Speech

Report by OSCE Head of Centre in Ashgabat: UK response, July 2023

Deputy Ambassador Deirdre Brown voices UK support for the OSCE Centre's work in Turkmenistan, especially on border capability, gender equality, and climate.

This was published under the 2022 to 2024 Sunak Conservative government
Deirdre Brown MBE

Thank you, Chair. I would like to welcome you, Ambassador MacGregor, back to the Permanent Council, and thank you and your colleagues for your report and for the work undertaken at the OSCE Centre in Ashgabat over the last year.

We are pleased that the Centre has increased the number and reach of its projects in Turkmenistan, especially among women participants. We are also pleased that, particularly through the visit of the OSCE Secretary General, the visibility of the Centre has remained high.

The United Kingdom and Turkmenistan have a close and productive relationship. This year we held the second annual Structured Dialogue with Turkmenistan, and last week, our Minister for Europe and Central Asia visited Ashgabat and met government interlocutors. We are committed to building cooperation across human rights, security, climate, economy and trade.

Chair, I would like to focus my remarks on three areas of the Centre’s work. First, on border capability, which has continued to develop since the last report and has the UK’s full support. The UK has been continuing its dialogue with Turkmenistan on the situation in Afghanistan, and recently our Minister for Europe discussed with the Turkmen Foreign Ministry the issues arising from terrorist threats emerging from Afghanistan. We are committed to working with Turkmenistan and the OSCE to mitigate these challenges.

Second, on gender equality. We are pleased that the work on promoting gender equality and support for victims of domestic violence has continued. The UK works through the UNFPA on gender-based violence and support for victims, and we co-chair the development partners group on gender issues. We are glad that the OSCE Centre has been able to work with this group. Nonetheless, the UK strongly urges Turkmenistan to address gender based violence and we encourage the Turkmen authorities to legislate accordingly.

Finally, on climate. We welcome the Centre’s dialogue on climate change issues and work with the Turkmen authorities to develop regulations for the supply of renewable electricity to the national power grid. My ambassador met the Turkmen Deputy Minister of Environmental Protection at the climate change conference here in Vienna last week, and briefly discussed areas of cooperation. We welcome the Turkmen authorities’ engagement on climate change issues and encourage the Centre to look for opportunities to raise the issue of methane emissions in future discussions.

Chair, to conclude, we were pleased to see the host government provide renovated premises to the field mission for the next ten years. This allows for some financial savings, and provides some security. But it is important to underline again the negative impact the continued non-agreement of the Unified Budget is having on the work of OSCE field operations, as highlighted in this Report. It is vital that field missions are adequately financed. We urge again participating States continuing to obstruct agreement of the Unified Budget to look beyond a narrow national focus, and to ensure all OSCE institutions have the funding they need to be able to effectively fulfil their mandates.

I would like to once again thank you, Ambassador MacGregor, and your team for your report, and wish you every success in future.

Updates to this page

Published 13 July 2023