History

The OSCE traces its origins to the détente phase of the early 1970s, when the Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe (CSCE) was created to serve as a multilateral forum for dialogue and negotiation between East and West. Meeting over two years in Helsinki and Geneva, the CSCE reached agreement on the Helsinki Final Act, which was signed on 1 August 1975.

1975 Helsinki CSCE Ford Brezhnev Gerald R Ford Library 1This document contained a number of key commitments on polito-military, economic and environmental and human rights issues that became central to the so-called 'Helsinki process'. It also established ten fundamental principles (the 'Decalogue') governing the behaviour of States towards their citizens, as well as towards each other.

1990 Paris Summit OSCEUntil 1990, the CSCE functioned mainly as a series of meetings and conferences that built on and extended the participating States' commitments, while periodically reviewing their implementation. However, with the end of the Cold War, the Paris Summit of November 1990 set the CSCE on a new course. In the Charter of Paris for a New Europe, the CSCE was called upon to play its part in managing the historic change taking place in Europe and responding to the new challenges of the post-Cold War period, which led to its acquiring permanent institutions and operational capabilities. In the Charter of Paris, the Heads of State or Government of the CSCE also specifically called for the creation of a CSCE parliamentary Assembly.

In April 1991, at the invitation of the Spanish Parliament, high-level parliamentary leaders from all CSCE participating States gathered in Madrid for the particular purpose of creating a CSCE Parliamentary Assembly, as requested by their respective Heads of State or Government. The result of the meeting was the Madrid Declaration, which set forth the basic rules of procedure, working methods, size, mandate and distribution of votes of the Assembly.

At its Berlin Meeting in 1991, the CSCE Ministerial Council welcomed the establishment of the Parliamentary Assembly and stated that the Ministers looked forward to the "collective expression" of the views of the Parliamentary Assembly on security and co-operation in Europe as well as on the future development of the CSCE.

In July 1992, the first formal session of the Parliamentary Assembly was held in Budapest. The Assembly decided, inter alia, to accept an invitation of the Danish Parliament to establish an International Secretariat in Copenhagen.

At its Prague Meeting the same year, the CSCE took a direct step towards active dialogue by announcing that the Chairman-in-Office would be prepared to make himself available to report to the Assembly on the work of the CSCE, to answer parliamentarians' questions in this regard and to take note of parliamentarians' views for subsequent transmission to the Ministerial Council. It has since become a tradition for the Chairman-in-Office to address the Parliamentary Assembly and answer direct questions from the parliamentarians.

In 1994, the CSCE was renamed the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe due to the expanded role of the organization.

The CSCE-OSCE Summits in Helsinki (1992), Budapest (1994) and Istanbul (1999) reaffirmed the participating States' interest in the active participation of parliamentarians in the OSCE process and mandated the Chairman-in-Office to maintain close contacts with the Parliamentary Assembly, to draw its recommendations to the attention of the Permanent Council and to inform the parliamentarians of OSCE activities.

"The Parliamentary Assembly has developed into one of the most important OSCE institutions continuously providing new ideas and proposals," said the heads of OSCE governments at the close of the 1999 Istanbul Summit. "We welcome this increasing role, particularly in the field of democratic development and election monitoring. We call on the Parliamentary Assembly to develop its activities further as a key component in our efforts to promote democracy, prosperity and increased confidence within and between participating States."

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