HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING BY FARHAN HAQ,
DEPUTY SPOKESMAN FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL ANTÓNIO GUTERRES
FRIDAY, 17 FEBRUARY 20203

SECRETARY-GENERAL
Today in Addis Ababa, the Secretary-General took part in several high-level events. He addressed the Roundtable on the Joint Sahel Assessment, the meeting of Heads of State and Government of the African Union Peace and Security Council on the situation in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, as well as the High-Level Committee on Libya.   
In his remarks to the meeting on Libya, the Secretary-General said that the UN has no agenda and no goal but one: to secure the right of the Libyan people to live in peace, to vote in free and fair elections, and to share in the prosperity of their country. He warned that the absence of elections worsens economic insecurity, heightens political instability, risks renewed conflict, and raises the spectre of partition. His remarks have been shared with you.  
The Secretary-General had several bilateral meetings, including with the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, the incoming chairperson of the African Union, the President of the Comoros, Azali Assoumani, as well as the Presidents of Burundi, Rwanda, South Africa, Kenya and Namibia. We have issued readouts following these meetings.  
Tomorrow, the Secretary-General will deliver remarks at the 36th ordinary Session of the African Union Assembly. In the afternoon, he will also speak to the press and all of those remarks will be shared with you. The Secretary-General is scheduled to be back in New York on Sunday.   

TÜRKIYE/SYRIA EARTHQUAKE
Turning to Syria and Türkiye, we and our partners continue to scale up the cross-border aid operation from Türkiye into northwest Syria. Today, 35 trucks from both the World Food Programme and the International Organization for Migration crossed Bab Al-Hawa crossing, carrying food and shelter and other items. Two trucks from the International Organization for Migration also crossed via Bab Al-Salam. 
In total, since February 9th, 178 trucks have gone into northwest Syria. 161 via Bab al-Hawa and 17 via Bab al-Salam.
In north-west Syria, according to recent assessments, 50,000 households need tents or emergency shelter, and at least 88,000 households need mattresses, thermal blankets and clothing. In addition, our partners report that hospitals and medical centers are overstretched and under-resourced.
Health partners are setting up temporary medical health facilities, deployment teams and providing mental health and psychosocial support. More than 4,800 people, including people with disabilities, received medical consultations and health services in Idlib and Aleppo. More than 60,000 people in 74 collective centers were reached with water trucking since the start of the response. 
Our partners have set up reception centers and helped to provide tents and other items to camps and affected communities, in Jandaris, Dana, Atareb, Maaret Tamsrin, Harim and Idlib. Some 13,000 people have received tents and 1,500 people have received heaters and fuel. 
In Syria, in addition to providing immediate food assistance in quake-affected cities, the World Food Programme has resumed its regular general food assistance for 5.5 million people every month following a brief pause after the earthquakes. 
Between 13 and 16 February, 52 WFP-contracted trucks crossed into northwest Syria through Bab al-Hawa and Bab al-Salam. 
WFP plans to use all three Turkish-Syrian border crossings, Bab al-Hawa, Bab al-Salam and Al Ra’ee, to ensure a constant reach of aid to non-government-controlled areas of northwest Syria.
For its part, the Food and Agriculture Organization is also scaling up operations in Türkiye and Syria focusing on the needs of rural communities. In Syria, rapid assessments by FAO of areas affected by the earthquakes suggest major disruption to crop and livestock production capacity, threatening immediate and longer-term food security. 
In Türkiye, FAO is working closely with the Government to determine the next steps in rehabilitating agriculture-sector infrastructure including irrigation systems, roads, markets and storage capacity.
Meanwhile, in Türkiye, we continue to support the coordination of search and rescue operations. The teams are working in the provinces of Malatya, Kahra-man-marash, Adiyaman, Gaziantep, and Hatay.
We and our partners are delivering food, tents, blankets and other supplies, with medical supplies and personnel being dispatched to affected areas.
The UN Refugee Agency provided over 19,500 high thermal blankets, 12,000 foam mattresses and 19,500 kitchen sets, 12,000 supplementary food packs as well as heaters, hygiene items, winter clothes. They also provided 14,300 family tents, 10,000 tarpaulin, 6,000 high-thermal blankets, and close to 12,000 hygiene parcels.

SECURITY COUNCIL 
This morning, the Security Council held a meeting on threats to international peace and security. In his briefing, Assistant Secretary-General Miroslav Jenča noted that, long before the situation in Ukraine evolved into the present tragedy, the UN cautioned all relevant actors about the dangers of complacency regarding the implementation of the Minsk Agreements and the risks of keeping the conflict unresolved. He pointed out that the UN has also used all opportunities, including before the Security Council, to urge all sides to avoid any unilateral steps that could deepen the divide or depart from the spirit and letter of the Minsk Agreements. 
Mr. Jenča said that we have learned from the Minsk process that peace is not just about signing an agreement. He stressed that we need sustainable and implementable peace that addresses the root causes of the conflict and is in line with the UN Charter and international law. 
Mr. Jenča noted that the Secretary-General has reiterated that the UN is ready to support all meaningful efforts to bring peace to Ukraine, in line with the Charter and international law. His remarks have been shared with you.  

CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC 
In the Central African Republic, our peacekeeping mission, MINUSCA, continues supporting the government to build peace and extend state authority, including through the rehabilitation of road infrastructure and community violence reduction. A bridge destroyed during armed groups’ attacks in January 2021 was rebuilt with the Mission’s support in Nyakari, in Mbomou prefecture. It enables safe transportation for the local population, rapid deployment of UN peacekeepers, and the delivery of humanitarian assistance. The Mission also helped improve detention conditions at the Bouar prison, in Nana Mambere prefecture, and trained 25 detainees in new skills to facilitate their socio-professional reintegration and offer them an alternative to recruitment by armed groups. 

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO 
The UN Refugee Agency and partners today said they are seeking $605 million to assist refugees from the Democratic Republic of the Congo across Africa this year. 
The regional response plan will support Congolese refugees who have found safety in neighbouring countries across the Southern and Great Lakes regions. It also aims to provide support to their local host communities. 
Uganda remains the largest host country of refugees from the DRC on the African continent. In 2022 alone, attacks by armed groups in eastern DRC led to the exile of some 98,000 refugees to Uganda, where a total of almost half a million Congolese refugees are now hosted. 
UNHCR and partners are calling on the international community to ensure continued support for these generous host countries, so vulnerable refugee populations can be provided with protection, shelter, food, health, education, and other basic services. This year’s regional response plan also seeks to promote economic self-reliance and resilience for refugees and vulnerable host communities. It will focus on youth- and women-led initiatives to reduce dependence on assistance. 

SOMALIA 
The UN Refugee Agency today said that more than 60,000 Somalis, mainly women and children, have fled to Ethiopia’s Somali region in the past few weeks to escape clashes and insecurity in the city of Laascaanood, in Sool region. UNHCR said that local communities in Doolo have generously welcomed the refugees, sharing whatever resources they have but warns these are quickly depleting as an average of 1,000 people continue to cross into Ethiopia each day. 
In response to this sudden influx, UNHCR is working with the Ethiopian Government’s Refugees and Returnees Services and regional authorities, together with the UN and NGO partners, setting up temporary reception centres and providing immediate life-saving aid. Relief items, including blankets, jerry cans, buckets, kitchen sets, plastic sheets and mosquito nets, have already been distributed to more than 1,000 vulnerable families and UNHCR aims to reach another 9,000 families in the coming days. 
The UN Refugee Agency notes that inside Somalia, more than 185,000 people have been displaced from Laascaanood town and its surrounding areas since early February. UNHCR is calling for all parties to respect the safety of civilians and for additional funding support to meet the needs of these newly displaced. 
  
MALAWI 
In Malawi, our team led by Resident Coordinator Rebecca Adda-Dontoh, launched this week with authorities a campaign to fight the country’s worst cholera outbreak on record, with over 1,400 deaths and 43,000 cases to date. Over the past four months the UN Population Fund has delivered over 150 cholera beds, 14 tents for cholera treatment and other essential supplies to health authorities. For its part, the World Food Programme provided 12 mobile storage units for cholera treatment while increasing safety in nearly 500 schools for over 600,000 students, providing soap, handwashing stations, and cholera information.  

EDUCATION CANNOT WAIT 
World leaders announced today over $826 million to Education Cannot Wait, the UN global fund for education in emergencies and protracted crises, to support the education of millions of girls and boys living in crises.  
These announcements were made at the Education Cannot Wait High-Level Financing Conference in Geneva, Switzerland. Worldwide, 222 million children impacted by conflict, climate change, forced displacement and other protracted crises urgently need quality education. Together with its partners, Education Cannot Wait is leading the way to reach them with the safety, hope and opportunity that only a holistic education can provide. 

GLOBAL TOURISM RESILIENCE DAY  
Today we mark Global Tourism Resilience Day, which aims to emphasize the need to foster resilient tourism development to deal with shocks, taking into account the vulnerability of the tourism sector to emergencies. It is also a call for action for Member States to develop national strategies for rehabilitation after disruptions, including through private-public cooperation and the diversification of activities and products. 
  
HONOUR ROLL
And for the Honour Roll, we say thank you to our friends in Nauru and Italy for paying their 2023 Regular Budget dues in full. That brings the final tally for the Honour Roll this year to 53 Member States.

NOON BRIEFING GUESTS ON MONDAY 
On Monday, we will be joined by guests who will brief you on the plans and expected outcomes of the upcoming Fifth UN Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5) taking place on 5 to 9 March in Doha, Qatar.    
The guests will be Ms. Rabab Fatima, UN High Representative for Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States, Ambassador Sheikha Alya Ahmed bin Saif Al-Thani, Permanent Representative of the State of Qatar to the United Nations, and Dr. Agnes Mary Chimbiri-Molande, Permanent Representative of the Republic of Malawi to the United Nations.