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10 Oct 2007 : Column WA11



10 Oct 2007 : Column WA11

Written Answers

Wednesday 10 October 2007

Abkhazia

Lord Avebury asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Home Office (Lord West of Spithead): The Country of Origin Information Service (COIS) publishes COI reports for the 20 countries that generate the most asylum claims. For other countries, such as Russia and Georgia, COIS publishes COI key documents which provide a brief country profile and an index of key external source documents (produced by a wide range of reliable organisations such as the United Nations, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch).

The current Russia and Georgia key documents list external source documents that provide information on freedom of movement for Abkhazians. The COIS will consider including information that Professor Hewitt has supplied in updates of the COI key documents.

Afghanistan: NATO

Lord Astor of Hever asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The UK supports strongly the efforts by the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) Secretary-General and NATO's military commanders to fill the gaps in the Combined Joint Statement of Requirement for Afghanistan, and thus secure the resources they need to carry out International Security Assistance Force's (ISAF) mission effectively. The UK continues to make this support clear bilaterally to NATO and non-NATO ISAF partners, as well as multilaterally in NATO and elsewhere.

Burma: Human Rights

Lord Alton of Liverpool asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): We have repeatedly condemned the Burmese Government's violent suppression of peaceful demonstrations, the continuing house arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi and the ongoing attacks on ethnic groups in Burma.

My right honourable friend the Prime Minister issued statements on 2 and 28 September condemning the Burmese Government's persistent abuse of human rights. He has called for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi.

We have extensively lobbied a wide range of other Governments, including China, India and Association of South East Asian Nations partners to draw attention to our serious concerns about the situation and called for their support to work for positive political progress and national reconciliation in Burma.

We are working with our EU partners to strengthen sanctions against the Burmese regime.

We continue to support the UN Secretary-General's “Good Offices” mandate on Burma. We welcome the recent visit of the Secretary-General's Special Adviser to Burma and will encourage him to return there to facilitate dialogue between the Burmese Government and democratic opposition.

Cuba: Human Rights

Lord Patten asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): We remain concerned about the plight of Dr Oscar Elias Biscet and other political prisoners in Cuba. We are particularly worried about political prisoners such as Dr Biscet who are reported to be suffering poor health yet are not provided with adequate medical treatment. The UK considers Dr Biscet's imprisonment to be a violation of his civil and political freedoms. At the time of Dr Biscet's detention, the UK and EU condemned these violations and called for the immediate release of all political prisoners in Cuba.

The UK, along with our EU partners, is committed to seeking improvements in civil and political freedoms in Cuba. We regularly raise the situation of political prisoners in Cuba with the Cuban authorities both in London and Havana and call for their immediate release. On 30 April my right honourable friend the then Minister for Trade, Investment and Foreign Affairs, Ian McCartney, expressed concern about political

10 Oct 2007 : Column WA13

prisoners and other human rights issues during a meeting with Cuban Deputy Minister for Foreign Trade, Antonio Carricarte.

In addition, our embassy in Havana continues to monitor Dr Biscet's case and maintains contact with his supporters and family. On 10 December 2006 officials from the embassy met Dr. Biscet's wife, Elsa Morejon. More information on the human rights situation in Cuba and on UK and EU actions can be found in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's annual human rights report, available at www.fco.gov. uk/humanrights.

Cyprus: Annan Plan

Lord Maginnis of Drumglass asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): We continue to support the UN's efforts to broker a comprehensive and durable settlement to the Cyprus problem. The leaders of the two communities must engage constructively with the UN's efforts to implement the 8 July agreement. As time passes, a settlement becomes increasingly difficult and complicated. Fully-fledged negotiations should therefore start as soon as possible. In parallel to this, we would hope that both sides could agree to confidence-building measures, such as opening the Ledra Street crossing, and engaging in bicommunal activities, which themselves would begin the process of rebuilding trust and ending the division of the island.

Cyprus: Human Rights

Lord Maginnis of Drumglass asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The European Convention on Human Rights applies to all individuals within the jurisdiction of a party to the European Convention on Human Rights. The suspension of the EU acquis has meant that Turkish Cypriots have been unable to benefit from the usual advantages of EU membership.

We continue to support the commitment of EU Foreign Ministers in April 2004 to end Turkish Cypriot isolation and facilitate the reunification of Cyprus by encouraging the economic development of the Turkish Cypriot community. The Financial Aid Regulation is an important step towards this goal and represents the biggest EU aid programme per capita.

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The practical projects it funds have the potential to make a real difference to the lives of ordinary Turkish Cypriots.

Lord Maginnis of Drumglass asked Her Majesty's Government:

Lord Malloch-Brown: The Government have not made any recent assessments of the suffering endured by both communities during the period 1963-74. However, the Committee for Missing Persons in Cyprus continues to carry out important work in identifying and returning the remains of those who lost their lives during this period. We hope that this process will promote reconciliation between the communities. Issues such as this that continue to divide the two parties will fully be resolved only through a comprehensive and durable solution.

The European Convention on Human Rights applies to all individuals within the jurisdiction of a party to the European Convention on Human Rights.

EU: Constitution

Lord Stoddart of Swindon asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Lord Malloch-Brown): The reform treaty will have to be ratified by all member states according to their own constitutional procedures. In the UK, all treaties, including EU treaties, are laid before Parliament, which has the right to examine and debate them in detail. An Act of Parliament will give legal effect to the treaty. So Parliament must be satisfied that a treaty is in the national interest before that treaty can be implemented in national law.

Gulf Veterans: Mortality and Morbidity Data

Lord Morris of Manchester asked Her Majesty's Government:

Mortality statistics are a key indicator of health in a population, as recognised by the World Health Organisation. The continued monitoring of Gulf veterans' mortality, as detailed in my Written Statement of 16 July 2007 in the Official Report (WS 4), therefore provides a level of ongoing health monitoring. The latest statistics and the methods that are used to complete them are available on the internet at www.dasa.mod.uk/natstats/gulf/intro.html

The MoD does not have access to medical or other health records of Gulf veterans who have left the Armed Forces. Routine monitoring of the health of these veterans is therefore not possible. The only illness for which central records are kept is cancer.

Nevertheless, the MoD remains committed to investigating Gulf War veterans' illnesses openly and honestly. Cancer registration data for the UK Gulf veterans and the Era comparison group are held by the Defence Analytical Services Agency. In 2003, the data were forwarded to Professor Gary Macfarlane, then of the University of Manchester, for analysis and publication in the peer-reviewed medical literature (Macfarlane et al (2003), “Incidence of Cancer among UK Gulf Veterans: Cohort study”, British Medical Journal 327, December 1373-76).

The medical assessment programme, based at St Thomas's Hospital in London, also continues to investigate the health concerns of those who served in the Gulf, or who believe that their health has suffered as a direct result of the Gulf conflict. The overall findings of these investigations are detailed in a number of publications but did not reveal any medically unexplained conditions.

A follow-up to the Gulf health research first published by Professor Simon Wessely of King's College, London, in January 1999 was sponsored by the MoD and published in the British Medical Journal in December 2003. The study found that, at follow up, Gulf veterans continued to report poorer health than other military personnel, but the overall health gap had narrowed slightly.

Immigration: Detention

Lord Hylton asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Home Office (Lord West of Spithead): The UK Government's firm commitment to strengthening and exporting our borders is already well established and can be found in

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the IND Review: Fair, Effective, Transparent and Trusted: Rebuilding Confidence in our Immigration System of July 2006. We do not condone treatment of asylum seekers that is either humiliating or degrading.

North Korea: Aid

Lord Alton of Liverpool asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for International Development (Baroness Vadera): The European Commission food security committee met in Brussels on 5 September. The UK delegate asked a specific written question on whether water and sanitation assistance could be provided under the food security budget line. The Commission's answer was as follows:

While health was not specifically mentioned in the Commission's response, it is clear that assistance to water and sanitation will have an impact in terms of better health and hygiene outcomes. We will look at this aspect as Commission proposals are developed.

Lord Alton of Liverpool asked Her Majesty's Government:

Baroness Vadera: DfID has contributed up to £700,000 in response to the flash appeal issued by the United Nations on 27 August: £650,000 will go to programmes under way and being implemented by Save the Children UK and the World Food Programme. We have also offered support to the UN if required to assist with co-ordinating the relief effort, which is estimated to last a further three months.

Lord Alton of Liverpool asked Her Majesty's Government:



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Baroness Vadera: The position remains that ECHO will close its programmes in North Korea in May 2008, and we agree with that.

In light of the recent flooding, the Directorate General for Humanitarian Aid (ECHO) has provided emergency funding of £2 million to provide immediate humanitarian assistance and we support this decision. ECHO has stressed to member states that this is an emergency intervention lasting six months to meet the humanitarian needs created by the flooding.

The EC will remain engaged with DPRK through the AidCo Food Security programme.

Overseas Aid: Southern Africa

Lord Blaker asked Her Majesty's Government:

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for International Development (Baroness Vadera): Details of the UK's bilateral assistance and imputed multilateral assistance to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and its member nations over the past six years for which data are available are laid out in the tables below.

Table 1: UK Total Bilateral Gross Public Expenditure on Development to the Southern African Development Community and its Member Nations 2001-02 to 2006-07, (£thousands)
Financial YearSouthern African Development CommunitySouthern African Development Community Member Nations

2001-02

3,453

529,495

2002-03

5,261

357,311

2003-04

3,940

579,322

2004-05

6,618

542,905

2005-06

8,601

528,897

2006-07

10,485

480,408

Table 2: Imputed UK Share of Multilateral aid to SADC Member Nations for 2000 to 2005 (£ thousands)
Calendar YearImputed aid

2000

81,727

2001

113,394

2002

103,671

2003

232,019

2004

153,896

2005

215,005


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