Recent activities of the Social Development Fund of the Council of Europe
Recommendation 1156
(1991)
- Author(s):
- Parliamentary Assembly
- Origin
- Text adopted by the
Standing Committee, acting on behalf of the Assembly, on 28 June
1991. See Doc. 6459, report of the Committee on Migration, Refugees
and Demography, Rapporteur: Mr Eisma.
- Thesaurus
1. The Council of Europe's Social
Development Fund, set up in 1956, is the operational instrument
which gives practical expression to the spirit of solidarity between
member states
2. Twenty Council of Europe member states together with the Holy
See are parties to the partial agreement creating the Fund. Austria,
Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Ireland and the United Kingdom are not
yet members
3. Since its creation and in accordance with its statutory objectives,
the Fund has allocated almost 8 000 million ecus in loans (3 700
million over the last four years), to provide aid for refugees,
migrants and deprived regions or regions afflicted by natural disasters
4. In addition to ordinary loans, the Fund's Social Account,
supplied exclusively from sums taken from the Fund's profits, grants
low-interest loans at a preferential rate of 1% per annum. 76 million
ecus have been allocated in this way since the creation of the Social
Account in 1970.
5. While adhering to its priority objectives, the Fund has progressively
extended its fields of activity to finance projects entailing the
creation of jobs, the construction of housing and infrastructures,
the improvement of public health and education services and the
protection of the environment
6. The need to pursue and develop action in the member states
and to acquire the wherewithal to cope with the accession of countries
from Central and Eastern Europe fully justifies the decision by
the Governing Body of the Fund to increase the capital once more,
a step which the Assembly fully supports.
7. The Assembly nevertheless considers that this increase in
resources should be accompanied bymore effective and independent
supervision of the execution of projects, based not only on information
provided by the beneficiaries, but also on visits carried out on
the spot by representatives of the Fund.
8. The Assembly should be associated with the procedure for monitoring
projects; thanks to its knowledge of the Fund's activities, the
Committee on Migration, Refugees and Demography could play a role
in this respect and, on the occasion of its meetings in member countries,
visit such projects
9. Despite its new name, now used in addition to its official
title of Council of Europe Resettlement Fund for National Refugees
and Over-Population in Europe, the Fund is still not sufficiently
well known, especially in deprived regions of member states, which
are the very ones which have the greatest interest in acquiring
the loans it offers.
10. The attention which the Fund will be paying to countries of
Central and Eastern Europe should not obscure the fact that a very
large number of migrants and refugees in Council of Europe member
countries originally came from developing countries. The governments
of member states should make use ofthe Fund to improve the living
conditions of these persons. In this way, the activities of the
Fund could acquire a North-South dimension
11. Accordingly, the Assembly recommends that the Committee of
Ministers:
i draw the attention
of new member states and of states considering accession to the
Council of Europe to the opportunities offered by the Fund for stimulating
their development;
ii provide fuller information on the activities of the Fund
in member states, in order to enable a greater number of local and
regional officials to become familiar with the loan application
procedures
iii invite the governments of the member states of the Fund:
a to participate in the fourth increase
in the Fund's capital in accordance with Resolution 222 (1990) of
the Governing Body;
b to submit projects for improving the living conditions
of non-European migrants and refugees;
c to supply the Social Account of the Fund with voluntary
contributions;
iv invite the Governing Body of the Fund:
a to consider ways in which to monitor independently the
execution of projects on the basis of information collected directly
at source;
b to associate Representatives of the Assembly with this
procedure
c to examine, in conjunction with representatives of the
Committee on Migration, Refugees and Demography, the ways and means
of putting these two proposals into effect;
d to give wider publicity to the activities of the Fund
in the member countries.
12. The Assembly urges the Governments of Austria, Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, Ireland and the United Kingdom to join the Fund, thereby
demonstrating their solidarity towards the other member states which
are already members.