public life and contribute to decisions to build a better future
for them.
13. Participants were also briefed on Generation Equality, a unique forum launched by UN Women in
partnership with the governments of France and Mexico and civil society groups, centred on
intergenerational dialogue and multi-stakeholder collaboration to achieve gender equality. Participants
were invited to indicate their commitment to the Action Coalition areas of Generation Equality.
14. In the ensuing discussion, members of parliament shared information about what they did at the
national level to promote women’s and girls’ organizing and leadership. Participants
explained how their
parliaments engaged in repealing discriminatory laws and pushed for new legislation that guaranteed
women’s rights and gender equality.
They discussed the steps they took to reach gender parity in
politics and to ensure the presence of diverse groups of young women leaders in all areas of decision-
making. Strategies to achieve gender-responsive budgeting and the elimination of gender-based
violence both in politics and in domestic life were also discussed.
Elections to the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians
15. The Forum elected representatives to fill half of the seats of regional representatives and other
vacancies in the Bureau of Women Parliamentarians. Since, due to the pandemic, elections had not
been held in 2020, the Bureau proposed to extend by one year the term of the regional representatives
whose terms were due to end in 2022 in keeping with the Rules of the Forum. It was so decided. The
updated list of members of the Bureau is available in Annex.
16.
Following the Bureau’s proposal, the Forum elected
Ms. L. Vasylenko (Ukraine) to fill the post of
President, and Ms. H. Ramzy Fayez (Bahrain) to the post of First Vice-President of the Bureau of
Women Parliamentarians. The position of Second Vice-President remained vacant and would be filled
when the Bureau and Forum met again at the 143rd Assembly.
*****
COMPOSITION AND OFFICERS OF THE BUREAU
OF WOMEN PARLIAMENTARIANS
(as at 12 May 2021
)
PRESIDING OFFICERS (April 2021–2023)
President: Ms. L. Vasylenko (Ukraine)
First Vice-President: Ms. H. Ramzy Fayez (Bahrain)
Second Vice-President:
Vacancy
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REGIONAL REPRESENTATIVES
African Group:
Ms. O. Sanogo (Mali)
Ms. N. Bujela (Eswatini)
Arab Group:
Ms. M.S. Al Suwaidi (United Arab Emirates)
Ms. H. Ramzy Fayez (Bahrain)
Asia-Pacific Group:
Ms. P. Maadam (India)
Ms. P.A. Komarudin (Indonesia)
Eurasia Group:
Ms. E. Vtorygina (Russian Federation)
Ms. E. Afanasieva (Russian Federation)
Ms. S. Wakarura Kihika (Kenya)
Ms. M. Baba Moussa Soumanou (Benin)
Ms. M. Mohammed Saleh (Syrian Arab Rep.)
Ms. A.N. Ayyoub Awadallah (Egypt)
Vacancy
Ms. E. Azad (Islamic Rep. of Iran)
Ms. Z. Greceanîi (Rep. of Moldova)
Ms. M. Vasilevich (Belarus)
Expiry of
term
April 2023
April 2025
April 2023
April 2025
April 2023
April 2025
April 2023
April 2025
April 2023
April 2025
April 2023
April 2025
Group of Latin American and the Caribbean:
Ms. C. Mix (Chile)
Ms. V. Persaud (Guyana)
Ms. W.P. Andrade Muñoz (Ecuador)
Ms. A.F. Sagasti (Argentina)
Twelve Plus Group:
Ms. L. Wall (New Zealand)
Ms. V. Riotton (France)
Ms. L. Vasylenko (Ukraine)
Ms. M. Grande (Italy)
MEMBERS OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
(ex officio, for the duration of their term on the Executive Committee)
Ms. L. Fehlmann Rielle (Switzerland)
Ms. A.D. Mergane Kanouté (Senegal)
Ms. C. Widegren (Sweden)
Ms. P. Krairiksh (Thailand)
Ms. E. Anyakun (Uganda)
Ms. B. Argimón (Uruguay)
4
Expiry of
term
October 2021
April 2023
October 2023
October 2023
October 2023
October 2024
Report of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians
of the IPU
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
The Forum of Young Parliamentarians convened on 13 and 17 May 2021. The Forum was presided by
the President of the Forum Mr. M. Bouva (Suriname).
In the course of the meetings, young members of parliament discussed the key role of youth in the
COVID-19 pandemic recovery strategies, in building a future underpinned by representative and
inclusive democracies and by a new development model that responded to the needs and interests of
all generations. Marking the beginning of a new chapter in the advancement of youth participation and
in the implementation of the 2010 IPU resolution
Youth participation in the democratic process,
the
Forum launched the fourth IPU report entitled
Youth participation in national parliaments
and the IPU
campaign
I Say Yes to Youth in Parliament!
In their introductory remarks, the IPU President and the IPU Secretary General reaffirmed that young
people were a key part of any democracy and that it was their right to be included in political decision-
making. Recognizing youth leadership in mitigating the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, they praised
the role that young people were playing in supporting the elderly and other vulnerable groups and
countering disinformation during the pandemic in addition to promoting democracy, climate action and
combatting racism and exclusion.
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Participants discussed from a youth perspective the overall theme of the 142nd Assembly. They
unveiled initiatives and actions taken at the national level to mitigate the COVID-19
pandemic’s impact
on youth in terms of legislation and policies on education, employment, health and youth social
services. They shared best practices in furthering youth participation in the democratic process, such as
the establishment of caucuses of young MPs and youth national councils, digitalization initiatives to
develop new opportunities for youth employment, lowering the age of eligibility to be elected to office,
digitalization of election processes, and advancing equality and equity in access to online education.
Equally important were decisions made to support youth participation and leadership in the IPU. In this
context, the Forum approved the nominations made by the geopolitical groups for membership of the
Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians for the period 2021–2023. Furthermore, the Forum
approved the election of Ms. S. Albazar (Egypt) as the new President of the Board of the Forum of
Young Parliamentarians.
In preparation for the 143rd IPU Assembly, the Forum appointed Mr. U. Lechte (Germany) to prepare a
youth overview report, with the aim of contributing a youth perspective to the draft resolution to be
considered by the Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights entitled
Legislation worldwide
to combat online sexual child exploitation.
The Board of the Forum of Young Parliamentarians convened on 10 March, 6 May and 14 May 2021. It
took decisions on the holding of the 2021 Global Conference of Young Parliamentarians in April and on
the integration of a youth perspective into the theme of the 142nd IPU Assembly. The agendas of the
meetings included the election of the new President of the Board. The Board also considered means to
keep outgoing members of the Board involved in its work and agreed to propose a revision of the
definition of "young parliamentarian" by reducing the age limit currently applied.
Report of the Committee on Middle East Questions
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
Two sittings of the Committee were held virtually, on 14 April and 10 May 2021. This report summarizes
the Committee’s discussions and decisions made during those two sittings, which built on its
discussions in July 2020.
The Committee’s
President,
Ms. S. Ataullahjan (Canada), as well as Ms. F. Benbadis (Algeria),
Mr. H. Julien-Laferrière (France), Mr. A. Al-Ahmad (Palestine), Ms. H. Martins (Portugal) and
Mr. L. Wehrli (Switzerland), attended both sittings. Mr. A.A. Jama (Somalia) attended the 14 April sitting.
Ms. I. Al Madhy (Iraq) and Mr. A. Dichter (Israel) attended the sitting on 10 May. Also present at the
sittings were Mr. M. Chungong (IPU Secretary General), Mr. M. Omar (Senior Advisor to the IPU
Secretary General), Ms. J. Vanian (IPU Peace and Security Consultant) and Ms. M. Hermes (IPU
Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism (CTVE) and Peace and Security team).
During these sittings, the Committee heard reports prepared by the IPU Secretariat on the latest
developments in Yemen, Libya and Palestine, as well as on the peace and normalization agreements
between Israel and other countries in the region.
The IPU Secretariat provided an overview of the communications it had received regarding the situation
in the region, and on how the IPU had responded to them. The majority of the communications related
to the situations in Palestine and in Yemen, but some also concerned the situations in Iran, Iraq, Libya,
Saudi Arabia and Syria.
The Committee agreed that it should meet more frequently to be able to respond in good time to the
fast-moving developments in the region and expressed its desire to produce more statements stating
the Committee’s position on those developments.
Yemen
Regarding Yemen, it was reported that the situation
was dire and had been dubbed “the world’s worst
humanitarian crisis” by the United Nations. Millions of Yemenis were suffering
from malnutrition. The
humanitarian situation was exacerbated by the cholera epidemic and COVID-19 pandemic. The
parliamentarians
who had been elected in Yemen’s last elections held in 2003 were divided into two
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factions: one which had remained in Houthi-controlled Sana’a,
and one which was based in Seiyun and
was affiliated with the internationally recognized Yemeni Government in Aden. The IPU remained in
communication with both factions.
The Committee agreed that the conflict in Yemen had lasted for too long, expressed its support for a
political solution under UN auspices, and welcomed the recent efforts of the UN Special Envoy to
Yemen to renew the political process. The Committee also emphasized that the IPU must give priority to
promoting access to humanitarian assistance in Yemen and encouraged a unified parliamentary
approach in that regard, while expressing its concern in particular about food insecurity in Yemen. The
Committee condemned the continued sale of weapons by many countries to the parties in conflict. With
regard to Yemen’s representation in the IPU, the Committee recommended
that the IPU governing
bodies consider recognizing the House of Representatives in Seiyun led by Sultan Al-Burkani, while
emphasizing the need for inclusiveness and the involvement of all parliamentarians elected in 2003,
whether in Sana’a or Seiyun, to be involved in the country’s parliamentary
processes.
The Committee agreed to submit a statement regarding the situation in Yemen for endorsement by the
Governing Council, the text of which can be found on
page 55.
Libya
Turning to Libya, the Committee heard that in October 2020 the warring parties had agreed to a
ceasefire and that in November 2020 it had been announced that elections would take place on
24 December 2021. An interim Government of National Unity had been formed in February 2021. It was
endorsed by the House of Representatives in Tobruk, which exercised membership rights in the IPU.
Although there had been significant progress politically and a big fall in the number of casualties in the
Libyan conflict, the problem of foreign terrorist fighters and militias remained, despite many countries
having called for their removal.
The Committee welcomed the recent political agreements that had been concluded between various
parties to the conflict. It encouraged the implementation of the agreements and the carrying out of the
elections as had been foreseen. It condemned foreign interference in the conflict and called for the
removal of foreign terrorist fighters, while emphasizing the need to tackle robustly the scourge of
terrorism in Libya. The Committee encouraged both local and international stakeholders to work
together and come to a common understanding on a way forward. It also expressed its concern about
the case of Ms. S. Sergiwa, a parliamentarian who had been abducted from her home on 17 July 2019,
and encouraged the relevant parties to shed light on it. The Committee encouraged the House of
Representatives in Tobruk to continue engaging with the IPU.
Peace and normalization agreements
The Committee noted that, since September 2020, Israel had signed agreements with the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco.
The Committee welcomed the peace and normalization agreements, while noting that it was important
for all peace to be inclusive, and that the fate of Palestine should not be ignored while fences were
being mended with other countries in the region. The Committee encouraged the parties concerned to
work towards comprehensive and sustainable peace. The Committee further welcomed the desire
expressed by its members for peace in the region.
Palestine
In its 14 April meeting, the Committee heard an update on the upcoming parliamentary elections in
Palestine, which had been scheduled to take place on 22 May 2021. The Palestinian Committee
member informed the Committee that Palestine had sent an official letter to Israel requesting that they
not obstruct the elections, especially in East Jerusalem. He noted that the Presidential Decree on
elections was
based on the Palestinian Liberation Organization’s (PLO) by-laws
and the Independence
Declaration adopted in Algiers by the Palestinian National Council. He also noted that relations were
resuming between Palestine and the United States Administration.
The Committee welcomed the elections in Palestine and expressed its strong hope that they would run
smoothly and in keeping with free and equitable electoral standards. The IPU had been invited by the
Palestinian Central Elections Commission to observe the elections. While the IPU strongly welcomed
the prospect of the elections, the Organization did not observe elections unless there was heavy UN
involvement. Nevertheless, the Committee agreed that the IPU should invite its Member Parliaments to
observe the elections in their individual capacities, which the Secretary General subsequently did in a
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letter dated 20 April. The Committee further invited the IPU President and Secretary General to issue an
official statement welcoming and reiterating their support for the elections, and encouraging their
smooth running and conduct in an acceptable manner without hindrances.
On 10 May, the Committee noted that the elections in Palestine had been postponed. The member from
Palestine appealed to the international community to ensure that there were no obstacles to the
electoral process in East Jerusalem. He also highlighted the need to respect international legal
frameworks, and for a two-state solution to the crisis. The member from Israel emphasized that Israel
was not responsible for the postponement of the Palestinian elections, which were an internal matter.
The Committee highlighted that the elections were needed for the legitimate representation of the
people of Palestine, and as part of the architecture for the statehood of Palestine, and reiterated its
hope that they could take place under free and fair conditions. It agreed that Palestine was entitled to
full statehood within the territories agreed by international resolutions. The Committee also expressed
its deep concern over the recent escalation of violence and tensions in East Jerusalem, and agreed to
produce a statement regarding those recent developments. Both the Israeli and Palestinian members
objected to the violence. The Committee stressed the need for restraint and dialogue. The text of the
Committee’s statement can
be found below.
*****
Statement on events in Jerusalem
Having met on Monday, 10 May 2021, the IPU Committee on Middle East Questions decided to
continue to closely monitor the developments unfolding in East Jerusalem. It expresses grave concern
over the escalation of violence and tensions that have unfortunately cost human life and caused
extensive injuries and damage. It firmly condemns all forms of violence, irrespective of who is
responsible. It urges all parties to exercise maximum restraint and to refrain from any action that will
lead to further damages and loss of human life.
The Committee reiterates its commitment to peace in the region and requests that all parties engage in
meaningful dialogue with a view to a resolution of the conflict with full respect for the legitimate rights of
all involved.
The IPU Committee on Middle East Questions is made up of 12 members of parliament from around the
world with expertise in the Middle East. Its members are elected by the IPU Governing Council for four
years. Israel and Palestine are ex-officio members of the Committee.
Report of the Committee to Promote Respect for
International Humanitarian Law
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
1.
The Committee to Promote Respect for International Humanitarian Law (the Committee) met on
16 April 2021. The meeting was chaired by the
Committee’s President, Ms. Á. Vadai. Participants
included, in addition to the Chair, members from Armenia, Bahrain, Belgium, Ecuador and India
representing more than 50 per cent of sitting members. Representatives from the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC) attended as observers. Special thanks went to outgoing Committee members Mr. S.M.
Al-Khathlan (Saudi Arabia), former member of parliament, and Mr. A. Sinmaleza (Ecuador) for their
strong participation in the Committee’s work.
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COVID-19 and displaced and stateless populations
2.
The Committee pursued the discussions held at its preceding sitting on 2 October 2020 on the
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on refugees, stateless persons and people fleeing conflict. It heard
updates from the UNHCR and ICRC. With regard to refugees and people displaced by conflict, they
often found themselves in a dire and challenging situation. Refugees and displaced persons were
particularly at risk during the current coronavirus pandemic, because of their precarious living
conditions. They often had limited or no access to water, sanitation and health facilities. Their poor living
conditions in crowded camps made it more difficult to implement sanitary measures and offer
responses. The pandemic had turned into a pandemic of hunger, caused an increase in the number of
cases of forced marriages, a historic rise in school dropouts within the refugee communities and more
intense stigmatization of refugees. The year 2020 had also seen the lowest number of refugee
resettlements. The question of access to testing and vaccination remained a priority in 2021. A total of
153 States had adopted vaccination policies which included a reference to refugees but actual
immunization remained a challenge.
3.
With regard to stateless men and women, they did not enjoy the rights and protections of the
citizenry and were more likely to contract COVID-19 because they often found themselves in dire living
conditions. Moreover, they might not have the same access to health facilities, such as testing and
treatment, and might also be reluctant to seek such services for fear of being detained and/or deported.
Measures to mitigate the impact of the pandemic and to protect citizenry needed to place special
attention on stateless people. That included affording them full access to health services, such as
COVID-19 testing and treatment, without requiring proof of legal status or identity, and access to
services without fear and risk of being arrested or detained. Finally, in order to avoid further
instances of statelessness, civil records, such as registration of births, should be maintained as
“essential” services.
4.
Such challenging conditions also applied to people fleeing conflict or living in conflict situations.
Access to services, including health services, remained difficult, especially in regions dominated by non-
State armed groups, who would also have to facilitate access to health services.
5.
The Committee called on the Assembly to pay particular attention to the situation of refugees,
stateless men and women, and people fleeing conflict in its work on the management of the pandemic
and pandemic recovery efforts. The Committee also called on the need to combat vaccination
nationalism and ensure access to all, including the most vulnerable.
6.
The Committee agreed to pursue discussions on the impact of the pandemic on refugees,
stateless men and women, and people fleeing conflict. It took note that a guidance note for members of
parliament on parliaments, the COVID-19 pandemic and people on the move was being prepared. A
draft text would be submitted to the Committee for consideration in May.
Parliamentary action to end statelessness
7.
The Committee was briefed on recent developments in combatting statelessness. It noted that
several countries had revised their legal frameworks to address discrimination in nationality laws. That
was a key avenue to reducing statelessness.
8.
The Committee discussed strategies to engage parliaments in contributing to efforts to end
statelessness. It welcomed the organization of a very successful webinar, organized in cooperation with
UNHCR in February 2021, on parliamentary action to end statelessness. The webinar had brought
together close to 300 participants. The Committee agreed to pursue awareness-raising efforts and
encouraged its regional representatives to open a debate within their geopolitical groups and take the
lead in hosting (with the support of the IPU and UNHCR) regional webinars on the issue.
9.
The Committee furthermore noted that 2021 was a key year as it marked the 60th anniversary of
the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness. The IPU, in close collaboration with UNHCR,
had been engaged in supporting efforts to end statelessness for many years. The Committee felt it was
important to mark the 60th anniversary with a renewed commitment to pursuing efforts in this area. It
adopted a statement to that effect (see
page 54)
and invited the IPU Governing Council to endorse it for
onward transmission to the United Nations.
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Follow-up to the Global Compact on Refugees and Global Refugee Forum
10. The Committee was briefed on the follow-up to the Global Refugee Forum (GRF) and
implementation of the pledges made. IPU Members were invited to follow up on pledges made by their
countries (see:
https://globalcompactrefugees.org/index.php/).
The Committee decided to pursue raising
awareness of IPU Members with regard to the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR) and its
implementation. It furthermore agreed to carry out a survey of IPU Members to identify good
parliamentary practices in following up on the GRF pledges.
Implementation of international humanitarian law (IHL)
11. The Committee reviewed the various measures it could take to facilitate greater awareness and
to engage parliaments in implementing IHL. That included: translating and disseminating the IPU-ICRC
handbook for members of parliament on IHL; organizing debates in parliament on IHL; and reviewing
existing national legal frameworks to facilitate implementation and respect of IHL. The ICRC reiterated
its commitment to supporting parliamentary initiatives in that regard.
12. The Committee agreed to focus efforts in 2021 and 2022 on ratifying and implementing the
Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions in view of the celebration of their 45th anniversary
in 2022. That would entail developing a mobilization and awareness-raising campaign. The ICRC and
the IPU Secretariat were asked to put together a workplan of activities for consideration by the
Committee.
13. With regard to immediate initiatives, the Committee agreed to organize a panel discussion on the
Ottawa Convention on Anti-Personnel Mines, as well as a discussion on humanitarian impacts of
conflicts.
Presidency and membership of the Committee
14. Committee members re-elected Ms. Á. Vadai (Hungary) as its Chair for another term ending
March 2022. Ms. Vadai had been elected as Chair in March 2019. Committee members agreed to
consider the 2019-2021 period as a first mandate as Chair in view of the exceptional circumstances
linked to the pandemic and the impossibility to meet during the past year.
15. The Committee also noted the absence of participation in its meetings of the regional
representative from Mexico for more than three times in a row. It agreed not to immediately suspend her
membership, as allowed for by the rules, pending feedback from the member concerned, on challenges
faced regarding participation.
Report of the Advisory Group on Health
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
The IPU Advisory Group on Health met on 28 April with eight out of eleven members in attendance. The
Group was also pleased to welcome technical partners from the World Health Organization, the
Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, UNAIDS, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria.
As the focal point for parliamentary accountability, the Advisory Group discussed the implementation of
the IPU resolution on universal health coverage (UHC). The Group agreed on the importance of UHC in
the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, took note of the findings of the first report on the implementation
of the resolution, and agreed that more data are needed on the impact of the pandemic on health
budgeting and the protection of the right to health in legislation and in practice. The social determinants
of health also need to be taken into account to invest in health prevention.
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The Group’s
discussion will inform
the
2021 report on the resolution’s implementation but data is also
required from Member Parliaments. Parliaments are therefore urged to respond to the survey that the
IPU Secretariat has already sent out. The Group wishes to be inspired by Member Parliaments and
learn about their work to assist with promoting the implementation of this key IPU resolution.
The Group also discussed parliamentary engagement on HIV/AIDS and its contribution to the United
Nations High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS that will take place on 8-10 June 2021. The AIDS epidemic
can only be ended if it remains high on political agendas. As a parliamentary contribution to the High-
Level Meeting, the Group adopted a statement calling on parliaments to use their powers to ensure
prevention and access to HIV and health services without discrimination. The Governing Council is
invited to endorse the statement for onward transmission to the United Nations (see
page 52).
Finally, the Group praised the IPU Secretariat’s
tireless work to continue to promote and facilitate
parliamentary action on global health security, UHC, and women’s,
children’s and adolescents’ health
during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Group also thanked its partners for their support and commitment
to working with the IPU. Members of Parliament should consider it one of their main tasks to ensure that
other health priorities are not sidelined in the COVID-19 response and to continue to deliver for all
people without forgetting the marginalized and vulnerable.
At the end of the meeting, the Advisory Group unanimously approved second mandates for the Chair,
Ms. G. Katuta from Zambia, and Vice-Chair, Mr. J. Ignazio Echániz from Spain, for a period of one year.
Report of the High-Level Advisory Group on
Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism
Noted by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th Session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
The High-Level Advisory Group on Countering Terrorism and Violent Extremism (HLAG) had held the
following three meetings: an in-person fifth meeting on 16 and 17 January 2020, and two virtual
meetings
a sixth meeting on 16 June 2020 and a seventh meeting on 17 May 2021. The present
report summarizes the discussions and decisions reached by the HLAG during those three meetings.
The fifth meeting, held on 16 and 17 January 2020, was chaired by the HLAG President Mr. R. Lopatka
(Austria), and was attended by: the Vice-Chairperson Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), Mr. S. Chiheb (Algeria),
Ms. A. Karapetyan (Armenia), Mr. CHEN Fuli (China), Mr. A. Abdel Aal (Egypt), Mr. J.F. Merino (El
Salvador), Mr. R. del Picchia (France), Ms. Á. Vadai (Hungary), Mr. G. Migliore (Italy), Ms. A. Husin
(Malaysia), Mr. O. Tinni (Niger), Ms. S.J. Marri (Pakistan), and Ms. I. Passada (Uruguay).
The sixth meeting, held on 16 June 2020, was chaired by the HLAG President Mr. R. Lopatka (Austria),
and was attended by: the Vice-Chairperson Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), Mr. CHEN Fuli (China), Mr. M. Fawzy
representing Mr. A. Abdel Aal (Egypt), Mr. R. del Picchia (France), Ms. Á. Vadai (Hungary),
Mr. G. Migliore (Italy), Mr. O. Tinni (Niger), and Ms. S.J. Marri (Pakistan).
The seventh meeting, held on 17 May 2021, was chaired by the HLAG President Mr. R. Lopatka
(Austria), and was attended by: the Vice-Chairperson Ms. J. Oduol (Kenya), Mr. CHEN Fuli (China),
Mr. V. Suárez Díaz (Dominican Republic), Mr. L. Vance representing Mr. R. del Picchia (France),
Ms. Á. Vadai (Hungary), Mr. G. Migliore (Italy), and Ms. S.J. Marri (Pakistan).
Also present at the meetings were Mr. M. Chungong (IPU Secretary General), Mr. M. Omar (Senior
Adviser to the IPU Secretary General), Ms. C.E. Castillo (IPU Counter-Terrorism Senior Consultant),
Mr. M. Miedico (Deputy Director of the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT),
Mr. Antonio Luzzi Programme Officer Office of the Chief, Terrorism Prevention Branch of the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Ms. J. Vanian (IPU Peace and Security Consultant), and
Ms. M. Hermes (IPU CTVE and Peace and Security Team).
During the
meetings, the HLAG reviewed the following areas of the IPU Secretariat’s work: progress
in
development of products to be launched; activities regarding victims of terrorism, the protection of the
internet and the World Wide Web; cooperation and projects with regional parliaments. Members also
stressed the importance of addressing the situation in the Sahel region, as well as the importance of
supporting the victims of terrorism, and addressing hate speech.
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Sahel countries
Regarding the situation in the Sahel region, the members emphasized that it must be addressed and
that it was important to raise awareness about the situation both nationally and internationally in the G5
Sahel countries and with their European partners. It was decided to hold a parliamentary meeting for the
G5 Sahel countries and their international partners. Members approved the proposal to provide
capacity-building for that region. They agreed to recommend to the IPU governing bodies that the IPU
adopt a resolution recommending that parliaments request the executive branches of their governments
to lobby the United Nations to increase their financial support to the G5 Sahel Joint Force in keeping
with Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter. It was also agreed that the HLAG would recommend to
the IPU governing bodies to include in the declaration of the Fifth World Conference of Speakers of
Parliament (5WCSP) a paragraph calling upon the United Nations to make the fight against terrorism an
even higher priority, particularly in the Sahel region, and to underline the need to defend the victims of
terrorism.
Members were also informed of consultations that the IPU Secretariat had had with the Arab Parliament
on holding activities with the G5 Sahel countries on strengthening relations and cooperation between
both regions, especially on issues relating to counter-terrorism.
Development of IPU tools and products
The IPU Secretariat presented three projects that it was working on: the Global Parliamentary Network,
the interactive map and the mobile application for parliamentarians aimed at enhancing parliamentary
work. HLAG members agreed that the tangible use of such tools had positive aspects, such as
accessing shared documentation. Members were assured that the IPU would have full control over the
products and be solely responsible for their management. The products were being developed with
funding from the National
People’s Congress of China.
Collaboration was also envisaged with GRULAC and the Arab Parliament to produce the said tools in
Arabic and Spanish, to further ensure robust security, and provide chat and videoconference features
for users.
Protection of the internet and World Wide Web
HLAG members discussed the protection of the internet and the World Wide Web and were informed
that the IPU Secretariat had consulted various stakeholders on the topic, including CERN, the
International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice
Research Institute (UNICRI), United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), UNOCT and a
cybersecurity company. All participants agreed that the internet was a vulnerable target and protecting it
was an urgent priority.
Victims of terrorism
Members highlighted the importance of addressing the issue of victims of terrorism and the role of the
global parliamentary community in supporting them, including the marking of the International Day of
Remembrance and Tribute to the Victims of Terrorism on 21 August during the virtual segment of the
5WCSP in 2020. The Group’s
members also noted UNODC’s substantial legislative work and its role in
implementing UN counter-terrorism activities.
Members reviewed work that had been done by the IPU Secretariat, UNODC and UNOCT on the model
legislative provision for victims of terrorism within the framework of the IPU-UN Joint Programme on
countering terrorism and violent extremism (CT/VE). Six expert consultations had taken place from
November 2020 to January 2021 with two main objectives: first, to draft model legislative provisions that
could serve as examples for the review of existing laws; and, secondly, to promote the exchange of
information regarding existing best practices. The final product would be launched at the First Global
Parliamentary Summit on Counter-Terrorism on 9 September 2021 in Vienna, Austria.
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Trilateral agreement between the IPU, UNODC and UNOCT on Countering Terrorism and Violent
Extremism
HLAG members reaffirmed the Group’s founding ToR, endorsed by the Governing Council, as the
global parliamentary focal point for counter-terrorism related parliamentary activities. Although the
members confirmed their full support for the IPU-UN Joint Programme and the budgeted 2020 activities,
they emphasized that the said programme was not the HLAG’s only programme.
They expressed their
willingness to explore topics in the field of prevention of extremism, such as education and radicalization
issues, and to do so in collaboration with other UN agencies.
Members stressed that there was a need for better coordination between the IPU, UNODC and
UNOCT. Parliamentarians lacked clarity on the mandate of UNODC and UNOCT, making it a
coordination issue. The HLAG must send a strong political message to the United Nations to express its
commitment and, at the same time, its concerns on the issue of coordination. There was a need for
stronger UN support to the development of IPU products, including through financial means. It was
important that the HLAG be invited to UN events to provide a substantive contribution as the global
parliamentary focal point on counter-terrorism related activities.
Members were informed that the IPU-UN Joint Programme on CT/VE budget, which had been launched
two and a half years ago, would end in June 2021. The IPU Secretariat explained that the IPU had not
received any direct financial support from that budget for any activities. However, technical cooperation
between the United Nations and the IPU would continue where necessary.
Parliamentary Counter-Terrorism Coordination Compact (PCTCC) initiative
The IPU Secretariat and the HLAG Chair presented the Parliamentary Counter-Terrorism Coordination
Compact (PCTCC) initiative, which would mirror the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Coordination
Compact (GCTCC) and enable the IPU to consolidate input from regional parliamentary assemblies
when representing the global parliamentary community in the GCTCC. The initiative was approved by
the members of the HLAG.
Financial situation
Members discussed suggestions on fundraising in light of a need for more resources and took note of
the financial arrangements as stated in the IPU-UN Joint Programme: the IPU and UN financial and
auditing regulations applied as the programme activities were divided among the three organizations
the IPU, UNOCT, UNODC.
Likewise, the IPU Secretariat reported on consultations it had been carrying out with various regional
parliamentary organizations and parliaments with which the IPU Secretariat would sign cooperation
agreements. The IPU had been in discussions with the Arab Parliament, which would make available
funding for an Arabic version of the mobile application. A broader cooperation agreement would include
other fields of cooperation, including activities in counter-terrorism and preventing violent extremism. At
the same time, the IPU Secretariat informed members of the continuation of its fundraising strategy with
Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.
Preparations for the First Global Parliamentary Summit on Counter-Terrorism
At the seventh HLAG meeting, the importance of holding such a summit had been discussed. The IPU
Secretary General informed members that the Summit had been approved by the IPU governing bodies
in
the context of the HLAG’s work programme and had been endorsed by the 5WCSP Preparatory
Committee. HLAG members received the draft programme and were encouraged to share their
opinions, ideas and comments with the Secretariat.
It was also mentioned that this Summit had originally been programmed as part of the activities of the
IPU-UN Joint Programme on CT/VE, and that the UN would have financed it, but that this would no
longer be the case as the Joint Programme was ending in June 2021. The IPU Secretariat informed
members that it would ensure the development of CT/VE activities and that, bearing in mind the
importance of the Summit, would use the Summit as an event to launch a number of tools, including the
model legislative provision for victims of terrorism, the mobile application, the Global Parliamentary
Network and the interactive map.
73
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
Statistics of the Gender Partnership Group
Status of participation of women delegates at the 142nd Assembly of the IPU (at 27 May 2021)
Composition of delegations of IPU members at the last eight IPU statutory meetings
(October 2016 - present)
Total
delegates
Total/percentage
of women
delegates
288
227
219
247
227
249
193
228
38.1
30.7
30.3
32.9
30.5
30.0
31.5
32.9
Total
delegations
Total/percentage
of all-male
delegations
(2 or more)
8
15
16
17
18
17
11
15
6.2
11.3
11.8
12.1
12.7
11.8
9.6
11.5
Total all-female
delegations
(2 or more)
2
0
0
4
3
1
1
3
Total single-
sex delegations
(2 or more)
10
15
16
21
21
18
12
18
Total single-member
delegations
(male and female)
4
17
12
9
6
11
12
11
Meeting
Virtual (05/21)
Belgrade (10/19)
Doha (04/19)
Geneva (10/18)
Geneva (03/18)
St. Petersburg (10/17)
Dhaka (04/17)
Geneva (10/16)
755
739
721
751
745
829
612
693
133
149
147
149
148
155
126
141
Single-sex, multi-member delegations of IPU members attending the virtual Assembly
(status on 27 May 2021)
Virtual May 21
Belgrade 10/19
Doha 04/19
Geneva 10/18
Geneva 03/18
St. Petersburg 17
Dhaka 17
Geneva 16
Men MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Men MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Total
Total
Total
Total
Total
Country
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Czech Republic
Guinea*
Israel
Jordan
Kuwait
Malta*
Republic of Korea
Slovenia
Turkmenistan*
Yemen*
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
2
0
0
2
4
2
2
4
2
0
0
2
8
2
4
2
2
4
2
4
2
2
8
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
3
1
absent
6
7
1
8
3
2
8
4
1
7
8
1
9
4
2
8
3
3
absent
absent
6
0
2
1
3
2
1
6
7
1
7
1
1
5
3
4
2
7
8
2
7
1
2
5
2
0
1
1
1
0
2
1
0
3
2
2
7
6
2
3
1
7
5
2
3
8
7
2
5
2
7
0
0
1
1
1
0
1
2
4
4
2
3
5
7
3
7
1
4
4
2
4
6
8
3
8
3
8
1
1
2
0
0
2
6
1
absent
6
7
1
6
absent
7
2
8
7
1
8
1
0
1
1
5
4
2
2
absent
absent
Total
6
4
3
3
5
8
Geneva 16
Total
Total
1
1
0
1
2
2
8
7
3
3
1
1
absent
9
8
3
4
3
3
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
4
absent
absent
not affiliated
absent
0
8
absent
Single-member delegations of IPU members attending the virtual Assembly (status on 27 May 2021)
Virtual May 21
Belgrade 10/19
Doha 04/19
Geneva 10/18
Geneva 03/18
St. Petersburg
17
Dhaka 17
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Women MPs
Total
Women MPs
Total
Women MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
Men MPs
absent
2
1
4
Total
Total
Country
1
2
3
4
Côte d'Ivoire
Cyprus
Luxembourg*
Zambia
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
2
2
3
3
absent
4
3
5
6
1
2
0
2
8
3
2
4
9
5
2
6
1
2
2
2
2
4
3
4
6
0
2
2
3
3
5
3
5
7
1
2
0
3
2
3
3
3
3
5
3
6
absent
1
0
2
0 1
1 1
4 6
2
0
2
4
1
6
absent
absent
*
Delegations subjected to sanctions at the 142nd Assembly, pursuant to Art. 10.4 and 15.2.c of the IPU Statutes, for being
composed exclusively of representatives of the same sex for two consecutive Assemblies.
74
Total
Total
Total
Total
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
Delegations with 40 to 60 per cent of women parliamentarians
The countries are ordered according to the percentage of women parliamentarians in their delegations
at the 142nd IPU Assembly. There are a total of 44 gender-balanced delegations out of 133 delegations
(33,1%) of IPU members attending the 142nd IPU Assembly (as at 27 May 2021).
Countries with 40 to 49.9 per cent women parliamentarians (11):
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Saudi Arabia (40%)
Senegal (40%)
Suriname (40%)
Togo (40%)
Portugal (43%)
Argentina (44%)
Bahrain (44%)
Kenya (44%)
Poland (44%)
Thailand (44%)
Uzbekistan (44%)
Countries with 50 per cent women parliamentarians (26):
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Angola
Armenia
Belarus
Bolivia
Brazil
Comoros
Djibouti
Ecuador
Egypt
Estonia
Hungary
Italy
Japan
Latvia
Lesotho
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Mali
Mexico
Montenegro
New Zealand
Philippines
Sao Tome and Principe
Timor Leste
Uruguay
Zimbabwe
Countries with 51 to 60 per cent women parliamentarians (7):
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Kazakhstan (56%)
Namibia (56%)
Andorra (57%)
Sweden (57%)
Austria (60%)
Burundi (60%)
Ukraine (60%)
75
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
Calendar of future meetings and other activities
Approved by the IPU Governing Council at its 207th session
(Virtual session, 25 May 2021)
Information seminar on the structure and functioning of the IPU, for the
parliaments in the Americas
Side event on the occasion of the UN High-Level Meeting on HIV/AIDS
Virtual World e-Parliament Conference
Innovation and technology in parliaments after COVID-19
Parliamentary meeting on the occasion of the UN Food Systems
Summit
International or regional workshop for members of Parliamentary
Human Rights Committees
Parliamentary forum at the United Nations High-Level Political Forum
13th Summit of Women Speakers of Parliament (in-person)
Fifth World Conference of Speakers of Parliament (in-person)
First Global Parliamentary Summit on Counter-Terrorism organized
jointly by the IPU and the UN (UNODC and UNOCT)
Parliamentary meeting on the occasion of the opening of the
76th session of the UN General Assembly
Workshop for members of Parliamentary Human Rights Committees
from French-speaking countries that have recently or will soon be
reviewed by the UN Human Rights Council
First global parliamentary meeting on achieving the SDGs
Virtual
7–9 June 2021
Virtual
7 June 2021
Virtual
16–18 June 2021
Virtual
23 June 2021
Virtual
June–July 2021
(Dates to be confirmed)
Virtual
12 July 2021
VIENNA (Austria)
6 September 2021
VIENNA (Austria)
7–8 September 2021
VIENNA (Austria)
9 September 2021
NEW YORK or virtual
22 or 23 September 2021
GENEVA (Switzerland)
22–23 September 2021
Indonesia
September 2021
(Dates to be confirmed)
ROME (Italy)
7–8 October 2021
ROME (Italy)
8–9 October 2021
Virtual
October 2021
(Dates to be confirmed)
GLASGOW (United Kingdom)
1 November 2021
November 2021
(to be confirmed)
Speakers’ Summit (P20) on the occasion of the G20
Pre-COP26 parliamentary meeting
Parliamentary meeting at the 2021 World Investment Forum
Parliamentary meeting at the 26th United Nations Climate Change
Conference (COP26)
143rd IPU Assembly (hybrid)
76
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
Parliamentary meeting at the 2021 Internet Governance Forum
Interregional seminar on the SDGs
Second regional seminar on achieving the SDGs for African parliaments
Parliamentary meeting on the occasion of the 12th WTO Ministerial
Conference
Parliamentary meeting in the context of the WTO Public Forum
Parliamentary conference on migration in the Mediterranean
(organized in cooperation with the Global Council on Tolerance and
Peace)
Parliamentary session at the High-Level Meeting on Diplomacy for
Health Security and Emergency Preparedness
Regional workshop on the implementation of the Global Compact on
Migration
Capacity-building regional workshop on countering terrorism and violent
extremism for the G5 Sahel
Third regional seminar on SDGs for the parliaments of Latin America
and the Caribbean
Third regional seminar on achieving the SDGs for the Twelve Plus
group
Regional workshop on promoting the rights of the child for the
parliaments of the East and South Asia region
Fifth
South Asia Speakers’ Summit on achieving the SDGs
Capacity-building regional workshop on countering terrorism and
violent extremism for the Eurasia group
Capacity-building regional workshop on countering terrorism and
violent extremism for the group of Latin America and the Caribbean
(GRULAC)
Workshop on comprehensive disarmament
KATOWICE (Poland) or virtual
7 December 2021
BEIJING (China)
(Dates to be confirmed)
DJIBOUTI (Djibouti)
(Dates to be confirmed)
Virtual
(Dates to be confirmed)
Virtual
(Dates to be confirmed)
Malta
(Venue and dates to be
confirmed)
MARRAKESH (Morocco)
(Dates to be confirmed)
Republic of Moldova
(Dates to be confirmed)
NIAMEY (Niger)
(Dates to be confirmed)
PANAMA CITY (Panama)
(Dates to be confirmed)
PARIS (France)
(Dates to be confirmed)
Venue and dates to be
confirmed
Venue and dates to be
confirmed
Venue and dates to be
confirmed
Venue and dates to be
confirmed
Venue and dates to be
confirmed
77
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
Parliamentary Forum on the occasion of the Fifth UN Conference
on the LDCs
Regional seminar on achieving the SDGs for Asia-Pacific Parliaments
DOHA (Qatar)
January 2022
(Dates to be confirmed)
ISLAMABAD (Pakistan)
March 2022
(Dates to be confirmed)
BALI (Indonesia)
20–24 March 2022
ST PETERSBURG
(Russian Federation)
16–18 May 2022
KIGALI (Rwanda)
19-23 October 2022
Indonesia
November 2022
Uzbekistan
(Dates to be confirmed)
Venue and dates to be confirmed
144th Assembly and related meetings
World Conference on Intercultural and Interfaith Dialogue:
Working
together for peace and humanity
145th Assembly and related meetings
Speakers’ Summit (P20) on the occasion of the G20
Summit of Women Speakers of Parliament
Capacity-building regional workshop on countering terrorism and
violent extremism for the African group
78
IPU, Alm.del - 2020-21 - Bilag 27: 142nd IPU Assembly and related meetings
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Inter-Parliamentary Union
Reports and other texts of the Governing Council
Agenda of the 143rd Assembly
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Election of the President and Vice-Presidents of the 143rd Assembly
Consideration of requests for the inclusion of an emergency item in the Assembly agenda
General Debate
Legislation worldwide to combat online sexual child exploitation
(Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights)
Reports of the Standing Committee on Peace and International Security; Standing Committee on
Sustainable Development; and Standing Committee on United Nations Affairs
Approval of the subject item for the Standing Committee on Democracy and Human Rights at the
145th IPU Assembly and appointment of the Rapporteurs
79