DECLARATION
OF PRINCIPLES SECOND SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS
Santiago de Chile,
Chile
April,
1998
The following document is the complete text of the Declaration
of Santiago signed by the Heads of State and Government participating in the
Second Summit of the Americas:
We, the democratically-elected Heads of State and Government
of the countries of the Americas, have met in Santiago, Chile, in order to
continue the dialogue and strengthen the cooperation we began in Miami in
December 1994. Since that time, significant progress has been made in the
formulation and execution of joint plans and programs in order to take advantage
of the great opportunities before us. We reaffirm our will to continue this most
important undertaking, which requires sustained national efforts and dynamic
international cooperation.
The strengthening of democracy, political dialogue, economic
stability, progress towards social justice, the extent to which our trade
liberalization policies coincide, and the will to expedite a process of ongoing
Hemispheric integration have made our relations more mature. We will redouble
our efforts to continue reforms designed to improve the living conditions of the
peoples of the Americas and to achieve a mutually supportive community. For this
reason, we have decided that education is a key theme and is of particular
importance in our deliberations. We approve the attached Plan of Action and
undertake to carry out its initiatives.
Since our meeting in Miami, we have seen real economic
benefits in the Americas resulting from more open trade, transparency in
economic regulations, sound, market-based economic policies, as well as efforts
by the private sector to increase its competitiveness. Even as countries in our
region have been tested by financial and other economic pressures, and as
countries in other regions have experienced serious economic setbacks, the
overall course in the Americas has been one of faster economic growth, lower
inflation, expanded opportunities, and confidence in facing the global
marketplace. A major reason for this positive record has been our countries´
steadfast and cooperative efforts to promote prosperity through increased
economic integration and more open economies. New partnerships have been formed
and existing ones strengthened and expanded. A positive role is being played by
sub-regional and bilateral integration and free trade agreements. We are
confident that the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) will improve the
well-being of all our people, including economically disadvantaged populations
within our respective countries.
Hemispheric integration is a necessary complement to national
policies aimed at overcoming lingering problems and obtaining a higher level of
development. In its broadest sense, a process of integration based on respect
for cultural identities will make it possible to shape a common, interwoven set
of values and interests that helps us in these objectives.
Globalization offers great opportunities for progress to our
countries and opens up new areas of cooperation for the hemispheric community.
However, it can also heighten the differences among countries and within our
societies. With steadfast determination to reap its benefits and to face its
challenges, we will give special attention to the most vulnerable countries and
social groups in the Hemisphere.
Education is the determining factor for the political,
social, cultural, and economic development of our peoples. We undertake to
facilitate access of all inhabitants of the Americas to preschool, primary,
secondary, and higher education, and we will make learning a lifelong process.
We will put science and technology at the service of education to assure growing
levels of knowledge and so that educators may develop their skills to the
highest level. The Plan of Action that accompanies this Declaration defines the
objectives and goals we intend to achieve and the actions that will make them a
reality. In order to meet our goals within the agreed timeframes, we reaffirm
our commitment to invest greater resources in this important area, and to
encourage civil society to participate in developing education.
The decisions adopted by our Ministers of Education at the
Conference held in Mérida, Mexico, last February, reflect our desire to promote
specific joint initiatives designed to improve access to education, with
fairness, quality, relevancy, and effectiveness. In order to consolidate and
lend continuity to our decisions, we have instructed that another Conference be
held in Brasilia, Brazil, in July of this year.
Today, we direct our Ministers Responsible for Trade to begin
negotiations for the FTAA, in accordance with the March 1998 Ministerial
Declaration of San José. We reaffirm our determination to conclude the
negotiation of the FTAA no later than 2005, and to make concrete progress by the
end of the century. The FTAA agreement will be balanced, comprehensive, WTO-consistent
and constitute a single undertaking.
We note with satisfaction the preparatory work by the
Ministers Responsible for Trade over the past three years which has strengthened
our trade policies, fostered understanding of our economic objectives and
facilitated dialogue among all participating countries. We appreciate the
significant contribution of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the
Organization of American States (OAS), and the United Nations Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), acting as the Tripartite
Committee.
The FTAA negotiating process will be transparent, and take
into account the differences in the levels of development and size of the
economies in the Americas, in order to create the opportunities for the full
participation by all countries. We encourage all segments of civil society to
participate in and contribute to the process in a constructive manner, through
our respective mechanisms of dialogue and consultation and by presenting their
views through the mechanism created in the FTAA negotiating process. We believe
that economic integration, investment, and free trade are key factors for
raising standards of living, improving the working conditions of the people of
the Americas and better protecting the environment. These issues will be taken
into account as we proceed with the economic integration process in the
Americas.
The region has made significant advances in both monetary and
fiscal policy as well as in price stability and liberalizing our economies. The
volatility of capital markets vindicates our decision to strengthen banking
supervision in the Hemisphere and to establish regulations relating to
disclosure and reporting of banking information.
The strength and meaning of representative democracy lie in
the active participation of individuals at all levels of civic life. The
democratic culture must encompass our entire population. We will strengthen
education for democracy and promote the necessary actions for government
institutions to become more participatory structures. We undertake to strengthen
the capabilities of regional and local governments, when appropriate, and to
foster more active participation in civil society.
Respect for and promotion of human rights and the fundamental
freedoms of all individuals is a primary concern of our governments. In
commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the American Declaration of the Rights
and Duties of Man and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, we agree on the
need to promote the ratification and implementation of the international
agreements aimed at preserving them and to continue strengthening the pertinent
national and international institutions. We agree that a free press plays a
fundamental role in this area and we reaffirm the importance of guaranteeing
freedom of expression, information, and opinion. We commend the recent
appointment of a Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression, within the
framework of the Organization of American States.
Confident that an independent, efficient, and effective
administration of justice plays an essential role in the process of
consolidating democracy, strengthens its institutions, guarantees the equality
of all its citizens, and contributes to economic development, we will enhance
our policies relating to justice and encourage the reforms necessary to promote
legal and judicial cooperation. To that end, we will strengthen national
entities involved in the study of the administration of justice and expedite the
establishment of a hemispheric center for studies on this subject.
We will combat all forms of discrimination in the Hemisphere.
Equal rights and opportunities between men and women and the objective of
ensuring active participation of women in all areas of national endeavor are
priority tasks. We will continue to promote the full integration of indigenous
populations and other vulnerable groups into political and economic life, with
due respect for the characteristics and expressions that affirm their cultural
identity. We will make a special effort to guarantee the human rights of all
migrants, including migrant workers and their families.
Overcoming poverty continues to be the greatest challenge
confronted by our Hemisphere. We are conscious that the positive growth shown in
the Americas in past years has yet to resolve the problems of inequity and
social exclusion. We are determined to remove the barriers that deny the poor
access to proper nutrition, social services, a healthy environment, credit, and
legal title to their property. We will provide greater support to micro and
small enterprises, promote core labor standards recognized by the International
Labor Organization (ILO), and use new technologies to improve the health
conditions of every family in the Americas, with the technical support of the
Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO), achieving greater levels of equity and
sustainable development.
With deep satisfaction, we note that peace, an essential
value for human coexistence, is a reality in the Hemisphere. We underscore that
Central America has become a zone of peace, democracy, and development and we
recognize efforts to eliminate antipersonnel mines and to rehabilitate their
victims. We will continue to foster confidence and security among our countries
through such measures as those mentioned in the Santiago and San Salvador
Declarations on Confidence- and Security-Building Measures. We encourage the
pacific settlement of disputes.
We will lend new impetus to the struggle against corruption,
money laundering, terrorism, weapons trafficking, and the drug problem,
including illicit use, and work together to ensure that criminals do not find
safe haven anywhere in the Hemisphere. We are determined to persevere in this
direction.
In forging an alliance against drugs and applying the
Hemispheric Anti-Drug Strategy, we welcome the start of formal negotiations at
the May 4 meeting of Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission (CICAD) to be
held in Washington within the framework of the Organization of American States
(OAS), to establish an objective procedure for the multilateral evaluation of
actions and cooperation to prevent and combat all aspects of the drug problem
and related crimes, based on the principles of sovereignty, territorial
integrity of States, shared responsibility, and with a comprehensive and
balanced approach.
We will strengthen national, hemispheric, and international
efforts aimed at environmental protection as a basis for sustainable development
that provides human beings a healthy and productive life in harmony with nature.
The commitments undertaken at the Miami Summit and the Summit on Sustainable
Development held in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, provide a solid basis for
strengthening our actions. As parties to the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change, we underscore the importance of working together to further
fulfillment of the agreement reached at the Conference in Kyoto, Japan, and to
promote its ratification in our countries. Moreover, we will work closely to
make preparations for a Conference of the Parties to be held in November of this
year in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
We acknowledge that the development of energy links between
our countries and the intensification of trade in the energy sector strengthen
and foster the integration of the Americas. Energy integration, based on
competitive and transparent activities, and in compliance with national
conditions and objectives, contributes to the sustainable development of our
nations and to the improvement of the quality of life of our people with minimum
impact on the environment.
Recognizing the importance of, and positive role played by
hemispheric institutions, particularly the Organization of American States
(OAS), we instruct our Ministers to examine the strengthening and modernizing of
these institutions.
We reaffirm our will to continue strengthening
intra-hemispheric dialogue and cooperation within the framework of friendship
and solidarity that inspires our nations.
Done in Santiago, Chile, on this the 19th day of April, 1998,
in the Spanish, French, English and Portuguese languages.
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