The first Arria formula meeting was held in 1992, after Venezuelan Ambassador
Diego Arria, who during this time was the president of the Security Council, was contacted by a Croatian priest, Fra Joko Zorko who wanted to speak to members of the UNSC to report an eyewitness account of violence in
Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Crisis of Yugoslavia. As the structure of the UNSC meetings would not allow for the testimony to be heard during a security council meeting, and there was no formal way to hold a meeting between the UNSC and Fra Joko Zorko, Ambassador Diego Arria invited council members to meet outside the Council chambers in the UN delegates lounge to share the testimony of Fra Joko Zorko. After this first meeting, Ambassador
Diego Arria decided to institutionalise the meeting and it became known as the Arria formula.
Development Arria formula meetings have been held every year since the meetings conception in 1992, the meetings held whenever a UNSC council member wishes to use the forum. The flexibility of the meeting means that there is no regular schedule of Arria formula meetings, and as such the frequency of Arria formula meetings since 1992 has varied widely. However, some Council members including the
United Kingdom and
Russia wanted to continue restricted use of the Arria formula meetings in preference of hearing only from high representatives and the head of states. With a lack of support from permanent council members, briefings to hear non-governmental organisations and non-official voices was opposed. In response to this, it was argued that hearing the voices of non-official individuals and non-government organisations was the initial reason the Arria formula meeting was invented. In 1996, Ambassador
Juan Somavía of
Chile attempted to organise a meeting between Council members and humanitarian NGOs including
Oxfam,
Médecins Sans Frontières and the
International Committee of the Red Cross. When this was not approved by other Council members, Ambassador Somavía developed another formula, known as the Somavía Formula. In 1997, there was a dispute within the Council in regards to a proposal by
Portugal to invite
Amnesty International Secretariat General
Pierre Sané to give a briefing at an Arria formula meeting. Due to the dispute between Council members, the meeting with Sané was called an 'ad hoc' event instead of being given the status of an Arria formula meeting. In 1999, the question of expanding the Arria formula meeting was brought up again as the Council started to adopt flexible and more open procedures. By this time, opinion had begun to shift among
permanent members as the Council began to favour the inclusion consultation with
non-governmental organisations. On 12 April 2000, the UNSC held its first regular Arria formula briefing with
NGO leaders, opening the forum up for regular inclusion of NGOs. Arria formula meetings are now open to a range of actors, including high level delegations from member states not represented on the council, representatives of
civil society and non-state actors, and representatives of territories which are not recognised as states but are stakeholders in issues before the council. == Structure ==