The Secretary-General has
arrived in Copenhagen after completing his official visit to Sweden.
Earlier today in Stockholm,
the Secretary-General met with the Speaker of Parliament and representatives
of political parties and then
spoke with Swedish Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). He then went
to Copenhagen, where he was scheduled to have a working dinner with the
Danish Prime Minister, Lars Lokke Rasmussen.
The Secretary-General and
Mrs. Ban also plan to meet this evening with the President of the
International Olympic Committee, Jacques Rogge, and Mrs. Rogge.
On Saturday in Copenhagen,
the Secretary-General is scheduled to give the keynote speech to the Olympic
Congress. He will discuss how the Olympic Committee’s Sports for Environment
agenda is helping to make the concept of ‘Green Games’ a reality.
He will also deliver a lecture at the University
of Copenhagen, entitled “The Road to Copenhagen: Meeting the Climate
Challenge.”
HUMAN RIGHTS
COUNCIL DEFERS ACTION ON GAZA RESOLUTION
This morning in Geneva, the Human Rights Council
decided to defer action on a draft resolution concerning human rights in
the Occupied Palestinian Territory. That draft dealt with the Fact-Finding
Mission on the Gaza Conflict, which had been headed by Justice Richard
Goldstone.
Because of that decision, which was requested by the
draft resolution’s sponsors, the Human Rights Council will now take up the
text at its thirteenth session, to be held in March 2010.
In related news, the Human Rights Council today adopted
six resolutions and one decision on a wide variety of subjects, including
on: freedom of opinion and expression; elimination of discrimination against
women; the adverse effects of toxic waste dumping on human rights; the
effects of foreign debt on human rights; extreme poverty and human rights;
Aung San Suu Kyi and other political prisoners in Myanmar; and promoting
human rights in accordance with traditional human values and international
human rights law.
U.N. WELCOMES
ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN EXCHANGE
Asked about the UN reaction to the release of Palestinian prisoners in
exchange for a videotape of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, the Spokesperson
said that the United Nations welcomes today’s developments and hopes to see
further progress and a speedy resolution to these important issues.
He added that the
Secretary-General had repeatedly called for the release of Gilad Shalit. He
has also consistently called for the opening of crossing points into Gaza.
U.N. HELPING
WITH SEARCH AND RESCUE EFFORTS IN QUAKE-HIT INDONESIA
The UN is working with the Government of Indonesia to
help the people of
West Sumatra, and to coordinate the relief efforts of the international
humanitarian community.
A UN Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC) team
is currently on the ground to help the Government in coordinating with
international search and rescue teams. Emergency funds are also on standby
to complement the Government’s relief efforts.
Preliminary assistance provided by the UN includes
family kits, school tents, health reproductive kits, and heavy equipment for
search and rescue efforts.
Following the earthquake in Sumatra, Indonesia, which
measured 7.6 on the Richter Scale, latest reports show 715 people dead,
2,400 injured, thousands trapped under buildings, and about 20,000 houses
severely damaged, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs.
The number of internally displaced persons is unknown
at this time, but initial rapid assessments are underway and will provide a
clearer picture of the number of fatalities, injured and displaced.
Electricity and communication have not been restored.
PHILIPPINES:
U.N. AGENCIES RUSH RELIEF SUPPLIES TO STORM SURVIVORS
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA) reports that the
tropical storm that hit the Philippines has affected more than 3.1
million people and claimed the lives of 293 people, while 42 people are
reported missing.
OCHA says that nearly 651,000 people are accommodated
in 508 evacuation shelters.
Relief efforts are being slowed by the approaching
Typhoon Parma, which is expected to hit the Philippines this weekend. OCHA
is very concerned, as some 8.5 million people live in the path of the
typhoon and 1.8 million people are living in areas that are expected to bear
the full force of the storm.
A flash appeal will be launched in Geneva on 6 October
2009. An application for funds from the Central Emergency Response Fund is
under preparation to support the projects presented in the appeal.
The World Food Programme’s first response had been to
roll out 750 metric tons of food, mostly rice, for 180,000 people affected
by the storm there. The World Food Programme is looking to launch an
emergency food relief programme for 1 million people for a 3-month period.
UNICEF is working to ensure that 20,000 children could
return to school as soon as possible.
The World Health Organization’s regional centre in the
Philippines has sent first aid kits, as well as 10,000 containers of water.
FOOD RATIONS
GIVEN TO TYPHOON VICTIMS IN LAO P.D.R.
The World Food Programme (WFP) is rapidly expanding its
operations in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, following a destructive
typhoon that hit the southern part of the country on Wednesday.
WFP’s Executive Director, Josette Sheeran, has said she
is “extremely concerned” about people’s ability to “get back on their feet.”
In the meantime, the agency is providing rations of rice and canned fish to
the survivors.
IRAQ MISSION
GETS NEW DEPUTY CHIEF
The Secretary-General has
appointed Christine McNab of Sweden as his Deputy Special Representative for
Iraq. Ms. McNab will head the Development and Humanitarian Support
component of the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI).
She will also serve as the United Nations Resident Coordinator and
Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq.
She will replace David
Shearer. The Secretary-General is grateful for Mr. Shearer’s leadership and
contribution to improved coordination of the United Nations system in Iraq.
Ms. McNab has a wealth of
experience in development cooperation, with a particular focus on public
sector reform, democratic governance and capacity development in support of
the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. She currently serves as
the UNDP Resident Representative and UN Resident Coordinator in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. She held a similar position from 2002 to 2006 as UN Resident
Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in Jordan.
SOMALIA:
CIVILIANS BEARING THE BRUNT IN LATEST UPSURGE IN FIGHTING
The Office of the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR)
says that the civilian population in Somalia is bearing the brunt in the
latest upsurge in fighting in the troubled South Central region. The Agency
says that its local partners report that 145 people have been killed and
another 285 injured in heavy clashes throughout Somalia, mainly in Kismayo
and Mogadishu, in September alone.
Yesterday, Al Shabaab said it had taken
control of the southern city of Kismayo from their former allies,
Hisb-ul-Islam. According to hospital sources, some 12 people were killed and
50 others injured, UNHCR says.
The Agency says that the rate of
displacement of civilians within Somalia had diminished over the last two
months, as compared to May and June, but it is still high, with 17,000
people displaced within Somalia during September alone. UNHCR fears that, if
the fighting between Al Shabaab and Hisb-ul-Islam escalates, more than half
a million internally displaced people (IDPs) in the Afgooye corridor, some
30 km south of Mogadishu, could be affected and uprooted once again.
UNHCR provides protection and
assistance to more than 515,000 Somali refugees in the nearby countries of
Kenya, Yemen, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Uganda. There are also more than 1.5
million IDPs in the country and the number is constantly increasing.
Also today, the UN Special Representative for Somalia,
Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, congratulated Somaliland officials on the signing of
a Memorandum of Understanding on the way forward to holding presidential
elections, which had been previously postponed.
Asked about allegations of the diversion of food aid to Somalia, the
Spokesperson later clarified that the World Food Programme (WFP) and the
Somalia Monitoring Group are both looking into this matter.
WFP systematically follows an established procedure to check the contractors
it works with in Somalia. Given the seriousness of the allegations raised,
in June, WFP hired two external investigating companies with experience in
Somalia. Based on those findings, WFP launched a formal investigation under
its own Inspector General at the end of August.
When the investigations are complete, WFP will determine its course of
action, Haq said.
U.N. ENVOY BILL
CLINTON WELCOMES 500 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS EXECUTIVES TO HAITI
The UN
Special Envoy for Haiti, Bill Clinton, has welcomed 500 international
business executives to the country, as part of his two-day visit, which
concludes today.
According to the Office of the Special Envoy, the trade
delegation traveling with Clinton was the first of this kind to the country
in over 25 years. The visit coincided with an Inter-American Development
Bank (IDB) Investment Conference and an International Labour Organization (ILO)
Conference – bringing together an unprecedented number of companies and
investors to Haiti.
On Thursday, Clinton spoke before the Inter-American
Development Bank conference, emphasizing the significant business
opportunities in Haiti, in such industries as agriculture, renewable energy,
textiles, and infrastructure. “This is the right time to invest in Haiti,”
he added.
The UN Special Envoy also met with Haitian President
René Préval and Prime Minister Michèle Pierre-Louis.
Today, Clinton is traveling to the northern coast of
Haiti to highlight tourism opportunities. This morning, he visited the Sans
Souci Palace, a UNESCO World Heritage site and national park.
HONDURAS: U.N.
OFFICIAL CONCERNED BY CURTAILING OF CIVIL LIBERTIES
The Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Koïchiro Matsuura, today voiced
concern over civil liberties in Honduras, following a government decree
that curtails such liberties for a period of 45 days.
Matsuura says he is particularly concerned about
freedom of expression in the country.
He adds that it is important that political tensions in
Honduras be resolved in a manner that recognizes the rights of citizens to
engage in informed debate.
He calls on the authorities to reconsider their
position in light of democratic principles and to ensure that respect for
good governance is maintained.
DEPUTY
SECRETARY-GENERAL BRIEFS GENERAL ASSEMBLY ON RULE OF LAW
Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro this morning
addressed an informal meeting of the General Assembly on the rule of
law.
The Deputy Secretary-General, who was also speaking in
her capacity as Chair of the UN Rule of Law Coordination and Resource Group,
noted that the Organization is now engaged in rule of law activities in more
than 120 countries.
Her remarks also include an update on the
implementation of the UN Joint Strategic Plan, which she described as a
significant step in coordinating the work of the nine leading UN departments
and agencies engaged in rule of law activities. She said the Plan will
strengthen coherence, keep Member States engaged and reinforce global action
for the rule of law.
BAN KI-MOON
HONORS GANDHI’S LEGACY ON NON-VIOLENCE DAY
Today is the International Day of Non-Violence. In a
message marking this occasion, the Secretary-General urges people to
celebrate and embody the legacy of Mahatma Gandhi by heeding his call for a
movement of non-violence.
He highlights the UN’s work to end violence, for
example by striving to rid the world of weapons of mass destruction. The
call to non-violence also applies to stopping the human assault on our
planet, adds the Secretary-General.
On this Day, the Secretary-General also urges all
partners to join his UNiTE to End Violence against Women campaign.
The Deputy Secretary-General is also expected later
today to deliver remarks on this year’s observance of the International Day
of Non-Violence, which celebrates the legacy of Gandhi. She is expected to
underline UN efforts to reach a world free of weapons, and underscore how
the UN’s drive to combat climate change can contribute to reducing the
causes of violent conflicts.
CLIMATE CHANGE:
PROGRESS TOWARDS EMISSION CUTS REMAINS DISAPPOINTING
Negotiators have concluded the first week of the UN
Climate Change Talks in Bangkok. The talks are the penultimate negotiating
session ahead of the Copenhagen conference in December.
Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC),
said he found it encouraging that progress was being made towards effective
draft agreements in key areas. He underlined the progress made in
adaptation, technology, and building capacity to deal with climate action in
developing nations. He also said he found it very positive to see
negotiators finally getting into the text and beginning to slim it down.
De Boer however warned that progress toward higher
industrialized world emission cuts remained disappointing. Progress on
finance, he added, was disappointing as well.
John Ashe, the Chair of the Working Group under the
Kyoto Protocol, also said that progress was urgently needed next week on a
higher level of ambition in terms of emission reduction pledges.
The Climate Change Talks in Bangkok will run through 9
October.
NEW REPORT
HIGHLIGHTS ACTION UNDERTAKEN TO END FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION
The Secretary-General’s
report to the General Assembly on girls is available today. The report
highlights activities undertaken to end female genital mutilation. The
Secretary-General says that ending female genital mutilation/cutting will
contribute to the achievement of several Millennium Development Goals,
including promoting gender equality and empowerment of women, reducing child
mortality and improving maternal health.
He adds that the goal of the Inter-agency Statement on
Female Genital Mutilation -- which is the overall abandonment of female
genital mutilation/cutting in one generation – could be reached if support
and collaboration are strengthened.
HUMAN
DEVELOPMENT REPORT TO FOCUS ON MIGRATION
The UN Development Programme (UNDP) says that the
2009 Human Development Report will be launched this Monday in Bangkok.
UNDP Administrator Helen Clark and the Prime Minister of Thailand will be
there for the launch.
This year’s report demonstrates that migration – both
within and between countries – can improve the lives of millions of people –
including those who move, those in destination communities and those that
remain at home. The Human Development Report, which comes out once a year,
is an independent report commissioned by UNDP.
OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS
PEACEKEEPING CHIEF HEADS TO SOUTH ASIA: Next week
the Under-Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations, Alain Le Roy, will
travel to Bangladesh, India and Pakistan as part of an official visit to top
troop-contributing countries. One of the main purposes of Mr. Le Roy’s trip is
to thank the countries for their long-standing dedication to peacekeeping and
engage in an open discussion regarding current and future peacekeeping
challenges.
URBAN UNEMPLOYMENT RATES RISE IN LATIN AMERICA,
CARIBBEAN: Urban
unemployment rates have reached 8.5% in the second quarter of this year,
according to the Economic Commission for Latin America and Caribbean and the
International Labor Organization’s second joint bulletin. This means that 2.5
million additional people are joining the ranks of the unemployed. According to
the joint bulletin, the unemployment figure could reach 18.4 million.
SECURITY COUNCIL AGREES ON MONTHLY SCHEDULE: The
Security Council this morning adopted its programme of work for October, in
its first consultations under the Vietnamese Presidency of the Security Council.
MYANMAR POLITICAL PRISONERS SHOULD BE FREED:
In response to a question, the Spokesperson said that the Secretary-General has
learned of the court’s decision to reject Aung San Suu Kyi’s appeal. His
position has been clear and remains the same: Aung San Suu Kyi and all remaining
political prisoners should be free and allowed to participate in their country’s
political process.
DEPUTY ENVOY’S SEPARATION BEING PROCESSED:
Asked about the status of the former Deputy Special Representative of the
Secretary-General (DSRSG) for
Afghanistan, Peter Galbraith, the Spokesperson said that Galbraith’s
separation from service is being processed now. He will be employed up the
completion of that process. As of 30 September 2009, he added, Galbraith no
longer executed the functions of DSRSG.
U.N. DEDICATED TO UPHOLDING
THE RIGHTS OF ALL PEOPLE: The Spokesperson
declined to comment on remarks about homosexuality attributed to the President
of the General Assembly. He noted that, although the Member States as a whole
have not come to a formal decision on that topic, the United Nations is
dedicated to upholding the rights of all people, in accordance with the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
THE WEEK AHEAD AT THE UNITED NATIONS[1]
3 - 9 October 2009
Saturday, 3 October
The
Secretary-General will be in Copenhagen, Denmark, where he will give the keynote
address at the opening of the International Olympic Committee’s congress. He
will also give a lecture on climate change at the Copenhagen University.
Sunday, 4 October
The
Secretary-General will meet with the Danish Foreign Minister and the
Climate and Energy Minister.
Starting
today and until 8 October, the UN Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, Mr. Githu
Muigai (Kenya), will undertake a country visit to the United Arab Emirates, at
the invitation of the Government.
Monday, 5 October
Today and
tomorrow, the Secretary-General will be in Geneva where he will address the
International Telecommunication Union’s Telecom World and will hold a press
conference.
The
Security Council will hold an open debate on women and peace and security.
Under-Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations, Alain Le Roy, will be in
Pakistan today and tomorrow, as part of an official visit to top Troop
Contributing Countries that will also take him to Bangladesh (8 October) and
India (13-15 October). One of the main purposes of Mr. Le Roy’s trip is to thank
the countries for their long-standing dedication to peacekeeping and engage in
an open discussion regarding current and future peacekeeping challenges.
The UNDP
2009 Human Development Report “Overcoming barriers: Human mobility and
development” will be launched today. The main launch will take place in Bangkok,
with the Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva of Thailand and UNDP Administrator
Helen Clark.
Today is
World Habitat Day.
Tuesday, 6 October
The 35th
session of UNESCO’s General Conference will start today and run through 23
October in Paris. During the session, the General Conference is expected to
endorse the nomination of Irina Bokova (Bulgaria) as the new Director-General of
the Organization.
The guest at the noon briefing, John Holmes,
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief
Coordinator, will brief on a new humanitarian flash appeal for areas in the
Philippines recently devastated by natural disasters.
Wednesday, 7 October
There are
no major events scheduled for today.
Thursday, 8 October
This
morning, the Security Council will hear a briefing on Somalia. It is also
expected to adopt a resolution on ISAF authorization.
Today is
World Sight Day.
Friday, 9 October
Today is
World Post Day.
[1]This
document is for planning purposes only and is current as of DATE \@ "HH:mm"
14:10 DATE \@ "dddd, dd MMMM, yyyy" Friday, 02 October, 2009.
Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General
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