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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: MONDAY, 30/06/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / -
30 June 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
UN
HEADQUARTERS, NEW YORK
Monday,
June 30, 2008
SECRETARY-GENERAL
WELCOMES PROGRESS ON IMPLEMENTATION OF SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION 1701
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The
Secretary-General welcomes
the progress on the urgent humanitarian aspects of Security Council Resolution
1701 achieved by the recent decision of the Israeli government. These
involve the return of the two abducted Israeli soldiers and the solution of
the cases of Lebanese prisoners held in Israel. He looks forward to the
signing and the full implementation of the negotiated agreement in the near
future.
-
He
hopes that the envisaged humanitarian moves will encourage further steps on
implementing other parts of the resolution and contribute to further
humanitarian moves.
-
Asked
whether the Secretary-General would also ask Israel to release thousands of
Palestinian prisoners, the Spokeswoman said that was a subject of
negotiations, and that the United Nations has been doing all that it can to
help that process.
SECRETARY-GENERAL
EXPRESSES CONDOLENCES IN WAKE OF DEATHS OF TWO GUATEMALAN OFFICIALS
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The
Secretary-General of the United Nations is saddened
by the news of the helicopter crash that took the lives of Vinicio Gómez
and Edgar Hernández, Minister and Vice-Minister of the Interior of
Guatemala.
-
He
wishes to express his sincere condolences to the Government of Guatemala,
its people and the families for this tragic loss, both personally and for
the important work they were doing at the head of the Ministry.
DEPUTY
SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS ON AFRICAN LEADERS TO STAND BY PEOPLE OF ZIMBABWE
-
Deputy
Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro this morning addressed
the leaders of the African Union at their summit meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh,
Egypt, telling them that we must stand by the people of Zimbabwe, who are
facing an extremely grave crisis.
-
She
called the situation in Zimbabwe “the single greatest challenge to
regional stability in southern Africa, not only because of its terrible
humanitarian and security consequences, but also because of the dangerous
political precedent it sets”.
-
She
noted that, regrettably, the run-off election went ahead last Friday despite
the concerns raised and calls made by the international community, including
by the Security Council, to suspend the vote. This is a moment of truth for
regional leaders, the Deputy Secretary-General warned.
-
In
a statement
issued on Sunday from Japan, the Secretary-General expressed his support for
the views expressed by the President of the Security Council regretting the
decision by the Government of Zimbabwe to go ahead with the presidential
elections.
-
The
Secretary-General has said repeatedly that conditions were not in place for
a free and fair election and observers have confirmed this from the deeply
flawed process. The outcome did not reflect the true and genuine will of the
Zimbabwean people or produce a legitimate result.
-
The
Secretary-General encourages efforts of the two sides to negotiate a
political solution that would end violence and intimidation. He
supports the efforts of the African Union and Southern African Development
Community (SADC) to promote an agreement acceptable to the people of
Zimbabwe.
-
Asked
whether the Secretary-General would refuse to recognize Robert Mugabe as the
President of Zimbabwe, the Spokeswoman clarified that it is not up to the
Secretary-General to recognize a Government, but for Member States to do so.
MIGIRO
WELCOMES AFRICAN SUMMIT’S FOCUS ON DEVELOPMENT GOALS
-
The
Deputy Secretary-General, in her statement
at the African Union summit in Sharm el-Sheikh, welcomed the Summit’s
focus on the Millennium
Development Goals—including the targets on water and sanitation. With
only seven and a half years to go, she said, we must do everything possible
to accelerate progress on the Goals.
-
The
Deputy Secretary-General added that we have seen progress in a number of
post-conflict African States, with Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea-Bissau
all embarking on longer-term efforts to consolidate peace. Their efforts
deserve greater support from the international community, she said.
-
And
she said that Somalia, a country that has some of the worst indicators on
earth, has taken a step toward improving stability. The Deputy
Secretary-General welcomed the recent Djibouti Agreement on Somalia and
called on all parties to abide by their commitments.
SECRETARY-GENERAL
VISITS JAPAN AHEAD OF G-8 SUMMIT
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The
Secretary-General is in Japan today, where, among other events, he met with
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda. The Secretary-General and his wife had an
audience with the Emperor and Empress of Japan, and later in the day with
the Crown Prince and Princess of Japan.
-
After
his meeting with Prime Minister Fukuda, the Secretary-General told
the press that they had an excellent discussion on the major challenges
the world faces, and he particularly thanked the Prime Minister for his
strong personal leadership and tireless efforts to make the coming G-8
summit meeting in Toyako a great success.
-
The
Secretary-General said that the summit would be a major milestone in the
common effort to mobilize international action on such challenges as climate
change, the food crisis and the Millennium
Development Goals. He added that he and the Prime Minister had paid
particular attention to Africa, given Japan’s long-standing effort to turn
it into “a continent of hope”.
-
He
also said he appreciated the news that Japan is going to send its Self
Defense Forces to the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS)
and also establish a peacekeeping training centre with financial support.
-
Earlier,
the Secretary-General met with the Foreign Minister, Masahiko Koumura, who
hosted a luncheon in his honour. He also met with Chief Cabinet Secretary
Nobutaka Machimura and with Akihiro Ohta, the Chief Representative of the
New Komei Party.
-
The
Secretary-General began his official programme in Tokyo early Sunday evening
by attending a reception hosted by the Global Compact Network of Japan. He told
the gathered business leaders that the race is underway to develop and
provide needed solutions, such as clean technology, renewable energy,
efficient products and processes, and sustainable goods and services.
-
On
Sunday, he also took part in a Town Hall meeting
on Climate Change at Kyoto University. He said that Japan, the world's
second largest economy and a leader in green technology, had a "moral
and political responsibility" to play a bigger role in tackling climate
change.
SECRETARY-GENERAL
APPOINTS NEW HEAD OF U.N. PEACEKEEPING
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Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon announced today the appointment of Mr. Alain Le Roy of France as
Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping
Operations. Mr. Le Roy will replace Mr. Jean-Marie Guéhenno.
-
The
Secretary-General is grateful for Mr. Guéhenno’s dedicated service to the
Department of Peacekeeping Operations and for his important contribution to
the achievement of its goals. He recalled the strong sense of commitment and
professionalism shown consistently by Mr. Guéhenno to the fulfilment of his
responsibilities.
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As
the new Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Mr. Alain Le
Roy brings to the job an extensive experience in public administration,
management and international affairs, both at the political level and in the
field. After serving in the private sector as a petroleum engineer, he
joined the public service as Sous-préfet , then as Counsellor at the Cour
des comptes (French Audit office).
-
Mr.
Le Roy was appointed as Deputy to the UN Special Coordinator for Sarajevo
and Director of Operations for the restoration of essential public services.
He went on missions for the U.N. Development Programme in Mauritania and was
appointed UN Regional Administrator in Kosovo (West Region).
-
After
having been National Coordinator for the Stability Pact for South-east
Europe in the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he was appointed European
Union Special Representative in The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
He was subsequently appointed Assistant Secretary for Economic and Financial
Affairs in the French Ministry for Foreign Affairs, before serving as the
French Ambassador to Madagascar.
-
He
is currently Conseiller Maître à la Cour des comptes and is serving as
Ambassador in charge of the Union for the Mediterranean Initiative since
September 2007.
NEW
JOINT U.N.-AFRICAN UNION CHIEF MEDIATOR FOR DARFUR NAMED
-
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon and the African Union Chairperson have appointed Mr. Djibril Yipènè
Bassolé of Burkina Faso as Joint AU-UN Chief Mediator for Darfur.
Mr. Bassolé will conduct the mediation efforts in Sudan on a full-time
basis. He will be based in El Fasher. The UN and AU Special Envoys for
Darfur, Jan Eliasson and Salim Ahmed Salim, will remain available for advice
and engagement as required.
-
Mr.
Djibril Yipènè Bassolé comes to this position with extensive experience
in multilateral diplomacy and mediation processes. Since 2007, Mr. Bassolé
has been serving as his country’s Foreign Minister. Between 2000 and 2007,
he was Minister of Security and played a key role in facilitating the
Ouagadougou Agreement of 2007 signed between President Laurent Gbagbo of Côte
d’Ivoire and Forces Nouvelles leader (now Prime Minister) Guillaume Soro.
-
Mr.
Bassolé also worked as a Member of the Mediation Committee for the
‘Touareg’ conflict in Niger (1994 - 1995) and was a Member of the
International Committee for the monitoring of the elections in Togo (1993 -
1994).
U.N.
PEACEKEEPERS IN NORTH DARFUR RELEASED AFTER BEING HELD HOSTAGE FOR SEVERAL HOURS
-
In
North Darfur, a patrol of 38 peacekeepers from the UN-AU Mission (UNAMID)
has now been released
after being held at gun-point by a faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA)
for more than five hours. The peacekeepers were denied entry to the Zamzam
camp for internally displaced persons by members of the SLA/Minni faction (SLA/M).
-
When
the patrol attempted to return to their base, they were prevented from doing
so. The SLA/M soldiers were demanding immediate compensation for an injured
member who was involved in a motorbike accident with a UNAMID vehicle on 25
June. That accident is presently being investigated by the Government of
Sudan and UNAMID Military Police, but the SLA/M soldiers wanted immediate
compensation without the necessary legal procedures being followed.
-
UNAMID
dispatched reinforcements to the camp to assist in the release of the
detained peacekeepers. The patrol was finally released, following
negotiations between UNAMID and the SLA/M leadership.
WFP
DRIVER IN SOUTHERN SUDAN KILLED IN AMBUSH
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The
World Food Programme has sent its condolences to the family of one of its
drivers, who was killed
in an ambush over the weekend in southern Sudan.
-
28-year-old
Muzamil Ramadan Sida, from Uganda, was shot and killed after delivering food
to a WFP warehouse in Juba. His death brings to five the number of WFP-contracted
drivers or their assistants killed in South Sudan this year.
-
There
is, however, welcome news for aid workers from more than 200 organizations
who depend on WFP’s humanitarian air service. With banditry and insecurity
making it dangerous for humanitarians to travel by road in many parts of
southern Sudan and Darfur, that service will remain
up and running through the end of September, after receiving donations of
nearly $15 million.
-
The
funds are still not enough to prevent some service cuts, and the air service
has no funds to operate beyond the end of September.
ECONOMIC
AND SOCIAL COUNCIL OPENS HIGH-LEVEL SEGMENT
-
The
Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) today opened its high-level
segment, which runs through Thursday.
-
Under-Secretary-General
Sha Zukang this morning delivered a message
on behalf of the Secretary-General. In it, he noted that we are at a
critical juncture in the implementation of the UN development agenda. The
fragile state of the major developed market economies, persistent global
imbalances and soaring oil and other commodity prices are slowing global
economic growth, while rising food and energy prices are hitting the poor
and vulnerable especially hard.
-
“No
social or economic order is secure if it fails to benefit the majority of
those who live under it,” he said, adding that we should also all have
serious concerns about a system whose wealthiest 400 citizens command more
resources than its “bottom billion”.
-
He
called on the international community to pursue truly concerted efforts to
redress the woes of the global economy, which also include the challenges of
climate change and skepticism about globalization and fears that it is
leaving many people behind. This session of ECOSOC should give new impetus
to achieving economic growth, social development and environmental
protection, he said.
-
He
added that the first-ever Development
Cooperation Forum, which opens this afternoon, should become the
principal venue for global dialogue and policy review of international
development cooperation. It should also focus on how the current aid
effectiveness framework is not sufficiently responsive to development issues
that cut across multiple sectors, such as human rights, gender equality, and
environmental sustainability.
SECURITY
COUNCIL CLARIFIES SANCTIONS ON AL-QAEDA, TALIBAN
-
The
Security Council this morning unanimously adopted
a resolution clarifying how Member States are to implement the sanctions
measures that have been previously imposed on the individuals, groups and
entities linked to al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
-
Council
members then received a briefing on the work of the Counter-Terrorism
Executive Directorate by its chief, Mike Smith. He presented a survey on the
implementation of resolution 1373, which set up the Council’s Counter-Terrorism
Committee.
-
Today
is the last day of the US Presidency of the Security Council. Tomorrow,
Vietnam will assume the Presidency of the Council for the month of July.
-
The
Spokeswoman declined to offer any response from the Secretary-General to
claims that the resolution does not deal with how people are to be removed
from the Consolidated List of individuals linked to al-Qaeda and the Taliban,
noting that the issue is a matter for the Security Council.
U.N.
HUMANITARIAN CHIEF WRAPS UP FIRST VISIT TO AFGHANISTAN
-
Under-Secretary-General
for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes spoke to the press in Kabul yesterday
about his first visit to Afghanistan,
where he discussed the worsening humanitarian situation in the country.
-
He
said that the most serious immediate problem is food insecurity as a result
of the rise in global food prices and the recent drought. He noted that the
UN appeal earlier this year for $81 million to deal with that food crisis
has been well-funded, but more may be needed, so work is being done on
another, larger appeal.
-
Holmes
added that the number of civilian casualties from the fighting in the
country is a source of great concern. He said that most of the casualties
are caused by insurgents, but there are also still significant numbers
caused by the international military forces.
NEW
AGREEMENT ALLOWS WFP TO EXPAND FOOD ASSISTANCE TO DPRK
-
The
World Food Programme (WFP) has signed
an agreement with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea that will
allow it to rapidly increase food assistance to more than five million
people.
-
WFP
will also expand its operations into 128 counties, up from just 50. New
areas covered include the traditionally food-insecure Northeast and some
counties that have never before been accessible to humanitarian agencies.
-
The
agreement will also allow WFP to send nearly 50 more international aid
workers to the DPRK. They will oversee and monitor the delivery of food to
make sure it reaches those most in need.
-
Following
the signing of the agreement on Friday, a ship from the United States
arrived Sunday in the port of Nampo, carrying 37,000 tonnes of wheat.
It’s the first installment of a U.S. food aid pledge of up to 500,000
tonnes.
NEW
RAPID TEST FOR DRUG-RESISTANT TUBERCULOSIS TO BE LAUNCHED
-
The
World Health Organization today took part in the unveiling
of a new rapid test for Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). Instead
of waiting two to three months for a diagnosis – during which time they
can transmit the disease to others – patients in 16 developing countries
will now receive their test results in just two days.
-
In
addition to enhancing lab facilities and training lab staff, today’s
initiatives will also boost the supply of drugs needed to treat MDR-TB in
these and nearly 40 other countries.
-
It
is estimated that only two percent of MDR-TB cases worldwide are diagnosed
and treated appropriately, mainly because of inadequate laboratory services,
WHO says. It is hoped today’s initiatives will increase that number at
least sevenfold over the next four years.
UNDP
ANNOUNCES NEW HEAD OF ETHICS OFFICE
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The
UN Development Programme (UNDP) has
announced the appointment of a new head of its Ethics Office.
-
Ms.
Elia Armstrong of Canada has been working as a Senior Governance and Public
Administration Officer for the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA)
since December 2006. Prior to that, she helped set up the operations of the
new UN Ethics Office in the Secretariat.
-
She
also worked for six years as a Public Administration officer for DESA, and
as a consultant on Civil Service Reform, primarily on Public Sector Ethics.
-
Ms.
Armstrong replaces Karunesh Bhalla, who has served as head of UNDP’s
Ethics Office since last December.
CHINA
QUAKE CAUSED $6 BILLION IN DAMAGES TO AGRICULTURE, FAO SAYS
-
Last
month’s earthquake in China’s Sichuan province caused an estimated $6
billion in damage to the agricultural sector, according to the Food and
Agricultural Organization (FAO).
-
An
FAO assessment mission that recently visited Sichuan province found that
over 30 million people in rural communities have been severely hit, losing
most of their assets. FAO notes that it could take three to five years to
rebuild the agricultural sector in Sichuan.
OTHER
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UNTV
STAFF CONTRACTS ARE NOT WITH U.N. DIRECTLY: Asked about the expiring
contracts of some UNTV staff, the Spokeswoman noted that the United Nations does
not contract those staff directly; rather, the United Nations hires the
contractor and negotiates with that company, and that company in turn hires the
workers. The issue of contracts, she said, is between the company and its
employees.
Office
of the Spokesperson for the Secretary-General
United Nations, S-378
New York, NY 10017
Tel. 212-963-7162
Fax. 212-963-7055
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