Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
leadership
of
the
SAARC
was
passed
over
to
Maldives
with
the
President,
Mr.
Maumoon
Abdul
Gayoom,
taking
over
as
the
Chairman
from
Pakistan.
Moreover,
the
leaders
also
agreed
to
observe
1991
as
the
'SAARC
Year
of
Shelter',
1992
as
'SAARC
Year
of
Environment',
and
1993
as
'SAARC
Year
of
Disabled
Persons'.
The
sixth
Summit
of
the
South
Asian
Association
for
Regional
Cooperation
scheduled
to
begin
in
Colombo
on
November
7,
1991
was
postponed.
The
ostensible
reason
for
the
Summit's
cancellation
was
the
inability
of
the
King
of
Bhutan
to
attend
the
meeting
because
of
trouble
in
his
kingdom.
It
was
cancelled
because
the
SAARC
Charter
stipulates
that
all
seven
members
of
the
organisation
should
attend
summits.
Later
on,
the
sixth
Summit
was
held
on
December
21,
1991
in
Colombo.
All
of
the
seven
member
countries
agreed
to
liberalise
trade
in
the
region,
with
the
Prime
Minister
of
India
proposing
a
'collective
economic
security
system'.
It
was
pointed
out
that
the
regional
economic
co
operation
was
the
only
alternative
which
will
be
able
to
fulfil
the
need
for
an
effective
safeguard
for
further
developing
and
strengthening
economies
of
developing
countries.
The
general
trend
towards
disarmament
was
welcomed
at
the
Summit.
The
trend
towards
safeguarding
human
rights
was
also
welcomed
but
it
was
felt
that
this
could
not
be
viewed
in
'narrow
and
exclusively
political
terms'.
It
was
noted
that
civil
and
political
rights
on
the
one
hand
and
economic
and
social
rights
on
the
other
were
'interdependent
and
of
equal
importance'.
The
Heads
of
Governments
also
decided
to
closely
examine
the
proposal
to
establish
a
SAARC
preferential
trade
arrangement
by
1997.
The
Seventh
SAARC
Summit
was
held
in
Dhaka
(Bangladesh)
in
1993
and
the
eighth
in
New
Delhi
in
May
1995.
A
permanent
secretariat
of
SAARC
has
been
set
up
at
Kathmandu
in
Nepal.
The
ninth
SAARC
Summit
was
held
in
Male,
the
capital
of
Maldives,
from
May
12
to
14,
1997.
In
the
ninth
Summit
it
was
evident
that
the
Summit
had
lost
much
of
its
appeal.
The
bitter
relationship
between
India
and
Pakistan
is
the
main
obstacle
in
the
path
of
regional
co
operation.
The
SAARC
Summit
in
Colombo
was
held
towards
the
end
of
July
1998.
The
Colombo
Declaration
issued
at
the
end
of
the
three
day
Summit
did
not
directly
refer
to
the
nuclear
blasts
at
Pokhran
and
Chagai
Hills
in
May
1998,
but
criticised
major
nuclear
weapons,
despite
a
worldwide
commitment
to
nuclear
disarmament.
The
leadership
of
the
SAARC
was
passed
over
to
Maldives
with
the
President,
Mr.
Maumoon
Abdul
Gayoom,
taking
over
as
the
Chairman
from
Pakistan.
Moreover,
the
leaders
also
agreed
to
observe
1991
as
the
'SAARC
Year
of
Shelter',
1992
as