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HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING
 

BY
MARIE OKABE


DEPUTY SPOKESPERSON FOR THE SECRETARY-GENERAL

 

UN
HEADQUARTERS, NEW YORK

 


Tuesday,
September 15, 2009

 

BAN KI-MOON IS
BRIEFED ON GAZA FACT-FINDING MISSION REPORT
 

  • The United Nations Fact Finding

    Mission
    on the Gaza Conflict

    released
    its

    findings
    today in New York. 
     

  • The Mission, headed by Justice Richard Goldstone, was
    mandated by the Human Rights Council to "investigate all violations of
    international human rights law and international humanitarian law that might
    have been committed at any time in the context of the military operations
    that were conducted in Gaza during the period from 27 December 2008 and 18
    January 2009, whether before, during or after."
     

  • Since its establishment, the Secretary-General has
    encouraged and supported the mission and called on all parties to cooperate
    fully in its work. He believes that accountability for violations of
    international human rights and humanitarian law is essential both to the
    protection of human dignity, and to the quest for sustainable peace.
     

  • The Mission will formally present its report to the
    Human Rights Council on 29 September. Earlier today, Justice Goldstone had a
    telephone conversation with the Secretary-General to inform him of its broad
    contents and of his intention to release the report.
     

  • The Secretary-General commended Justice Goldstone for
    his leadership and independence.

 

BAN KI-MOON
WELCOMES RESOLUTION ON COHERENCE ACROSS U.N. SYSTEM
 

  • The Secretary-General

    welcomes
    the adoption by the 63rd General Assembly of the

    resolution
    on System-wide coherence. The Secretary-General notes that
    with this resolution an important step has been made in strengthening the
    United Nations’ work in the area of gender equality and empowerment of women
    as well as in ensuring the effective delivery of its operational activities
    for development, which constitutes the other key components of the
    resolution. 
     

  • The Secretary-General is particularly gratified that
    Member States have agreed to his proposal to consolidate all four
    women-specific entities into a stronger composite entity for a more robust
    promotion of the rights and well-being of women around the world.
     

  • For his part the Secretary-General has appointed more
    women to senior posts than at any time in United Nations history. This
    includes 9 women with the rank of Under-Secretary-General, and overall the
    number of women in senior posts has increased by 40 percent under his
    tenure.
     

  • The Secretary-General is committed to provide
    expeditiously the General Assembly with a comprehensive proposal concerning
    the mission statement, the organizational arrangements, the funding and the
    oversight for the new entity in order to allow the launching of the
    composite entity without further delay.

 

BAN KI-MOON
LAUDS GENERAL ASSEMBLY’S FIRST RESOLUTION ON RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT
 

  • The following

    statement
    was issued yesterday following the General Assembly’s adoption
    by consensus of its first resolution on the responsibility to protect:
     

  • The Secretary-General welcomed the adoption of the
    resolution as an important step as we chart a common path towards meeting
    the commitment made at the 2005 World Summit to protect the world's peoples
    from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against humanity.

     

  • The Secretary-General now looks forward to further
    deepening the dialogue on how best to implement the responsibility to
    protect, building on the important debate the General Assembly held in late
    July. He has asked his Special Adviser, Professor Edward Luck, together with
    the Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide, Professor Francis Deng,
    to continue their wide-ranging consultations on the many implementation
    questions still before us.

 

NO COUNTRY IN
THE WORLD CAN CLAIM TO BE FREE OF HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS
 

  • This morning in Geneva, High Commissioner for Human
    Rights Navi Pillay

    addressed
    the autumn session of the Human Rights Council.
     

  • In her remarks, she said that discrimination remains a
    “scourge” that affects every country, and that combating it had become one
    of her office’s top priorities -- along with tackling impunity for attacks
    on civilians during armed conflict and other human rights violations.
     

  • Pillay added that there are “huge gaps” between the
    “lofty pledges” made by States and the realities of daily life for many of
    their inhabitants. She noted that “no country in the world can claim to be
    free of human rights violations.”
     

  • Pillay also told the Human Rights Council this morning
    that it is a breach of international law for state authorities and ship
    owners to reject or ignore the pleas of migrants stranded at sea. She said
    the fate of people who brave life-threatening risks to cross international
    boundaries in search of a better life present one of the most serious human
    rights problems in the world today.
     

  • Pillay has just completed her first year at the helm of
    the UN human rights office.

 


A TERRIBLE YEAR FOR CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT
 

  • The Secretary-General’s Special Representative for
    Children and Armed Conflict, Radhika Coomaraswamy,

    reported
    to the Human Rights Council today on the plight of children
    affected by war.
     

  • She said that it had been a terrible year for children
    living in situations of armed conflict around the world, as conflicts in
    Gaza, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq and
    Afghanistan led to high casualty rates and the displacement of a large
    number of people, especially children. She stressed the need to address
    protection concerns for children displaced as a result of conflict.
     

  • The Special Representative said that in order to halt
    grave violations against children, addressing impunity and holding
    perpetrators accountable must remain a priority of the international
    community.

 

DEATH TOLL
RISES FOR AFRICANS TRYING TO CROSS GULF OF ADEN
 

  • The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees
    (UNHCR) has

    reported
    that 16 African migrants have died while attempting to reach
    Yemen from the Horn of Africa region. Another 49 are missing and presumed
    dead. The migrants are believed to have died in three separate incidents
    involving smuggling boats over the past two days.
     

  • Survivors told UNHCR that some migrants were beaten to
    death by smugglers, while others suffocated in the overcrowded engine rooms
    of the smuggling vessels.
     

  • Close to 300 Africans are reported to have perished
    trying to cross the Gulf of Aden since the start of the year.

 

SECURITY
COUNCIL EXTENDS MANDATES FOR LIBERIA AND SIERRA LEONE OPERATIONS
 

  • The

    Security Council
    this morning voted unanimously to extend the mandates
    of the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL)
    and of the UN Integrated Peacebuilding Support Office in Sierra Leone
    (UNIPSIL), both for an additional year.
     

  • Council members then heard a briefing on the work of
    the Sanctions Committee for Sudan in their closed consultations, by the
    chair of that committee, Ambassador Thomas Mayr-Harting of Austria.

 

TIMOR-LESTE:
PROGRESS SEEN IN KEY HUMAN RIGHTS AREAS
 

  • A public report released today by the United Nations
    Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT)

    shows
    that progress has been made in key human rights areas over the
    past year in Timor-Leste, including strengthening of the judicial system and
    enactment of important legislation.
     

  • Launched 10 years after the popular consultation that
    paved the way for Timor-Leste’s independence, the UNMIT report, covering the
    period July 2008 to June 2009, focuses on key developments in relation to
    accountability and combating impunity for past and present human rights
    violations.

 


INCIDENTS TARGETING AID WORKERS RISE IN D.R. CONGO
 

  • Incidents targeting
    humanitarian workers in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic
    of the Congo have increased by 26 percent in the first six months of 2009,
    compared to the same period in 2008. That is according to a report based on
    data collected by Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
    (OCHA).
     

  • The city of Goma, for
    example, has seen a staggering 44 percent rise in reported incidents
    targeting aid workers during the same period. These incidents are
    increasingly violent and there is more and more evidence attributing a
    majority of them to local armed groups.
     

  • OCHA also notes that the
    non-governmental aid community has been most affected, more so than UN
    agency staff. And that’s partly because non-governmental organization aid
    workers have a greater physical presence across the region.

 

CHALLENGES TO
DEMOCRACY AROUND THE WORLD REMAIN FORMIDABLE AND NUMEROUS
 

  • Today is the International Day of Democracy.
     

  • In a

    message
    to mark this occasion, the Secretary-General says that the
    challenges to consolidating democracy around the world remain formidable and
    numerous.  He adds that the primary responsibility for democratic change
    lies within national societies but that the international community can play
    a vital supportive role. 
     

  • The Secretary-General notes that demand for UN
    assistance with institution-building, elections, the rule of law, the
    strengthening of civil society and other key aspects of democracy has grown
    considerably and that this trend is likely to continue.
     

  • To ensure that UN assistance truly helps to build
    national capacities and nurture democratic cultures, he adds that he has
    circulated a Guidance Note on Democracy to all parts of the United Nations,
    including field presences.
     

AFGHANISTAN DEPUTY
REMAINS AN INTEGRAL PART OF MISSION LEADERSHIP

  • Asked whether
    the Secretary-General’s Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan, Peter
    Galbraith, has left the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (
    UNAMA),
    the Spokeswoman said Galbraith is currently on mission and he will join the
    Secretary-General’s Special Representative, Kai Eide, later this month in
    New York at the briefing of the UN Security Council.
     

  • She said that
    Galbraith remains an integral part of the mission leadership. With any hotly
    contested election there are bound to be differences in opinions; that is to
    be expected, she said. However, Okabe added, the leadership of UNAMA remains
    committed to supporting a credible election outcome that is accepted by
    voters.

 

OTHER
ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

UNICEF HIGHLIGHTS “SCHOOL FOR AFRICA” CAMPAIGN:

UNICEF’s
“School for Africa” campaign will expand to help millions of more
of children. The initiative has raised more than US$50 million, exceeding its
initial target, says UNICEF. The “School for Africa” Campaign is a partnership
to raise money in order to help over four million children in Angola, Malawi,
Mozambique, Rwanda, South Africa and Zimbabwe.

 

REFUGEE AGENCY AWARD GOES TO LATE U.S. SENATOR: The
Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) today

announced
that its annual Nansen Refugee Award is going to the late Senator
Edward Kennedy.  UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres says that
“Senator Kennedy stood out as a forceful advocate for those who suddenly found
themselves with no voice and no rights.”

The Award Ceremony is going to take place on October 28th
in Washington D.C.

 

*** The guests at the noon briefing today were Alain Le
Roy, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, and Susanna Malcorra,
Head of the Department of Field Support.

 

 

 Office of
the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General

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