PERMANENT
COUNCIL OF THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES
GT/CDI-2/01 add. 10
15 August 2001
Original: Spanish
Working Group to study the
Draft Inter-American Charter
COMMENTS AND PROPOSALS BY MEMBER STATES
ON THE DRAFT INTER-AMERICAN DEMOCRATIC CHARTER
El Salvador
San Salvador, 10 August 2001
Excellency:
As instructed by my government, I have the honor
to submit herewith the contributions of El Salvador to the Inter-American Democratic
Charter, to be considered for adoption in Lima, Peru.
These contributions are the product of a Forum on
the Inter-American Democratic Charter, coordinated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in
cooperation with the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, the Guillermo Manuel Ungo Foundation, and
the Inter-American Institute of Human Rights, and held in El Salvador on 9 August 2001
with the participation of Salvadoran citizens and institutions representing all sectors of
national life.
I should be grateful if your Excellency would
arrange for the circulation of these contributions to the Honorable Permanent Missions for
the purposes of consideration by the Permanent Councils Working Group on the
Inter-American Democratic Charter.
Accept, Excellency the renewed the assurances of
my highest consideration.
Margarita Escobar
Ambassador, Permanent Representative
Ambassador Hernán Castro
Permanent Representative of Costa Rica
Chairman of the Permanent Council
Washington, D.C.
Forum on the
Inter-American Democratic Charter
EL SALVADOR
CONCLUSIONS OF THE CIVIL SOCIETY
WORKING GROUPS
Thursday, 9 August 2001
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Supreme Electoral Tribunal Guillermo Manuel Ungo Foundation Inter-American Institute of
Human Rights
EL SALVADOR
FORUM ON THE INTER-AMERICAN DEMOCRATIC CHARTER,
CONVENED BY THE MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, THE
SUPREME ELECTORAL TRIBUNAL, THE GUILLERMO MANUEL UNGO FOUNDATION, AND THE INTER-AMERICAN
INSTITUTE OF HUMAN RIGHTS
CONCLUSIONS OF THE SALVADORAN CIVIL SOCIETY WORKING
GROUPS
I. Substantive gaps found in the Draft
Inter-American Democratic Charter
- Article 1, add the underlined text: "the peoples of the
Americas have a right to democracy and the duty to require it."
- Broaden the wording of article 1 and add: "and it is the
obligation of the member states to guarantee and promote it."
- Article 3, change the text to read as follows: "...free and transparent
elections..."
- Article 3, incorporate a second paragraph: "The American
states shall strengthen representative democracy through the effective participation of
women in electoral processes and fundamental decision-making on a footing of a real
equality with men."
- Article 4, add the underlined text: "the exercise and
strengthening of democracy require transparency, legitimacy, probity,
responsibility, and effectiveness in the exercise of public authority, respect for social
rights, and freedom of expression and of the press, as well as economic and social
development."
- Article 4, add the underlined text: "...respect for
individual and social rights, freedom of the press, as well as economic development and social
well-being."
- Article 5, add the underlined text: "Solidarity and the
strengthening of inter-American cooperation for integral development, and especially the
fight against extreme poverty and vulnerabilities in the political, economic, and
social fields, are fundamental parts... "
- Article 6, add the underlined text: "Promoting and fostering
diverse forms of participation and consultation strengthens democracy."
- Article 8 only mentions civil, political, social, and cultural
rights; third-generation rights, especially the right to a healthy environment, need to be
added.
- Mention of the Belem Do Para Convention should also be incorporated
into article 8.
- Article 9, add the underlined text: "Any person,
irrespective of gender, whose human rights have been violated are entitled to present
claims ..."
- Article 10, add the underlined text: "When the democratically
elected government of a member state considers that its democratic political
institutional process or democratic regime is at risk, it may solicit from the
Organization..."
- Article 11, add the underlined text: "...the Secretary General
may, on his own initiative or at the request of the government concerned, undertake
visits..."
- There are no mechanisms to safeguard social rights, rights to
freedom (expression, thought, press); democratic freedoms of association, mobilization,
organization.
- Overall, the document in itself fails to establish mechanisms for
handling such problems as critical poverty and human, economic, and social development;
the term critical poverty extends to academic/scientific and economic poverty and poverty
in terms of health, etc.
- The issues of environmental depredation and the rights of
immigrants to vote on foreign soil are not addressed.
- The issue of migratory protection for citizens on foreign soil
(guaranteeing civil, political, and other rights) is not addressed.
- Cooperation agreements between public and civil society
institutions; the performance of a social oversight role.
- Political reform is required to ensure real citizen participation.
- The functions of electoral authorities are not defined so as to
establish their independence in ensuring representative democracy.
- The concept of democracy within the document is limited. There is
mention only of representative democracy, without reference to the element of citizen
participation.
- The trilogy of freedom, solidarity, and sustainable development
should be included within the concept of democracy.
- The Charter should promote the plebiscite and the referendum (as
means of public consultation).
- Independence to ensure representative democracy.
- Reference should be incorporated to the issue of corruption and
ethical values as vulnerable aspects of representative democracy.
II. Principal strengths of the Draft
Inter-American Democratic Charter
- Provides for citizen participation as a fundamental pillar of
effective democracy.
- Provides for preservation and strengthening of human rights and the
democratic system.
- Promotes and provides for the real exercise and international
monitoring of the fundamental rights of individuals.
- Provides support for legitimately elected governments.
- Includes the gender issue -- equality of conditions.
- Promotes respect for the democratic institutions of government.
- Provides for respect, noninterference, nonintervention among
states.
- Reaffirms respect for the conventions and agreements signed among
states to guarantee democratic processes and the effective functioning of institutions.
- Reasserts the need for citizen participation in the effective and
legitimate exercise of democracy.
- Recognizes the need for economic and social improvement.
- Promotes the principles and practices of civic and democratic
activity.
- Establishes a procedure to be implemented when democratic systems
are in danger of interruption. Provides for measures ranging from preventive action to the
suspension of member states.
- Incorporates the OAS Charter, the Protocol of Washington, and
Resolution 1080, the Santiago Commitment.
- Incorporates the principal inter-American human rights instruments.
- Complements regional instruments for the guarantee and respect of
representative democracy, establishing appropriate procedures for its restoration and the
corresponding sanctions.
- Respects the principle of nonintervention and the
self-determination of peoples.
- Provides for the guarantee, respect, and strengthening of democracy
and the consolidation of a representative democracy in the Americas.
- Provides for enhancement of the concept of American solidarity.
- Provides for the strengthening of electoral institutions in the
American states.
- Establishes that democracy is the system of life founded on freedom
and constant improvement in the economic, social, and cultural life of peoples.
- Promotes the creation of a democratic culture.
- Provides for increased and representative public participation in
political parties to strengthen democratic life.
III. Points in the Inter-American Democratic
Charter requiring greater precision and further development
- Link Democracy and human rights more closely.
- Enhance civil society participation and consultation as a means to
strengthen democracy.
- Incorporate the commitment of states to democratic culture and
respect for human rights.
- Incorporate reference to the role of the OAS.
- Provide foundation for the right to self-determination of peoples
and strengthen the principle of nonintervention and related mechanisms.
- Develop the concept of representative democracy.
- Develop the concept of universal observance of human rights.
- Specify what constitutes an alteration or interference in the
democratic order of a state in the hemisphere.
IV. Other proposals and comments in respect of
the Draft Inter-American Democratic Charter
Proposals
- In article 5, delete the reference to "critical poverty"
and refer only to poverty.
- The Charter's preamble should mention other regional instruments
referring to representative democracy and the inter-American system of human rights.
- Incorporate other mechanisms to ensure citizen participation:
consultations, referendums, plebiscites, etc.
Comments
- There is interest within the inter-American community in the need
to strengthen the democratic rule of law.
- The Charter should include recognition of the right of peoples to
insurrection as a guarantee of representative democracy and a deterrent when
representative democracy collapses.
- Democratic institutional integrity is a critically important
concept within the Charter.
- The concept of representative democracy must be more precisely
defined and expanded.
- An appropriate procedure must be established for determining the
nature and extent of an institutional alteration or interruption in the democratic order
of a state in the hemisphere.
- The inviolability of the principle of nonintervention should be
established in the Charter and in particular in the Democracy Clause.
- Participation is limited to the political parties; citizen or civil
participation through independent mechanisms should be encouraged.
- The Charter should promote a democratic culture through education
and the strengthening of relevant institutions.
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