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MICHELE
MONTAS is the Spokesperson for U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
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The
Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General and the Spokesperson for
the President of the General Assembly.
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UN
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UNITED NATIONS BRIEFING AND TV: MONDAY, 08/10/2007 (MaximsNews Network)
UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 08 October 2007 -- The
Office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General and the Spokesperson for
the President of the General Assembly issued the following report today.
BY
MICHELE MONTAS
SPOKESPERSON FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN KI-MOON
Monday,
October 8, 2007
ENVOYS PREPARING FOR DARFUR
PEACE TALKS IN LIBYA
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Over the weekend, a UN
humanitarian assessment team went to Haskanita in North Darfur,
and reported that the town, which is currently under the control of the
Government, was completely burned down, except for a few buildings. The
market area had been looted. Few civilians had returned in search of food
and water. The civilian population had reportedly fled to neighboring areas
of Haskanita when the first attack on the African Union peacekeepers took
place on 29 September."
-
The United Nations and African
Union Special Envoys for Darfur,
Jan Eliasson and Salim Ahmed Salim, are finalizing preparations for the
upcoming political negotiations scheduled to start in Libya later this
month. Today they are in Addis Ababa, where they are meeting with the Joint
Mediation Support Team.
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Jan Eliasson is scheduled to
proceed to Khartoum tomorrow to meet with Government officials, regional
countries, and members of civil society -- the concerned stakeholders on
Libya negotiations.
-
Over the weekend, he met in
Khartoum with Sudan’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Lam Akol, and briefed him
on the preparations for the negotiations.
-
Looking ahead, Jan Eliasson is
scheduled to be in New York two weeks from now and will brief the Security
Council prior to the onset of the negotiations.
-
Asked whether
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is planning to travel to Sudan, the
Spokeswoman said that he is not planning to go there at this point. She said
that currently, the process with troop contributing countries was moving
ahead, while political meetings among the Darfur parties were scheduled to
take place. The Secretary-General would intercede when he feels that his
intervention is needed.
MYANMAR: NO AUTHORITIES
ENTERED U.N. PREMISES
-
The Spokeswoman responded to
questions about a media report that said that UN offices in Yangon had been
raided by asserting that, contrary to the report, no authorities entered any
UN premises, and no written request to do so or to present any permits have
been received by the UN offices in Yangon.
-
She said that security forces,
accompanied by representatives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, came to
the Traders Hotel, which houses several UN offices and other international
agencies, as well as businesses. Montas noted that UNDP and the Resident
Coordinator are not located in that hotel.
-
She added that a United
Nations official asked the authorities for the purpose of the visits. They
responded verbally that they were there to see the permits issued to the
United Nations to use satellite equipment. However, this was never pursued
by any letter nor any request, which would be the appropriate channel to
deal with the issue.
-
She could not confirm reports
that UN staff in Myanmar had tried to delete information from their
computers.
-
Asked whether Special Advisor
Ibrahim Gambari should move up his next visit to Myanmar, the Spokeswoman
said that, if an earlier visit would move matters in Myanmar forward, then
the Secretary-General would support it. The timing of a visit, Montas said,
was being assessed by Gambari.
U.N. MISSION IN GEORGIA
CONTRIBUTES TO SECURITY
-
The report
of the Secretary-General on the situation in Abkhazia, Georgia, is available
today. In it, he notes that despite relative calm in recent months,
the deadly clash that occurred on 20 September is “the most serious
incident involving the Georgian and Abkhaz sides in many years.”
-
He noted that the incident
took place outside the area of responsibility of the UN Observer Mission in
Georgia (UNOMIG) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
peacekeeping force. He recommended that areas between the zone of
conflict and the Kodori Valley be put under international monitoring, with
the deployment of unmanned aerial vehicles and artillery radar.
-
Noting that UNOMIG’s
presence continues to contribute to security in the conflict zone, he
recommended that its mandate be extended for six months.
SECURITY COUNCIL BRIEFED
ON D.P.R.K. SANCTIONS
-
The Security Council this
morning held consultations on the work of its sanctions
committee operating under resolution 1718, which concerns the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea.
-
The chair of the sanctions
committee, Ambassador Marcello Spatafora of Italy, briefed the Council on
the implementation of the sanctions, which include an arms embargo, as well
as an assets freeze and travel ban on certain individuals.
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Last Friday afternoon, the
Security Council, in a Presidential
Statement, condemned the 3 October attack in Baghdad against the Polish
Ambassador to Iraq, which resulted in the wounding of the Ambassador and the
killing of two other people. The Council called on the international
community to support the Government of Iraq in exercising its responsibility
in providing protection to the diplomatic community in Iraq, United Nations
staff and other foreign civilian personnel working in Iraq.
BAN KI-MOON WELCOMES
WORLD COURT’S JUDGMENT
IN CENTRAL AMERICAN LAND DISPUTE
-
The International Court of
Justice (ICJ)
has delivered its judgment
in the territorial and maritime dispute between Nicaragua and Honduras in
the Caribbean Sea. In the judgment, which is final, binding and without
appeal, the Court found unanimously that Honduras has sovereignty over Bobel
Cay, Savanna Cay, Port Royal Cay and South Cay.
-
A majority of ICJ judges also
voted to delineate the starting point of the single maritime boundary that
divides the territorial sea, continental shelf and exclusive economic zones
of Nicaragua and Honduras.
-
Another majority of judges
ordered that the parties negotiate in good faith with a view to agreeing on
the course of the delimitation of their 1906 land boundary and their
maritime boundary determined this morning by the Court.
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The Secretary-General welcomes
the judgment and expresses trust that the Parties will implement it in full.
This important judgment illustrates the essential role of the International
Court of Justice in peacefully resolving international disputes.
U.N. REFUGEE AGENCY HELPS
AFGHAN REFUGEES RETURN HOME
-
The Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
says that more than 16,000 Afghans returned to their home country from
Pakistan last month, and it adds that the pace of returns is slowing down as
winter approaches.
-
Right now, UNHCR says there
are about 200 people returning to Afghanistan from Pakistan a day, down from
a peak of 12,000 people crossing the border daily during April. So far this
year, UNHCR has assisted more than 353,000 Afghans in returning to their
homes – nearly 350,000 of them from Pakistan and more than 5,000 from
Iran.
SOME ASIAN COUNTRIES
LAGGING BEHIND AFRICA & LATIN AMERICA
-
While the Asia-Pacific region
as a whole is moving ahead on reaching many of the Millennium
Development Goals, some individual countries are still lagging behind.
-
That is the conclusion of a report,
released today by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacific, the Asian Development Bank, and the UN Development Programme.
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The report finds uneven
progress between and within countries, with some areas falling behind
sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America in reducing extreme poverty, providing
universal education and achieving gender parity.
-
It says the region’s
greatest challenges are child mortality, malnutrition, maternal health, and
the provision of safe drinking water and sanitation.
GLOBALIZATION AIDS QUICK
SPREAD OF ANIMAL DISEASES
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The Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) today confirmed
the recent arrival of the bluetongue virus in the United Kingdom, which
indicates again that animal diseases are advancing rapidly due to
globalization, movement of people and goods, tourism and climate change.
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According to FAO, the virus,
which is spread by insects, does not affect humans. Nevertheless, the agency
is urging countries to invest more in surveillance, control measures and
veterinary services.
-
Bluetongue was first
discovered in South Africa but has spread to many countries. It had crossed
the Mediterranean by the end of the 1990s. Since
PEACE-BUILDING COMMISSION
OFFICIAL HEADS TO SIERRA LEONE
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Dutch Ambassador Frank Majoor,
in his capacity as Chair of the Peacebuilding
Commission’s Sierra Leone configuration, is headed to Sierra Leone
today to meet with newly-elected President Ernest Bai Koroma and members of
his cabinet. Ambassador Majoor will also have meetings with members of
Parliament and civil society and with the UN Country Team.
-
The visit is expected to
advance development of a “peacebuilding cooperation framework” with the
Sierra Leone Government. It will also highlight efforts in areas including
good governance, justice and security sector reform, and youth employment.
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Ambassador Majoor will brief
members of the Peacebuilding Commission when he returns to New York on 15
October.
PAKISTANI LIEUTENANT GENERAL
APPOINTED AS MILITARY ADVISER
-
The Secretary-General has
appointed Lieutenant General Ahmad Shuja Pasha of Pakistan as the new
Military Adviser, Department of Peacekeeping Operations.
-
General Pasha succeeds
acting-Military Adviser General Per Arne Five of Norway.
-
For the last two years,
General Pasha has served as the Director General of Military Operations at
the Pakistani Army Central Headquarters, in overall command of all army
operations inside Pakistan’s borders as well as all peacekeeping
deployments.
OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS
CROATIA LETTERS NOT PUBLIC YET:
Asked about a letter sent by the President of the International Criminal
Court for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Fausto Pocar, the Spokeswoman said that
Pocar’s office confirmed this morning that the President sent a letter on
Friday to both the President of the Security Council and the President of the
General Assembly. The ICTY President’s letter relates to an earlier letter
sent by the Government of Croatia about the Court’s recent ruling in the case
of the so-called Vukovar Three, Montas said. Both letters are expected to be
issued as official documents, and until that is done, she said she would have no
further comment.
HANDBOOK HELPS EXPLAIN
DISABILITIES TREATY: The UN’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs
and Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights -- together with the
Inter-Parliamentary Union -- today launched
a handbook on the newly adopted Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities. The handbook aims to raise awareness of the new legal instrument
among parliamentarians. It will also give legislators the tools to facilitate
the treaty’s ratification and subsequent implementation.
SINGAPORE REJOINS UNESCO:
Singapore has rejoined the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO)
after 22 years of absence. Singapore is now UNESCO’s 193rd Member State and
will participate in the 34th session of UNESCO’s General Conference, which
starts in Paris next week.
TRIBUNAL FOR EX-YUGOSLAVIA RAN
SEVEN TRIALS SIMULTANEOUSLY: Available today is the progress report
of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. In it,
Tribunal officials say, among other things, that for the first time in the
Tribunal’s history the three Trial Chambers ran seven trials simultaneously,
three of which involved 18 accused persons. The reports also provides the latest
on the Office of the Prosecutor's efforts to secure the arrests of remaining
fugitives.
***The guests at the noon briefing
were Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations,
and Jane Holl Lute, Acting Head of the Department of Field Support. They briefed
on the situation in Sudan.
Office
of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General
United Nations, S-378
New York, NY 10017
Tel. 212-963-7162
Fax. 212-963-7055
Labels: United
Nations, U.N.,
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