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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.
TV: UN
WEBCAST TV VIDEO
- 23 minutes
UN:
UNITED NATIONS BRIEFING AND TV: TUESDAY, 22/04/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / -
22 April 2008 -- Daily Press Briefing by the Office of the
Spokesperson for the United Nations Secretary-General and UN Webcast TV Video.
BY
MICHELE MONTAS
SPOKESPERSON FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN KI-MOON
Tuesday,
April 22, 2008
BAN
KI-MOON ARRIVES IN BURKINA FASO FROM LIBERIA
-
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon is now in Ougadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso, after a few
hours spent in Monrovia, Liberia.
-
The
Secretary-General today addressed
a joint session of Liberia’s legislature in the capital, Monrovia, telling
the parliamentarians that he had come to the country to see its remarkable
achievements in recovering from a devastating conflict, and to reassure the
Liberian people of his steadfast commitment to peace, stability and
prosperity in that nation.
-
He
noted that the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL)
has embarked on the first phase of its drawdown, adding that he will
recommend to the Security Council that there be a gradual and phased
drawdown of the Mission's military and police components, linked to the
Government's ability to assume full responsibility for its national
security.
-
The
Secretary-General later spoke
to the press before leaving Liberia, saying that the recent worldwide
protests over soaring global food prices has demonstrated the need for
Liberia to meet the Millennium
Development Goals in order to be safe from the weaknesses of
globalization while taking advantage of its myriad opportunities for growth
and prosperity.
-
He
added that it is regrettable that rape continues to be the most commonly
committed crime in Liberia, and he called on community leaders, government
leaders, traditional chiefs, elders and prominent Liberians to take the lead
in combating the scourge of rape and other acts of sexual and gender based
violence.
-
Upon
arrival in Monrovia yesterday the Secretary-General was greeted by an honour
guard and received the traditional Liberian gift of a live chicken and an
egg, as well as a key to the city, making him an honorary citizen of the
Liberian capital.
-
He
met this morning with Vice President Joseph Boakai, and with members of the Cabinet.
They discussed the recovery efforts since the war and the challenges ahead
for Liberia as well as the peace building projects underway.
-
The
Secretary-General has since travelled to Burkina Faso, where this evening he
is to meet with President Blaise Compaore and Prime Minister Tertius Zongo.
SECURITY
COUNCIL TAKES UP DARFUR
-
The
African Union-United Nations Joint Special Representative for Darfur,
Rodolphe Adada, and John Holmes, the Under-Secretary-General for
Humanitarian Affairs, briefed
the Security Council this morning on the situation in
Darfur.
-
Special
Representative Adada says that the challenges facing the UN-AU joint
operation in Darfur (UNAMID) are formidable in all aspects.
-
It
is disturbing, he says, that even though Darfur is at the top of the
international agenda, this attention has not thus far been matched with the
action to provide UNAMID with the means to accomplish the tasks assigned to
it.
-
He
appealed again to the Security Council to redouble its efforts to assist the
mission in overcoming the logistical and political obstacles it currently
faces.
-
John
Holmes, in his briefing, says he is saddened and angry that after five years
of suffering, and four years since the Security Council became actively
engaged, we still have not been able to find a lasting solution to the
suffering of the millions of men, women and children in Darfur.
-
Further
progress in the deployment of UNAMID will help, he said, but only an end to
all violence and concrete steps towards a political settlement will make the
fundamental difference needed, as the rebel movements themselves above all
need to recognize.
-
In
the absence of any real progress towards a solution, Holmes concludes,
profound human suffering will continue to grow in Darfur.
UNITED
NATIONS IN SUDAN COMMENDS HISTORIC CENSUS
-
The
UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS),
meanwhile, commends the parties to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA)
on the commencement of the historic 2008 Sudan census, which kicked off
today.
-
The
Secretary-General himself, in a statement
issued last Friday, welcomed the intention of the Government of National
Unity to proceed with the holding of the national census, saying that it is
an important milestone in the implementation of the Agreement.
RISING
FOOD PRICES HAVE BECOME A SILENT TSUNAMI
-
Rising
food prices have become a “silent tsunami” that threatens to plunge more
than 100 million people into hunger. That’s according to the World
Food Programme (WFP), which says
that high food prices are creating the biggest challenge in the agency’s
45-year history.
-
As
one example of the urgency of the situation, WFP says it will have to
suspend school feeding in Cambodia next month, unless it finds new funding
in time.
-
WFP
Executive Director Josette Sheeran is calling for a worldwide response on
par with that following the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami. What is needed
is large-scale, high-level global action, with a special emphasis on
partnerships between governments, UN agencies and other humanitarian actors,
Sheeran says.
-
For
its part, WFP is seeking funding for scaling up mother-child health
programmes, school feeding, life-saving distribution networks, cash and
voucher programs, and local purchases from small farmers.
-
WFP
also stands ready to support policy reform and provide advice and support
for government agriculture development programmes.
-
Asked
about comments from Thailand’s Prime Minister criticizing the
Secretary-General’s comments on bio-fuels, the Spokeswoman said that the
Secretary-General had in fact called for a complete analysis of all the
factors that lead to a rise in food prices, and had not only focused on
countries producing food.
-
Asked
about the appropriate venue for discussing food issues, Montas said that
discussions are taking place everywhere – in London today, in the
Secretary-General’s meetings yesterday and at the Food and Agriculture
Organization high-level meeting in June. Next week, she said, all UN
agencies, funds and programmes would discuss the issue when they meet in
Bern, Switzerland.
GAZA
POWER PLANT TO SHUT DOWN IF NO FUEL RECEIVED BY
TOMORROW
-
According
to the Office of the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace
Process (UNSCO), if no fuel is
allowed into Gaza tomorrow, Gaza’s power plant
will shut down, and there will be increased
electricity cuts in most areas of Gaza, lasting up to 8 hours a day.
-
In
an effort to save fuel, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) has
been prioritizing food distribution, solid waste removal and sewage
projects. Despite this, some 500,000 Gazans living in 12 municipalities are
already being forced to live without solid waste management capacity. UNRWA
reports that its fuel supplies will be exhausted by this Thursday. If fuel
still hasn’t been allowed in by then, UNRWA will have to cut food aid to
650,000 refugees and garbage collection services for 500,000 Gazans.
-
Asked
about the Secretary-General’s reaction to former U.S. President Jimmy
Carter’s meeting with Hamas leaders, the Spokeswoman said that the
Secretary-General had not commented on that specific initiative but
generally welcomed initiatives that can help to bring peace to the region.
This effort, she said, would need to be analyzed by the Department for
Political Affairs.
POLITICAL
AFFAIRS CHIEF URGES MORE DIALOGUE BY IRAQ’S NEIGHBORS
-
Under-Secretary-General
for Political Affairs B. Lynn Pascoe today spoke to a ministerial meeting of
Iraq and its neighbours in Kuwait, on behalf of the Secretary-General.
Pascoe urged more dialogue and stronger support by Iraq’s neighbours for
stabilizing the country, including through the opening of embassies in
Baghdad. He said that the opening of embassies would be “a very
positive step.”
-
Pascoe
also described the stepped-up UN efforts to help the Government and people
of Iraq through the work of UNAMI, the
United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq, which Pascoe visited over the
weekend.
-
The
United Nations, he said, is helping Iraq with political dialogue, the
resolution of internal territorial disputes, the holding of governorate
elections later this year, the review of Iraq’s constitution and efforts
to help Iraq’s refugees and internally displaced persons.
FRIENDS
OF LEBANON DISMAYED AT POLITICAL STALEMATE
-
On
the margins of the meeting in Kuwait of Iraq’s neighbouring countries, a
number of concerned countries, along with officials from the Arab League,
the European Union and the United Nations, met as the “Friends of Lebanon”
to discuss the situation in that country.
-
Terje
Roed-Larsen, the Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for the Implementation
of Resolution 1559, represented the Secretary-General at that meeting.
-
The
Friends of Lebanon ended their meeting with a joint statement, saying that
they are deeply dismayed at the ongoing political stalemate and calling for
the immediate election of the consensual candidate, General Michel Suleiman,
as President without prior conditions.
SOME
77,000 PEOPLE ARE DISPLACED BY FIGHTING IN YEMEN
-
The
Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is launching
an appeal for nearly $3 million to help protect
some 77,000 people in northern Yemen, who have been affected by fighting
between a rebel group and Government forces.
-
Both
people who have returned to their villages and those who continue to be
displaced need aid, according to UNHCR. With the funds it gets, the agency
plans to distribute basic supplies, such as blankets, stoves and mattresses,
as well as tents and reconstruction materials.
-
In
response to a question, the Spokeswoman said that, contrary to press
reports, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) office in Sana’a, Yemen, has
not been closed and UNDP staff continue to go about their work. A security
assessment is now underway. All UNDP programmes in the country continue to
operate and UNDP project offices outside of Sana’a remain open.
UNITED
NATIONS DELIVERS AID TO INDIGENOUS IN COLOMBIA
-
The
UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) has organized
an emergency humanitarian mission to bring assistance to several indigenous
communities along the Guaviare River in east-central Colombia, who are
virtually cut off from the rest of the world.
-
Last
week, UNHCR delivered 14 tons of food from the World Food Programme to some
one thousand people. The remote area is disputed by rival irregular
armed groups and is reachable only by boat. The mission made four
stops along the river.
-
In
addition to food rations, basic hygiene kits and school materials were also
distributed.
-
The
mission was part of a series of preventive protection measures to protect
indigenous groups from losing their traditional lands.
WESTERN
SAHARA: ENVOY PRESENTS CONCLUSION TO SECURITY COUNCIL
-
In
response to questions about the assessment by the Secretary-General’s
Personal Envoy for Western Sahara, Peter van Walsum, that was circulated in
the Security Council on Monday, the Spokeswoman said that van Walsum had
been acting in his role as the facilitator for Western Sahara and had some
leeway in that role to present his own conclusions.
-
The
Secretary-General’s position, Montas said, was presented in his own
report. The Spokeswoman could not confirm that van Walsum had said that an
independent Sahara was not a realistic option, but she noted that many
reporters had obtained his proposals.
U.N.
MISSION IN GEORGIA INVESTIGATES REPORTED INCIDENT
-
Asked
about the shooting down of a Georgian unmanned aerial vehicle, the
Spokesperson said that the UN Mission Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG)
had not seen the incident firsthand. But UNOMIG is now engaged in an
investigation into this matter.
-
She
declined to comment on bilateral matters between Russia and Georgia.
-
Asked
whether there is a UN resolution that
forbids the flying of reconnaissance aircraft by Georgia over Abkhazia,
Georgia, she later clarified that Security Council resolution 937 (1994)
welcomes the 1994 Moscow Agreement, which says, “The parties shall
scrupulously observe the cease-fire on land, at sea and in the air and shall
refrain from all military actions against each other.”
OTHER
ANNOUNCEMENTS
THEATRE
SHOW ON HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE OPENS IN AFGHANISTAN: The
UN Mission in Afghanistan helped to
support a new Afghan theatre show which opened today in Kabul, which highlights
the need to deal with the impunity of past human rights abuses. The
play, ‘AH-5787’, is named after an anonymous Afghan prisoner, and the United
Nations hopes that the show can encourage all Afghans to explore their past and
come to terms with Afghanistan’s years of conflict.
ARMED
RESPONSE NEEDS SECURITY COUNCIL AUTHORIZATION:
Asked about a proposal from Amnesty International for the United Nations to act
to obtain the release of some 350 people reportedly taken hostage by the
Lord’s Resistance Army, the Spokeswoman could not confirm that they had been
taken hostage, and she noted that any armed response would need to be authorized
by the Security Council.
NO
U.N. BODY CAN VERIFY REPORTS OF TORTURE CAMPS IN ZIMBABWE: Asked
about reports of torture camps in Zimbabwe, the Spokeswoman said that there was
no United Nations body that could verify those reports on the ground. She noted
that the Secretary-General had met on Monday in Ghana with opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai to discuss the situation in Zimbabwe.
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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