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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 - 25 minutes
UN:
UNITED NATIONS BRIEFING AND TV - QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS FRIDAY, 18/07/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 18 July 2008 -- Daily Press Briefing by the Office of the
Spokesperson for the United Nations Secretary-General and UN Webcast TV Video.
**Questions and Answers
Question: Just a quick question about
the alleged attacks at the Ruwa site in Zimbabwe. The UN spokesperson office did
get back to me and it wasn’t anything new than what they had told us, you know,
a couple of weeks ago that no humanitarian aid worker has been able to confirm
what had happened on the nights of July 7 and 8. So, if we can get an update on
that…
Deputy Spokesperson: Well, if they
didn’t have access, they don’t have first-hand information, then perhaps that’s
the only information we have available. Of course, if we have anything, we’ll
get it to you.
Question: I also understand that the
Government was supposed to assess the situation and would get back to the United
Nations on that?
Deputy Spokesperson: As soon as we
have something more on it, we’ll get back to you
Correspondent: All right, thank you.
Question: On the UNAMID attack on
Wednesday, do we know which country the peacekeeper was from, the one that was
killed? Is there an investigation into who did it?
Deputy Spokesperson: Yes, there is an
investigation under way. But I think we had a press release on this yesterday
and there is another one coming out, so, I’d refer you to that.
Question: Can you confirm John Holmes
is going to Myanmar on Monday?
Deputy Spokesperson: He had announced
that to you during his press conference earlier this week.
Question: Marie, on Nepal, the
Ambassador of India said that he took issue with the Secretary-General report
not extending it for six months but saying only a month until there is
clarification by Nepal. He said Nepal is the one that approached the Security
Council for help on its own volition and that the Secretary-General should grant
that request for a six-month extension. Can you explain? I guess he seemed
surprised that the Secretary-General was asking for more information or not
granting the request or agreeing with the request. What’s the reason for that?
Deputy Spokesperson: I think you came
in late, Ian Martin had remarks and that’s available upstairs for you and that
explains the reasons why he’s asking for an extension for six months on behalf
of the Secretary-General.
Question: All right, I wanted to ask
you another thing. There is a report that Joseph Kony, the ICC indictee of the
Lord’s Resistance Army, has written a letter, including to the UN, setting
conditions for continuing talks, I guess that Mr. Chissano was a part of. It
wasn’t clear who in the UN he wrote to. But has the UN received a letter from
ICC indictee Joseph Kony?
Deputy Spokesperson: I have not
heard, but we can look into that for you.
[The Deputy Spokesperson later
informed the reporter that no such letter had been received.]
Have a good afternoon. Have a good
weekend.
Briefing by the Spokesperson for the
General Assembly President
Thank you, Marie. Good afternoon.
Good to see you. I haven’t been here for sometime. But here I am to give you an
update of what’s happening with the Assembly, what the President is up to and to
help plan for the next couple of days and weeks, and of course, to answer any
questions that you may have.
**Assembly Plenary Meeting on Food
Crisis
The General Assembly is holding a
plenary meeting today on the global food and energy crises. The meeting was
opened by the President of the General Assembly Srgjan Kerim. This was followed,
as you heard from Marie, by a statement from the Secretary-General, and then the
floor was opened for statements from Member States.
Let me recall as background that it
was exactly a month ago, on 18 June, that the General Assembly heard a briefing
by the Secretary-General on the food crisis after the FAO Summit in Rome. At
that meeting a month ago, Member States expressed support for convening a
special plenary meeting of the General Assembly as the highest political
deliberative body and the strategic policy-making organ on this issue.
It was based on that support of the
membership that the President of the Assembly convened today’s meeting. Also to
assist the membership, the President circulated to Member States the finalized
version of the UN system’s Comprehensive plan of action, the draft of which the
Secretary-General presented at the 3 June meeting in Rome. That is available on
the President’s website.
In his opening statement, the
President underlined the emergency nature of the two crises, noting their
extremely grave social consequences.
He stressed that the two crises
required an immediate coherent and coordinated response with the UN system
playing a central role. In this regard, he commended the Secretary-General’s
Comprehensive Framework for Action noting that it provided a coherent and
coordinated strategy.
He pointed out that, as with climate
change, during this session of the General Assembly, Member States had to apply
full, continuous and high-level commitment to deal with the global food and
energy crises.
He specifically called for the
General Assembly to provide overall policy direction and the political
commitment necessary for the measures before the Assembly to receive widespread
international support. He also called for the Assembly to play an active and
crucial role by facilitating global partnerships on food and agriculture,
involving all relevant actors. He stressed that, given the urgency of the
situation, the General Assembly should adopt a resolution calling for immediate
concerted global action. He also expressed support for the calls from several
Member States for food security and development to be one of the main priorities
of the sixty-third session of the General Assembly.
In conclusion he stressed that the
opportunity to deal with the dramatic effects of the global food and energy
crises had to be used to inject new life -- a new deal -- into the multilateral
system, and systematically address longer-term structural issues to create
economic security for all.
The plenary meeting is expected to
continue in the afternoon, as there are close to 50 speakers on the list of
speakers. Before I came here, it was actually the tenth speaker who was about to
finish her statement. So, I expect the plenary to go on into the afternoon.
**Statement on Meeting with Deputy
Prime Minister of Viet Nam
We had a statement issued yesterday
late in the afternoon and that had to do with a meeting that the President had
with the Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Viet Nam. It is a
statement attributable to the Spokesperson for the President of the General
Assembly, and it reads as follows:
The President of the General
Assembly, Srgjan Kerim met yesterday late afternoon with H.E. Pham Gia Khiem,
the Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Viet Nam. The President
congratulated the Deputy Prime Minister for his country taking on the role of
the presidency in the Security Council and also expressed his appreciation for
Viet Nam’s active involvement in the work of the General Assembly.
The President briefed the Deputy
Prime Minister on the General Assembly session on the global food and energy
crisis. The two also reviewed other priority issues on the agenda of the General
Assembly, especially climate change, development and UN reforms. In that regard,
the Deputy Prime Minister expressed his support for the efforts of the President
to advance on a strong development agenda during the sixty-second session of the
Assembly and for promoting climate change as the defining issue of the session.
He also highlighted his country’s economic development policies and noted that
Viet Nam was the first “delivering as one” pilot country of the United Nations
system-wide coherence efforts to be a non-permanent member of the Security
Council.
They also discussed regional issues
with a special focus on recent developments related to Myanmar, a topic that
both the General Assembly and the Security Council has been focusing on. In the
context of regional issues both stressed the growing importance of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) as a regional body taking a more
active role in promoting peace and stability in South-East Asia.
**Few Things for Next Week
And now a few things for next week
and these concern some of the things listed in the Journal, just to give you a
bit of orientation, because there are a number of different informal
consultations and meetings that are scheduled for next week.
So, let me start with the
revitalization of the General Assembly. The ad hoc working group set up during
this session and co-chaired by the Ambassadors of Paraguay and Poland is going
to hold a meeting on Monday afternoon with the intention to introduce and
consider the adoption of the draft report of the working group. This draft also
contains proposals for further action in the form of a draft resolution for the
General Assembly to adopt.
As you may recall, the co-chairs have
been leading a process of revitalization within the format of the working group
and what they were doing was to take a focused review of the implementation of
resolutions on General Assembly revitalization since the fifty-first session.
The way they were looking at this
review was that they put the resolutions into three clusters: working methods,
agenda and documentation was one cluster; selection of the Secretary-General
another cluster; and the role and authority of the General Assembly was the
third cluster.
Also next week, you will see that the
facilitator of the preparatory work for the 4 September review of the UN’s
Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy, Ambassador Gert Rosenthal of Guatemala, has
called for another round of consultations -- starting on Tuesday -- to review
the Secretary-General‘s report on the activities of the UN system in
implementing the Strategy. He has circulated an advance copy of the report that
should form the basis of the consultations, which then would lead to a process
for Member States to start discussing the possible outcome of the review
meeting. This possible outcome, according to the facilitator, would most likely
be in the form of a General Assembly resolution, and the drafting of which would
be something that Ambassador Rosenthal would facilitate. So, that’s on
preparations for the 4 September review of the UN’s Global Counter-Terrorism
Strategy, which was adopted two years ago on 8 September in 2006.
And finally, one more thing, that’s
also next week, you may see this in the Journal as well, a series of so called
informal “informal” consultations starting on Monday on the preparatory process
for the high-level mid-term review meeting on the implementation of the
so-called Almaty Programme of Action. This is a process facilitated by the
Permanent Representative of Japan -- and this mid-term review is set for 2-3
October 2008. Now, for those of you wondering what the Almaty Programme of
Action is; well it was something that was adopted at a conference in Almaty in
August 2003 and it addresses the special needs of landlocked developing
countries as regards their participation in international trade. And why is this
linked to the current session? It was during this session that a resolution was
adopted by the Assembly to hold a two-day high-level meeting on this issue here
in October.
So, for those of you who are planning
things for the beginning of the next Assembly, then please note that the
sixty-third Assembly, as you probably all know, is going to open on 16
September. Then on 22 September there is already a high-level meeting on
Africa’s development needs. Then on 23 September the general debate begins. On
25 September there is a leaders’ meeting on the Millennium Development Goals.
And now, as I have mentioned, there is a 2-3 October high-level review meeting
on the Almaty Programme of Action.
So, that’s what I have and, of
course, I am ready to answer all questions you may have.
**Questions and Answers
Question: A question on the GA
summit. Do you have a list of confirmed Heads of State that will be speaking for
that day?
Spokesperson: No, no, I don’t, at
least not that I can reveal. I know that the General Assembly Affairs Branch is
putting together a provisional list of speakers for the general debate, but I am
not at liberty to disclose that. Matthew.
Question: Can you state where we
stand in terms of the Secretary-General briefing or asking for input from the
General Assembly on his forthcoming appointment of a Human Rights Commissioner?
Spokesperson: Matthew, I cannot speak
on behalf of the Secretary-General, of course. And I know that in previous noon
briefings, I have listened to you asking this question from both, I think Marie
and Michèle and they’ve both said that the Secretary-General had been consulting
Member States in various formats, consulting the regional groups. What I do know
is that the Secretary-General and the President of the General Assembly have
consulted on this matter, and the President himself has mentioned this to you.
But we have not received any official communication as to the next step. That
next step, of course, would be for the General Assembly to meet in a plenary
session and approve the Secretary-General’s selected person, as is stipulated in
resolution 48/141.
Question: When the President of the
General Assembly, Srgjan Kerim, was here nine days ago, he said that he expected
the Secretary-General to give a briefing to the GA, and he said within the next
10 days. So, that’s why I am asking you whether that’s going to take place or
not.
Spokesperson: As I said, we have no
further news on this. No further comment, no further statement to make. Things
stand where they stood nine days ago on this.
Question: Can you give us an update
on Security Council reforms open-ended meeting? The President is expected to get
some report on this.
Spokesperson: Okay. Maybe, I should
have mentioned amongst the upcoming things, of course, that as far as Security
Council reform, there is nothing new to report. That’s why I didn’t mention it
because there is nothing new on the process. What we do have is that the
consultation process is ongoing. The President of the General Assembly is
meeting with Member States on this issue in various configurations and,
basically, what is happening is that parallel to this consultation process or
along with this, you have the task force of the President working on the draft
report of the open-ended working group, which should include, and this we have
mentioned before, a draft decision which the Assembly will then take action on,
and that would include the various steps forward. This draft report of the
open-ended working group would be something that should be discussed by the
open-ended working group itself. So, for that, a meeting of the open-ended
working group would be called. I don’t have a date for that yet. The moment we
know when the open-ended working group is going to meet, I’ll let you know.
Question: There is an issue of some
of the members of the General Assembly raising the question of having an
independent entity when they’re listing and de-listing of people onto the
sanctions list as individuals or entities. I see there is a meeting on Monday of
1267 and it’s open to the Members in general. But, I wonder, is there any effort
that that issue be part of the Security Council reform since it’s a reform of
the methods of the Security Council and a number of States have legal problems
because of that issue?
Spokesperson: This issue of listing
and de-listing has been on the agenda of the Security Council within the Al-Qaida/Taliban
Sanctions Committee, which is what you’re referring to when it comes to the
list. The most recent (Security Council) resolution adopted on this issue in
fact, is a result of the concerns expressed by various Member States to make
this process more transparent and also to make it possible for those on the list
to be aware of why they are there, also to review periodically the list and to
allow for an easier procedure, or a faster procedure, for an entity on the list
to be de-listed. So, that process is ongoing. Now, where else could this come
up? Certainly, it could come up in the framework of Security Council working
methods, but I don’t think this is something that has been concentrated on.
However, where this issue may also
come up is within the broader framework of the UN’s work on counter-terrorism. I
think just before you came in, I did mention that one of the things that the
Assembly is very much engaged in, because it is one of the five priority issues
and it is very much still on the agenda because the high point of dealing with
this priority item is going to come up on 4 September, is the review the UN’s
Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy. One of the pillars of this Strategy is the
focus on human rights (in the context of countering terrorism). So, in that
sense, this issue could definitely come up. So, there are several tracks where
this is looked at, but more closely, of course, it is within the 1267 Committee
of the Security Council.
Question: But not as an issue of
reform, that the reform focuses basically on expansion issues, not on
(inaudible) issues at this point, is that right?
Spokesperson: The reform (of the
Security Council) issue focuses on both. It’s actually very much both, but what
I am trying to say here is that in answer to whether this particular issue of
listing/de-listing is part of that discussion -- I don’t think so. It is
definitely a very serious part of the discussions within the framework of the
Al-Qaida/Taliban Sanctions Committee of the Security Council. And progress has
been made on that, as I mentioned, according to the last resolution that they
had on this.
So, with that, thank you very much
and have a great weekend.
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