Sunday, January 19, 2014



WHAT IS    "CHOGM "

The Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) is a biennial submit meeting  of the heads of government from all commonwealth  nations. Every two years the meeting is held in a different member state, and is chaired by that nation's respective Prime Minister or President, who becomes the commonwealth chairperson in office . Queen Elizabeth II, who is the Head of the commonwealth , has attended every CHOGM beginning with Ottawa in 1973, although her formal participation only began in 1997. However, she was represented by the prince of wales at the 2013 meeting as the 87-year-old monarch is curtailing her overseas travel.
The first CHOGM was held in 1971, and there have been twenty-one held in total: the most recent  was held in colombo, Sri Lanka. They are held once every two years, although this pattern has twice been interrupted. They are held around the Commonwealth, rotating by invitation amongst its members.
In the past, CHOGMs have attempted to orchestrate common policies on certain contentious issues and current events, with a special focus on issues affecting member nations. CHOGMs have discussed the continuation of apartheid rule in South Africa and how to end it, military coups in pakistan and Fiji, and allegations of electoral fraud in Zimbabwe. Sometimes the member states agree on a common idea or solution, and release a joint statement declaring their opinion. More recently, beginning at the 1997 CHOGM, the meeting has had an official 'theme', set by the host nation, on which the primary discussions have been focused.
 
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting is located in World



The twenty-two Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings have been hosted by seventeen countries in twenty-one cities across five continents.
History

The meetings originated with the leaders of the self-governing colonies of the british Empire The  Colonial conference  in 1887 was followed by periodic meetings, known as imprerial conference from 1907, of government leaders of the Empire. The development of the independence of the dominian, and the creation of a number of new dominions, as well as the invitation of sourthern Rodesia (which also attended as a sui generis colony), changed the nature of the meetings. As the dominion leaders asserted themselves more and more at the meetings, it became clear that the time for 'imperial' conferences was over.
From the ashes of the second world war , seventeen commonwealth prime ministers conferences  were held between 1944 and 1969. Of these, sixteen were held in London, reflecting then-prevailing views of the Commonwealth as the continuation of the Empire and the centralisation of power in the British commonwealth office  (the one meeting outside London, in , was an extraordinary meeting held in January 1966 to co-ordinate policies towards Rodasia ). Two supplementary meetings were also held during this period: a Commonwealth Statesmen's meeting to discuss peace terms in April 1945, and a Commonwealth Economic Conference in 1952.
The 1960s saw an overhaul of the Commonwealth. The swift expansion of the Commonwealth after decolonisation saw the newly independent countries demand the creation of the commonwealth secretariat , and the United Kingdom, in response, successfully founding the commonwealth foundations This decentralisation of power demanded a reformulation of the meetings. Instead of the meetings always being held in London, they would rotate across the membership, subject to countries' ability to host the meetings: beginning with Singapore in 1971 . They were also renamed the 'Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings' to reflect the growing diversity of the constitutional structures in the Commonwealth


Structure

The core of the CHOGM are the executive sessions, which are the formal gatherings of the heads of government to do business. However, the majority of the important decisions are held not in the main meetings themselves, but at the informal 'retreats': introduced at the second CHOGM  in Ottawa, by prime minister of canada , but reminiscent of the excursions to Chequers  or dorneywood  in the days of the Prime Ministers' Conferences. The rules are very strict: allowing the head of the delegation, his or her spouse, and one other person. The additional member can be of any capacity (personal, political, security, etc.), but he or she has only occasional and intermittent access to the head. It is usually at the retreat where, isolated from their advisers, the heads resolve the most intransigent issues: leading to the Gleneagles Agreement in 1977, the Lusaka Declaration in 1979, the Langkawi Declaration in 1989, the Millbrook Programme in 1995, and the Aso Rock Declaration in 2003.
The 'fringe' of civil society organisations, including the Commonwealth Family and local groups, adds a cultural dimension to the event, and brings the CHOGM a higher media profile and greater acceptance by the local population.First officially recognised at Limassol in 1993, these events, spanning a longer period than the meeting itself, have, to an extent, preserved the length of the CHOGM: but only in the cultural sphere. Other meetings, such as those of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group, Commonwealth Business Council, and respective foreign ministers, have also dealt with business away from the heads of government themselves.
As the scope of the CHOGM has expanded beyond the meetings of the heads of governments themselves, the CHOGMs have become progressively shorter, and their business more compacted into less time. The 1971 GHOGM lasted for nine days, and the 19787and 1991 CHOGM for seven days each. However, Harare's epochal CHOGM was the last to last a week; the 1993 CHOGM lasted for five days, and the contentious 1995 CHOGM  for only three-and-a-half. The 2005 and subsequent conferences were held over two days.

List of meetings

YearDateCountryTownRetreatChairperson
197114–22 January SingaporeSingaporeNoneLee Kuan-Yew
19732–10 August CanadaOttawaMont-TremblantPierre Trudeau
197529 April – 6 May JamaicaKingstonNoneMichael Manley
19778–15 June United KingdomLondonGleneagles HotelJames Callaghan
19791–7 August ZambiaLusakaLusakaKenneth Kaunda
198130 September – 7 October AustraliaMelbourneCanberraMalcolm Fraser
198323–29 November IndiaGoaFort AguadaIndira Gandhi
198516–22 October BahamasNassauLyford CayLynden Pindling
19863–5 August United KingdomLondonNoneMargaret Thatcher
198713–17 October CanadaVancouverOkanaganBrian Mulroney
198918–24 October MalaysiaKuala LumpurLangkawiMahathir bin Mohamad
199116–21 October ZimbabweHarareVictoria FallsRobert Mugabe
199321–25 October CyprusLimassolNoneGeorge Vasiliou
199510–13 November New ZealandAucklandMillbrookJim Bolger
199724–27 October United KingdomEdinburghSt AndrewsTony Blair
199912–14 November South AfricaDurbanGeorgeThabo Mbeki
20022–5 March AustraliaCoolumNoneJohn Howard
20035–8 December NigeriaAbujaAso RockOlusegun Obasanjo
200525–27 November MaltaVallettaMellieħaLawrence Gonzi
200723–25 November UgandaKampalaMunyonyoYoweri Museveni
200927–29 November Trinidad and TobagoPort of SpainLaventille HeightsPatrick Manning
201128–30 October AustraliaPerthKings ParkJulia Gillard
201315–17 November Sri LankaColomboWaters Edge, Sri Jayawardenepura KotteMahinda Rajapaksa
2015To be announced. MaltaTBATBATBA
2017To be announced. VanuatuTBATBATBA
2019To be announced. MalaysiaTBATBATBA



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