17. December 2009
Message from
His Excellency Mahinda Rajapaksa
President of Sri Lanka
on the occasion of
the Commemoration of SAARC Charter Day
8 December
2009
It is a
great pleasure
for me, as the current Chair of SAARC, to extend warm greetings and
best wishes
of the Government and people of Sri Lanka to the
Governments and people
of South Asia
on the occasion of the commemoration of the SAARC Charter Day.
Twenty-four
years ago,
our nations came together to establish SAARC with the conviction that
regional
cooperation among countries of South Asia is mutually beneficial,
desirable and
necessary for promoting the welfare and improving the quality of life
of the
peoples of the region. The then leaders of South Asia believed
that in an
increasingly interdependent world, the objectives of peace, freedom,
social
justice and economic prosperity are best achieved in our region by
fostering
mutual understanding, good neighbourly relations and meaningful
cooperation
among Member States which are bound by ties of history and culture.
Since the
establishment
of SAARC with that noble conviction, our Association has developed and
matured steadily
over the years with a decisive shift in focus in its third decade,
towards
implementation.
It is
heartening to see
increasing interaction between the people of our region. It is in
recognition
of the importance of this aspect to the regional integration process
that the Fifteenth
SAARC Summit was held in Colombo in 2008,
under the theme
Partnership for Growth for Our People.
The
underlying theme of the
Mahinda Chintana Policy
Statement of 2005
is the importance of collective self-reliance for the achievement of
socio-economic development. Especially in the context of the current
global
economic crisis, the promotion and strengthening of collective
self-reliance
among the countries of South Asia which is
enshrined in our Charter
as one of SAARC’s objectives, assumes greater significance. The four Agreements signed during the
Fifteenth SAARC Summit in Colombo last year, namely the Protocol of
Accession
of Afghanistan to the Agreement on SAFTA, Agreement on the
Establishment of the
South Asian Regional Standards Organisation, the Convention on Mutual
Assistance in Criminal Matters and the Charter of the SAARC Development
Fund, along
with the adoption of the Statement on Food Security were important
steps in
this process.
Since the Summit, there has
been further
continued progress. The SAARC Food Bank is now fully operational.
Project based
development through the SAARC Development Fund is progressing well and
the
Secretariat of the Fund is to be established shortly in Bhutan. Our
regional resolve
and commitment to work together to address our problems in a
regional-specific
framework continues to gather momentum. This is manifest in the SAARC
Ministerial Statement on Global Economic Crisis and the SAARC
Ministerial
Declaration on Cooperation in Combating Terrorism adopted by the SAARC
Council
of Ministers in February 2009. During Sri
Lanka’s
Chairmanship of SAARC, the Ministers of SAARC Member States
dealing with the subjects of Energy, Higher Education, Transport,
Parliamentary
Affairs, Children’s issues, and Science and Technology held
meetings in Colombo,
enabling important decisions to be taken in specific areas of
common interest. During the same period,
the Ministers of Agriculture, Finance and Environment also met in other
SAARC
capitals.
While
reaffirming Sri Lanka’s
firm commitment to SAARC
and its objectives, I remain confident of the determination of the
Governments
and peoples of our region towards fostering the stronger cooperation
that is
essential for peace, freedom, social justice and economic prosperity in
South Asia.
Mahinda Rajapaksa