Guiding Principles
Criteria
Bearing these principles in mind, the ARF participants agree that the
criteria for new participants should be as follows
i) Commitment : | All new participants, who will all be sovereign states, must subscribe to, and work cooperatively to help achieve the ARF's key goals. Prior to their admission, all new participants should agree to abide by and respect fully the decisions and statements already made by the ARF. All ASEAN members are automatically participants of ARF. |
ii) Relevance | A new participant should be admitted only if it can be demonstrated that it has an impact on the peace and security of the "geographical footprint" of key ARF activities (i.e. Northeast and Southeast Asia as well as Oceania). |
iii) Gradual expansion : | Efforts must be made to control the number of participants to a manageable level to ensure the effectiveness of the ARF. |
iv) Consultations | All applications for participation should be submitted to the Chairman of the ARF, who will consult all the other ARF participants at the SOM and ascertain whether a consensus exists for the admission of the new participant. Actual decisions on participation will be approved by the Ministers. |
(ii) Nuclear testing remains a concern in the region. The Meeting welcomed the end of nuclear testing in the South Pacific and confirmed their understanding that the Asia Pacific region would shortly be free of nuclear testing. The Meeting called upon all states participating in the Conference on Disarmament, in particular the nuclear weapons states, to conclude, as a task of the highest priority, a universal and multilaterally effectively verifiable comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty which contributes to nuclear disarmament and the prevention of the proliferation of nuclear weapons in all its aspects so as to enable its signature by the outset of the fifty-first session of the UNGA. The Meeting expressed the hope that the on-going negotiations in the Conference on Disarmament to be reconvened on 29 July 1996 would lead to a CTBT which would receive the support of all concerned parties.
(iii) With reference to the issue of the global elimination of anti-personnel mines, the Meeting welcomed the decisions of several states to impose moratoria and ban on the production, export and operational use of these weapons. The Meeting recognized the need, following conflict, for reinforcing international support for efforts to detect and remove landmines and to assist victims.
(iv) On the South China Sea, the Meeting welcomed the efforts by countries concerned to seek solutions by peaceful means in accordance with international law in general and with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 1982 in particular. The Meeting also noted the positive contributions made by the Workshop Series on Managing Potential Conflicts in the South China Sea.
(v) Bearing in mind the importance of peace and security on the Korean
Peninsula, the Meeting stressed the need to establish a peace mechanism
and also emphasized that the 1953 Armistice Agreement until then should
remain valid. The Meeting reiterated the importance of the resumption of
dialogue between the Republic of Korea and the Democratic Peoples' Republic
of Korea. The Meeting noted the importance of the Korean Peninsula Energy
Development Organization (KEDO) and encouraged ARF participants to consider
giving further financial and political support to KEDO.
disaster relief, and considering the convening of an intersessional
meeting on this matter;
A meeting of SAR experts and officials who are familiar with the
ARF process should be convened to further discuss and explore cooperation
in the following areas:
- holding training courses on specialized peacekeeping topics;
- sharing curricula and course information;
- developing a roster of peacekeeping trainers;
- offering available places in national training programmes to other ARF participants;
- assisting where possible in financing of peacekeeping training;
- fostering cooperation among national peace keeping training centers.