Distinguished
Canadian Annual Address Spring 1999
The Honourable Jill Sinclair
Canadian Ambassador for Mine Action
Dissident Diplomacy: Canada and the
Global Mine Ban Process
Jill
E. Sinclair joined Canada's Department of External Affairs in 1981 and had
diplomatic postings in Prague and Havana, as well as a secondment to the
Department of Communications as Special Advisor to the Assistant Deputy
Minister, Culture and Broadcasting. She worked extensively on issues of
international peace and security as Departmental Assistant to Canada's
Ambassador for Disarmament, as Deputy Director responsible for the Organization
for Security and Co-operation in Europe and the Organization of American States
Hemispheric Security Committee and as Director of the Non-Proliferation, Arms
Control and Disarmament Division. She is a graduate of York University (Glendon
College), Toronto, and undertook postgraduate work at Dalhousie University,
Halifax.
As Director of the Non-Proliferation, Arms
Control and Disarmament Division of the Department of Foreign Affairs and
International Trade, Ms. Sinclair played a crucial role in the Ottawa Process
from its inception through the October 1996 Ottawa meeting, where Foreign
Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy challenged the world to conclude, within a year,
a comprehensive, global ban on anti-personnel mines, to the signature of the
Convention in December 1997. She was the Chair of the "Ottawa Process II -- Mine
Action Forum," which took place in Ottawa in March 1998. It brought together
participants from mine-affected and donor countries, the community of Canadian
and international non-governmental organizations, the United Nations and
regional organizations. The goal of the Forum was to establish a coordinated
global approach to ensure the effective and early implementation of the
Convention and an integrated approach to global efforts to clear mines and
assist victims.
In 1998, Ms. Sinclair was appointed Canada's first
Ambassador for Mine Action.
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