National Consultation Meeting Of People’s SAARC Held

National Consultation Meeting Of People’s SAARC Held

Created: 15 November 2011

November 4, Kathmandu. A national consultation meeting of People’s SAARC has been held today in Kathmandu. The meeting was inaugurated by Hon. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs Narayankaji Shrestha. On the eve of the upcoming SAARC Summit in Maldives on November 10-11, 2011, the meeting discussed the issues of public concern that relate to or have an impact on the regional level in South Asia. Hon. Minister wished that the meeting would be able to incorporate diverse issues of national concern in the position that is to be submitted to the Nepal Government.

Many intellectuals, professionals, human rights activists, civil society activists, representatives of civil society organizations, media persons, representatives of the organizations that work on the issues of children, women, ethnic and indigenous communities, Dalits, the marginalized, peasants, human trafficking, trade unions, regional economy, and development activists among others actively took part in the discussion. A draft of the civil society issues and resolutions was presented for discussion. With suggestions and comments included and addressed, a civil society position paper is being prepared. The position paper or demand paper will be submitted to the Government so that the issues are considered by the Government upon participation in the Summit. The document will be submitted to the SAARC Secretariat as well. Further, this civil society paper with resolutions will be integrated into the consolidated paper at the SAARC level.

Source: http://www.ngofederation.org

Share On:
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Threads

Other related posts

People’s SAARC Punjab Strategy Meeting Held
People’s SAARC Regional Convergence 2014 Organized In Nepal
People’s SAARC Regional Planning Meeting Held
People’s SAARC 2014 Host Country Preparatory Meetings Organized In Kathmandu, Nepal
SAARC CSO Leaders Interact On Common Regional Issues
Skip to content