| 
		...continuation (Chapter II)
 
		AG/RES. 
		2036 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS:  
		SUPPORT FOR THE INDIVIDUALS, GROUPS, AND ORGANIZATIONS OF CIVIL SOCIETY 
		WORKING TO PROMOTE AND 
		PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS 
		IN THE AMERICAS 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            HAVING SEEN the Annual Report 
		of the Permanent Council to the General Assembly (AG/doc.4265/04 add. 3 
		corr. 1) as it pertains to this topic and resolution AG/RES. 1920 (XXXIII-O/03), 
		“Human Rights Defenders:  Support for the Individuals, Groups, and Civil 
		Society Organizations Working to Promote and Protect Human Rights in the 
		Americas”; 
		  
		            CONCERNED that situations 
		persist in the Americas that, directly or indirectly, prevent or hamper 
		the work of individuals, groups, or organizations working to protect and 
		promote fundamental rights; 
		  
		            CONSIDERING that member states 
		support the work carried out by human rights defenders and recognize 
		their valuable contribution to the promotion, observance, and protection 
		of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the Americas, and to the 
		representation and defense of individuals, minorities, and other groups 
		of persons whose rights are threatened or violated; 
		  
		            TAKING NOTE that in 2003, in 
		its decisions granting provisional measures, the Inter-American Court of 
		Human Rights highlighted the importance of the work of human rights 
		defenders to the development of democracies in the Americas; 
		  
		            TAKING INTO ACCOUNT the work 
		accomplished by the Unit for Human Rights Defenders of the Inter-American 
		Commission on Human Rights and the member states’ replies to the 
		questionnaire drawn up by that unit with a view to preparing a 
		comprehensive report on the subject; and 
		  
		            UNDERSCORING that the 
		performance by human rights defenders of their tasks contributes 
		actively to strengthening democratic institutions and improving national 
		human rights systems, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To reiterate its 
		support for the work carried out, at both the national and regional 
		levels, by human rights defenders; and to recognize their valuable 
		contribution to the promotion, observance, and protection of human 
		rights and fundamental freedoms in the Hemisphere. 
		  
		            2.         To condemn actions 
		that directly or indirectly prevent or hamper the work of human rights 
		defenders in the Americas. 
		  
		            3.         To encourage human 
		rights defenders to continue to work selflessly for the enhancement of 
		national human rights systems for the consolidation of democracy, in 
		accordance with the principles contained in the United Nations 
		Declaration on Human Rights Defenders. 
		  
		            4.         To urge member 
		states to continue stepping up their efforts to adopt the necessary 
		measures to safeguard the lives, freedom, and personal safety of human 
		rights defenders, and to conduct thorough and impartial investigations 
		in all cases of violations against human rights defenders, ensuring that 
		the findings thereof are transparent and publicized. 
		  
		            5.         To invite the 
		Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to conclude its 
		comprehensive report on the situation of human rights defenders in the 
		Americas, in keeping with resolution AG/RES. 1842 (XXXII-O/02), for 
		presentation to the Permanent Council and consideration, if possible, in 
		the second half of 2004. 
		  
		            6.     To request the IACHR 
		to: 
		  
		a.       Continue 
		to give due consideration to this matter at the level it deems 
		appropriate; 
		  
		b.       Continue 
		intensifying its dialogue and cooperation with the Special 
		Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General on Human Rights 
		Defenders; and 
		  
		c.       Include 
		in its annual report a section on the work of the Unit for Human Rights 
		Defenders of the IACHR. 
		  
		            7.         To invite member 
		states to promote the dissemination and enforcement of the instruments 
		of the inter-American system and the decisions of its bodies on this 
		matter, as well as the United Nations Declaration on the Right and 
		Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and Organs of Society to Promote 
		and Protect Universally Recognized Human Rights and Fundamental 
		Freedoms. 
		  
		            8.         To invite member 
		states to consider the preparation and implementation of national plans 
		to apply the principles contained in the United Nations Declaration 
		mentioned in the preceding paragraph, for which purpose they may also 
		request the advisory services of the IACHR. 
		  
		            9.         To urge member 
		states that have not yet done so to reply to the questionnaire prepared 
		by the Unit for Human Rights Defenders of the Inter-American Commission 
		on Human Rights. 
		  
		AG/RES. 
		2037 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		STUDY OF THE RIGHTS 
		AND THE CARE OF PERSONS UNDER  
		ANY FORM OF DETENTION 
		OR IMPRISONMENT 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            HAVING SEEN the chapter on 
		this topic in the Annual Report of the Permanent Council to the General 
		Assembly (AG/doc.4265/04 add. 3 corr. 1) and resolutions AG/RES. 1897 
		(XXXII-O/02) and AG/RES. 1927 (XXXIII-O/03); 
		  
		BEARING IN MIND: 
		  
		            That consultations with the 
		member states on this subject have continued within the Committee on 
		Juridical and Political Affairs and that a number of them have replied 
		to the questionnaire prepared for that purpose (CP/CAJP-1853/01 rev. 1); 
		  
		            The presentation on December 
		4, 2003, of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to the 
		Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs (CP/CAJP-2096/03), pursuant 
		to resolution AG/RES. 1927 (XXXIII-O/03); 
		  
		            That the Fourth Meeting of 
		Ministers of Justice or of Ministers or Attorneys General of the 
		Americas decided to draft a document to protect the fundamental rights 
		of detained persons (REMJA-IV/doc.24/02 rev. 2); and 
		  
		            The recommendations of the 
		First Meeting of Officials Responsible for Penitentiary and Prison 
		Policies of the OAS Member States (GAPECA/doc.04/03), held in Washington 
		D.C., on October 16 and 17, 2003, and the recommendations for 
		hemispheric cooperation on penitentiary and prison policies issued at 
		the Fifth Meeting of Ministers of Justice or of Ministers or Attorneys 
		General of the Americas, held in Washington, D.C., from April 28 to 30, 
		2004 (REMJA-V/doc.7/04 rev. 4); and 
		  
		            WELCOMING the strengthening by 
		the IACHR of the Special Rapporteurship on the Rights of Persons 
		Deprived of Freedom, through the appointment of a Special Rapporteur, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To instruct the 
		Permanent Council to continue studying the question of the rights and 
		the care of persons under any form of detention or imprisonment, in 
		cooperation with the competent organs and agencies of the inter-American 
		system and taking into account the conclusions and recommendations of 
		the Fifth Meeting of Ministers of Justice or of Ministers or Attorneys 
		General of the Americas (REMJA-V/doc.7/04 rev. 4), including the report 
		of the First Meeting of Officials Responsible for Penitentiary and 
		Prison Policies of the OAS Member States (GAPECA/doc.04/03). 
		  
		            2.         To urge those 
		member states that have not already done so to reply as soon as possible 
		to the questionnaire entitled:  “Study of the Rights and the Care of 
		Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment” (CP/CAJP-1853/01 
		rev. 1). 
		  
		            3.         To request the 
		Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to report on the 
		situation of persons under any form of detention or imprisonment in the 
		Hemisphere and to compile, using as a basis its work on the subject, the 
		regional and global parameters for detention and imprisonment policies 
		in the member states and to make reference to any problems and good 
		practices observed. 
		  
		4.         To encourage member states to 
		invite the Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons Deprived of 
		Freedom of the IACHR to visit their countries. 
		  
		            5.         To call upon member 
		states to consider allocating more funds to the IACHR to enable it to 
		support the effective fulfillment of the mandate assigned to its Special 
		Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons Deprived of Freedom. 
		  
		            6.         To reiterate to the 
		Permanent Council that, on the basis of the discussions held and the 
		studies conducted, it should consider the advisability of preparing, in 
		due course, an inter-American declaration on the rights and the care of 
		persons under any form of detention or imprisonment. 
		  
		            7.         To request the 
		Permanent Council to report to the General Assembly at its thirty-fifth 
		regular session on the implementation of this resolution. 
		AG/RES. 
		2038 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		PREVENTION OF RACISM 
		AND ALL FORMS OF DISCRIMINATION AND INTOLERANCE AND CONSIDERATION OF THE PREPARATION OF A
 DRAFT INTER-AMERICAN CONVENTION
 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            HAVING SEEN the Annual Report 
		of the Permanent Council to the General Assembly (AG/doc.4265/04 add. 3 
		corr. 1) and resolutions AG/RES. 1712 (XXX-O/00), AG/RES. 1774 
		(XXXI-O/01), AG/RES. 1905 (XXXII-O/02), and AG/RES. 1930 (XXXIII-O/03); 
		  
		            AWARE that the principles of 
		equality and nondiscrimination recognized in Articles 3.l and 45.a of 
		the Charter of the Organization of American States, in Article II of the 
		American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, and in Article 2 
		of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights enshrine respect for the 
		human rights and fundamental freedoms of individuals specified therein, 
		without any distinction as to race, color, nationality, sex, language, 
		religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, 
		property, birth, or any other status; 
		  
		            TAKING INTO ACCOUNT that the 
		preamble to the Declaration and Plan of Action of the Regional 
		Conference of the Americas, held in Santiago, Chile, in December 2000, 
		to prepare for the United Nations World Conference against Racism, 
		Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, held in 
		Durban, South Africa, in 2001, recognizes that “in spite of the efforts 
		made by States in the region, racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia 
		and related intolerance still persist in the Americas and continue to be 
		causes of suffering, disadvantage and violence, as well as of other 
		serious human rights violations, which must be fought by all available 
		means as a matter of the highest priority”; 
		  
		            CONSIDERING the report of the 
		Inter-American Juridical Committee on the preparation of a draft 
		Inter-American Convention against Racism and All Forms of Discrimination 
		and Intolerance, contained in its annual report (2001) (CP/doc.3545/02); 
		  
		            CONSIDERING ALSO the study 
		“Judicial System and Racism against Persons of African Descent,” 
		conducted by the Justice Studies Center of the Americas in response to 
		the mandate issued in resolution AG/RES. 1930 (XXXIII-O/03), the 
		conclusions of which indicate “that the invisibility of racist practices 
		and intolerance affecting people of African descent continues to be a 
		serious problem throughout the Americas” and point to the need to adopt 
		internal measures within the states to “prevent and eventually eliminate 
		racism and intolerance towards this group”; and 
		  
		            TAKING INTO ACCOUNT that 
		resolution AG/RES. 1905 (XXXII-O/02) instructed the Permanent Council,
		inter alia, to “initiate the study of possible strategies for 
		promoting, through initiatives in the areas of education and justice 
		administration, public awareness campaigns, tolerance, and full and 
		effective equality for all persons in building pluralistic, inclusive 
		societies, on the understanding that national programs and international 
		cooperation should be encouraged,” 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To urge member 
		states to step up efforts toward the adoption of effective measures, at 
		the national and regional levels, to fight the manifestations of racism 
		and all forms of discrimination and intolerance. 
		  
		            2.         To receive with 
		satisfaction from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) 
		document CP/CAJP-2116/04 corr. 1, concerning the preparation of the 
		study referred to in operative paragraph 3 of resolution AG/RES. 1930 
		(XXXIII-O/03), on the laws of the member states dealing with the 
		adoption of policies to promote equality or affirmative action. 
		  
		            3.         To urge member 
		states that have not yet done so to reply to the request by the IACHR 
		for information on national legislation concerning the adoption of 
		policies to promote equality or affirmative action. 
		  
		            4.         To request the 
		IACHR to continue to pay due attention, in the framework of inter-American 
		and international legal instruments currently in force, to the problems 
		generated by manifestations of racism, discrimination, and intolerance 
		in the Americas and to continue to intensify dialogue and cooperation 
		with the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Commission on Human 
		Rights on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, 
		xenophobia and related intolerance and report on that cooperation in due 
		course to the Permanent Council. 
		  
		            5.         To instruct the 
		organs, agencies, and entities of the Organization to include in their 
		annual reports to the General Assembly information on their efforts to 
		incorporate the perspective of promoting racial equality and the 
		principle of nondiscrimination into their policies, programs, projects, 
		and activities. 
		  
		            6.         To instruct the 
		Permanent Council, through its Committee on Juridical and Political 
		Affairs, to: 
		  
		a.       Continue to address, as a matter 
		of priority, the subject of preventing, combating, and eradicating 
		racism and all forms of discrimination and intolerance; 
		  
		b.       Promote a special meeting, 
		attended by government experts, inter-American specialized organizations, 
		and nongovernmental organizations, at which a representative of the 
		Justice Studies Center of the Americas will present the conclusions of 
		the study “Judicial System and Racism against Persons of African Descent” 
		and there will be an exchange of experience and best practices in the 
		adoption of measures against racism and all forms of discrimination and 
		intolerance; and 
		  
		c.          Receive and analyze the 
		contributions mentioned in operative paragraphs 2 and 6.b of this 
		resolution, inter alia, as well as those of member states, the 
		Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the Inter-American Court of 
		Human Rights, the Inter-American Juridical Committee, and civil society 
		organizations, with a view to examining existing national strategies for 
		fighting racial discrimination and to considering areas for 
		international cooperation against racism and all forms of discrimination, 
		including, inter alia, the possibility of an Inter-American 
		Convention against Racism and All Forms of Discrimination and 
		Intolerance. 
		  
		            7.         To request the 
		Permanent Council to report to the General Assembly at its thirty-fifth 
		regular session on the implementation of this resolution. 
		  
		  
		AG/RES. 
		2039 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		
		PROMOTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL 
		CRIMINAL COURT/ 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            RECALLING its resolutions AG/RES. 
		1619 (XXIX-O/99), AG/RES. 1706 (XXX-O/00), AG/RES. 1709 (XXX-O/00), AG/RES. 
		1770 (XXXI-O/01), AG/RES. 1771 (XXXI-O/01), AG/RES. 1900 (XXXII-O/02), 
		and AG/RES. 1929 (XXXIII-O/03);  
		  
		            RECALLING ALSO the 
		recommendation of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (OEA/Ser.L/V/II.102, 
		Doc. 6 rev. April 16, 1999, Chapter VII, 21.3.B), as well as its 
		resolution N° 1/03, “On Trial for International Crimes,” and the 
		document “Framework for OAS Action on the International Criminal Court” 
		(AG/INF.248/00); 
		  
		            RECOGNIZING that the adoption 
		of the Statute of the International Criminal Court on July 17, 1998, in 
		Rome, is a milestone in efforts to combat impunity and that the Court is 
		an effective instrument for consolidating international justice; 
		  
		            CONCERNED over the persistent 
		violations of international humanitarian law and international human 
		rights law; 
		  
		            AFFIRMING that states have the 
		primary duty to prosecute and punish those violations so as to prevent 
		their recurrence and avoid the impunity of the perpetrators of those 
		crimes; 
		  
		            MINDFUL of the importance of 
		preserving the effectiveness and integrity of the Rome Statute of the 
		International Criminal Court; 
		  
		            WELCOMING the entry into force 
		of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court on July 1, 2002, 
		because as of that date the Court became a judicial body complementing 
		the efforts of national jurisdictions to prosecute the perpetrators of 
		the most serious international crimes, such as genocide, crimes against 
		humanity, and war crimes; 
		  
		            TAKING NOTE that June 30, 
		2004, is the deadline for signing the Agreement on Privileges and 
		Immunities of the International Criminal Court, and that only 11 
		countries in the American Hemisphere have signed it and one country has 
		ratified it; 
		  
		            RECOGNIZING that 139 states, 
		including 26 member states of the Organization of American States, have 
		signed the Rome Statute and that 94 states, including 19 member states 
		of the Organization, have ratified or acceded to it; and 
		  
		            EXPRESSING its satisfaction 
		with the holding of the Special Meeting of the Committee on Juridical 
		and Political Affairs on Promotion of and Respect for International 
		Humanitarian Law, at OAS headquarters on March 25, 2004, with regard to 
		which the Chair of the Committee prepared the report contained in 
		document DIH/doc.24/04, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To urge those 
		member states of the Organization that have not already done so to 
		consider ratifying or acceding to, as the case may be, the Rome Statute 
		of the International Criminal Court. 
		  
		            2.         To urge all member 
		states of the Organization to continue to participate constructively, 
		even as observer states, in the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome 
		Statute of the International Criminal Court in order to ensure the best 
		possible operating environment for the Court, in a context of 
		unconditional defense of the integrity of the Rome Statute. 
		  
		            3.         To urge the member 
		states of the Organization that are parties to the Rome Statute to adapt 
		and amend their domestic law, as necessary, with a view to the effective 
		application of the Statute. 
		  
		            4.         To urge those 
		member states that are not party to the Rome Statute to adapt their 
		criminal legislation, in accordance with the treaties for the protection 
		of human rights and humanitarian law to which they are party. 
		  
		            5.         To urge the member 
		states of the Organization that are not party to the Rome Statute to 
		consider signing and ratifying the Agreement on Privileges and 
		Immunities of the International Criminal Court, or acceding thereto, as 
		the case may be, and in the case of those states that are already party 
		to that Agreement to take the necessary measures for its effective 
		implementation at the national level. 
		  
		            6.         To request the 
		Inter-American Juridical Committee to include on the agenda for the next 
		joint meeting with legal advisers of the foreign ministries of the 
		member states of the Organization a review of due implementation of the 
		Rome Statute and the Agreement on Privileges and Immunities in national 
		legislations. 
		  
		            7.         To request the 
		Permanent Council to hold, with the support of the General Secretariat 
		and cooperation from the International Criminal Court, international 
		organizations, and nongovernmental organizations, a working meeting on 
		appropriate measures that states should take to cooperate with the 
		International Criminal Court in the investigation, prosecution, and 
		punishment of the perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity, 
		genocide, and crimes against the administration of justice of the 
		International Criminal Court. 
		  
		            8.         To request the 
		Permanent Council to include the topic of the implementation of the Rome 
		Statute and the Agreement on Privileges and Immunities on the agenda of 
		the Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs. 
		  
		            9.         To urge member 
		states of the Organization to cooperate so as to avoid the impunity of 
		the perpetrators of the most serious international crimes, such as war 
		crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide./ 
		  
		            10.       To request the 
		Permanent Council to follow up on this resolution, which will be 
		implemented within the resources allocated in the program-budget of the 
		Organization and other resources, and to present a report on its 
		implementation to the General Assembly at its thirty-fifth regular 
		session. 
		  
		
		ANNEx 
		  
		
		Statement by the Delegation of the United States 
		  
		  
		            The United States has long 
		been concerned about the persistent violations of international 
		humanitarian law and international human rights law throughout the 
		world.  We stand for justice and the promotion of the rule of law.  The 
		United States will continue to be a forceful advocate for the principle 
		of accountability for war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity, 
		but we cannot support the seriously flawed International Criminal 
		Court.  Our position is that states are primarily responsible for 
		ensuring justice in the international system.  We believe that the best 
		way to combat these serious offenses is to build and strengthen domestic 
		judicial systems and political will and, in appropriate circumstances, 
		work through the United Nations Security Council to establish ad hoc 
		tribunals as in Yugoslavia and Rwanda.  Our position is that 
		international practice should promote domestic accountability.  The 
		United States has concluded that the International Criminal Court does 
		not advance these principles. 
		  
		            The United States has not 
		ratified the Rome Statute and has no intention of doing so.  This is 
		because we have strong objections to the International Criminal Court, 
		which we believe is fundamentally flawed.  The International Criminal 
		Court claims jurisdiction over the nationals of states not party to the 
		agreement.  It has the potential to undermine the role of the United 
		Nations Security Council in maintaining international peace and 
		security.  We also object to the Court because it is not subject to 
		adequate checks and balances.  We believe that an independent court with 
		unchecked power is open to abuse and exploitation.  Its structure lends 
		itself to the great danger of politically-motivated prosecutions and 
		decisions.  The inclusion of the still-undefined crime of aggression 
		within the statute of the Court creates the potential for conflict with 
		the United Nations Charter, which provides that the Security Council 
		determines when an act of aggression has occurred. 
		  
		            The United States notes that 
		in past decades several member states have reached national consensus 
		for addressing historic conflicts and controversies as part of their 
		successful and peaceful transition from authoritarian rule to 
		representative democracy.  Indeed, some of those sovereign governments, 
		in light of new events, evolved public opinion, or stronger democratic 
		institutions, have decided on their own and at a time of their choosing 
		to reopen past controversies.  These experiences provide compelling 
		support for the argument that member states–particularly those with 
		functioning democratic institutions and independent functioning judicial 
		systems–should retain the sovereign discretion to decide as a result of 
		democratic and legal processes whether to prosecute or to seek national 
		reconciliation by other peaceful and effective means.  The United States 
		is concerned that the International Criminal Court has the potential to 
		undermine the legitimate efforts of member states to achieve national 
		reconciliation and domestic accountability by democratic means. 
		  
		            Our policy on the ICC is 
		consistent with the history of our policies on human rights, the rule of 
		law and the validity of democratic institutions.  For example, we have 
		been a major proponent of the Special Court for Sierra Leone because it 
		is grounded in sovereign consent, combines domestic and international 
		participation in a manner that will generate a lasting benefit to the 
		rule of law within Sierra Leone, and interfaces with the Truth and 
		Reconciliation Commission to address accountability. 
		  
		            The United States has a unique 
		role and responsibility to help preserve international peace and 
		security.  At any given time, U.S. forces are located in close to 100 
		nations around the world, for example, conducting peacekeeping and 
		humanitarian operations and fighting inhumanity.  We must ensure that 
		our soldiers and government officials are not exposed to the prospect of 
		politicized prosecutions and investigations.  Our country is committed 
		to a robust engagement in the world to defend freedom and defeat terror; 
		we cannot permit the ICC to disrupt that vital mission. 
		  
		            In light of this position, the 
		United States cannot in good faith join in the consensus on an OAS 
		resolution that promotes the Court. 
		  
		  
		AG/RES. 
		2041 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		OBSERVATIONS AND 
		RECOMMENDATIONS ON THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            HAVING SEEN the observations 
		and recommendations of the Permanent Council on the Annual Report of the 
		Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (AG/doc.4321/04); and 
		  
		CONSIDERING: 
		  
		            That, in the Charter of the 
		Organization of American States, the member states have proclaimed, as 
		one of their principles, respect for the fundamental rights of the 
		individual without distinction as to race, nationality, creed, or sex; 
		and that, under the OAS Charter and the American Convention on Human 
		Rights, the principal function of the Inter-American Commission on Human 
		Rights is to promote the observance and protection of human rights; and 
		  
		            That in the Declaration of the 
		Third Summit of the Americas, held in Quebec City, the Heads of State 
		and of Government stated that their “commitment to full respect for 
		human rights and fundamental freedoms is based on shared principles and 
		convictions” and that they supported “strengthening and enhancing the 
		effectiveness of the inter American human rights system, which includes 
		the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Inter-American 
		Court of Human Rights,” 
		  
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To accept the 
		observations and recommendations of the Permanent Council on the annual 
		report of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights 
		(AG/doc.4321/04); and to forward them to that organ. 
		  
		            2.         To reaffirm the 
		essential value of the work carried out by the Inter-American Commission 
		on Human Rights, within its regulatory framework and with full autonomy, 
		to enhance the protection and promotion of human rights in the 
		Hemisphere. 
		  
		            3.     To encourage OAS member 
		states to: 
		  
		a.       Consider signing and ratifying, 
		ratifying, or acceding to, as the case may be, all legal instruments of 
		the inter-American human rights system; 
		  
		b.       Follow up on the recommendations 
		of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights; and 
		  
		c.       Continue to take appropriate 
		action in connection with the annual reports of the Inter-American 
		Commission on Human Rights, in the context of the Permanent Council and 
		the General Assembly. 
		  
		            4.         To note with 
		satisfaction the decisions taken by governments of member states to 
		invite the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to visit their 
		respective countries; and to encourage all member states to continue 
		this practice. 
		  
		            5.         To instruct the 
		Permanent Council to continue to examine ways to bring about an 
		effective and adequate increase in the financial resources allocated to 
		the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in the program-budget of 
		the Organization. 
		  
		            6.         In addition, to 
		encourage member states to contribute to the Specific Fund for 
		Strengthening the Inter-American System for the Protection and Promotion 
		of Human Rights. 
		  
		            7.     To invite the 
		Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to: 
		  
		a.       Continue to publish on its 
		Internet page, when member states so request, their observations and 
		recommendations on its annual report to the General Assembly; 
		  
		b.       Continue to strengthen existing 
		rapporteurships and operational units within the limits of its available 
		resources, in accordance with Article 15 of its Rules of Procedure; and 
		  
		c.       To continue to participate, 
		through its commissioners, in the dialogue with member states, in the 
		context of the Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs, in light of 
		the application of its new Rules of Procedure, especially to shed light 
		on the criteria used when applying its principal mechanisms for the 
		protection of human rights, such as precautionary measures, on-site 
		visits, publication of reports, friendly settlement procedures, time 
		periods for the review and initial processing of petitions, inter 
		alia. 
		  
		            8.         To recommend to the 
		Inter-American Commission on Human Rights that it continue to take into 
		account the observations and recommendations of the member states on its 
		annual report and that it adopt such measures as it considers pertinent 
		based on such observations and recommendations.
 
		            9.         To request the 
		Permanent Council to report to the General Assembly at its thirty-fifth 
		regular session on the implementation of this resolution, which will be 
		carried out within the resources allocated in the program-budget and 
		other resources. 
		  
		  
		AG/RES. 
		2043 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		
		OBSERVATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS ON THE ANNUAL REPORT
		OF THE INTER-AMERICAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS
 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            HAVING SEEN the Observations 
		and Recommendations of the Permanent Council on the Annual Report of the 
		Inter-American Court of Human Rights (AG/doc.4325/04); 
		  
		CONSIDERING: 
		  
		            That in the Declaration of the 
		Third Summit of the Americas, held in Quebec City, the Heads of State 
		and Government stated that their “commitment to full respect for human 
		rights and fundamental freedoms is based on shared principles and 
		convictions” and that they supported “strengthening and enhancing the 
		effectiveness of the inter American human rights system, which includes 
		the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Inter-American 
		Court of Human Rights”; 
		  
		            That Article 54.f of the 
		Charter of the Organization of American States establishes that it is a 
		function of the General Assembly to consider the observations and 
		recommendations presented by the Permanent Council on the reports of the 
		organs, agencies, and entities of the Organization, in accordance with 
		Article 91.f of the Charter; 
		and 
		  
		            That Article 65 of the 
		American Convention on Human Rights establishes that “to each regular 
		session of the General Assembly of the Organization of American States 
		the Court shall submit, for the Assembly’s consideration, a report on 
		its work during the previous year.  It shall specify, in particular, the 
		cases in which a state has not complied with its judgments, making any 
		pertinent recommendations”; 
		  
		            TAKING INTO ACCOUNT the 
		summary of the annual report of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights 
		for fiscal year 2003 (CP/CAJP-2131/04), the “Reflections on the 
		Inter-American Court of Human Rights based on the Report of Its Work 
		Presented to the Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs” 
		(CP/CAJP-2131/04 add. 1); and the proposed budget of the Inter-American 
		Court of Human Rights for 2005, contained in document AG/CP/doc.663/04; 
		  
		            TAKING INTO ACCOUNT ALSO the 
		proposal by the President of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, 
		contained in document CP/CAJP-2131/04 add. 1, “to initiate an expanded 
		process of a shared review and examination, comprising the organs of the 
		OAS, the Court and the Commission, the states, and the Inter-American 
		Institute of Human Rights, civil society groups and institutions, and 
		external observers and academicians, which could all contribute to it 
		from their own perspective.  This process, carried out in the way that 
		would best serve its proposed objectives, could lead to useful 
		suggestions on ways to correct, reform, advance, and consolidate.  An 
		expanded, serious, and careful study, conducted with good will, could be 
		an excellent step forward in this new stage we are now embarking on.”; 
		and 
		  
		            TAKING NOTE OF Advisory 
		Opinion OC-18/03, “Legal Status and Rights of Undocumented Migrants,” 
		issued by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on September 17, 
		2003, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To accept the 
		observations and recommendations of the Permanent Council on the Annual 
		Report of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and to transmit them 
		to that organ. 
		  
		            2.         To reaffirm the 
		essential value of the work of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights 
		in enhancing the promotion and defense of human rights in the 
		Hemisphere. 
		  
		            3.         To reiterate that 
		the judgments of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights are final and 
		may not be appealed and that the states parties to the Convention 
		undertake to comply with the decisions of the Court in all cases to 
		which they are party. 
		  
		            4.         To reiterate the 
		need for states parties to provide the information requested by the 
		Court in order to enable it to fully meet its obligation to report to 
		the General Assembly on compliance with its judgments. 
		  
		            5.         To reaffirm the 
		importance of the advisory function of the Inter-American Court of Human 
		Rights for the development of inter-American jurisprudence and 
		international human rights law and, in that context, to take note of 
		Advisory Opinion OC-18/03. 
		  
		            6.         To instruct the 
		Permanent Council to continue its consideration of the issue of “Access 
		of victims to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (ius standi) 
		and its application in practice,” including its financial and budgetary 
		implications, taking into account the report of the Inter-American Court 
		of Human Rights entitled “Bases for a Draft Protocol to the American 
		Convention on Human Rights to Strengthen Its Mechanism for Protection – 
		Volume II”; the proposal presented by the Government of Costa Rica, 
		“Draft Optional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights”; 
		and the revised Rules of Procedure of the Inter-American Court of Human 
		Rights and of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. 
		  
		            7.         To instruct the 
		Permanent Council to continue to examine ways to bring about an 
		effective and adequate increase in the financial resources allocated to 
		the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in the program-budget of the 
		Organization. 
		  
		            8.         In addition, to 
		encourage member states to contribute to the Specific Fund for 
		Strengthening the Inter-American System for the Protection and Promotion 
		of Human Rights. 
		  
		            9.         To 
		urge member states to consider signing and ratifying, ratifying, or 
		acceding to, as the case may be, the American Convention on Human Rights 
		and other instruments of the system, including acceptance of the binding 
		jurisdiction of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. 
 
		AG/RES. 2047 (XXXIV-O/04) 
		  
		
		
		PROTECTION OF ASYLUM SEEKERS, REFUGEES, RETURNEES, ANDSTATELESS PERSONS IN THE 
		
		AMERICAS
 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            RECALLING its resolution AG/RES. 
		1971 (XXXIII-O/03), “The Protection of Refugees, Returnees, and 
		Stateless and Internally Displaced Persons in the Americas,” and its 
		resolutions AG/RES. 774 (XV-O/85), AG/RES. 838 (XVI-O/86), AG/RES. 951 (XVIII-O/88), 
		AG/RES. 1021 (XIX-O/89), AG/RES. 1039 (XX-O/90), AG/RES. 1040 (XX-O/90), 
		AG/RES. 1103 (XXI-O/91), AG/RES. 1170 (XXII-O/92), AG/RES. 1214 (XXIII-O/93), 
		AG/RES. 1273 (XXIV-O/94), AG/RES. 1336 (XXV-O/95), AG/RES. 1416 (XXVI-O/96), 
		AG/RES. 1504 (XXVII-O/97), AG/RES.1602 (XXVIII-O/98), AG/RES. 1693 (XXIX-O/99), 
		AG/RES. 1762 (XXX-O/00), AG/RES. 1832 (XXXI-O/01), and AG/RES. 1892 (XXXII-O/02); 
		  
		            WELCOMING the accession by 
		Saint Vincent and the Grenadines to the 1967 Protocol relating to the 
		Status of Refugees, with which a total of 29 OAS member states that are 
		party to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and/or 
		to its 1967 Protocol; 
		  
		            WELCOMING ALSO the adoption of 
		domestic regulations to determine refugee status in Venezuela, Paraguay, 
		Peru, and Uruguay, and the fact that thus far a total of 21 countries of 
		the Hemisphere have in place domestic legislation pertaining to refugees, 
		and that four other countries of the Hemisphere have existing bills 
		pertaining to refugees; 
		  
		            NOTING WITH CONCERN the 
		significant increase in asylum seekers and the existence of a large 
		number of refugees in some countries of the Americas who, owing to a 
		well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, 
		nationality, membership of a particular social group or political 
		opinion, are outside the country of their nationality and are unable or, 
		owing to such fear, are unwilling to avail themselves of the protection 
		of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the 
		country of their former habitual residence as a result of such events, 
		are unable or, owing to such fear, are unwilling to return to it; 
		  
		            NOTING the presentation made 
		by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 
		(UNHCR) to the Permanent Council on May 14, 2004, entitled 
		“International Protection of Asylum Seekers, Refugees, Internally 
		Displaced Persons, Stateless Persons, and Other Persons of Interest to 
		the UNHCR in the Americas: Importance of International Solidarity and 
		Shared Responsibility”; 
		  
		            RECOGNIZING the importance of 
		efforts that could be made by countries of origin, with the support of 
		the international community, to address the circumstances that generate 
		flows of persons fleeing to seek asylum; 
		  
		            RECOGNIZING ALSO that the 
		protection of refugees is a responsibility shared by the entire 
		international community and that durable solutions depend on the will 
		and capacity of states, guided by a spirit of humanitarianism and 
		international solidarity; 
		  
		            UNDERSCORING that to promote 
		enhanced protection for refugees, comprehensive strategies and 
		coordinated actions are needed that include, among other aspects, 
		voluntary repatriation and, when appropriate and feasible, local 
		integration or resettlement in a third country, in a context of 
		increasing solidarity and effective cooperation among all states, in 
		keeping with the pertinent international conventions; 
		            EMPHASIZING the efforts being 
		made, even under difficult socioeconomic circumstances, by the countries 
		of the region, faithful to their generous tradition of asylum, to 
		continue giving protection to asylum seekers and to refugees; 
		  
		CONSIDERING: 
		  
		            That the protection of asylum 
		seekers, refugees, and stateless persons is strengthened through the 
		increasing cooperation between the pertinent organs of the inter-American 
		system, the UNHCR, and other pertinent players, as well as through 
		support for programs that are carried out by governments for the 
		protection of refugees; and 
		  
		            The importance of 
		international dialogue, solidarity, and cooperation among the states and 
		the international community to strengthen the international framework 
		for the protection of refugees and to address new challenges; and 
		  
		            NOTING WITH PLEASURE the 
		support of the UNHCR for the organization of events to commemorate the 
		20th anniversary of the 1984 Cartagena Declaration on 
		Refugees, as well as the collaboration of the Government of Mexico as 
		host country for that celebration in November 2004, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To urge the states 
		parties to take or continue to take the necessary measures to strengthen 
		refugee protection and make it more effective, including, inter alia, 
		the adoption and implementation of national provisions pertaining to 
		refugees and stateless persons and procedures for the determination of 
		refugee status and for the treatment of asylum seekers and refugees, and 
		to continue to implement fully and effectively their obligations under 
		the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and/or its 1967 
		Protocol, and, where applicable, under the 1954 Convention relating to 
		the Status of Stateless Persons, the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of 
		Statelessness, and other international and regional instruments, taking 
		into account the special needs of vulnerable groups, such as women, 
		children, persons with disabilities, and the elderly. 
		  
		            2.         To urge those 
		member states that have not yet done so to consider signing, ratifying, 
		or acceding to, as the case may be, the international instruments on 
		refugees and stateless persons or to consider withdrawing reservations 
		made upon ratification or accession, as well as the adoption of 
		necessary procedures and institutional mechanisms for the determination 
		of refugee status and for the treatment of asylum seekers and refugees, 
		in keeping with the principles established in the international and 
		regional instruments, as applicable. 
		  
		            3.         To encourage 
		countries of origin to make every possible effort, with support from the 
		Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and 
		the international community, to address the circumstances that generate 
		flows of persons fleeing to seek asylum. 
		  
		            4.         To urge member 
		states to continue to apply protection measures that are consistent with 
		international principles of international refugee protection, including,
		inter alia, non-refoulement, family unity, and confidentiality in 
		cases of asylum. 
		  
		            5.         To call on member 
		states and the international community to increase technical and 
		economic cooperation to the countries of the Hemisphere that receive 
		refugees and that so require, and to work in cooperation with the UNHCR 
		to provide effective protection to asylum seekers and refugees in the 
		region. 
		  
		            6.         To renew its appeal 
		for international and inter-American cooperation to facilitate necessary 
		assistance and protection in cases of mass flows of refugees as well as 
		the search for durable solutions such as voluntary repatriation and, 
		when appropriate and feasible, the local integration or resettlement of 
		refugees in a third country, in accordance with international and 
		regional instruments, as applicable. 
		  
		            7.         To urge member 
		states and to request the organs, agencies, and entities of the inter-American 
		system to continue and increase their support for the UNHCR. 
		  
		  
		AG/RES. 
		2052 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		
		
		PROMOTION OF AND RESPECT FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN 
		LAW[9]/ 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		REAFFIRMING the principles and purposes of 
		the Charter of the Organization of American States and the Charter of 
		the United Nations; 
		  
		RECALLING its 
		resolutions AG/RES. 1270 (XXIV-O/94), AG/RES. 1335 (XXV-O/95), AG/RES. 
		1408 (XXVI-O/96), AG/RES. 1503 (XXVII-O/97), AG/RES. 1565 (XXVIII-O/98), 
		AG/RES. 1619 (XXIX-O/99), AG/RES. 1706 (XXX-O/00), AG/RES. 1771 
		(XXXI-O/01), AG/RES. 1900 (XXXII-O/02), AG/RES. 1904 (XXXII-O/02), 
		AG/RES. 1929 (XXXIII-O/03), and AG/RES. 1944 (XXXIII-O/03); 
		  
		DEEPLY CONCERNED over persistent 
		violations of international humanitarian law affecting the world’s 
		civilian populations, in particular children and women; 
		  
		AWARE that the aim of international 
		humanitarian law is the protection of the civilian population and all 
		persons affected by armed conflict and that it also establishes that the 
		right of parties in armed conflict to choose the methods and means of 
		war is not unlimited; 
		  
		TAKING INTO ACCOUNT the commitments made 
		by the international community as set forth in the Declaration and 
		Agenda for Humanitarian Action of the 28th International 
		Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, held in Geneva, 
		Switzerland, from December 2 to 6, 2003; 
		  
		REAFFIRMING the importance of establishing 
		measures to strengthen the role of the OAS in disseminating and 
		promoting the application of international humanitarian law in the 
		region; 
		  
		RECALLING that it is the obligation of all 
		states to respect and ensure respect, in all circumstances, for the 1949 
		Geneva Conventions and, for the states that are party thereto, the 
		provisions contained in the 1977 Additional Protocols to those 
		conventions, as well as the provisions and general principles 
		established in international humanitarian law; 
		  
		REITERATING the need for states to adopt 
		legislative, administrative, educational, and practical measures for the 
		application, at the national level, of international humanitarian law; 
		  
		RECOGNIZING the important part played by 
		the national committees or commissions established in numerous countries 
		for the dissemination and application of international humanitarian law 
		in ensuring that the Geneva Conventions and, where applicable, the 
		Additional Protocols thereto, as well as the other instruments of 
		international humanitarian law, are incorporated into the domestic law 
		of states parties to those instruments, so as to ensure proper 
		compliance with and dissemination of those instruments; 
		  
		AWARE of the need to prevent impunity and 
		to bring to justice those responsible for war crimes, crimes against 
		humanity, and other grave breaches of international humanitarian law; 
		  
		RECALLING that the Rome Statute of the 
		International Criminal Court defines the war crimes and crimes against 
		humanity that the states parties thereto commit to punishing; 
		  
		NOTING the growing number of ratifications 
		of the Statute of the International Criminal Court; 
		  
		EXPRESSING ITS SATISFACTION with the 
		adoption of United Nations Security Council resolution 1502 (2003), 
		which urged all those concerned, as set forth in international 
		humanitarian law, to allow full unimpeded access by humanitarian 
		personnel to all people in need of assistance; 
		  
		EXPRESSING ALSO ITS SATISFACTION with the
		Meeting of National Committees on 
		International Humanitarian Law in the Americas, held in Antigua, 
		Guatemala, from August 27 to 29, 2003; 
		  
		NOTING the Regional Meeting of Legal 
		Advisers of the Armed Forces, held in Lima, Peru, on April 28 and 29, 
		2004; 
		  
		CONCERNED over the disappearance of 
		persons and the taking of hostages, particularly during armed conflict, 
		and the suffering this causes to families and loved ones during and 
		after the conflict; 
		  
		UNDERSCORING the need to protect cultural 
		property from the effects of armed conflicts; 
		  
		TAKING NOTE of the adoption of a new 
		protocol on explosive remnants of war by the states parties to the 1980 
		United Nations Convention on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of 
		Certain Conventional Weapons Which May Be Deemed to Be Excessively 
		Injurious or to Have Indiscriminate Effects; 
		  
		UNDERSCORING ONCE MORE the ongoing efforts 
		of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to promote and 
		disseminate knowledge of international humanitarian law and the 
		activities it carries out as an organization that is impartial, neutral, 
		and independent under any and all circumstances; and 
		  
		EXPRESSING ITS SATISFACTION with the 
		special meeting of the Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs on 
		promotion of and respect for international humanitarian law, held on 
		March 25, 2004, at the headquarters of the Organization, with the 
		participation of Dr. Luis Moreno Ocampo, Prosecutor of the International 
		Criminal Court, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		1.                 
		To urge the member states 
		and all parties engaged in an armed conflict to honor their obligations 
		under international humanitarian law, especially those that refer to 
		protection of the civilian population and the treatment of prisoners of 
		war. 
		  
		2.       To 
		urge all member states of the Organization that have not yet done so to 
		consider becoming party to the following treaties: 
		  
		a.       The 
		1977 Additional Protocols I and II to the 1949 Geneva Conventions; and 
		that they consider making the declaration contemplated in Article 90 of 
		Protocol I; 
		  
		b.       The 
		1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court; 
		  
		c.       The 
		1997 Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production 
		and Transfer of Antipersonnel Mines and on Their Destruction; 
		  
		d.       The 
		1980 Convention on Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Certain 
		Conventional Weapons Which May Be Deemed to Be Excessively Injurious or 
		to Have Indiscriminate Effects, including the amendment to its Article I 
		adopted in 2001 and its five protocols; 
		  
		e.       The 
		1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the 
		Event of Armed Conflict, its 1954 Protocol, and its 1999 Second Protocol, 
		on enhanced protection; 
		  
		f.        The 
		1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child and its Optional Protocol on 
		the involvement of children in armed conflict, which includes their 
		participation in hostilities and their recruitment into armed forces and 
		armed groups; 
		  
		g.       The 
		1997 Inter-American Convention against the Illicit Manufacturing of and 
		Trafficking in Firearms, Ammunition, Explosives, and Other Related 
		Materials (CIFTA); and 
		  
		h.       The 
		1994 Convention on the Safety of United Nations and Associated Personnel. 
		  
		3.      To 
		exhort the member states to respect and ensure respect for the basic 
		provisions of international humanitarian law set forth in Article 3 
		common to the Geneva Conventions, and to call upon the parties in 
		conflict to apply, as a minimum, those provisions in the event of armed 
		conflict that is not of an international nature. 
		  
		4.      To 
		urge member states to consider adopting the appropriate measures, at the 
		national level, to address the grave humanitarian consequences of the 
		unregulated availability of arms, including the enactment of domestic 
		laws aimed at strengthening control over the manufacturing of and 
		illicit trafficking in firearms, ammunition, and other related materials, 
		and to bear in mind the Programme of Action adopted at the United 
		Nations Conference on the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light Weapons 
		in All Its Aspects (New York, July 9-20, 2001). 
		  
		5.      To 
		urge states, in accordance with international legal obligations they 
		have assumed, to pay special attention both in times of peace and in 
		times of armed conflict to the obligation, in the study, development, 
		acquisition, or adoption of new weapons or new means or methods of 
		warfare, to determine whether their use would be contrary to 
		international humanitarian law, and, in that event, neither to adopt 
		them for use by the armed forces nor to manufacture them for such 
		purposes. 
		  
		6.      To 
		call upon the member states to implement effective mechanisms to follow 
		up on family reunification programs and search programs for persons 
		reported as missing in circumstances of armed conflicts or other 
		situations of violence. 
		  
		7.      To 
		urge member states to apply the necessary measures to protect cultural 
		property from the effects of armed conflict, such as the identification, 
		registration, or distinctive marking of such property. 
		  
		8.      To 
		urge member states to consider establishing, if they have not yet done 
		so, national committees or commissions on international humanitarian law 
		to ensure effective coordination and the applicability of measures to 
		prevent, disseminate, and apply international humanitarian law, with the 
		support of the International Committee of the Red Cross. 
		  
		9.      To 
		urge member states, and all those concerned, as set forth in 
		international humanitarian law, to allow full unimpeded access by 
		humanitarian personnel to all people in need of assistance, in keeping 
		with United Nations Security Council resolution 1502 (2003). 
		  
		10.      To 
		invite the states parties to the Rome Statute to define in their 
		criminal legislation, in addition to crimes that must be repressed under 
		other international humanitarian law treaties, those set forth in the 
		Statute, and to adopt all measures necessary to cooperate effectively 
		with the International Criminal Court. 
		  
		11.     To 
		urge member states to adopt the necessary measures to implement, at the 
		national level, the provisions contained in the instruments of 
		international humanitarian law to which they are party, enlisting, if 
		necessary, the technical assistance of the ICRC, and to bring about the 
		widest possible dissemination of international humanitarian law 
		throughout the population, particularly among the armed forces and 
		security forces, by including it in military doctrine and manuals, and 
		official instruction programs. 
		  
		12.     To 
		call upon member states to consider promoting and applying the Agenda 
		for Humanitarian Action, adopted at the 28th International 
		Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent. 
		  
		13.     To 
		invite member states to contribute to the search for solutions to the 
		humanitarian problem associated with the use of mines other than 
		antipersonnel mines. 
		  
		14.     To 
		request the General Secretariat to continue to organize, through the 
		Secretariat for Legal Affairs and in coordination with the ICRC, 
		governmental conferences to disseminate and reinforce the implementation 
		of international humanitarian law and related inter-American conventions. 
		  
		15.     To 
		instruct the Permanent Council to continue to organize, with support 
		from the General Secretariat and in cooperation with the ICRC, special 
		meetings on topical issues in the area of international humanitarian law. 
		  
		16.     To 
		instruct the Permanent Council to present a report to the General 
		Assembly at its thirty-fifth regular session on the implementation of 
		this resolution. 
 
		ANNEX 
		  
		
		Statement by the Delegation of the United States 
		  
		  
		The United States has long been concerned 
		about the persistent violations of international humanitarian law and 
		international human rights law throughout the world.  We stand for 
		justice and the promotion of the rule of law.  The United States will 
		continue to be a forceful advocate for the principle of accountability 
		for war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity, but we cannot 
		support the seriously flawed International Criminal Court.  Our position 
		is that states are primarily responsible for ensuring justice in the 
		international system.  We believe that the best way to combat these 
		serious offenses is to build and strengthen domestic judicial systems 
		and political will and, in appropriate circumstances, work through the 
		United Nations Security Council to establish ad hoc tribunals as in 
		Yugoslavia and Rwanda.  Our position is that international practice 
		should promote domestic accountability.  The United States has concluded 
		that the International Criminal Court does not advance these principles. 
		  
		The United States has not ratified the 
		Rome Statute and has no intention of doing so.  This is because we have 
		strong objections to the International Criminal Court, which we believe 
		is fundamentally flawed.  The International Criminal Court claims 
		jurisdiction over the nationals of states not party to the agreement.  
		It has the potential to undermine the role of the United Nations 
		Security Council in maintaining international peace and security.  We 
		also object to the Court because it is not subject to adequate checks 
		and balances.  We believe that an independent court with unchecked power 
		is open to abuse and exploitation.  Its structure lends itself to the 
		great danger of politically-motivated prosecutions and decisions.  The 
		inclusion of the still-undefined crime of aggression within the statute 
		of the Court creates the potential for conflict with the United Nations 
		Charter, which provides that the Security Council determines when an act 
		of aggression has occurred. 
		  
		The United States notes that in past 
		decades several member states have reached national consensus for 
		addressing historic conflicts and controversies as part of their 
		successful and peaceful transition from authoritarian rule to 
		representative democracy.  Indeed, some of those sovereign governments, 
		in light of new events, evolved public opinion, or stronger democratic 
		institutions, have decided on their own and at a time of their choosing 
		to reopen past controversies.  These experiences provide compelling 
		support for the argument that member states–particularly those with 
		functioning democratic institutions and independent functioning judicial 
		systems–should retain the sovereign discretion to decide as a result of 
		democratic and legal processes whether to prosecute or to seek national 
		reconciliation by other peaceful and effective means.  The United States 
		is concerned that the International Criminal Court has the potential to 
		undermine the legitimate efforts of member states to achieve national 
		reconciliation and domestic accountability by democratic means. 
		  
		Our policy on the ICC is consistent with 
		the history of our policies on human rights, the rule of law and the 
		validity of democratic institutions.  For example, we have been a major 
		proponent of the Special Court for Sierra Leone because it is grounded 
		in sovereign consent, combines domestic and international participation 
		in a manner that will generate a lasting benefit to the rule of law 
		within Sierra Leone, and interfaces with the Truth and Reconciliation 
		Commission to address accountability. 
		  
		The United States has a unique role and 
		responsibility to help preserve international peace and security.  At 
		any given time, U.S. forces are located in close to 100 nations around 
		the world, for example, conducting peacekeeping and humanitarian 
		operations and fighting inhumanity.  We must ensure that our soldiers 
		and government officials are not exposed to the prospect of politicized 
		prosecutions and investigations.  Our country is committed to a robust 
		engagement in the world to defend freedom and defeat terror; we cannot 
		permit the ICC to disrupt that vital mission. 
		  
		In light of this position, the United 
		States cannot in good faith join in the consensus on an OAS resolution 
		that promotes the Court. 
		  
		Furthermore, the United States has not 
		acceded to the 1997 Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, 
		Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Antipersonnel Mines and on their 
		Destruction, or the “Ottawa Convention,” and does not intend to do so.  
		In light of this position, the United States cannot in good faith join 
		in the consensus on an OAS resolution that promotes the Ottawa 
		Convention. 
		  
		  
		AG/RES. 
		2055 (XXXIV-O/04)
		 
		
		INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		  
		            THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		RECALLING its 
		resolutions AG/RES. 1971 (XXXIII-O/03), “The Protection of Refugees, 
		Returnees, and Stateless and Internally Displaced Persons in the 
		Americas”; and AG/RES. 774 (XV-O/85); AG/RES. 838 (XVI-O/86); AG/RES. 
		951 (XVIII-O/88); AG/RES. 1021 (XIX-O/89); AG/RES. 1039 (XX-O/90); AG/RES. 
		1040 (XX-O/90); AG/RES. 1103 (XXI-O/91); AG/RES. 1170 (XXII-O/92); AG/RES. 
		1214 (XXIII-O/93); AG/RES. 1273 (XXIV-O/94); AG/RES. 1336 (XXV-O/95); AG/RES. 
		1416 (XXVI-O/96); AG/RES. 1504 (XXVII-O/97); AG/RES. 1602 (XXVIII-O/98); 
		and AG/RES. 1892 (XXXII-O/02); 
		  
		REITERATING the 
		principles established in the Inter-American Democratic Charter, 
		especially those referred to in its Chapter III, “Democracy, Integral 
		Development, and Combating Poverty; 
		  
		            
		RECALLING the pertinent international norms on human 
		rights, humanitarian law, and refugee law, and recognizing that the 
		protection of internally displaced persons has been reinforced by the 
		identification, reaffirmation, and consolidation of specific protective 
		standards, in particular the Guiding Principles on Internal 
		Displacement, prepared by the Representative of the United Nations 
		Secretary-General on Internally Displaced Persons; 
		  
		            
		RECALLING ALSO that, according to the those guiding 
		principles, internally displaced persons are “persons or groups of 
		persons who have been forced or obliged to flee or to leave their homes 
		or places of habitual residence, in particular as a result of or in 
		order to avoid the effects of armed conflict, situations of generalized 
		violence, violations of human rights or natural or human-made disasters, 
		and who have not crossed an internationally recognized State border”; 
		  
		            
		EMPHASIZING that the states have the primary 
		responsibility to provide protection and assistance to internally 
		displaced persons within their jurisdiction, as well as to address, as 
		appropriate, the root causes of the internal displacement problem and to 
		do so, when so required, in cooperation with the international 
		community; 
		  
		TAKING NOTE that several countries in the 
		Hemisphere are using the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, 
		prepared by the Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General 
		on Internally Displaced Persons, including those on the development of 
		national policies and strategies; 
		UNDERSCORING the holding of the Regional 
		Seminar on Internal Displacement in the Americas, in Mexico City in 
		February 2004, which made it possible to evaluate and identify possible 
		solutions to the problem of internal displacement in the region; 
		  
		            TAKING INTO ACCOUNT that the 
		problem of internally displaced persons is of significant proportions 
		and that their needs, particularly with regard to protection and 
		assistance, require immediate attention; 
		  
		            UNDERSCORING the importance of 
		implementing effective policies for preventing and averting forced 
		internal displacement and for protecting and assisting internally 
		displaced persons during displacement, their return or resettlement, and 
		their reintegration; 
		  
		UNDERSCORING ALSO that to promote enhanced 
		protection for internally displaced persons, comprehensive strategies 
		and lasting solutions are needed, which include, among other aspects, 
		the safe and voluntary return of internally displaced persons, promotion 
		and protection of their human rights, and their resettlement and 
		reintegration, either in their place of origin or in the receiving 
		community; and 
		  
		REAFFIRMING the importance of 
		international cooperation, both from governments and from civil society 
		institutions and organizations, in addressing fully and effectively the 
		needs of internally displaced persons, 
		  
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To urge member 
		states to include, as appropriate, in their sectoral plans and programs 
		the special needs of internally displaced persons. 
		  
		            2.         To appeal to member 
		states to consider the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, 
		prepared by the Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General 
		on Internally Displaced Persons, in designing public policy on this 
		matter. 
		  
		            3.         To urge member 
		states to make every effort, as far as possible, with the support of the 
		United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, other international 
		organizations, and the international community, to address the root 
		causes of the internal displacement of persons. 
		  
		            4.         To encourage member 
		states to provide, on the basis of comprehensive and lasting strategies, 
		protection and assistance to internally displaced persons and to 
		facilitate the efforts of and access by appropriate United Nations 
		agencies, as well as humanitarian organizations. 
		  
 
		AG/RES. 
		2057 (XXXIV-O/04)
		  
		
		ACCESS TO PUBLIC INFORMATION:  STRENGTHENING DEMOCRACY[10]/ 
		  
		(Adopted at the fourth plenary session, 
		held on June 8, 2004) 
		  
		  
		            
		THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 
		  
		            HAVING SEEN the Report of the 
		Permanent Council to the General Assembly on the Status of 
		Implementation of Resolution AG/RES. 1932 (XXXIII-O/03), “Access to 
		Public Information:  Strengthening Democracy” (AG/doc.4339/04); 
		  
		            CONSIDERING that Article 13 of 
		the American Convention on Human Rights provides that “[e]veryone 
		has the right to freedom of thought and expression.  This right includes 
		freedom to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds, 
		regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing, in print, in the 
		form of art, or through any other medium of one's choice”; 
		  
		            CONSIDERING ALSO that Article 
		19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights includes the freedom “to 
		seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and 
		regardless of frontiers”; 
		  
		            RECALLING that the Plan of 
		Action of the Third Summit of the Americas, held in Quebec City in 2001, 
		indicates that governments will ensure that national legislation is 
		applied equitably to all, respecting freedom of expression and access to 
		information of all citizens; 
		  
		
		            EMPHASIZING that Article 4 of the Inter-American 
		Democratic Charter states that transparency 
		in government activities, probity, responsible public administration on 
		the part of governments, respect for social rights, and freedom of 
		expression and of the press are essential components of the exercise of 
		democracy; 
		  
		            NOTING that, in the 
		Declaration of Nuevo León, the Heads of State and Government affirmed 
		that access to information held by the state, subject to constitutional 
		and legal norms, including those on privacy and confidentiality, is an 
		indispensable condition for citizen participation and promotes effective 
		respect for human rights, and, in that connection, that they are 
		committed to providing the legal and regulatory framework and the 
		structures and conditions required to guarantee the right of access to 
		public information;   
		            BEARING IN MIND the adoption 
		of the Declaration of Santiago on Democracy and Public Trust:  A New 
		Commitment to Good Governance for the Americas” [AG/DEC. 31 (XXXIII-O/03)], 
		as well as resolution AG/RES. 1960 (XXXIII-O/03), “Program for 
		Democratic Governance in the Americas”; 
		  
		            CONSIDERING that the Inter-American 
		Agency for Cooperation and Development (IACD) has been identifying and 
		facilitating access by member state governments to e-government 
		practices that facilitate information and communications technology 
		applications in governmental processes; 
		  
		            CONSIDERING ALSO that the Unit 
		for the Promotion of Democracy (UPD) has been providing support to 
		member state governments in dealing with the topic of access to public 
		information; 
		  
		            NOTING the work accomplished 
		by the Inter-American Juridical Committee (CJI) on this issue, in 
		particular, the document “Right to Information:  Access to and 
		Protection of Information and Personal Data in Electronic Format,” 
		presented by Dr. Jonathan Fried (CJI/doc.25/00 rev. 1); 
		  
		
		            RECOGNIZING that 
		the goal of achieving an informed citizenry must be rendered compatible 
		with other societal aims, such as safeguarding national security, public 
		order, and protection of personal privacy, pursuant to laws passed to 
		that effect; 
		  
		
		            RECOGNIZING ALSO that democracy is strengthened through full 
		respect for freedom of expression, access to public information, and the 
		free dissemination of ideas, and that all sectors of society, including 
		the media, through the public information they disseminate to the 
		citizenry, may contribute to a climate of tolerance of all views, foster 
		a culture of peace, and strengthen democratic governance; 
		  
		
		            TAKING NOTE of 
		the Declaration of Principles on Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American 
		Commission on Human Rights; and 
		  
		
		            RECALLING 
		initiatives taken by civil society regarding access to public 
		information, in particular, the Declaration of Chapultepec, the 
		Johannesburg Principles, the Lima Principles, 
		and the Declaration of the SOCIUS Peru 2003:  Access to Information, 
		
		RESOLVES: 
		  
		            1.         To reaffirm that 
		everyone has the freedom to seek, receive, access, and impart 
		information and that access to public information is a requisite for the 
		very exercise of democracy. 
		  
		            2.         To reiterate 
		that states are obliged to respect and promote respect for everyone’s 
		access to public information and to promote the adoption of any 
		necessary legislative or other types of provisions to ensure its 
		recognition and effective application. 
		  
		            3.         To encourage member 
		states, in keeping with the commitment made in the Declaration of Nuevo 
		León and with due respect for constitutional and legal provisions, to 
		prepare and/or adjust their respective legal and regulatory frameworks, 
		as appropriate, so as to provide the citizenry with broad access to 
		public information. 
		  
		            4.         To urge member 
		states to take into consideration clear and transparent criteria for 
		exemptions when drafting up and adapting their domestic legislation. 
		  
		   5.         To encourage 
		member states to take the necessary measures, through their respective 
		national legislation and other appropriate means, to facilitate the 
		electronic availability of public information. 
		  
		            6.         To instruct the 
		Special Rapporteurship for Freedom of Expression of the Inter-American 
		Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) and the Unit for the Promotion of 
		Democracy to: 
		  
		a.       Support the efforts of member 
		states that so request in drafting legislation and developing mechanisms 
		in the area of access to public information and citizen participation; 
		and 
		  
		b.       Assist the Permanent Council in 
		the preparatory work for the special meeting mentioned in paragraph 9.a. 
		  
		7.         To instruct the Special 
		Rapporteurship for Freedom of Expression to continue to report on the 
		situation regarding access to public information in the region in the 
		annual report of the IACHR. 
		  
		         8.         To instruct the 
		Inter-American Agency for Cooperation and Development (IACD) to identify 
		new resources to support member states’ efforts to facilitate access to 
		public information. 
		  
		            9.     To recommend to the 
		Permanent Council that it: 
		  
		a.       Convene a special meeting with 
		the participation of experts from the states and civil society 
		representatives to promote, impart, and exchange experiences and 
		knowledge with respect to access to public information and its 
		relationship with citizen participation; and 
		  
		b.       On the basis of the report of the 
		special meeting, and through the Committee on Juridical and Political 
		Affairs, prepare a basic document on best practices and the development 
		of common approaches or guidelines for increasing access to public 
		information. 
		  
		            10.       To request the 
		Permanent Council to report to the General Assembly at its thirty-fifth 
		regular session on the implementation of this resolution, which will be 
		carried out in accordance with the resources allocated in the program-budget 
		of the Organization and other resources.   
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