HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING
BY
MARIE OKABE
DEPUTY SPOKESPERSON FOR THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
UN
HEADQUARTERS, NEW YORK
Thursday,
September 10, 2009
BAN KI-MOON REGRETS DELAYS IN FORMING NEW LEBANESE GOVERNMENT
In response to a question about the reported resignation of Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri, the Deputy Spokesperson said
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon regrets that at the moment it has proven
impossible to form a new government in Lebanon.
The Secretary-General hopes that the consultations that President Michel Sleiman will hold with
all parties will be successful and that the Lebanese continue working
towards the goal of a unity government.
The UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Michael Williams, will continue to
talk to all of the parties and encourage them to work in this direction.
UNITED NATIONS
IS EXTREMELY CONCERNED AT SRI LANKA’S DETENTION OF TWO STAFF MEMBERS
Asked about reports that two UN staff may have
been tortured in Sri Lanka, the Spokeswoman said that the United Nations has
been and is extremely concerned about the continuing case of two national UN
staff members detained by the Sri Lankan authorities in June.
The two men were detained while deployed to
Vavuniya by the United Nations without any notice to the Organisation. Okabe
said that the United Nations was immediately concerned about the
‘disappearance’ of the staff, and protested strongly the manner of their
detention, once discovered, with the Sri Lankan authorities, at many levels.
The UN has been particularly concerned about
suggestions that the two staff members may have been mistreated in the first
days of their detention, she said. If these allegations are validated, this
would be a violation of Sri Lankan and international law.
The allegations, the Spokeswoman said, were raised
with the Government both orally and in writing, and the United Nations has
assisted the two staff members to seek redress through the Sri Lankan legal
system.
Okabe said that the United Nations has called for
due process to be swiftly applied. The Government should either notify the
Secretary-General of the case and any charges against the two men and
request for their immunity as UN staff to be waived, or they should be
released.
She noted that the Secretary-General had raised
the issue with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa when the two met at
the Non-Aligned Movement Summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.
The Secretary-General intends to raise the issue
of the two detained staff members again when he speaks by phone with
President Rajapaksa and will raise his serious concern over their
mistreatment.
BAN KI-MOON:
INT’L CRIMINAL COURT WORK “CLOSELY LINKED” TO UN GOALS
Under-Secretary-General for Legal
Affairs Patricia O’Brien delivered a
message on the Secretary-General’s behalf to the Consultative Conference
on International Criminal Justice.
In it, the Secretary-General says
that the establishment of the International Criminal
Court was a landmark in the efforts of the international community to
enforce the applicability of international humanitarian law, and to advance
the cause of justice and the rule of law on a universal scale.
The UN’s efforts to promote peace,
development and human rights are closely linked to the ICC’s work, he adds.
The Secretary-General says he
attaches great importance to improving cooperation between the two
institutions in ways that take into account the legitimate interests of both
partners. With full respect for its independent character, the United
Nations will continue to support and assist the Court.
COHESIVE APPROACH IS NEEDED TO FIGHT PIRACY OFF SOMALIA
The continued increase in the total
number of piracy-related incidents off the Coast of Somalia and their
evolving sophistication underscores the limits of an exclusively sea-based
approach. That’s according to the Director of the Africa One Division of
the UN’s Department of
Political Affairs, Joao Honwana, who was speaking at UN Headquarter
today, during a Contact Group meeting on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia.
Honwana added that the situation
highlighted the need for the international community to deal with the issue
of piracy in a comprehensive, cohesive and broad-based manner.
He said that the U.N. has been
strengthening the capacities of States to ensure that suspected pirates are
prosecuted through harmonizing national legislation with the international
legal regime. Additionally, the UN is assisting to get more states to share
the burden of prosecution and imprisonment of pirates.
NO FUNDING
RECEIVED FOR HUMANITARIAN APPEAL ON YEMEN
The Director of the United Nations Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Rashid Khalikov, is leaving today for
a four day fact-finding mission to
Yemen.
During his mission, Khalikov will visit areas where
internally displaced people (IDPs) have settled, and meet with government
officials and humanitarian actors in order to gain a better understanding of
the crisis and challenges to providing assistance.
Tens of thousands of people have been displaced from
Sa'ada and Amran Governorates, in the north of the country, as a result of
the conflict, bringing the total number of IDPs to around 150,000 so far,
says
OCHA. Their most urgent needs are food, water and sanitation, essential
domestic items and health care.
On 2 September, the humanitarian community launched a
Flash Appeal for $23.7 million for a period of four months but it has not
received any funding to date. OCHA says it urgently needs the international
community's support to prevent the situation from further deteriorating.
AID APPEAL
IMMINENT FOR DROUGHT-STRICKEN GUATEMALA
In
Guatemala, the Resident Coordinator in the country has informed the
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
of the country team's decision to issue a Flash Appeal in the coming days,
to respond to the current humanitarian situation.
Severe droughts in the country have caused food
shortages – a situation exacerbated by previous crop losses, low food
stocks, and declining remittances, exports, foreign investment due to the
global economic crisis, according to the World Food Programme (WFP).
In what is known has Guatemala’s “Dry Corridor,” the
number of children affected by severe acute undernutrition is three times
higher than last year at the same time, adds WFP. It also says that the food
shortage is likely to deteriorate, due to the period of irregular rainfalls
in the country: 60 to 80% of the up-coming harvest could be lost in some of
the provinces, which would put even more households at very high risk of
becoming food insecure.
WFP, in coordination with UN agencies, has allocated as
an immediate response, a total of 20 metric tons of High Energy Biscuits
(HEB) and 200 metric tons of other food commodities to assist some 75,000
families.
HAITI ENVOY
PRESSES FOR FASTER DELIVERY OF PROMISED FUNDS
The Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Haiti, former
US President Bill Clinton,
told the
Security Council yesterday afternoon that Haiti has a historic
opportunity to consolidate its political stability. He said, “I am convinced
that Haiti has a remarkable opportunity to escape its past.”
The Haitian Government was committed to building a
modern State, he said, while international donors had pledged substantial
aid to help build a modern, sustainable society. But of the amount pledged,
Clinton warned, only $21 million had been disbursed so far. Anything that
could help expedite the distribution of aid would have a positive impact on
the daily lives of Haitians.
Hédi Annabi, the Secretary-General’s Special
Representative for Haiti, also spoke, introducing the Secretary-General’s
report about the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH).
Annabi stressed that political dialogue lay at the heart of the
stabilization process, and lauded the improvement of collaboration between
the executive and legislative branches of Government.
With regard to security, he said that there had been
progress in many areas, with support from MINUSTAH and its bilateral
partners, including the continued strengthening of the Haitian National
Police that now comprised nearly 10,000 officers.
Serious threats continued, however, including a
potential for resumed activity by gangs, criminals and other armed groups;
corruption and violence associated with illegal trafficking; and the risk of
civil unrest. To counter such threats, Annabi said that the continued
presence of international troops and police remained indispensable.
UNICEF REPORTS PROGRESS IN FIGHT AGAINST CHILD MORTALITY
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) today
released new figures showing that the rate of deaths of children under
five continued to drop in 2008.
According to these estimates, child deaths in 2008
declined to an estimated 8.8 million from 12.5 million in 1990, the base
line year for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
“Compared to 1990, 10,000 fewer children are dying
every day,” said UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman – adding that,
despite progress it was still unacceptable that, each year, 8.8 million
children die before their fifth birthday.
UNICEF also says that the global rate of improvement is
still insufficient to reach the MDG. Africa and Asia combined still account
for 93 per cent of all under-five deaths that occur each year in the
developing world.
ISRAEL SHOULD
LIFT CURBS ON GAZA CHILDREN’S ACCESS TO SCHOOL MATERIALS
As the school year begins, the UN Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA)
is once more raising attention to the need for Palestinian children to have
access to educational materials.
There is a long history of UNRWA experiencing obstacles
with the Israeli authorities in getting educational materials, such as paper
and books, into Gaza. This is particularly hard to understand, as UNRWA's
education programmes, including subjects such as human rights and the
Universal Declaration, are underpinned by universal values which are
informed by tolerance and the need to resolve conflict peacefully.
It is in the interests of everyone who believes
in peace that the blockade of Gaza should be lifted especially for
educational materials, the Agency says.
PAKISTAN:
SCORES OF SCHOOLS DAMAGED IN NORTHWEST CONFLICT
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
reports that insecurity in the Malakand Division of Pakistan’s
North-West Frontier Province has led to major challenges in providing
quality education to children. In the areas that were affected by fighting,
many children will find that their former schools have been damaged or
destroyed. Nearly 550 primary and secondary schools have been damaged or
destroyed in these areas, including 147 girls’ schools that were destroyed.
Also, in the host communities where internally
displaced people (IDPs) took refuge, more than 4,800 schools were converted
to shelters. These schools must be repaired and rehabilitated to provide
adequate and healthy environments for children to learn.
UNICEF has dispatched 100 school tents to Swat and
Buner so that formerly displaced children who are returning home don’t miss
out on education. Meanwhile, nearly 1,000 schools that had been serving as
shelters have been rehabilitated to date, and work is currently underway on
nearly 900 schools. An estimated 543,000 children will benefit from that
effort.
In addition, mass education on unexploded ordnance and
mines is urgently needed to prevent loss of lives and injuries, as well as
to make children and teachers safe to commute to and from schools. Some
organizations have started work on this front, but it has to be sufficiently
funded and scaled up.
OCHA warns that, to date, only 17 percent of all
educational activities are currently funded, and nearly $20 million are
still required to cover the educational needs of children affected by this
conflict.
WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME IS SET TO RESUME
WORK IN RESTIVE MYANMAR-CHINA BORDER AREA
Responding to an earlier question, the Spokeswoman said
that the World Food Programme did suspend operations in the area on 25
August, in view of the growing insecurity in the region, and brought staff
back from deep field positions to Laukkai temporarily.
After fighting escalated in the vicinity of the town of
Laukkai, WFP requested safe passage out for its staff to Lashio. This was
not possible for a period of four days, because of fighting in and around
the three roads in and out of Laukkai.
It is not correct to suggest they were kept there so as
not to report on what was going on; in fact, WFP had continual updates on
developments from the team throughout the fighting. WFP now has a new team
on the ground and are in the process of re-starting its activities along
with its NGO partners. The situation remains stable and normal economic
activity is returning to the town.
UNITED NATIONS UPDATES EMERGENCY
PROCEDURE AMID STAFF RELOCATION TO NEW SITES ACROSS NEW YORK
Asked about a change in
emergency procedure, in which UN staff are to call 911 first in an
emergency, the Spokeswoman said that this is only a change for the UN
Secretariat building. The procedure to call 911 first has always been the
case for UN workplaces other than the Secretariat building.
The reason for the current
change, Okabe said, is the ongoing move of staff out of the Secretariat,
including the imminent move of UN medical services to a Capital Master Plan
swing space location where it will be no longer co-located with the majority
of UN staff. It is obvious that an expectation for medical staff to respond
on foot to emergencies scattered across the various swing space buildings is
untenable, and would only waste time.
Further, she said, any
emergency procedure should be valid for all times and circumstances. The UN
Fire and Safety Unit is manned 24 hours per day, and after calling 911, it
is the appropriate party to know of an emergency; they are responsible to
ensure site access for 911 responders. If it is appropriate for the location
and circumstances of the incident, the Fire and Safety Unit will also
activate a medical services response, for which UN medical staff is equipped
and ready, Okabe added.
OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS
LEBANON: NUCLEAR WATCHDOG REMOVES
RADIOACTIVE SOURCES: The
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
has safely removed powerful radioactive sources out of Lebanon, including
Cobalt-60, a single source of which is enough to kill a person within minutes if
directly exposed.
The mission was completed on 30 August, after a plane carrying the
high-activity cargo safely touched down in Russia, where the sources are now
securely and safely stored, the IAEA said.
CYPRUS LEADERS DISCUSS EXECUTIVE GOVERNANCE ISSUES:
Greek Cypriot leader Dimitris Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali
Talat met today under UN auspices in Nicosia. The Secretary-General’s Special
Adviser on
Cyprus, Alexander Downer, spoke to the press afterwards. He noted that the
leaders had discussed bridging proposals concerning the issue of executive
governance -- in relation to the election of the President and Vice-President of
the Republic of the United Republic. He added that both sides had put forward
new bridging proposals and that the leaders would continue discussing this
subject next Thursday, September 17.
NEW DARFUR FORCE COMMANDER
FACED COMPETITIVE HIRING PROCESS: Asked
about the selection of a Rwandan general to be the new Force Commander for the
UN-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID), the Spokeswoman said the general
was selected through a competitive process in which the United Nations and the
African Union worked together.
KENYA READIES CONTINGENCY PLANS FOR
EXPECTED HEAVY RAINS: The United Nations Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, (OCHA), and the Government of
Kenya are making contingency plans to respond to any humanitarian emergency that
could result from anticipated heavy rainfall between October and December this
year. The Kenya Meteorological Department has warned that the El Nino weather
pattern could cause unusually heavy rainfall in Kenya. In the past, El Nino
rainfall in Kenya resulted in the disruption of livelihoods, population
displacement, loss of property and assets, damage to infrastructure and death of
people and livestock. OCHA and the Kenya’s Ministry of State for Special
Programmes will co-chair a consultative workshop next week to prepare for the
anticipated heavy rainfall.
BURKINA FASO: CONDITIONS REMAIN TOUGH FOR FLOOD SURVIVORS:
Some 48,000 people in flood-hit Burkina Faso have found shelter in schools,
churches and other public buildings, but the Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says that sanitation and other conditions at these
facilities are now under strain. UN agencies are out to provide emergency
relief, including food, medical supplies, shelter material, hygiene kits and
much more. The flooding has been particularly severe in and around the capital,
Ouagadougou, where host families are helping another 40,000 flood survivors.
OCHA is now finalizing a Flash Appeal for this humanitarian emergency in Burkina
Faso.
**The guests today were Werner Obermeyer from the
World Health Organization and Brian Mishara from the International Association
for Suicide Prevention who are here to brief you on the occasion of World
Suicide Prevention Day.
Office of
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