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Encyclopedia > CSCE

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) is an international organization for security. In its region it is concerned with early warning, conflict prevention, crisis management and post-conflict rehabilitation. It has 55 participating states from Europe, the Mediterranean, the Caucasus, Central Asia and North America.

Contents

Institutions

The decision making bodies of the organization are the Summit, Ministerial Council and Senior Council, with the Permanent Council the regular decision-making body, with the leadership of the Chairman-in-Office (Currently (January 2004) the chairman is the Bulgarian Foreign Affairs Minister Solomon Passy).


The OSCE headquarters are located in Vienna, Austria. The Organization also has offices in Copenhagen, Geneva, The Hague, Prague and Warsaw.


History

The organization was established in 1973 as the Conference for Security and Co-operation in Europe (CSCE). Talks had been mooted about a European security grouping since the 1950s but the Cold War prevented any substantial progress until the talks at Dipoli in Helsinki began in November 1972. The recommendations of the talks, "The Blue Book", gave the practical foundations for a three-stage conference, the Helsinki process. The CSCE opened in Helsinki on July 3, 1973 with 35 states sending representatives. Stage I only took five days to agree to follow the Blue Book. Stage II was the main working phase and was conducted in Geneva from September 18, 1973 until July 21, 1975. the result of Stage II was the Helsinki Final Act which was signed by the 35 particpating nations during Stage III, which took place in Helsinki from July 30 to August 1, 1975.


The concepts of improving relations and implementing the Act were developed over a series of follow-up meeting, with major gatherings in Belgrade (October 4, 1977 - March 8, 1978), Madrid (November 11, 1980 - September 9, 1983), and Vienna (November 4, 1986 - January 19, 1989).


The collapse of Communism required a change of role for the CSCE. The Paris Charter for a New Europe which was signed on November 21, 1990 marked the beginning of this change. With the changes capped by the re-naming of the CSCE to the OSCE on January 1, 1995.


In Istanbul on November 19, 1999, the OSCE ended a two-day summit by calling for a political settlement in Chechnya and adopting a Charter for European Security.


A 43-member OSCE team helped oversee the October 9, 2004 presidential election in Afghanistan.


After a group of 13 democratic US senators petitioned Secretary of State Colin Powell to have foreign election monitors oversee the 2004 US presidential election, the State Department acquiesced, and President Bush invited the OSCE to do so. [1] (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1187060/posts)


See also

External link

  • Official website (http://www.osce.org/)

Others about the OSCE

  • OSCEWatch (http://www.oscewatch.org)

  Results from FactBites:
 
US Department of State Dispatch: CSCE: a new role for a new era - Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe - ... (1612 words)
CSCE reflects our faith that a truly democratic Europe will be a peaceful Europe-that a Europe which overcomes its history of ethnic hatreds need not repeat its endless history of internecine strife.
CSCE embodies the revolutionary concept that security in the future will be derived more from respect for human rights and democratic principles than from the balance-of-power mechanisms of the past.
CSCE must also play a more effective role in addressing the actual and potential ethnic conflicts in the former Soviet Union by monitoring respect for human rights and minority rights throughout the CIS [Commonwealth of Independent States] states and by accelerating conflict prevention missions in such places as Georgia and Moldova.
CSCE and the human rights challenge: the first Human Dimension Implementation Meeting, Warsaw 1993 (2258 words)
It should be a CSCE practice that unless indicated prior to a mission and for some compelling and exceptional reason, CSCE mission reports should be publicly released as soon as they are transmitted to participating states.
New CSCE human rights commitments will still be needed in the future to fill gaps, to strengthen weak CSCE commitments, to respond to a changing world and to reinforce the validity of standards developed in other fora.
CSCE states which are abolitionist should take a firm stance and encourage the remaining retentionist states to follow suit.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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