4th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement

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Summit Conference of Heads of State or Government of the Non-Aligned Movement
Host country Algeria
Date5–9 September 1973
CitiesAlgiers
ParticipantsMember states:[1]

Afghanistan
Equatorial Guinea
Libya
  Nepal
Algeria
Madagascar
Niger
Argentina
Ethiopia
Malawi
Nigeria
Bangladesh
Gabon
Malaysia
Oman
Bahrain
Gambia
Morocco
Sri Lanka
Bhutan
Ghana
Peru
Sudan
Botswana
Guinea
Qatar
Swaziland
Burma
Guyana
Saudi Arabia
Syria
Burundi
India
Sierra Leone
Tanzania
Cambodia
Indonesia
Singapore
Togo
Cameroon
Iraq
Somalia
Trinidad and Tobago
Central African Republic
Ivory Coast
Republic of South Vietnam
Tunisia
Jamaica
Uganda
Chad
Jordan
Egypt
Chile
Kenya
Congo
Kuwait
Upper Volta
Cuba
Laos
Mali
South Yemen
Cyprus
Lebanon
Malta
Yugoslavia
Dahomey
Lesotho
Mauritania
Zaire
Liberia
Mauritius
Zambia
Observers:[1]
Barbados
Bolivia
Brazil
Colombia
Ecuador
Mexico
Panama
Uruguay
Venezuela
14 African anticolonial movements
Puerto Rican Socialist Party
Palestine Liberation Organization
Special guests:[1] Austria
Finland

Sweden
ChairHouari Boumédiène
(Chairman of the Revolutionary Council)
Follows3rd Summit (Lusaka, Zambia)
Precedes5th Summit (Colombo, Sri Lanka)

4th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement took place on 5–9 September 1973 in Algiers, the capital city of Algeria.[2] The event took place in the Palace of Nations outside of the capital city.[1] The general agenda for the summit was initially defined at the 1973 ministerial meeting in Kabul where the Algerian delegation welcomed the contribution of Guyana, India and SFR Yugoslavia.[3] 76 countries in total participated in the summit calling upon the United States and the Soviet Union not to take important decisions on disarmament, world trade or the world monetary system without the effective participation of the Third World.[4]

Argentina, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Malta, Oman, Peru and Qatar joined as the Non-Aligned Movement at the time of the conference.[5] The Algerian host underlined the need for concrete measures to help liberation movements in Portuguese Africa and Palestine.[1] Secretary-General of the United Nations Kurt Waldheim welcomed “very useful” talks on peace in the region.[1] While the event coincided with the attack on the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Paris, the attack was not commented and the delegation of the country led by King Faisal maintained cordial interactions with Yasir Arafat.[1] United States Mission to the United Nations noticed increased coordination among the member states, where Sub-Saharan African countries showed a unified front on the question of Apartheid regime in South Africa and Arab states on the issue of Palestine.[6] The mission also noted the increasing importance of the core Arab-African members, with decreasing prominence of the original leaders of the movement such as Indonesia, India and even SFR Yugoslavia.[6] With the strong support by Fidel Castro, Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev sent a letter to the Algerian President ahead of the event, asking him to try to direct the movement towards Soviet strategic interests.[3] Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi accused Castro of being a representative of the USSR in the movement, whilst some expected guests were absent including the king Hussein of Jordan (due to disagreements with the Palestinian delegation) and Suharto (due to Sihanouk's participation).[3] In this sensitive context, the Yugoslav delegation, prepared in advance at the meeting in Igalo, carefully drafted the speech for the President of Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito in which he decided not to mention a word "socialism" once.[3][7]

The conference adopted the decision on the mandate and the name of the future Coordinating Bureau, which would include 15 countries responsible for the organization of the following summit.[3] The final document of the conference gave "unreserved support to the application of the principle that nationalization carried out by States [is understood] as an expression of their sovereignty...".[8] The United Nations General Assembly reaffirmed the declaration with a resolution supported by 108 countries and 1 vote (United Kingdom) against.[8]

References

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