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HIGHLIGHTS OF
THE NOON BRIEFING

BY MICHELE MONTAS
SPOKESPERSON FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN KI-MOON

 

U.N. HEADQUARTERS, NEW YORK


Wednesday,  June 17, 2009

 

 GAZA: GROWING CONCERN AS BLOCKADE HITS
TWO-YEAR MARK

  • Forty-one UN bodies and humanitarian non-governmental
    organizations today expressed their deepening concern over Israel’s
    continued blockade of the

    Gaza Strip
    , which has now been in force for two years.
     

  • The groups, in a joint statement, say that the amount
    of goods allowed into Gaza under the blockade is one quarter of the
    pre-blockade flow. They warn that the suffocation of Gaza's economy has led
    to unprecedented unemployment and poverty rates and almost total aid
    dependency.
     

  • The groups call for free and uninhibited access for all
    humanitarian assistance, in accordance with the international agreements and
    universally recognised international human rights and humanitarian law
    standards. They also call for a return to normalized trade to enable the
    poverty and unemployment rates to decrease.
     

  • Asked about the
    Secretary-General’s contacts with the Israeli Government on the question of
    opening the crossing points, the Spokeswoman noted that the
    Secretary-General has raised the issue with a number of Israeli officials
    who have visited the United Nations in recent weeks. They include Vice Prime
    Minister Silvan Shalom and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.

BAN KI-MOON
LAUNCHES NEW ADVISORY GROUP ON ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

  • Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is launching today a
    high-level Energy and Climate Change Advisory Group.
     

  • The Group brings together business leaders, experts and
    energy practitioners to help the Secretary-General make timely and
    appropriate policy contributions to the climate and energy challenges.
     

  • The Group will provide expert advice of direct
    relevance to the climate change negotiations. It will identify key issues in
    the run-up to the Copenhagen Conference, particularly regarding the critical
    role that energy efficiency can play in addressing climate change.
     

  • The Advisory Group, meeting today for the first time,
    is chaired by Mr. Kandeh Yumkella, Director-General of UNIDO and UN Energy
    Chairman.

BAN KI-MOON CALLS FOR FURTHER EFFORTS TO
PROTECT CIVILIANS IN ARMED CONFLICT

  • The latest

    report
    of the Secretary-General on the protection of civilians in armed
    conflict is out on the racks today.
     

  • In it, he notes that 2009 marks the tenth anniversary
    of the consideration by the Security Council of the protection of civilians
    in armed conflict as a thematic issue. He says that the protection of
    civilians has come to occupy a prominent place on the Council’s agenda and
    has resulted in concrete proposals and decisions intended to improve the
    situation of countless men, women, girls and boys affected by the horrors
    and indignities of war.
     

  • But the Secretary-General adds that further efforts to
    strengthen the protection of civilians remain crucial. He says that actions
    on the ground have not yet matched the progress in words and the development
    of international norms and standards.
     

  • The Secretary-General calls for determined action to
    meet five core challenges: enhancing compliance by parties to conflict with
    international law; enhancing compliance with the law by non State armed
    groups; enhancing protection through more effective and better resourced
    peacekeeping and other relevant missions; enhancing humanitarian access; and
    enhancing accountability for violations of the law.

SECURITY COUNCIL TO DISCUSS KOSOVO THIS
AFTERNOON

  • The

    Security Council
    has scheduled an open meeting at 3:00 p.m. today on
    Kosovo. The Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Kosovo, Lamberto
    Zannier, will brief the Council on developments there and on the
    Secretary-General’s latest

    report
    .
     

  • In that report, the Secretary-General welcomes the
    assumption of full operational capability by European Union Rule of Law
    Mission in Kosovo (EULEX) and says that he is encouraged by the level of
    cooperation between the UN Mission (UNMIK)
    and EULEX on the ground.

IRAQ: U.N.
ORGANIZES MEETING ON HYDROCARBON REVENUE AND WATER SHARING

  • The Iraqi Council of
    Representatives and the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI)
    organized a two-day conference in Baghdad this week that was dedicated to a
    discussion of hydrocarbon revenue and water sharing.
     

  • The participants stressed the
    existing broad agreement between the Government of Iraq and the Kurdistan
    Regional Government on the principle of revenue sharing, including automatic
    transfers.
     

  • At the end of the conference
    on Monday, the participants expressed a firm commitment to work towards
    resolving outstanding issues in the hydrocarbons file. They commended the
    United Nations’ consistent efforts in supporting constitutional dialogue in
    Iraq.

 U.N. CALLS FOR ADDITIONAL FUNDS TO
ASSIST CIVILIANS IN EASTERN DRC

  • Humanitarian agencies in the Democratic Republic of the
    Congo are urgently

    appealing
    for $38 million to provide life-saving assistance to some one
    million civilians affected by violence and insecurity in the east.
     

  • A statement issued by the UN’s Office for the
    Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, (OCHA),
    says the new funds would be used in the provinces of North and South Kivu,
    where 800,000 people – especially women and children – are affected by armed
    attacks and military operations.
     

  • Weeks of fighting have left many civilians in very dire
    and poor humanitarian conditions.  The situation has been characterized by
    massive displacement, killings and acts of sexual violence.
     

  • The UN Humanitarian Coordinator in the DR Congo, Ross
    Mountain, warns that the coming months will be trying times for thousands of
    men, women and children.

 A.U.-U.N. DEPUTY HEAD MEETS WITH
RETURNEES IN WEST DARFUR

  • The Deputy Joint Special Representative for Darfur,
    Henry Anyidoho,

    traveled
    to West Darfur yesterday and met with people who have recently
    voluntarily returned to their villages.
     

  • Meanwhile, the African Union Panel on Darfur, which is
    led by the former South African President Thabo Mbeki, and includes two
    other former heads of state, Burundi's Pierre Buyoya and Nigeria's
    Abdulsalami Abubakar, was in North Darfur yesterday. They met with the
    commanders of the Sudan Liberation Movement, Abdul Wahid faction.

 ATTACKS AGAINST U.N. AID OPERATIONS IN
SOMALIA PUTTING LIFE OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN AT RISK

  • A new wave of aggression and hostilities against
    humanitarian operations in Somalia is putting at risk the lives of Somali
    children and women, according to the UN children’s agency,

    UNICEF
    .
     

  • The acting UNICEF Representative to Somalia, Hannan
    Suleiman, cites specifically, the take-over and continuing occupation of
    UNICEF’s compound in Jowhar in Central Somalia by militiamen after the town
    came under the control of the Al-Shabaab group last month. The Jowhar
    compound is the biggest operational hub for UNICEF’s support to about 200
    feeding centres, and the subsequent looting and destruction of vital
    humanitarian items have seriously affected UNICEF’s ability to assist the
    most vulnerable children and women.
     

  • UNICEF is demanding that its facilities in Jowhar town
    be vacated by the militiamen and that all of its looted supplies and
    equipment be returned.

ON WORLD DAY TO
COMBAT DESERTIFICATION, BAN KI-MOON CALLS FOR GLOBAL RESPONSE

  • Today is the World Day to combat Desertification and
    Drought. This year’s observance highlights the growing threat to national
    and regional stability posed by desertification. 
     

  • In a

    message
    to mark this occasion, the Secretary-General notes that nearly
    one-third of the world’s cropland has become unproductive and has been
    abandoned in the past 40 years. Almost three-quarters of rangelands show
    various symptoms of desertification. 
     

  • Let us recognize the security risks of letting
    desertification advance unchecked, he says – adding that, as usual, the poor
    will be the first victims and the last to recover.
     

  • Calling for a global response to this problem, the
    Secretary-General says that sealing the deal on climate change can help
    reverse desertification, increase agricultural productivity, alleviate
    poverty and enhance global security.

BAN KI-MOON TO
RECEIVE GLOBAL HUMANITARIAN AWARD

  • Tonight, the Secretary-General will receive the Foreign
    Policy Association’s Global Humanitarian Award.
     

  • In his acceptance speech, the Secretary-General is
    expected to highlight the humanitarian work the United Nations is carrying
    out worldwide—adding that he speaks for the powerless in the councils of
    power.
     

  • He will also highlight the growing demands on the
    United Nations. He’ll underline the Organization’s essential role as the
    only universal multilateral forum for tackling the great challenges of this
    generation, including climate change.
     

  • The Secretary-General will stress that these challenges
    demand a new multilateralism – with all nations working in full
    collaboration.

 OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

NEW LAND
ANTI-EROSION TECHNIQUES SHOW PROMISE:
The United Nations Environment
Programme’s (UNEP) $10 million Desert Margins Programme (DMP)

provides
promising new anti-erosion techniques.  UNEP says that land
degradation and desertification is threatening a billion people in some 100
countries and a third of the world’s lands. So far, the programme has been a
success as it has improved livelihoods and produced better managed drylands. The
UNEP Executive Director, Achim Steiner, says that land degradation and
desertification is not inevitable and the multiple inspiring solutions from the
programme underscores this confidence.

 

AGRICULTURE
SHOWS RESILIENCE IN GLOBAL CRISIS BUT PRICES REMAIN HIGH:
As long as world
economic recovery begins within two to three years, falls in agricultural prices
are likely to be moderate, according to a

report
jointly launched today by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Because
food is a basic necessity, agriculture is showing more resilience than other
industries vis-à-vis the current global economic crisis. Food prices have come
down from the record peaks of early 2008 but they remain high in many poor
countries. The report warns that over the coming decade prices for all farm
commodities are unlikely to fall back to their levels before the economic
crisis. The report calls on more effective international aid, targeted policies
such as infrastructure investment, research and development systems, and
incentives for the sustainable use of soil and water.

 

U.N.D.P.
ADMINISTRATOR WRAPS UP TRIP TO DR CONGO:
The Administrator of the UN
Development Programme (UNDP), Helen Clark,

ended
a three-day trip to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. She visited
the capital Kinshasa and the eastern town of Goma in North Kivu province where
she visited the camp for internally displaced people at Kiwanja. During her
talks, including with the Congolese Prime Minister Adolphe Muzito and several
members of his cabinet, Clark stressed that the United Nations takes very
seriously the insecurity in the east of the country. She said that the UN wants
to see an end to impunity and want women to be better protected.  She also
discussed the support to the electoral process and indicated that she was
«pleasantly impressed » with the participation of the Congolese population. She
also called for greater participation of Congolese women in their country’s
political life.

 

 

**** The guest at the Noon Briefing today was Mr.
Kandeh Yumkella, Director-General of UNIDO and UN Energy Chairman, who also
chairs the Secretary-General’s new Advisory Group on Energy and Climate Change.

 

 

 Office of the
Spokesperson for the Secretary-General

United Nations, S-378
New York, NY 10017
Tel. 212-963-7162
Fax. 212-963-7055



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