HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING BY STÉPHANE DUJARRIC
SPOKESPERSON FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL ANTÓNIO GUTERRES
THURSDAY, 23 JUNE 2022

UN RELIEF AND WORKS AGENCY FOR PALESTINE REFUGEES
The Secretary-General spoke this morning to an ad hoc committee of the General Assembly dealing with the voluntary contributions to the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, otherwise known as UNRWA. He warned that in the last ten years, the needs of Palestine refugees have increased, while funds have stagnated. 
The Secretary-General is asking Member States for two steps to end the regular under-funding of the Relief and Works Agency. First, he appealed to potential donors to make pledges today that will bridge the gap between the mandate of UNRWA and the budget needed to ensure vital services to Palestine refugees until the end of the year – to bring UNRWA’s current shortfall down to zero. 
Second, he said, we must put the Agency on a durable financial footing. That requires a long-term plan to stabilize the financing of UNRWA and reach sufficient, predictable and sustainable funding.   
Just as a programming note Philippe Lazzarini, Commissioner General of UNRWA, will be here at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the end of the pledging conference so please do come even if it’s Friday afternoon.

DEPUTY SECRETARY-GENERAL  
Our Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, is in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda today, where she is attending the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. 
She delivered remarks at events focusing on sustainable development and on climate. She also spoke at the Violence Against Women and Girls Side Event, with the First Lady of Rwanda and Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall.
The Deputy Secretary-General also had a meeting with the Prime Minister of Cameroon, Joseph Ngute. 
And tonight, she is scheduled to meet with Patricia Scotland, the Secretary-General of the Commonwealth. She will also attend the Official Welcome Reception and State Dinner hosted by the President of Rwanda, Paul Kagame.
Tomorrow, the Deputy Secretary-General will continue to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting and will also meet with several participating leaders.

AFGHANISTAN
On Afghanistan I will not repeat what Martin Griffiths and our colleague Ramiz Alakbarov just briefed the Security Council with, but I’ll just add that our colleagues tell us that priority needs include emergency shelter and non-food items, food assistance, health and water and sanitation as well as hygiene support. The UN Refugee Agency has dispatched tents, blankets, plastic sheeting, and kitchen sets, that’s among other items, to cover the needs of about 4,000 people.
The World Food Programme has confirmed in-kind food stocks for about 14,000 people in hardest-hit Paktika Province.
UNICEF has also prepositioned non-food items in Paktika and Khost provinces and supported medical evacuations.
The UN Population Fund has confirmed capacity to provide dignity kits and support to health facilities in the impacted area.
In addition, seven teams from the International Organization for Migration are now on the ground in Paktika and Khost for assessments.
For its part, the World Health Organization has provided 10 tonnes of medical supplies sufficient for 5,400 surgeries as well as medical treatments covering 36,000 people for three months.
The UN Development Programme, as part of the overall UN response, has launched a series of emergency response initiatives to support the communities impacted by the earthquake. 
UNDP and its partners are refocusing their ongoing cash-for-work activities to support the reconstruction of damaged houses, restoring operations of the micro-businesses critical to the local economy, and addressing other basic human needs.
Also today, our humanitarian colleagues on the ground today coordinated the deployment of assessment teams to Khost and Paktika, as well as to Gardez in Paktia provinces. Local coordination with the de facto authorities is ongoing.
Colleagues also warn that the risk of cholera outbreaks are of particular concern in the southeast part of the country, where cases of acute watery diarrhoea were already rising prior to yesterday’s earthquake. Preparations are underway to avoid an outbreak, including through oral vaccinations and hygiene response activities.
The Humanitarian Coordinator for Afghanistan, Ramiz Alakbarov, is expected to lead a team to the affected areas in the coming days to support the coordination of response efforts.

LIBYA
Turning to Libya, the Special Adviser for Libya, Stephanie Williams, announced today that the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Agila Saleh, and the President of the High State Council, Khaled Al-Mishri, have agreed to a meeting under UN auspices on 28 and 29 June at the United Nations Office at Geneva. That meeting will be to discuss the draft constitutional framework for elections, in light of the outcome of the consultations of the Joint Committee last week.
Ms. Williams continues intensive engagement with national stakeholders and members of the international community, to ensure that conditions are in place to hold elections at the earliest possible date based on a consensual constitutional and legal basis. We urge again all relevant Libyan actors to embrace compromise, maintain calm on the ground, and refrain from using incendiary rhetoric or engaging in provocative actions that may undermine the fragile stability of the situation on the ground.

UKRAINE
From Ukraine, our humanitarian colleagues today raised alarm about the civilian impact of intense hostilities in the Donbas region, which has left a significant number of civilians killed and injured over the last 48 hours, according to our partners on the ground.
I mentioned on Monday - 20 June - that we managed to deliver vital assistance to some 25,000 people in Sloviansk, some 10 kilometres from the frontlines, in the territory under control of the Ukrainian Government. Just one day later, the mayor of the city called on people to evacuate, after hours of intense shelling.
Our UN colleagues who went there the day before, mentioned the harsh living conditions that people who had stayed in the city are faced with: no water, high food prices, and endless hours hiding from hostilities.
On the other side of the frontlines, our humanitarian colleagues tell us that densely-populated areas of the cities of Donetsk and Makiivka have been under heavy bombardment over the last 48 hours, reportedly leaving many civilians dead. As you know, insecurity makes it challenging for the UN to verify the exact impact of the situation.
In non-Government-controlled areas of Donetska oblast, water is extremely limited and across Government-controlled areas of the oblast more than 350,000 users—including health centres—have not had electricity for many weeks. 
The Humanitarian Coordinator for Ukraine, Osnat Lubrani, has called again on the parties to the conflict to facilitate safe and unimpeded humanitarian access to all regions of the country. She stressed that despite engagement to negotiate access, humanitarians have been prevented from reaching critical areas, including Mariupol, Kherson, and most recently Sievierodonetsk. We will continue trying to help those people who need our help the most. 

MALNUTRITION
Ahead of the G7 ministerial meeting tomorrow in Berlin on global food security, UNICEF today appealed for $1.2 billion to meet urgent needs of 8 million children at risk of death from severe wasting.
The children’s agency says that, since the start of the year, the escalating global food crisis has forced an additional 260,000 children – or one child every 60 seconds – to suffer from severe wasting in 15 countries bearing the brunt of the crisis, including in the Horn of Africa and the Central Sahel. 
UNICEF will use the funds to deliver nutrition services, including prevention programmes to protect maternal and child nutrition among pregnant women and young children, early detection and treatment programmes for children with severe wasting, and the procurement, and distribution of ready-to-use therapeutic food.
Also did not want to fail mentioning that the Secretary-General will address the meeting tomorrow via a pre-recorded video message and ee will share under embargo the text and the video of that.

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
We have an update from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where our humanitarian colleagues say that violence in the past three months has displaced at least 158,000 people in the eastern Rutshuru and Nyiragongo territories. Most of the people displaced are women and children.
Several villages in Rutshuru have been emptied of their inhabitants. Displaced people are sheltering in churches, schools and other makeshift areas, with several thousand others taken in by host families.
Despite access and funding constraints, humanitarian interventions by UN agencies and our partners continue in Rutshuru and Nyiragongo. Food has been distributed, and health, water and sanitation services made accessible. 
Humanitarians are currently working to step up aid distribution, but they say this crisis is compounding an already fragile humanitarian situation in North Kivu, as well as in other eastern provinces, such as Ituri and South Kivu.
To date, the humanitarian appeal for the DRC is only 20 per cent funded.

SRI LANKA
A quick note from Sri Lanka where our UN team, led by Resident Coordinator Hanaa Singer, is continuing to provide support to the ongoing crisis in the country. The UN Development Programme has launched an initiative that provides private sector partners the opportunity to contribute to the Humanitarian Needs and Priorities Plan, which calls for $47.2 million to provide life-saving assistance to nearly 2 million women, children and men worst affected by the economic crisis and whose livelihoods, food security and access to health services are most at risk.

PEACEBUILDING DAY
Today is Peacebuilding Day. In his message for the Day, the Secretary-General said that building peace is the raison d’être of the United Nations.
He notes that for sixteen years, the UN Peacebuilding Commission has helped forge sustainable peace in many places in the world.  It has cooperated with local actors and amplified the voices of women and youth. The Peacebuilding Fund, he says, has served as one of the most effective instruments to support conflict-affected populations.
At the same time, he warns that the war in Ukraine is shaking the international order and contributing to the destabilization of economies in many developing countries. The full message is online.

PUBLIC SERVICE DAY
Today is also UN Public Service Day and that’s what I do for you every day. You’re very welcome.
In his message to mark the Day, the Secretary-General says that there is no higher calling than serving others.
We honour the women and men around the world who proudly dedicate their ideas, innovations and energies to serving their communities and humankind, he added.
And today is also International Widow’s Day, which is an extremely important issue.

NOON BRIEFING GUEST TOMORROW
Tomorrow I mentioned the 1:30 briefing by Philippe Lazzarini and my guest at the briefing tomorrow will be Robert Piper, who as you will recall was recently appointed as the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Solutions to Internal Displacement. He will speak on the launch of the Secretary-General’s Action Agenda on internal displacement.

FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS
After a long dry spell, I am very happy to report two more budget contributors and they are
Central African Republic and Tajikistan, and we say thank you to both of them. Edie welcome back.