NAM: From
Bandung to Havana
The 14th Summit of the Non Aligned
Movement began on Friday with the participation of a
record 116 Heads of States/Governments. As one summit
after another was held in the 1960s and 1970s, "non
alignment", turned already the "Movement of
Non-Aligned Countries" that included nearly all
Asian and African countries, was becoming a forum of
coordination to struggle for the respect of the economic
and political rights of the developing world. After
the attainment of independence, the Conferences expressed
a growing concern over economic issues as well as strictly
political matters.
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Acting Cuban
President Raul Castro gives a speech during the
first plenary session of the summit of Non-Aligned
nations, in Havana September 15, 2006. Reuters |
The first summit of the Movement of
Non-Aligned Countries was convened by the then leaders
of India, Indonesia, the United Arab Republic (Egypt
and Syria) and Yugoslavia and Sri Lanka has been one
of the leading participants of this new movement since
then. On April 26, 1961, the Presidents of the United
Arab Republic (Gamal Abdul Nasser) and Yugoslavia (Marshal
Tito) addressed the Heads of State and Government of
21 "non-Aligned" countries and suggested that,
taking recent world events and the rise of international
tensions into account, a conference should be held to
promote an improvement in international relations, a
resistance to policies of force and a constructive settlement
of conflicts and other issues of concern in the world.
The joint message added that the President of Indonesia
(Sukarno) reaffirmed the criteria on the need for such
meeting.
This proposal took a more specific
form by way of a joint invitation by the Presidents
of the United Arab Republic (Nasser), Yugoslavia (Tito)
and Indonesia (Sukarno) that was issued on May 18, 1961.
Signed by the three Presidents, the letter also stated
that the Prime Minister of India (Nehru) had expressed
his satisfaction at having been included in the list
of Presidents who were inviting the Governments of the
concerned countries.
Cuba, where the Revolution had triumphed
two years earlier, was the only Latin American nation
among the founders of the Movement. It was aware of
the historical importance for underdeveloped countries
all over the world to make progress toward unity and
coordination.
The creation and strengthening of
the socialist block after the defeat of fascism in World
War II, the collapse of colonial empires, the coming
of a bipolar world and the emergence of two military
blocks (NATO and the Warsaw Pact) brought about a new
international context that led to the emergence of multilateral
coordination fora that were promoted by the countries
of the South.
In this context, the underdeveloped
countries, most of them in Asia and Africa, felt the
need to join efforts for the common defence of their
interests, the strengthening of their independence and
sovereignty and the cultural and economic rescuing of
their peoples, and also to express a strong commitment
with peace by declaring themselves as "non-aligned"
from either of the two nascent military blocks.
In order to fulfill the aims of debating
on and advancing a strategy designed to achieve such
objectives, the Bandung Asian-African Conference was
held in Indonesia in April 1955. It was attended by
29 Heads of State and Government belonging to the first
post-colonial generation of leaders and its expressed
goal was to identify and assess world issues at the
time and coordinate policies to deal with them.
Although the Asian and African leaders
who gathered in Bandung might have had differing political
and ideological views or different approaches toward
the societies they aspired to build or rebuild, there
was a common project that united them and gave sense
to a closer coordination of positions. Their shared
minimal program included the political decolonization
of Asia and Africa. Moreover, they all agreed that the
recently attained political independence was just a
means to attain the goal of economic, social and cultural
independence.
The Bandung meeting has been considered
as the most immediate antecedent of the founding of
the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries, which finally
came into being six years later on a wider geographical
basis when the first summit conference was held in Belgrade
on September 1-6, 1961. This gathering was attended
by the Heads of State or Government of 25 countries
and observers from another three nations.
The movement played an important role
in the support of nations which were struggling then
for their independence in the Third World and showed
great solidarity with the most just aspirations of humanity.
It contributed indisputably to the triumph in the struggle
for national independence and decolonization, thus gaining
considerable diplomatic prestige.
By the end of the 1980s, the movement
was facing the great challenge brought about by the
collapse of the socialist block. The end of the clash
between the two antagonistic blocks that was the reason
for its existence, name and essence was seen by some
as the beginning of the end for the Movement of Non-Aligned
Countries.
The fact that Yugoslavia was the chair
of the movement in that period, during which the dismembering
of that country also took place, led to a significant
reduction in the activities of this political coordination
forum.
Although the power struggle between
the two camps has drastically changed, even at the present
international juncture the principles and objectives
of non-alignment retain their full validity and force.
The primary condition that led to the emergence of the
Movement of Non-Aligned Countries, that is, non-alignment
from antagonistic blocks, has not lost its validity
with the end of the Cold War.
Despite the disintegration of the
Soviet Union, the validity of the movement continues
due to several factors. The pressing problems of the
developing world like strategic interests bent on domination
grow stronger and even acquire new and more dangerous
dimensions for underdeveloped countries. The defence
of multilateralism, of the principles that govern international
law and relations among States as well as the maintenance
of international peace and security are by themselves
more than good reasons to preserve and strengthen the
Movement of Non-Aligned Countries.
On the other hand, the long-standing
goals of the Movement remain unrealized. Peace, development,
economic cooperation and the democratization of international
relations.
Non
Aligned Summits |
1st Summit:
September 1-6, 1961, Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
2nd Summit: October 5-10, 1964, Cairo, Egypt.
3rd Summit: September 8-10, 1970, Lusaka, Zambia.
4th Summit: September 5-9, 1973, Algiers, Algeria.
5th Summit: August 16-19, 1976, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
6th Summit: September 3-9, 1979, Havana, Cuba.
7th Summit: March 7-11, 1983, New Delhi, India.
8th Summit: September 1-6, 1986, Harare, Zimbabwe.
9th Summit: September 4-7, 1989, Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
10th Summit: September 1-6, 1992, Jakarta, Indonesia.
11th Summit: October 14-20, 1995, Cartagena de Indias,
Colombia.
12th Summit: August 29-September 3, 1998, Durban,
South Africa.
13th Summit: February 20-25, 2003, Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia. |
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