HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING BY FARHAN HAQ,
DEPUTY SPOKESMAN FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL ANTÓNIO GUTERRES
FRIDAY, 13 JULY 2018
MEMBER STATES FINALIZE FIRST AGREEMENT ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION
- The text of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration, was finalized this morning. This is the first time that Member States of the United Nations have come together to negotiate an agreement covering all dimensions of international migration in a holistic and comprehensive manner.
- The Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed said that migration raises profound issues: around State sovereignty and human rights; around what constitutes voluntary movement; the relationship between development and mobility; and how to support social cohesion. She added that this compact demonstrates the potential of multilateralism: our ability to come together on issues that demand global collaboration – however complicated and contentious they may be.
- The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for International Migration, Louise Arbour, added that human mobility will be with us, as it has always been. Its chaotic, dangerous exploitative aspects cannot be allowed to become a new normal. The implementation of the Compact will bring safety, order and economic progress to everyone’s benefit, she added.
SECRETARY-GENERAL TO TRAVEL TO COSTA RICA
- On Monday, the Secretary-General will begin an official visit to Costa Rica, where he will attend the inauguration of the commemorative week of the 40th Anniversary of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. He will also meet with Costa Rican President Carlos Alvarado and other senior officials including the Vice President and Foreign Affairs Minister, Epsy Campbell Barr, and the President of the Inter-American Court, Eduardo Ferrer Mc Gregor.
- During his visit, the Secretary-General will also meet with civil society leaders and visit the country’s National Energy Centre. He is expected to be back in New York on Tuesday.
SECRETARY-GENERAL APPOINTS GHANA’S HANNA S. TETTEH HEAD OF U.N. NAIROBI OFFICE
- The Secretary-General announced today the appointment of Hanna S. Tetteh of Ghana as Director-General of the United Nations Office at Nairobi (UNON).
- She succeeds Ms. Sahle-Work Zewde who has been appointed as Special Representative to the African Union and Head of the United Nations Office to the African Union (UNOAU).
- Ms. Tetteh most recently served in the cabinet of the Government of Ghana as Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister for Trade and Industry.
- Ms. Tetteh is a practising lawyer and holds a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degree from the University of Ghana, Legon.
SECRETARY-GENERAL NAMES ITALIAN MAJOR GENERAL HEAD OF LEBANON PEACEKEEPING MISSION
- Yesterday the Secretary-General announced the appointment of Major General Stefano Del Col of Italy as Head of Mission and Force Commander of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, UNIFIL.
- Major General Del Col succeeds Major General Michael Beary of Ireland, who will complete his assignment on 7 August 2018. The Secretary-General is grateful to Major General Beary for his exemplary service and leadership of UNIFIL over the past two years.
- Major General Del Col has had a long and distinguished career in the Italian Army.
U.N. RELIEF WING VOICES ALARM OVER IMPACT OF HOSTILITIES ON CIVILIANS IN SYRIA
- The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs is alarmed by the impact of reported hostilities on civilians in several areas of Syria.
- Today, dozens of civilians were reportedly killed by airstrikes that hit a site for internally displaced people between Bagouz and Susah villages in the eastern Deir Ezzour countryside.
- Yesterday, hostilities reportedly continued for the third day in the Akrad mountains area, in western rural Idleb governorate and northeast Lattakia governorate. Several people were reportedly killed, including a woman and two children, and many others were injured by the airstrikes.
- Hostilities continued to affect civilians around the Yarmouk Basin area in southwestern Dara’a governorate. In Hayt town, strikes reportedly killed three children and a woman, and wounded six other people.
- Despite the return of tens of thousands of internally displaced people following local agreements and changes in control in many areas, it is estimated that up to 234,500 people remain displaced across southwest Syria. Some 70 per cent, around 160,000 people, are reportedly located in Quneitra in the west with limited access to humanitarian assistance.
SOUTH SUDAN: U.N. RELIEF OFFICIAL CALLS FOR INCREASED AID FOR DISPLACED PEOPLE IN TAMBURA
- The Humanitarian Coordinator for South Sudan, Alain Noudehou, yesterday called for the urgent scale-up of humanitarian assistance for displaced people in Tambura, in Western Equatoria. Tambura has in recent weeks witnessed an influx of over 18,000 internally displaced people following an escalation in fighting in the surrounding areas.
- Mr. Noudehou expressed serious concerns about the deteriorating situation there and called on all sides to facilitate safe access for humanitarian assistance. He reiterated that the UN is committed to supporting its partners in the provision of assistance based on need, including in the delivery of vital supplies. Most urgently, the UN will provide emergency latrines to recently displaced populations to protect communities from the potentially catastrophic spread of water borne disease.
U.N. REFUGEE AGENCY SOUNDS ALARM OVER SITUATION OF DISPLACED PEOPLE IN D.R. CONGO’S ITURI
- The UN Refugee Agency said today that after months of conflict between the Hema and Lendu ethnic groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Ituri region, they were recently able to obtain access to the area where they met some of the 150,000 formerly displaced people who are now returning in hope of finding their homes.
- They said that conditions are grim. Around 350,000 people are estimated to have fled the violence, and those who have returned so far are in many cases finding that their villages and homes have been reduced to ash. UNHCR heard harrowing reports of barbaric violence, including armed groups attacking civilians with guns, arrows and machetes, entire villages razed, and farms and shops looted and damaged beyond repair. The humanitarian challenges are enormous with hospitals, schools, and other key infrastructure destroyed.
- UNHCR is providing emergency and transition shelter kits to replace houses that have been damaged or destroyed, as well as cash grants to meet immediate and critical needs. However, the humanitarian appeal for the DRC continues to be among the least-funded in the world and UNHCR has received just 17% of the required US$201 million.
U.N. FORUM TO SPOTLIGHT PARTNERSHIPS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
- Today at the High-Level Political Forum participants discussed progress toward the Sustainable Development Goal 15, which calls on countries to “protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss”. Participants highlighted the importance of this goal to ensure water supplies, mitigate climate change and secure the well-being of many indigenous communities and others traditionally viewed as excluded, marginalized or at risk of being left behind.
- This afternoon the Forum will discuss Sustainable Development Goal 17, focusing on national, regional and global trends to establish global partnerships for sustainable development. This will be followed by a session dedicated to the principle of ensuring that no one is left behind. The week will conclude with a brief wrap-up session summarizing the main outcomes of the first week’s thematic review, delivered by the ECOSOC President, Marie Chatardová.
MOLDOVA PAYS U.N. DUES
- Moldova has paid its regular budget dues in full, becoming the 109th UN member state to do so.