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Saturday, February 16, 2008

UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF ASSESSES IMPACT OF CLOSURES ON WEST BANK RESIDENTS

UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF ASSESSES IMPACT OF CLOSURES ON WEST BANK RESIDENTS New York, Feb 17 2008 12:00AM During a visit to the West Bank today, the United Nations humanitarian chief saw the difficulties faced daily by Palestinian residents due to restrictions on the movement of people, goods and services.

At the Augusta Victoria Hospital, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes heard about the various hardships faced by West Bank patients in getting to hospitals and receiving crucial treatments, as well as the difficulties health workers holding West Bank identity cards encounter in getting to their jobs due to the existing permit regime.

During a stop in the East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Abu Dis, Mr. Holmes, who is also UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, saw the Barrier being constructed by the Israeli Government, and upon crossing the Gilo checkpoint, viewed the enclaves created by the construction.

Stressing the consequences of further construction of the Barrier for the daily lives of Palestinians, he said: "It is clear that the route of the Barrier, the expanding settlements and the closure regime and associated controls are severely damaging the social and economic structures of the West Bank and contributing to increased aid reliance, poverty and unemployment.

"The promised relaxation of the closures is urgently needed, as a minimum first step towards the kind of economic development which can underpin successful peace negotiations," Mr. Holmes added.

The humanitarian chief also travelled today to Hebron, where he was briefed on the implications of the closures and restrictions on the area's socio-economic activities.

Tomorrow, Mr. Holmes is scheduled to visit the Israeli cities of Sderot and Tel Aviv, where he will meet with government officials, before returning to the West Bank to hold discussions with representatives of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) providing assistance to residents of the occupied Palestinian territory.


2008-02-16 00:00:00.000


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TOP UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR GREATER EFFORTS TO FIGHT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

TOP UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR GREATER EFFORTS TO FIGHT HUMAN TRAFFICKING New York, Feb 16 2008 1:00PM The head of the United Nations anti-crime agency has urged governments, businesses and civil society to boost their efforts to combat human trafficking, including by increasing awareness of the problem and providing greater resources to tackle it.

"Let us build on the momentum generated here to ensure that people's lives will not be for sale," Antonio Maria Costa, Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (< http://www.unodc.org/>UNODC), said yesterday at the end of the Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking.

The three-day gathering brought together 1,400 experts, legislators, law enforcement teams, business leaders, non-governmental organization (NGO) representatives and trafficking victims from 116 countries.

The conference also drew the participation of celebrities and public figures such as Egypt's First Lady Suzanne Mubarak, Academy Award-winning British actress Emma Thompson, and international pop star Ricky Martin, who joined the outcry against the global scourge.

Calling the Forum "just the beginning of a process," Mr. Costa called for practical measures to prevent trafficking, such as self-certification by businesses to take slave-made products off the shelves and developing new technology to monitor human trafficking routes.

He also proposed the tracking and blocking of credit card payments for internet human trafficking transactions and codes of conduct to curb sex tourism.

Stressing the need to strengthen partnerships among governments, businesses and civil society in the fight against trafficking, the Executive Director hailed the launch during the Forum of the Women Leaders' Council. The group brings together political figures, diplomats, trade union representatives, business leaders and entertainers from around the world to work together to tackle the problem and help the victims.

The Forum was convened by the UN Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT), an initiative launched by UNODC and several UN partners last year to bring governments, the private sector, academia, civil society and the media together to combat a practice that is viewed as modern-day slavery.

2008-02-16 00:00:00.000


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Friday, February 15, 2008

UN MEETING ENDS WITH CALL FOR INCREASED AGRICULTURAL INVESTMENT FOR RURAL POOR

UN MEETING ENDS WITH CALL FOR INCREASED AGRICULTURAL INVESTMENT FOR RURAL POOR New York, Feb 15 2008 7:00PM The annual meeting of the United Nations International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) has wrapped up with participants issuing a call for stepped-up investment to help poor rural farmers.

At the two-day <"http://www.ifad.org/">IFAD Governing Council meeting in Rome, delegates from the agency's 164 Member States recognized the impact of climate change and soaring food prices on poverty-stricken smallholders in developing countries.

Attendees suggested measures to ease the burden on the rural poor, including reducing transportation costs, establishing safety nets for those who purchase more food than they grow and increasing productivity through research and micro-credit programmes.

"The major donor countries have not yet fully realized that the root cause of many social ills – youth unemployment, migration, urban slums and immigration, stem from the lack of investment in rural space," IFAD President Lennart Båge told reporters.

He appealed for more fund to support agriculture, since the vast majority of the world's poorest reside in rural areas. Currently, only 3 per cent of all international aid is directed towards farming.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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KENYA: BAN KI-MOON WELCOMES ADVANCES IN POLITICAL TALKS

KENYA: BAN KI-MOON WELCOMES ADVANCES IN POLITICAL TALKS New York, Feb 15 2008 6:00PM Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has lauded the progress made towards ending the political crisis that has gripped Kenya since contested elections were held in the East African nation last December.

The parties to the Kenya National Dialogue and Reconciliation process, which includes the planned creation of an independent review of the electoral process, announced today that their talks are advancing.

In a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11422.doc.htm">statement, Mr. Ban said that he "hopes these understandings will contribute immediately to reduced levels of violence in the country," where some 1,000 people have lost their lives and more than 310,000 others displaced since the December elections in which President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner over opposition leader Raila Odinga.

The Secretary-General expressed his concern for the safety of civilians, urging the full respect of human rights in the country and applauding "all those Kenyans who in these trying times have reached out to their neighbours irrespective of ethnic differences."

To heal the country's rifts, he said it was essential for its leaders to be open to compromise and reconciliation.

Mr. Ban also expressed his full and ongoing support for the mediation efforts of the Panel of Eminent African Personalities led by former Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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SECURITY COUNCIL EXTENDS ARMS EMBARGO AGAINST MILITIA GROUPS IN DR CONGO

SECURITY COUNCIL EXTENDS ARMS EMBARGO AGAINST MILITIA GROUPS IN DR CONGO New York, Feb 15 2008 6:00PM The Security Council today <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sc9248.doc.htm">extended its arms embargo and other sanctions against militias operating in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) until the end of March, underlining that it remains deeply concerned about the presence of unauthorized armed groups, especially in the east of the vast and impoverished country.

Council members voted unanimously this morning to maintain the sanctions – consisting of the arms embargo, a travel ban and an assets freeze on those who violate the embargo – until at least 31 March.

The 15-member Council expressed serious concern about the situation in the provinces of North and South Kivu and in the Ituri district, close to the border with Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

The presence of so many active armed groups there "perpetuates a climate of insecurity in the whole region," the resolution said, referring to the Great Lakes region of Central Africa.

Council members reserved the right to adjust the sanctions as appropriate depending on the security situation in the DRC, which has suffered from decades of war and misrule but in 2006 held its first free elections since in more than 45 years.

They stressed the need for progress in security sector reform, including integration of the armed forces and reform of the national police, as well as the disarmament, demobilization, repatriation and reintegration of members of both Congolese and foreign armed groups.

The embargo was first imposed in 2003 amid concerns that the growth and trafficking of arms was serving to fuel and exacerbate conflicts across the Great Lakes region. The Council also noted the link between the illegal exploitation and trade of natural resources in the DRC and the proliferation of arms.

The embargo does not apply to arms and related materiel intended for the use of units of the national army or police as long as those units meet certain criteria.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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AFTER VISIT TO GAZA, UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF DEPLORES DAILY LIVING CONDITIONS

AFTER VISIT TO GAZA, UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF DEPLORES DAILY LIVING CONDITIONS New York, Feb 15 2008 6:00PM Decrying the "miserable" daily living conditions inside the Gaza Strip, the United Nations humanitarian chief today deplored the restrictions on the flow of aid and commercial goods in and out of the area and said he would raise his concerns with Israeli and Palestinian officials.

John Holmes, the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, made a day-long visit today to assess the impact on the restrictions on Gaza's estimated 1.4 million inhabitants.

"I have been shocked by the grim and miserable things that I have seen and heard today, which are the result of current restrictions and the limitations on the number of goods that are being allowed into Gaza," he said.

"Around 80 per cent of the population is dependent on good aid from international organizations. Poverty and unemployment are increasing and the private sector has more or less collapsed. Only 10 per cent of the amount of goods that entered Gaza a year ago are being permitted to enter now."

During his first official visit to Gaza since taking up the post just over a year ago, Mr. Holmes saw the sewage lagoons at Beit Lahiya, where the waste-water system is in a precarious state, and the Shifa hospital in Gaza City, where the director told the Emergency Relief Coordinator that the interruptions to supplies of fuel and electricity as a result of the restrictions was having a particularly disastrous effect on the dialysis and neo-natal wards.

The Emergency Relief Coordinator was also briefed by UN staff, including officials from the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (<"http://www.un.org/unrwa/news/index.html">UNRWA), and representatives of non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and he also travelled to the Karni border crossing.

"What's essential to alleviate this situation is the opening of crossings to allow a lot more humanitarian and non-humanitarian goods to enter Gaza so people can lead better lives and have a minimum of human dignity. These are points I will be making to the Israeli Government and the Palestinian Authority later in my trip."

Tomorrow Mr. Holmes is scheduled to travel to the West Bank to assess the impact there of restrictions on the movement of people, goods and services. He is expected to visit Bethlehem, Hebron and the Augusta Victoria hospital.

In a related development, UNRWA Deputy Commissioner-General Filippo Grandi told a press briefing in Geneva that he had been informed by the director of a large public hospital in Gaza that he was unable to deal with patients' health problems because he had to spend his entire day searching for fuel. Without that fuel, generators and vital equipment such as incubators would shut down, he told Mr. Grandi.

The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/">OCHA) reports that residents of the West Bank are also suffering, with over 560 blockages of various sorts making everyday life increasingly difficult.

OCHA has voiced concern that the constraints could lead to growing political radicalization, especially among the younger members of society in the West Bank.

Meanwhile, in northern Lebanon, UNRWA and the Lebanese Government have announced plans to rebuild the Nahr el-Bared camp for Palestinian refugees, which was badly damaged last year when members of a militant group used it as a base to fight Lebanese Government forces.

The reconstruction of Nahr el-Bared, which is host to more than 30,000 people, is likely to cost about $174 million, according to Mr. Grandi.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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BAN KI-MOON CALLS ON ERITREA TO STOP BLOCKING UN MISSION'S RELOCATION

BAN KI-MOON CALLS ON ERITREA TO STOP BLOCKING UN MISSION'S RELOCATION New York, Feb 15 2008 5:00PM Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today appealed to Eritrea to cease obstructing the temporary relocation of the personnel and equipment of the United Nations mission across the border to Ethiopia.

Asmara cut off diesel fuel supplies to the UN Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unmee/index.html">UNMEE) last December, paralyzing the operation. Its advance units started moving by road on 11 February, while UNMEE's main body began its relocation yesterday.

But in a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11423.doc.htm">statement released by his spokesperson, the Secretary-General said that so far, Asmara has only allowed six vehicles to cross into Ethiopia. In one case, yesterday, "UNMEE personnel were threatened and the equipment seized."

He also voiced concern about the "disturbing" development in which the Eritrean commercial company supplying rations to UNMEE today said that it will no longer fulfil its contractual obligations, leaving the mission with only a few days of emergency food left.

Mr. Ban "is in close contact with the Security Council and the Troop Contributing Countries, and the Eritrean authorities are being contacted at the highest level to seek and immediate resolution of this unacceptable situation," the statement said.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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IN WASHINGTON, BAN KI-MOON URGES SUPPORT FOR GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT GOALS

IN WASHINGTON, BAN KI-MOON URGES SUPPORT FOR GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT GOALS New York, Feb 15 2008 5:00PM Following talks today in Washington with United States President George W. Bush, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon stressed the importance of reaching global anti-poverty targets and said a strong partnership between the world body and its host country is key to achieving shared goals.

<"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/offthecuff.asp?nid=1132">Speaking to reporters following their 90-minute meeting, Mr. Ban said he has been working to make the UN "a more trusty, transparent, accountable and more effective organization" and pledged to continue that effort. He also said regional hotspots such as Darfur, Lebanon, Myanmar and Kenya are high on the agenda. "There are so many problems that challenge us at this time; I'm committed to address these issues."

At the same time, Mr. Ban pointed to his efforts to meet global challenges such as climate change. "And I need your strong support as we are going through this year, a midpoint year, to realize the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015," he said, citing in particular the needs of Africa.

Toward that end, he said President Bush's upcoming visit to the continent "will be very important and historic," voicing hope that he would "discuss with African leaders on how to achieve these Millennium Development Goals, how to help people overcome abject poverty, and sanitation [problems] and [gain] access to educational opportunities. "

Mr. Ban wished the US President success, calling his trip "a very great opportunity."

He emphasized the need to sustain the momentum established in December last year at the UN Conference on Climate Change, pledging to work for a globally accepted framework to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which contains legally binding targets for cutting greenhouse gas emissions but will expire in 2012.

"The United States is the country with the most ability for technology and financing capacities. I count on your leadership and active participation," said Mr. Ban.

"All in all, I need your strong support, because I believe a strong partnership between the United Nations and United States is the crucial element in carrying out my duty as Secretary-General, and also in making the United Nations a stronger organization in carrying out the common challenges we share together."

According to a UN spokesperson, during their meeting, the two leaders discussed UN reform, "with the Secretary-General briefing President Bush on his efforts to promote transparency and accountability at the UN." They also discussed climate change, the MDGs in an African context, Darfur, Kenya Myanmar, Kosovo, Iraq, Lebanon and Afghanistan.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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UN REFUGEE AGENCY ALARMED AFTER ARMED GROUP PREVENTS RELOCATION OF DARFURIANS

UN REFUGEE AGENCY ALARMED AFTER ARMED GROUP PREVENTS RELOCATION OF DARFURIANS New York, Feb 15 2008 5:00PM Unidentified gunmen today blocked attempts by the United Nations refugee agency to move 179 Darfurian families away from the volatile border region and into formal camps in eastern Chad, sparking concern among humanitarian officials.

The men gave no reason for blocking the relocation when staff with UN High Commissioner for Refugees and its aid partners attempted on Tuesday to begin boarding the refugees on trucks bound for Kounoungou, one of 12 camps the agency operates in the region, <"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/47b5c2ad2.html">UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis told reporters.

"This is deeply concerning and we are making every effort with the Chadian authorities to get these refugees moved quickly," she said. "The situation is so serious that our representative in Chad is now at the border trying to find a solution to this problem."

As many as 8,000 people – mainly women and children – have crossed into the Birak and Koruk areas of Chad following deadly militia attacks on three towns in West Darfur last week, and nearly all are currently living in makeshift conditions near the border.

Ms. Pagonis warned that the refugees are "extremely exposed and vulnerable. The area is highly insecure, with roaming armed groups posing a real threat to the refugees and aid workers."

Notorious militia groups allied to the Sudanese Government and known as Janjaweed have been attacking villagers across Darfur since 2003 when rebels took up arms against the Government in the arid region. In the fighting since then more than 200,000 people have been killed and at least 2.2 million others displaced.

UNHCR said it has several trucks ready to begin the relocation process but is now awaiting approval from central authorities in Chad.

Ms. Pagonis said the agency faces "tough logistical challenges" in moving the refugees away from the border. In the meantime, basic items such as sleeping mats, blankets, jerry cans and soap will be distributed, along with tents and food.

Meanwhile, UNHCR is also preparing to start the first transfer of Chadian refugees from a site just over the border in neighbouring Cameroon to a better equipped site about 30 kilometres away in Maltam.

The refugees, who fled recent fighting in the Chadian capital, N'Djamena, have been living temporarily at a transit centre in Kousseri, close to the border. As many as 7,000 to 10,000 are living in the open there, while thousands of others have found shelter in schools and churches in Kousseri.

About 1,000 refugees are expected to be transferred tomorrow to Maltam, which can host up to 50,000 people at full capacity. UNHCR and its partners have begun building schools, health centres and latrines at the site and also started erecting tents.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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CAMBODIA: UN LAUNCHES ONLINE MAP TO IDENTIFY FOOD INSECURITY

CAMBODIA: UN LAUNCHES ONLINE MAP TO IDENTIFY FOOD INSECURITY New York, Feb 15 2008 4:00PM The United Nations World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?n=31">WFP) has launched an interactive and online map of Cambodia to identify areas of food insecurity so that it can better ascertain where to step up its aid in the South-East Asian country.

"It illustrates the fact that food security goes far beyond sufficient food production, but is affected by poverty, maternal health, access to clean water and health services, as well as shocks such as natural disasters and other socio-economic vulnerability," said the agency's Cambodia Country Director Thomas Keusters.

Despite the recent economic improvements in Cambodia – where levels of hunger vary by region and by social group – the new WFP Food Security Atlas highlights how food security continues to be a challenge.

The tool, created by WFP in concert with the Council for Agriculture and Rural Development of Cambodia, is especially relevant given such factors as climate change, shifts in food availability, high energy prices and globalization, Mr. Keusters pointed out.

"I am hopeful that the atlas will improve the handling of hunger in Cambodia by serving as an important reference in formulating the right kind of interventions," he said.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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MIGIRO TRAVELS TO THAILAND FOR REGIONAL MEETING TO SPUR DEVELOPMENT

MIGIRO TRAVELS TO THAILAND FOR REGIONAL MEETING TO SPUR DEVELOPMENT New York, Feb 15 2008 4:00PM Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro heads to Thailand this weekend to chair the latest regional coordination meeting of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (<"http://www.unescap.org/">ESCAP) as part of her efforts to promote development worldwide.

While in Bangkok, Ms. Migiro is also scheduled to meet Thai Foreign Minister Noppadon Patama, as well as with representatives of some of ESCAP's 53 Member States, UN spokesperson Marie Okabe told reporters today.

The Deputy Secretary-General also plans to meet with UN staff based in Bangkok before she returns to UN Headquarters in New York on Wednesday.

One of Ms. Migiro's key responsibilities since assuming her post last year is to strengthen the UN's role as a centre for development assistance and policy.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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UNESCO CHIEF SPEAKS OUT AGAINST MURDERS OF IRAQI AND PAKISTANI JOURNALISTS

UNESCO CHIEF SPEAKS OUT AGAINST MURDERS OF IRAQI AND PAKISTANI JOURNALISTS New York, Feb 15 2008 3:00PM The head of the United Nations agency mandated to defend press freedom today condemned the recent killings of journalists in Iraq and Pakistan.

Hisham Mijawet Hamdan, 27, was kidnapped on 10 February while shopping for office supplies in a Baghdad market and was tortured before being executed. His body was discovered by police on 12 February.

The murder of Mr. Hamdan, who worked for the fortnightly Internet publication <i>Al-Siyassa wal-Karar</i>, demonstrates "once again the dangers that journalists face every day when working in Iraq," Koïchiro Matsuura, Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (<"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=29008&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">UNESCO), said in a statement.

"While these professional men and women deserve to be praised for their bravery, further measures also need to be taken to ensure their safety."

The Association of Young Journalists, which counted Mr. Hamdan as a member, said he had of late been active in the group's campaign aiding families of journalists killed in the violence-ridden country and may have become a target after appearing on television regarding his work assisting survivors.

Meanwhile, Pakistani journalist Abdus Samad Chishti Mujahid was gunned down in Quetta, which is close to the South Asian nation's border with Afghanistan and is the capital of Baluchistan province, on 9 February.

"The intimidation and murder of journalists constitutes a crime not only against the individuals targeted, but also against the whole society," Mr. Matsuura noted in a separate statement.

The slain journalist, 55, was a photographer and columnist for the Urdu-language weekly <i>Akhbar-e-Jehan</i>. After being shot by an unknown assailant while coming out of his home with his wife, he died at the hospital.

Mr. Matsuura appealed to Pakistani authorities to bring the perpetrators of "this despicable attack on the fundamental human right of freedom of expression" to justice.

The Baluchistan Liberation Army, a separatist organization, has reportedly claimed responsibility for the murder, which has been condemned by the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists and the Baluchistan Union of Journalists.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000

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UN POLICE TRAINERS TO MEET IN GHANA TO DISCUSS PLANS FOR DARFUR FORCE

UN POLICE TRAINERS TO MEET IN GHANA TO DISCUSS PLANS FOR DARFUR FORCE New York, Feb 15 2008 3:00PM Senior international police trainers will gather in Ghana next week to coordinate plans to run pre-deployment training for the thousands of United Nations police – the largest-ever UN Police contingent – mandated to serve in the joint peacekeeping mission to Sudan's troubled Darfur region.

The five-day conference, which is being sponsored by Germany, will start on Monday and will take place at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre in Accra, Ghana's capital, according to a press release.

The conference will involve the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) Police Division and the Integrated Training Service, and will focus on how pre-deployment training for police officers can be improved, it added.

The joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force (UNAMID) will require the largest single UN Police contingent ever, with more than 6,400 police officers out of a total of over 30,000 personnel.

Over 30 senior police trainers will take part in next week's conference, along with representatives from the UN Police Division, Ghana's Inspector General of Police and the German Ambassador, representing the donor nation.

In a related development, some 250 Nigerian police officers who will serve with UNAMID are being trained by Norwegian officers as part of Norway's long-term Training for Peace (TfP) program, according to a press release from Norway's Mission to the UN.

Norway has trained African police personnel for peacekeeping operations since 1998 when Norway and African partners started the TfP program in Southern Africa. This specific Darfur training involves trainers from Norway, together with TfP colleagues from South Africa and Botswana, working with Nigerian officers in the capital Abuja.

Norwegian police also take part directly in UN peacekeeping operations and currently there are 36 officers serving in missions worldwide.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000

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VALENTINE'S DAY ART AUCTION RAISES OVER $40 MILLION FOR UN-BACKED GLOBAL FUND

VALENTINE'S DAY ART AUCTION RAISES OVER $40 MILLION FOR UN-BACKED GLOBAL FUND New York, Feb 15 2008 3:00PM At a Valentine's Day art auction in New York yesterday to benefit the United Nations-backed <"http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/">Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, more than $40 million was raised to fight HIV/AIDS in Africa.

The contemporary art auction was part of the (RED) campaign, which, since being launched in 2006 by Bono and Bobby Shriver, has become one of the largest consumer-based fundraising efforts by the private sector for an international humanitarian issue.

Yesterday's event "is yet more confidence expressed in the work of the Global Fund and those thousands of health workers who turn the money into lives saved," said Michel Kazatchkine, the Fund's Executive Director.

With support from its partners – the Gap, Hallmark, Apple, Motorola, Emporio Armani, American Express, Converse, Microsoft and Dell – the Global Fund takes no overhead so that all (RED) money is sent directly to the Fund to be invested in HIV/AIDS programmes in Africa.

To date, funds generated by (RED) have already provided anti-retroviral treatments to nearly 30,000 people and reached over one million women and children through counselling, HIV testing and other services.

Since its creation in 2002, the Global Fund has contributed more than $10 billion to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria through 550 programmes in 136 countries.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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UN POLICE TRAINERS TO MEET IN GHANA TO DISCUSS PLANS FOR DARFUR FORCE

UN POLICE TRAINERS TO MEET IN GHANA TO DISCUSS PLANS FOR DARFUR FORCE New York, Feb 15 2008 2:00PM Senior international police trainers will gather in Ghana next week to coordinate plans to run pre-deployment training for the thousands of United Nations police – the largest-ever UN Police contingent – mandated to serve in the joint peacekeeping mission to Sudan's troubled Darfur region.

The five-day conference, which is being sponsored by Germany, will start on Monday and will take place at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre in Accra, Ghana's capital, according to a press release.

The conference will involve the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) Police Division and the Integrated Training Service, and will focus on how pre-deployment training for police officers can be improved, it added.

The joint UN-African Union peacekeeping force (UNAMID) will require the largest single UN Police contingent ever, with more than 6,400 police officers out of a total of over 30,000 personnel.

Over 30 senior police trainers will take part in next week's conference, along with representatives from the UN Police Division, Ghana's Inspector General of Police and the German Ambassador, representing the donor nation.

In a related development, some 250 Nigerian police officers who will serve with UNAMID are being trained by Norwegian officers as part of Norway's long-term Training for Peace (TfP) program, according to a press release from Norway's Mission to the UN.

Norway has trained African police personnel for peacekeeping operations since 1998 when Norway and African partners started the TfP program in Southern Africa. This specific Darfur training involves trainers from Norway, together with TfP colleagues from South Africa and Botswana, working with Nigerian officers in the capital Abuja.

Norwegian police also take part directly in UN peacekeeping operations and currently there are 36 officers serving in missions worldwide.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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UNESCO CHIEF SPEAKS OUT AGAINST MURDERS OF IRAQI AND PAKISTANI JOURNALISTS

UNESCO CHIEF SPEAKS OUT AGAINST MURDERS OF IRAQI AND PAKISTANI JOURNALISTS New York, Feb 15 2008 2:00PM The head of the United Nations agency mandated to defend press freedom today condemned the recent killings of journalists in Iraq and Pakistan.

Hisham Mijawet Hamdan, 27, was kidnapped on 10 February while shopping for office supplies in a Baghdad market and was tortured before being executed. His body was discovered by police on 12 February.

The murder of Mr. Hamdan, who worked for the fortnightly Internet publication <i>Al-Siyassa wal-Karar</i>, demonstrates "once again the dangers that journalists face every day when working in Iraq," Koïchiro Matsuura, Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (<"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=29008&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">UNESCO), said in a statement.

"While these professional men and women deserve to be praised for their bravery, further measures also need to be taken to ensure their safety."

The Association of Young Journalists, which counted Mr. Hamdan as a member, said he had of late been active in the group's campaign aiding families of journalists killed in the violence-ridden country and may have become a target after appearing on television regarding his work assisting survivors.

Meanwhile, Pakistani journalist Abdus Samad Chishti Mujahid was gunned down in Quetta, which is close to the South Asian nation's border with Afghanistan and is the capital of Baluchistan province, on 9 February.

"The intimidation and murder of journalists constitutes a crime not only against the individuals targeted, but also against the whole society," Mr. Matsuura noted in a separate statement.

The slain journalist, 55, was a photographer and columnist for the Urdu-language weekly <i>Akhbar-e-Jehan</i>. After being shot by an unknown assailant while coming out of his home with his wife, he died at the hospital.

Mr. Matsuura appealed to Pakistani authorities to bring the perpetrators of "this despicable attack on the fundamental human right of freedom of expression" to justice.

The Baluchistan Liberation Army, a separatist organization, has reportedly claimed responsibility for the murder, which has been condemned by the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists and the Baluchistan Union of Journalists.
2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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UN REFUGEE AGENCY AIDS 55,000 CONGOLESE RETURNING TO KATANGA

UN REFUGEE AGENCY AIDS 55,000 CONGOLESE RETURNING TO KATANGA New York, Feb 15 2008 8:00AM The United Nations refugee agency is distributing supplies to some 55,000 displaced people who have returned to their homes in the southern province of Katanga in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Roger Hollo, a protection officer with the UN High Commissioner for Refguees (UNHCR) in the provincial capital, Lubumbashi, said the initiative is part of the agency's programme of assistance and protection for people displaced in northern and central Katanga.

"Some 11,000 households, or 55,000 people, will benefit," he said after the distribution began in central Katanga's Kilumbe district on Tuesday.

The exercise, expected to take up to three weeks to complete, involves handing out kitchen utensils, blankets, jerry cans, mosquito nets, plastic sheeting, buckets and soap to each returnee family. The refugee agency and a local partner will also distribute string, nails and hammers to help the former internally displaced people (IDP) construct homes.

The World Food Programme (WFP) and the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) are also assisting the group.

"I am very happy and grateful for this gesture. I was lost, I had nothing left," said an old woman, who, like others at the distribution, fled her home three years ago to escape fighting between government forces and the Mai-Mai militia.

This final distribution of food and supplies is being conducted in three isolated villages close to the town of Bukama in central Katanga's Kilumbe district. The area, located in Upemba National Park, can only be accessed by boat.

Last November, UNHCR sent a team to the region to assess the needs of the returnees and look at ways to bring in relief items and distribute them. Aid stocks were brought to the area by railway and road and the first distribution was held in January, with almost 8,000 families benefiting.

There are still more than 30,000 IDPs in Katanga and some 1.3 million throughout the DRC, according to UNHCR.


2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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UN'S TOP REFUGEE OFFICIAL URGES MORE SUPPORT FOR UPROOTED IRAQIS

UN'S TOP REFUGEE OFFICIAL URGES MORE SUPPORT FOR UPROOTED IRAQIS New York, Feb 15 2008 8:00AM In Syria as part of a weeklong visit to the Middle East, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has appealed to the international community to provide greater support for Iraqis who have fled across borders.

António Guterres urged help for Iraqis in Syria and Jordan, for more resettlement places in third countries and for the Government of Iraq to be more active in supporting those who have been forced to flee.

The High Commissioner met senior leaders in both Jordan and Syria, including Jordanian King Abdullah II and Syria's President Bashar al-Assad. He told reporters that he had received assurances from both governments that Iraqi refugees would not be pushed back against their will and that the "asylum space" will be preserved. "This is a very important guarantee," he added, particularly in view of the heavy burden both countries are bearing.

He said the international response remains disproportionate to the scope of the problem.

UNHCR and its partners estimate that out of a total population of 26 million, some 4.4 million Iraqis are still uprooted, including 2.4 million displaced inside Iraq and 2 million outside -- mainly in Syria and Jordan. In addition, more than 41,000 non-Iraqi refugees are in Iraq.

"The international community needs to provide more support to Iraqis themselves through the programmes that assist Iraqi refugees in Syria, Jordan and other host countries," he said.

"Up until now the international assistance has been out of proportion to the challenges that these countries face."

The High Commissioner also asked governments to increase the number of resettlement places for vulnerable refugees. "Some Iraqi families will not be able to go back to their country because they have been tortured or family members were all killed or because of some other situations," he said. "The number of resettlement opportunities for the most vulnerable is very important."

Mr. Guterres urged the Iraqi Government to reach out to its uprooted population, noting that they were not typical refugees fleeing persecution but, rather, escaping generalized violence.

"They need to feel that their government is supporting them and assisting them in the difficult conditions they are facing today," he said. "My appeal to the Iraqi government is for stronger engagement with Iraqis in Syria and Jordan and with the governments of neighbouring countries."

Mr. Guterres said UNHCR had clear global criteria on the conditions needed for the voluntary return of refugees which " are not met by the situation in Iraq now."

The agency is not promoting returns to Iraq in the present circumstances "because we do not believe the conditions are there for it to be possible on a meaningful scale," he said.

"That does not mean we cannot support people to go back if they decide to do so in the present circumstances. In our operations around the world we see that people are willing to go home even in the most dramatic circumstances."

The High Commissioner, who left Damascus for the Syrian town of Aleppo on Thursday evening, has also met top Government officials in both countries, talked to refugees and reviewed UNHCR operations. He has sought to assure Governments in the region of UNHCR's continued commitment to, and engagement in, efforts to ease the plight of Iraq's displaced.

UNHCR this year has appealed for $261 million for programmes to support the most vulnerable of the uprooted inside and outside Iraq.

2008-02-15 00:00:00.000


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Thursday, February 14, 2008

LOW-CARBON ECONOMY 'MAKES GOOD BUSINESS SENSE,' BAN KI-MOON TELLS INVESTORS

LOW-CARBON ECONOMY 'MAKES GOOD BUSINESS SENSE,' BAN KI-MOON TELLS INVESTORS New York, Feb 14 2008 7:00PM Transitioning to a low-carbon economy will not only help to combat climate change, but also promises to bring huge returns for investors, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told global business leaders.

"You are here today because you recognize climate change as an opportunity as well as a threat," Mr. Ban told the large gathering at UN Headquarters in New York which brought together 450 participants, who together control $10-15 trillion in investment capital. "You understand that the shift to a low-carbon economy opens new revenue streams and creates new markets."

He <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11416.doc.htm">urged the investors to lead efforts to finance the technological innovation necessary for a shift to a green economy.

"The carbon market makes good business sense – it has doubled in size to $60 billion in the past year alone – and it makes good moral sense," the Secretary-General, who has made climate change one of his top priorities since taking office last January, said at a dinner held last night.

The Investor Summit on Climate Risk, which was organized by the UN Fund for International Partnerships (UNFIP), the UN Foundation (UN Foundation) and Ceres, a network of investors and public interest groups that promotes green issues, aimed to provide a high-level forum for investment leaders to discuss the scale and urgency of climate change risks.

Attendees included leading institutional investors, financial services firms and United States state treasurers.

Alex Sink, the Chief Financial Officer of Florida, told reporters that his state is "at risk from climate change," but voiced his determination to tackle the issue.

"There is a financial imperative and it grew out of an environmental concern," he noted.

The Treasurer of California underscored the strong links between environmental sustainability and profitability.

"We have to be clean, green and sustainable," Bill Lockyer said at the same press briefing.

Yesterday, a three-day General Assembly event on climate change wrapped up with the body's President Srgjan Kerim emphasizing the importance of global partnerships and the need to define a clear global strategy to stemming the impacts of global warming.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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VISITING RAMALLAH, UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF VOICES SOLIDARITY WITH SUFFERING PEOPLE

VISITING RAMALLAH, UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF VOICES SOLIDARITY WITH SUFFERING PEOPLE New York, Feb 14 2008 6:00PM The United Nations humanitarian chief has opened his first official trip to the occupied Palestinian territory and Israel with a visit to the West Bank town of Ramallah, which he described as an act of solidarity with the suffering people of the region.

Mr. Holmes, the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, said many people in the Gaza Strip – which has been the subject of tight Israeli restrictions over the past month – were hovering on the brink of a humanitarian disaster.

Meanwhile, closures in the West Bank were destroying economic life there, Mr. Holmes said, and in the Israeli town of Sderot, the target of frequent rocket attacks by Palestinian militants in Gaza, communities were living in fear of rocket barrages.

The Under-Secretary-General, who is on a five-day visit to the region, stressed that the present situation cannot continue.

Mr. Holmes plans to visit two Gaza border crossings, both currently closed, tomorrow. He is also scheduled to visit a hospital that is finding it difficult to provide adequate medical care because of the reduced fuel, electricity, medicines and other supplies to Gaza.

In a related development, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon sent a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11418.doc.htm">message to today's opening at UN Headquarters in New York of the latest session of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People.

Mr. Ban said in his message – delivered on his behalf by his chief of staff Vijay Nambiar – that Israel's decision to introduce a full closure of the Gaza Strip last month "has cut off an already destitute population of Gaza from vitally needed supplies.

"The recent breach of the border between Gaza and Egypt showed the degree of desperation among ordinary Gazans, as thousands crossed into Egypt in search of food and basic daily necessities."

The Secretary-General reminded Israel of its obligations under international law towards Gaza's civilian population. He said those obligations included the laws of occupation, "which continue to apply to the extent of Israel's control over the territory and its population."

Mr. Ban also noted that he has repeatedly called on Palestinian groups to stop firing rockets at Israeli civilians and on Israel to show maximum restraint in its military operations and avoid a disproportionate response.

"It is the responsibility of all parties to adhere to their obligations under international humanitarian law and not to harm civilians."

In addition, Mr. Ban backed the proposal of the Palestinian Authority to operate the Gaza Strip, and said a restoration of "the unity of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank within the legitimate framework of the Palestinian Authority" was critical for a viable peace accord between Israelis and Palestinians.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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BAN KI-MOON APPOINTS RAY CHAMBERS AS SPECIAL ENVOY FOR MALARIA

BAN KI-MOON APPOINTS RAY CHAMBERS AS SPECIAL ENVOY FOR MALARIA New York, Feb 14 2008 5:00PM With two children dying each minute from malaria, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sga1118.doc.htm">announced the appointment of Ray Chambers of the United States as his Special Envoy to mobilize global support for action on the disease.

"Mr. Chambers will help the Secretary-General to raise the issue of malaria on the international political and development agendas including by doing all in his power to reduce child deaths from the disease," a spokesperson for Mr. Ban said.

A philanthropist and humanitarian, Mr. Chambers is the Founding Chairman of the Points of Light Foundation and Co-Founder, with Colin Powell, of America's Promise - The Alliance for Youth.

Speaking to reporters in New York, Mr. Chambers recalled the dawning of his understanding about the tragedies caused by malaria through Jeffrey Sachs, the Secretary-General Special Adviser on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of antipoverty targets to be reached by the year 2015.

Mr. Chambers remembered the moment when Mr. Sachs showed him a photograph of some children he thought were sleeping. "I said, 'Aren't they cute?' And he said, 'You don't understand; they are all in malaria comas.' They subsequently died, and I've never been able to get that rid of that image."

Since then, he studied the disease, which kills millions each year despite being preventable in what Mr. Chambers called "a genocide of apathy."

He reviewed recent initiatives to galvanize action on the issue, including "Idol Gives Back," a charity event by the "American Idol" televised talent competition, which raised $80 million for malaria and other causes. "We're going to do that again this April," said Mr. Chambers.

He said efforts would be made to raise $8 billion to $10 billion in the coming years to address malaria, he said. With that budget and concerted action, it would be possible to significantly cut mortality rates.

"That won't eradicate malaria," he said, adding that a longer-term plan to achieve a vaccine would take perhaps decades.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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AT UN ANTI-TRAFFICKING FORUM, PARTICIPANTS RAISE AWARENESS OF TAINTED GOODS

AT UN ANTI-TRAFFICKING FORUM, PARTICIPANTS RAISE AWARENESS OF TAINTED GOODS New York, Feb 14 2008 5:00PM As couples celebrated Valentine's Day around the world with gifts of chocolate and cut flowers, participants at a United Nations forum in Vienna on human trafficking today worked to raise awareness of how the problem is tied to these commodities.

Behind the romantic gestures of roses and chocolate "is often a chain of trafficked human beings delivering disposable commodities to affluent consumers. Many are children toiling in inhumane conditions or women trapped in near-slavery," the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/upset-hearts.html">UNODC) said in a news release issued in conjunction with the Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking.

Conference participants wore upturned heart lapel badges called the "upset heart" as a sign of solidarity with the victims. Their aim was to raise consciousness and affect the buying decisions of consumers just as the "blood diamond" and Fair Trade certifications have fostered ethical choices on diamonds. The campaign was also the subject of a press conference at UN Headquarters in New York this week.

"Take exploitation out of your bottom line," said UNODC Antonio Maria Costa in his opening speech to the Vienna Forum yesterday. "Make sure that the supply chain is not tainted by blood, sweat and tears of modern slaves."

"On this Valentine's Day, spare a thought for those whose lives have been turned upside down by human trafficking," he said.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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UN BACKS OVER ONE DOZEN WOMEN IN LARGEST ALL-FEMALE EVEREST EXPEDITION

UN BACKS OVER ONE DOZEN WOMEN IN LARGEST ALL-FEMALE EVEREST EXPEDITION New York, Feb 14 2008 5:00PM In the largest all-female expedition to Mount Everest ever, 13 courageous Nepali women representing the range of the Asian country's castes and ethnicities, backed by the United Nations, will attempt to reach the world's highest peak this Spring.

The women hope to draw attention to the impact of climate change on the Himalayas, as well as inspire and encourage other women through their endeavour to work together to achieve their goals. Since Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa reached the summit in 1953, only seven Nepali have successfully completed the ascent to the peak.

So far, the UN Development Programme (<"http://www.undp.org/">UNDP) and the UN World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?n=31">WFP) have raised one quarter of the $200,000 needed for the group, called the First Inclusive Women Sagarmatha Expedition 2008.

"We hope the efforts of this unique expedition will inspire women across Nepal to reach for their dreams – dreams to become doctors, teachers or even mountaineers," said Richard Ragan, WFP Representative in Nepal.

One of the climbers, Nimdoma Sherpa, received WFP food at school as a child.

"It is amazing to think about how far I have come," she said. "WFP was there to motivate me to begin my schooling and is now supporting me and this amazing group of women from across Nepal to achieve our dream of reaching the top of the world."

Expectations are high that the group will return with data on how global warming has affected Mount Everest from top to bottom.

"We hope that their observations will provide additional ideas on how to ecologically better manage and preserve this unique tourist and world heritage site," said Anne-Isabelle Degryse-Blateau, UNDP Country Director in Nepal.

The climbing leader of the team – organized exclusively by women, including the coordinator, technical experts, kitchen staff and mule drivers – will be Pemba Dorje Sherpa, who holds the record for the fastest ascent time for Mount Everest of eight hours and 10 minutes and is also a former WFP beneficiary.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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CIVIL UNREST IN KENYA PROJECTED TO IMPACT WORLD TEA PRICES - UN REPORT

CIVIL UNREST IN KENYA PROJECTED TO IMPACT WORLD TEA PRICES – UN REPORT New York, Feb 14 2008 5:00PM World tea prices are continuing to rise because of a tight global supply worsened by a projected 10 per cent decrease in production in Kenya, which has been rocked by civil unrest in recent months, a new report from the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (<"http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2008/1000784/index.html">FAO) says.

For many years, there was an oversupply of tea, but the FAO report says that prices increased by 11.6 per cent in 2006 and are expected to reflect a further 6.5 per cent rise in 2007.

World tea production grew by more than 3 per cent to reach an estimated 3.6 million tons in 2006, according to the latest available figures cited by the report.

Increases in China, India and Viet Nam should offset declines in major producing countries, according to the report.

The expansion was due to another record crop in China with 1.05 million tons and a record 28 per cent increase in output in Viet Nam, which pulled its production up to 133,000 tons.

An increase was also recorded in India, the second larger producer, where harvests were 3 per cent higher, totalling 945,000 tons for 2006.

Consumers are also drinking more tea, with consumption up by 1 per cent in 2006, reaching 3.64 million tons. Green tea appears to be gaining popularity; black tea production is projected to grow at 1.9 per cent annually while green tea production is expected to grow at a rate of 4.5 per cent.

FAO tea expert Kaison Chang called for strategies to improve demand. "Opportunities for an expansion in consumption and improvement in prices exist in producing countries themselves as per capita consumption levels are relatively low."

The report was prepared for the Global Dubai Tea Forum 2008, which opens next week with a focus on sharing industry-specific knowledge and best practices for improving tea production and marketing worldwide.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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GENERAL ASSEMBLY CLIMATE CHANGE DEBATE ENDS WITH CALL FOR GLOBAL COOPERATION

GENERAL ASSEMBLY CLIMATE CHANGE DEBATE ENDS WITH CALL FOR GLOBAL COOPERATION New York, Feb 14 2008 5:00PM The three-day General Assembly debate on climate changed <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/ga10690.doc.htm">wrapped up yesterday with the body's President issuing a <"http://www.un.org/ga/president/62/statements/closingremarksCC130208.shtml">call for increased global partnerships to tackle the issue.

The event – entitled "Addressing Climate Change: The United Nations and the World at Work" – was held at UN Headquarters in New York and included addresses by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg; panels featuring media, government and business leaders; and plenary meetings featuring 115 delegates.

What is evident is "that the actions necessary to address climate change are so intertwined that they can only be tackled through combined efforts," Assembly President Srgjan Kerim said in his closing remarks to the debate.

But despite the importance of partnerships, he underscored that individuals can also make a difference in the battle against global warming.

"Small contributions add up," Mr. Kerim pointed out. "Many of our speakers made the case that we can all make a difference through simple changes to our daily behaviour."

He also spotlighted the link between addressing climate change and sustainable development, nothing the need for the creation of low-carbon economies which can in turn promote growth.

Last December's historic UN Climate Change Conference ended with 187 countries agreeing to launch a two-year process of formal negotiations on a successor pact to the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

The Assembly President said yesterday that much work remains to be done to tackle climate change, and expressed his intention to convene two further meetings to contemplate more specific global warming issues: one will consider the impact of climate change on vulnerable countries while the other will focus on corporate responsibility and sustainability.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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'WE HAVE LOST A VOICE,' BAN KI-MOON SAYS IN TRIBUTE TO LATE TOM LANTOS

'WE HAVE LOST A VOICE,' BAN KI-MOON SAYS IN TRIBUTE TO LATE TOM LANTOS New York, Feb 14 2008 5:00PM Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3002">paid tribute to the contributions of the late Congressman Tom Lantos at a memorial service held in Washington, DC, saying the world has "lost a voice" that speaks for the very principles of the United Nations.

Mr. Ban, who enjoyed a friendship with Mr. Lantos stemming from the former's days as Foreign Minister of the Republic of Korea, praised in particular his support for the UN.

"As for me personally, I will always remember all I learned from Chairman Lantos," said the Secretary-General, recalling that when he first visited Washington after taking the reins at the UN, Mr. Lantos "introduced me to people who could support me in my work."

The Secretary-General has also long known the California Congressman's wife. "When I visited him again in his office a few months ago, I had no time for lunch, so he and Annette gave me sandwiches as we worked, and he told me to consider his office my sanctuary on the Hill," Mr. Ban said.

The veteran United States legislator also survived the Holocaust, a fact which Mr. Ban alluded to, saying Mr. Lantos' had a voice "that stemmed from witnessing the worst in man confronted by the best in man. He knew what was possible, because he had lived through the unimaginable."

Mourning the passing of Mr. Lantos, the Secretary-General said, "We have lost a voice that binds us to the very reasons the United Nations was founded.

"Today, I am proud to stand among you and give thanks for Tom Lantos' valiant and incomparable life."

During his stay in the US capital, which extends through tomorrow, Mr. Ban will hold meetings with top officials, including President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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UN CHIEF HAILS CREATION OF NEW CENTRE ON 'RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT'

UN CHIEF HAILS CREATION OF NEW CENTRE ON 'RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT' New York, Feb 14 2008 4:00PM Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today welcomed the establishment in New York of the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, a doctrine that holds States responsible for shielding their own populations from genocide and other major human rights abuses and requires the international community to step in if this obligation is not met.

"The birth of this new initiative holds great promise in supporting the endeavours of the international community to take the principle of the responsibility to protect from concept to actuality, from word to deed," said Mr. Ban in a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3000">statement delivered by Vijay Nambiar, the Secretary-General's Chief of Staff.

"You will help ensure that the responsibility to protect is known, understood and enjoyed by everyone, everywhere," he said, pointing out that those who most need their rights protected often also need to be informed that the obligation exists for them.

The new Centre is housed at the Ralph Bunche Institute for International Affairs of the CUNY Graduate Center named for the late UN Under-Secretary-General and 1950 Nobel Peace Laureate.

The Secretary-General called the responsibility to protect, sometimes known as 'R2P,' "a solemn commitment by the international community" and a "profound moral imperative in today's world."

Working together, he said that "we can deliver on the promise of the responsibility to protect, and we can transform this idea from an abstract obligation into what it truly is: one of humanity's highest calling."
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COLOMBIA AND UN FOOD AGENCY JOIN FORCES TO HELP OVER HALF A MILLION DISPLACED

COLOMBIA AND UN FOOD AGENCY JOIN FORCES TO HELP OVER HALF A MILLION DISPLACED New York, Feb 14 2008 4:00PM The United Nations World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?ModuleID=137&Key=2770">WFP) has launched a $157 million joint operation with the Colombian Government to provide food and other humanitarian assistance to more than 530,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the South American country over the next three years.

Starting in April, the programme will provide assistance through a series of projects, including school feeding, food for training, food for work and food assistance for both vulnerable communities at high risk of displacement and for host communities for IDPs.

WFP is already helping over 500,000 people across Colombia each year, drawing on its network of 10 field offices to support families and individuals who been forced to flee their homes because of long-running fighting between Government forces, rebels and paramilitary groups or attacks against civilians by armed groups.

The agency said in a press statement issued in Bogotá today that the new programme will be the largest international cooperation scheme for IDPs ever developed by a UN agency in Colombia.

Praveen Agrawal, the agency's country director in Colombia, said "the unanimous support for the implementation of these activities is not only the result of the excellent relationship between WFP and the Colombian Government, but also testament to the positive results WFP has achieved in the country during the last few years."

To finance the programme WFP will appeal to international donors for $93 million and the Colombian Government has pledged to contribute $64 million.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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US MORTGAGE CRISIS, RISING PRICES SPELL FINANCIAL TURMOIL - ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT

US MORTGAGE CRISIS, RISING PRICES SPELL FINANCIAL TURMOIL – ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT New York, Feb 14 2008 4:00PM The sub-prime mortgage market collapse in the United States, rising oil and commodity prices and other factors could combine to hamper the economies of developing countries, the President of the United Nations General Assembly said today.

Srgjan Kerim recalled that in the last quarter of 2007, macroeconomic and fiscal management had improved in many developing countries, creating higher savings, investments and consumer demand. Expenditures on social programmes went up while extreme poverty went down – but globally inequality was still rising, he said.

"Since then, the fall-out from the collapse of the US sub-prime mortgage market has spilled over into global equity and bond markets, eroding confidence in the financial system," Mr. Kerim told the Assembly.

"In addition, high oil and commodity prices, particularly in the agricultural sector, and rising global imbalances are storing up inflationary pressures."

Mr. Kerim made his comments as the General Assembly began the first of six review sessions on the "Monterrey Consensus," a 2002 agreement by which developing countries took primary responsibility for mobilizing domestic resources and developed countries agreed to promote an environment conducive to this effort.

The Assembly President warned that the ongoing financial turmoil could reduce "demand in developed countries with significant spillovers into emerging markets and developing countries."

At the same time, he noted that markets in developing counties have continued to expand. "Overall, developing countries have benefited from strong domestic demand, better governance, more disciplined economic management, and in the case of commodity exporters, from high food and energy prices."

But he said that unless growth is translated into human development that creates opportunities and benefits for all, "growing inequality and the sheer scales of global poverty will create destabilizing economic and political pressures in many countries."

Addressing climate change is central to ensuring sustainable economic development and poverty reduction, he said, adding that "its policy implications also embrace issues of equity, ethics, human rights and security."

The Financing for Development process "has a special responsibility to support those countries most affected to adapt to climate change; and, to create incentives for investment in climate-friendly energy production, energy efficiency and new technologies to ensure that all the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are met – not at the cost of economic growth, but to achieve it."

The Assembly's meeting is being held in preparation for the conference to review the implementation of the Monterrey Consensus, to be held in Doha, Qatar, toward the end of this year.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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SECRETARY-GENERAL REMEMBERS HARIRI KILLING WITH CALL OF SOLIDARITY FOR LEBANON

SECRETARY-GENERAL REMEMBERS HARIRI KILLING WITH CALL OF SOLIDARITY FOR LEBANON New York, Feb 14 2008 3:00PM Marking the third anniversary of the Beirut bombing that killed Lebanon's former prime minister Rafiq Hariri and 22 others, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today expressed the United Nations' solidarity for the country's people and their Government, restating the world body's longstanding determination to help bring the perpetrators to justice.

"This solemn anniversary comes at a perilous moment for Lebanon," Mr. Ban said in a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11413.doc.htm">statement released by his spokesperson, adding "there could be no greater homage paid to the memory" of Mr. Hariri than for Lebanon's divided political forces "to redouble their efforts to achieve national reconciliation and to ensure… stability, security and prosperity."

For months Lebanon's parties have been unable to agree on a choice for president of the Middle East country, which has been hit by a wave of car bombings and other terrorist attacks during the past few years.

Mr. Ban said in the statement that he continues to prepare for the establishment of the Special Tribunal, as authorized by the Security Council, "convinced that impunity must not prevail and that the tribunal process cannot be reversed."

The Special Tribunal is tasked with trying those responsible for the assassination of Mr. Hariri and for other recent political killings in Lebanon. This week the Secretary-General set up a management committee for the court, which is to be based in the Netherlands. The committee, which will among other tasks provide advice and policy direction on all non-judicial aspects of the tribunal's operations, is composed of the body's main donors.

Today's statement emphasized the UN's commitment "to assist Lebanon in establishing the truth and in bringing to justice those who instigated, planned and executed this and other callous political assassinations and terrorist attacks in the country."
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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UN PREDICTS RISE IN GLOBAL CEREAL PRODUCTION BUT WARNS PRICES WILL REMAIN HIGH

UN PREDICTS RISE IN GLOBAL CEREAL PRODUCTION BUT WARNS PRICES WILL REMAIN HIGH New York, Feb 14 2008 3:00PM The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) today predicted a rise in world cereal production this year but warned that prices will remain at record levels and could even increase.

Greater anticipated production is resulting from winter grain plantings and good weather among major producers in Europe and in the United States, coupled with a generally satisfactory outlook elsewhere, according to FAO's latest Crop Prospects and Food Situation report.

But with dwindling stocks, continuing strong demand for cereals is keeping international prices high, despite a record world harvest last season, the report said. International wheat prices last month were 83 per cent higher than in January 2007.

Poor countries where food is scarce are expected to import less cereal but pay more, <"http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2008/1000783/index.html">FAO said. "Cereal imports for all Low-Income Food-Deficit countries in 2007-08 are forecast to decline by about 2 per cent in volume, but as a result of soaring international cereal prices and freight rates, their cereal import bill is projected to rise by 35 per cent for the second consecutive year," the agency said in a news release.

Worldwide, 36 countries are currently facing food crises, according to the report.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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BOLIVIA: UN AID AGENCIES BRING RELIEF IN WAKE OF DEADLY FLOODS

BOLIVIA: UN AID AGENCIES BRING RELIEF IN WAKE OF DEADLY FLOODS New York, Feb 14 2008 3:00PM United Nations humanitarian agencies are helping the survivors of floods sweeping across large swathes of Bolivia that have already claimed at least 52 lives and affected more than 55,000 families.

Nearly $2 million has been allocated from the UN's Central Emergency Response Fund (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/Default.aspx?alias=ochaonline.un.org/cerf">CERF) so that immediate life-saving programmes can be implemented in the worst affected areas, according to officials from the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA).

The Bolivian Government has declared a state of natural disaster in response to the floods, which follow protracted heavy rains in the landlocked Andean nation. The department of Beni in the northeast is by far the worst hit, but the departments of Cochabamba and Santa Cruz are also suffering. In total, some 24,000 hectares of arable land have been destroyed.

The World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/">WFP) is giving out 10 tons of high-energy biscuits while the UN Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) has provided at least 14,000 portions of baby food.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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TEMPORARY RELOCATION OF UN MISSION FROM ERITREA HAS BEGUN - BAN KI-MOON

TEMPORARY RELOCATION OF UN MISSION FROM ERITREA HAS BEGUN – BAN KI-MOON New York, Feb 14 2008 2:00PM The United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unmee/index.html">UNMEE) has begun temporary relocating personnel and equipment from Eritrea to sites on the Ethiopian side of the border because of fuel restrictions imposed by the Government in Asmara, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced today.

Mr. Ban said in a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=2997">statement that he "regrets that the relocation has become necessary despite the letter he addressed to President Isaias Afwerki of Eritrea on 21 January seeking his urgent intervention to resolve the situation."

Asmara cut off diesel fuel supplies to UNMEE last December, paralyzing the mission. Its advance units started moving by road on 11 February, while UNMEE's main body began its relocation earlier today.

"The Secretary-General stresses the important conflict prevention role UNMEE plays in promoting regional stability," the statement noted. "However, without the fuel needed to conduct its operations, the mission has been effectively immobilized and rendered unable to carry out its critical functions."

Thus far, some of the mission's convoys have been able to cross into Ethiopia without difficulty, while others have been stopped.

Yesterday, the UN Secretariat held talks with Eritrea's Permanent Representative regarding the relocation process.

UNMEE is also conferring with the country's authorities so that appropriate instructions are issued to Eritrean troops in the Temporary Security Zone (TSZ) and officials at crossing points to ensure the smooth movement of UN personnel and equipment.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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UNICEF WARNS 90,000 SOMALI CHILDREN COULD DIE WITHOUT INCREASED SUPPORT

UNICEF WARNS 90,000 SOMALI CHILDREN COULD DIE WITHOUT INCREASED SUPPORT New York, Feb 14 2008 1:00PM About 90,000 children in war-ravaged Somalia could die in the next few months without immediate supplementary nutrition and therapeutic feeding, an official with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said today, calling for stepped-up international support.

Due to a lack of adequate funding, the agency – which is urgently appealing for $10 million for nutritional, water and sanitation programmes – said it maybe be forced to close its nutritional centres and cease delivering drinking water in two weeks.

"If we cannot maintain the activities that we have been running up to now, you will see a crisis," said UNICEF's Christian Balslev-Olesen. "You will see many children dying, [although] hopefully not like the beginning of the 1990s where between 200,000 and 300,000 people died within a few months in Somalia."

Fighting has intensified in recent months in the Horn of Africa nation, which has not had a functioning government since 1991.

To date, UNICEF said that its $47 million appeal for humanitarian operations in Somalia has not received any funding.

Yesterday, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that there are up to 2 million vulnerable people in need of assistance in the country. In the capital Mogadishu, the number of people escaping the city to the poorest areas of the Horn of Africa nation has doubled to 700,000 in the last six months.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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FARMERS IN ARID DJIBOUTI TO BENEFIT FROM NEW UN SCHEME TO TRAP SURFACE WATER

FARMERS IN ARID DJIBOUTI TO BENEFIT FROM NEW UN SCHEME TO TRAP SURFACE WATER New York, Feb 14 2008 1:00PM The United Nations agency tasked with trying to reduce rural poverty is setting up an $11.6 million project to better capture and make use of surface water in Djibouti, the small Horn of Africa nation frequently beset by drought.

The new scheme aims to increase the average incomes of 6,000 households in three regions of Djibouti by 20 per cent, meet their drinking water and livestock water needs and boost nutritional standards, the International Fund for Agricultural Development (<"http://www.ifad.org/media/press/2008/14.htm">IFAD) said in a press release issued yesterday from its Rome headquarters.

The project will introduce two surface-water mobilization techniques to Djibouti, where about 50 per cent of the rural population has no access to water either for drinking or for the needs of their livestock and where underground water capacity has been used up.

In the first, small dams will be constructed in 10 selected sites across the country. In the second, cisterns, earth tanks and supplementary works for soil and water conservation will be built. There will also be reseeding and regeneration efforts in and around the Day Forest area and vocational training towards the making of forestry products will be supported.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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UN APPEALS FOR NEARLY $500 MILLION TO SLASH MATERNAL DEATHS IN 75 NATIONS

UN APPEALS FOR NEARLY $500 MILLION TO SLASH MATERNAL DEATHS IN 75 NATIONS New York, Feb 14 2008 12:00PM With a women dying every minute due to pregnancy or childbirth complications, the United Nations Population Fund (<"http://www.unfpa.org/news/news.cfm?ID=1098">UNFPA) today appealed for nearly half a billion dollars to save the lives of millions of women in 75 countries.

"No woman should die giving life," said Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, UNFPA's Executive Director. "To have a healthy society, you have to have healthy mothers."

There are up to half a million maternal deaths annually, and the agency hopes the $465 million it is calling for will support women in the neediest countries over the next four years.

Progress in the area of maternal health has been slow in many nations due to the lack of political will and inadequate resources.

Ms. Obaid urged countries to bolster their investment in national health systems by training birth attendants and promoting family planning. "Millions of deaths and disabilities could be prevented, if every woman had access to reproductive health services," she pointed out.

Improving maternal health by 2015 is also the fifth Millennium Development Goal (MDG).

The new thematic fund – established by UNFPA in collaboration with governments, other UN organizations and international partners – will help countries health systems' capacities to provide a wide range of maternal health services and empower women to exercise their right to maternal health.
2008-02-14 00:00:00.000


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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

SECURITY SECTOR REFORM DEPENDS ON NATIONAL WILL AND CAPACITY, UN REPORT SAYS

SECURITY SECTOR REFORM DEPENDS ON NATIONAL WILL AND CAPACITY, UN REPORT SAYS New York, Feb 13 2008 7:00PM Security sector reform in any country will not succeed unless there is commitment, leadership and capacity from key figures and institutions in that State, a new United Nations report says.

The Secretary-General's report, <i>Securing Peace and Development: the role of the United Nations in supporting security sector reform</i>, stresses that while the UN has much experience helping nations reform their security sector, "there are no quick fixes for establishing effective and accountable security institutions" and any effective strategy would depend on willing and able national partners.

"Where a genuine will to build effective and accountable security does not exist or where there is no basic agreement between national actors on the objectives and the approach for national security arrangements, the potential contribution of the United Nations – and other partners – is limited at best," according to the report.

But it says the UN can contribute by elaborating basic principles and standards and by ensuring there is responsible and sustained international backing for the efforts of struggling countries to reform their security sector.

"By virtue of its mandate, legitimacy and presence, the United Nations can support national actors, particularly in post-conflict environments, to make informed security choices that are conducive to long-term development, sustainable peace and democratic governance."

The <"http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=s/2008/39">report notes that the UN is already helping many countries, especially through its mediation, peacekeeping, peacebuilding and development functions.

It also recommends the formation of appropriate field capacities at the UN to ensure more coherent and integrated implementation of security sector reform, the designation of lead entities for the delivery of effective support and the development of strategic advisory and specialist capacities.

The landmark report has been prepared following requests last year from the Security Council and General Assembly and is the result of consultations with regional groups and other stakeholders inside and outside the UN system.

Marking the report's release, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Jean-Marie Guéhenno said the UN's support of security sector reform has until now been largely ad hoc.

"We need to build a system-wide approach, as well as the capacities and resources required to deliver this support," he said.

Assistant Secretary-General Kathleen Cravero, Director of the Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery at the UN Development Programme (<"http://www.undp.org/">UNDP), said the UN has learned that security sector reform (SSR) will only work if it based on the rule of law, human rights and gender equality.

"Effective governance and civilian oversight of the security sector are essential," she added.

Kemal Dervis, the Administrator of UNDP, noted that security issues should no longer be viewed as the exclusive concern of security professionals.

"We know now that an inefficient and unaccountable security sector can be a major obstacle to democratic governance and can undermine the implementation of poverty reduction strategies," he said.

Assistant Secretary-General Dmitry Titov of the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) said a new phase in UN support for SSR "could help us all to accelerate much-needed reforms in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Haiti, Timor-Leste and other post-conflict societies."
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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UN FORUM HEARS CALLS FOR MEASURES TO COMBAT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

UN FORUM HEARS CALLS FOR MEASURES TO COMBAT HUMAN TRAFFICKING New York, Feb 13 2008 6:00PM Policy makers and celebrities today joined their voices in calling for action against human trafficking, as the first-ever global United Nations forum on the problem opened in Vienna.

Antonio Maria Costa, the Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/this-is-not-a-journey-that-anyone-should-take.html">UNODC), and the pop star Ricky Martin received a petition from the group "Stop the Traffik" signed by 1.5 million persons calling for action on the issue.

Mr. Costa <"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/tracking-a-monster.html">accused law enforcement authorities around the world of demonstrating "benign neglect" and appealed for coordinated action to fight the "monster" of human trafficking.

He said efforts to carry out the provisions of the UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons have been disjointed, with "victims often prosecuted for their illegal status; interdiction operations limited; few arrests, with inadequate retribution."

He said the Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking (UN.GIFT), launched to facilitate implementation of the Protocol, has begun a process of collecting scientific evidence about the extent of this crime while building up profiles of traffickers and their networks. It is also working on enhancing witness protection. In addition, measures are being taken to examine the causes of victims' vulnerability and to strengthen prevention.

Mr. Costa described some "uncomfortable truths" about the problem, which can involve children in conflicts, girls sold by their family into brothels, women enslaved into sex parlours, men in bondage "in southern plantations or northern sweat shops" and kids enslaved to beg in Europe and North America. Children are also sometimes forced to use "their nimble fingers to produce luxury goods."

He urged all segments of society to join forces against the scourge, while calling for contributions to the UN account to fight human trafficking.

But Mr. Costa cautioned that "money and goodwill are not enough; we need concrete actions that will reduce vulnerability and make this crime a riskier business." Toward that end, he said the Forum must adopt practical measures that will stop traffickers and help victims.

A chorus of voices joined Mr. Costa in decrying the problem. "Human trafficking is a vicious violation of human rights; it has no place in our world and I beg you to act now," said the Grammy Award-winning Mr. Martin.

Suzanne Mubarak, the First Lady of Egypt and President of her eponymous International Peace Movement, also decried the problem, calling human trafficking "a pervasive cancer."

"We simply cannot tolerate human beings being bought, sold and hired like commodities," Ursula Plassnik, Minister for European and International Affairs of the Republic of Austria. "Each and every one of us is being called upon to act."

Emma Thompson, Oscar-winning actress and Chair of the Helen Bamber Foundation, who yesterday opened an art installation in Vienna mapping the journey of a trafficking victim, told the Forum the harrowing story of a Moldovan woman who was trafficked to the United Kingdom and forced to work as a prostitute.

The Vienna Forum to Fight Human Trafficking is bringing together 1,200 experts, legislators, law enforcement teams, business leaders, NGO representatives and trafficking victims from 116 countries.

In a related development, UNODC today launched a manual aimed at helping countries develop comprehensive programmes for the protection of victims and witnesses of crime.
Witness protection programmes are considered a key tool in the dismantling of human trafficking networks as well as combating other forms of organized crime.

The manual, <i>Good Practices in the Protection of Witnesses in Criminal Proceedings Involving Organized Crime</i>, calls for early identification of vulnerable and intimidated witnesses; management of witnesses by the police; protection of witness identity during court testimony; and, if necessary, permanent relocation and re-identification.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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MYANMAR: SECRETARY-GENERAL CONVENES 'GROUP OF FRIENDS' MEETING

MYANMAR: SECRETARY-GENERAL CONVENES 'GROUP OF FRIENDS' MEETING New York, Feb 13 2008 6:00PM Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today convened a meeting of the 14 Member States known as the "Group of Friends" to review developments in Myanmar, where the Government forcefully cracked down on peaceful protesters last year.

The Group of Friends – comprising Australia, China, France, India, Indonesia, Japan, Norway, Russia, Singapore, Thailand, the United Kingdom, the United States, Vietnam and Slovenia (as holder of the European Union presidency) – met today for the second time following their first gathering last December.

Mr. Ban's Special Adviser Ibrahim Gambari plans to travel to the region shortly, and will visit Beijing from 18-19 February, followed by stops in Jakarta and Singapore.

Earlier this week, the Secretary-General called on Myanmar to ensure that the constitutional referendum scheduled to be held in May represents the views of all of the South-East Asian nation's people.

He "renews his call to the Myanmar authorities to make the constitution-making process inclusive, participatory and transparent in order to ensure that any draft constitution is broadly representative of the views of all the people of Myanmar," according to a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11409.doc.htm">statement issued by his spokesperson.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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MEMORIAL FOR US POLITICIAN, MODEL UN ON BAN KI-MOON'S WASHINGTON ITINERARY

MEMORIAL FOR US POLITICIAN, MODEL UN ON BAN KI-MOON'S WASHINGTON ITINERARY New York, Feb 13 2008 6:00PM During his two-day visit to Washington D.C. beginning tomorrow, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will attend a memorial service for United States Congressman Tom Lantos and address high school students at a Model United Nations gathering, a spokesperson announced today, adding to an agenda that already includes meetings with top officials.

Earlier this week in a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/sgsm11410.doc.htm">statement, Mr. Ban mourned the passing of "his friend Tom Lantos, the veteran United States legislator, Holocaust survivor, human rights advocate and long-time supporter of the United Nations."

The Secretary-General will be present at the service for the Californian, with whom he shared a friendship dating back to Mr. Ban's days as foreign minister of the Republic of Korea.

Afterwards, he will meet with representatives of UN agencies in the capital city as well as speak to students attending the North American International Model UN organized by Georgetown University.

Tomorrow, the Secretary-General will hold talks with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice tomorrow before his meeting on Friday with President George W. Bush, with whom he will discuss climate change, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), human rights, counterterrorism and issues in regions such as Darfur, Kenya, the Middle East, Iraq, Kosovo and Afghanistan.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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VIOLENCE PUTS SOME 2 MILLION PEOPLE IN SOMALIA AT RISK, SAYS UN

VIOLENCE PUTS SOME 2 MILLION PEOPLE IN SOMALIA AT RISK, SAYS UN New York, Feb 13 2008 5:00PM The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA) reports that there are up to 2 million vulnerable people in need of humanitarian aid in war-wracked Somalia, which has not had a functioning government since 1991 and where fighting has intensified in recent months.

In the capital Mogadishu, the number of people escaping the city to the poorest areas of the Horn of Africa nation has doubled to 700,000 in the last six months.

At the same time, UN spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters in New York the "constrained movement of aid workers" is causing concern.

The transport and delivery of crucial items such as food is being impeded by roadblocks, taxes and banditry, which are also responsible for a surge in numbers of people needing assistance.

In late January, three staff members of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)–Holland were killed in the southern port city of Kismayo when their car was hit by a roadside bomb outside the town of Kismayo. A Somali journalist, Hassan Kafi Hared, as well as a Somali boy, were also reportedly killed in the blast.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF TO MAKE FIRST VISIT TO OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY, ISRAEL

UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF TO MAKE FIRST VISIT TO OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY, ISRAEL New York, Feb 13 2008 5:00PM The United Nations' top humanitarian official will travel to Jerusalem tomorrow to start his first official visit to the occupied Palestinian territory and Israel.

John Holmes, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, will make field trips to the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and the Israeli town of Sderot during the five-day trip.

Mr. Holmes is also scheduled to meet senior officials, UN staff, representatives of aid agencies and members of the donor and diplomatic community.

In its latest report on the situation there, covering the week leading up to 6 February, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), reported that the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) killed four Palestinians and injured a dozen others in the Gaza Strip.

Thirty-four rockets and 13 mortar shells were fired towards Israel. As a result, three Israelis, including one woman, were injured, OCHA said.

In the West Bank, the IDF injured 21 Palestinians, including six children and one woman. Two Palestinian men from Hebron City carried out a suicide bombing in the Israeli city of Dimona, killing one Israeli woman and injuring six others, according to the report.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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ARMED ATTACKS BY UNIDENTIFIED GROUP IN SOUTHERN SUDAN CONCERN UN OFFICIALS

ARMED ATTACKS BY UNIDENTIFIED GROUP IN SOUTHERN SUDAN CONCERN UN OFFICIALS New York, Feb 13 2008 4:00PM Members of an unidentified armed group have launched a series of violent attacks against locals in southern Sudan's Central Equatoria state over the past month, prompting United Nations officials to organize the distribution of basic relief supplies to the affected population in the already impoverished region.

The UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) reports that the attacks have taken place across three counties in Central Equatoria, which borders Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), since mid-January.

All the attacks have been characterized by violence, looting and abductions, although some of the people abducted were released subsequently. So far there is no confirmed toll of deaths or injuries.

<"http://www.unmis.org/">UNMIS says locals claim the attacks are being carried out by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), the notorious rebel group that has been fighting Government forces across northern Uganda for the past two decades.

UN spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters today that several UN humanitarian agencies, including the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (<"http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home">UNHCR) and the UN Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF), have committed to distributing basic supplies to the affected populations.

The World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/">WFP) has also undertaken to deliver supplies as soon as the agency, which is undertaking an assessment, has a clearer picture of the security situation in Central Equatoria.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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SAUDI ARABIAN WOMEN NEED SUPPORT TO HELP ADVANCE SOCIETY - UN EXPERT

SAUDI ARABIAN WOMEN NEED SUPPORT TO HELP ADVANCE SOCIETY – UN EXPERT New York, Feb 13 2008 4:00PM An independent United Nations expert today hailed progress in Saudi Arabia on advancing the status of women but urged more action to prevent gender-based violence and raise their profile in public life.

"Women of Saudi Arabia, in full respect of their societal values, appear ready to embark on a new stage of engagement in contributing to the advancement of their society and that of the coming generations of women and men," the Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women, its Causes and Consequences, Yakin Ertürk, said in a <"http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/view01/8CC2308714A0566CC12573EE0062286B?opendocument">statement after visiting the country from 4 to 13 February.

"Supporting them on their endeavour requires vision, courage, leadership and a firm commitment from the highest levels of the state and the involvement of all sectors of government in consultation with civil society actors."

The expert stressed the variety of experiences among Saudi women. "There were those who have expressed contentment and satisfaction with their lives. Others have raised concerns of serious levels of discriminatory practices against women that compromise their rights and dignity as full human beings and undermine the true values of their society. And still others shared with me the domestic abuse they systematically encounter with little prospects for redress."

She noted a number of positive developments, particularly improvements in women's access to education, but said this has not been met with a comparable increase in their labour force participation. "Women are particularly excluded from decision making positions," she observed, while adding that the private sector, on the other hand, "appears to offer women potential for greater autonomous space for self actualization."

Some professional women and officials said the policy of sex segregation at the work-place constrains them, while others argued that the creation of private sections for women in public space fosters greater participation.

"Whatever the preferred modality may be, the infrastructure for women's equal participation in all government institutions and private businesses needs to be set in place and women's participation in decision making processes needs to be ensured," Ms. Ertürk said.

She hailed the recent demystification of the taboo around violence against women, praising a number of State initiatives to address the problem and promote awareness raising, referral, and care and protection for victims of violence, including access to shelters.

At the same time, the Special Rapporteur said women are prevented from escaping abusive environments because of their lack of autonomy and economic independence, practices surrounding divorce and child custody, the absence of a law criminalizing violence against women, and inconsistencies in the application of laws and procedures.

The lack of written laws governing private life "constitutes a major obstacle to women's access to justice," she said.

Women's freedom is also restricted by misconceptions and ambiguities with respect to the system of male guardianship the country, which has an impact on marriage, divorce, child custody, inheritance, property ownership and decision-making in family matters, education and employment, she added.

Members of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice "reportedly often act independently and are accountable only to the governor." As a result, they are "said to be responsible for serious human rights abuses in harassing, threatening and arresting women who 'deviate from accepted norms.'"

The expert recommended the adoption of a legal framework based on international human rights standards, the establishment of robust and independent institutions, and measures to foster women's empowerment through participation in all spheres of society.

She also called for training and awareness-raising measures aimed at law enforcement officials, the judiciary, health-care providers, social workers, community leaders and the general public, "to increase the understanding that all forms of violence against women are not only grave violations of fundamental rights but are also totally incompatible with the values cherished by the Muslim society."

Her visit, at the invitation of the Government, included stops in Riyadh, Buridah, Jeddah and Dammam. She met with Government officials, the head of the Shura Council and representatives of various segments of the society, including academia, human rights organizations, family protection centres, women's groups, victims of violence, and women at a prison, as well as representatives of the diplomatic community.

She voiced appreciation for the Governments' cooperation and assistance and said she would submit a full report to the Human Rights Council.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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SECRETARY-GENERAL URGES STEPPED-UP ACTION TO HELP WORLD'S POOREST PEOPLE

SECRETARY-GENERAL URGES STEPPED-UP ACTION TO HELP WORLD'S POOREST PEOPLE New York, Feb 13 2008 3:00PM Repeating his call for 2008 to be the year to address the plight of the "bottom billion" – the poorest of the world's poor – Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today said that efforts to tackle poverty, especially in the realm of agriculture, must be stepped up.

"This must be the year the international community renews its commitment to the needs of the weak, the disadvantaged, those who have been excluded from the mainstream of global society," he said in a <"http://www.ifad.org/events/gc/31/speech/sg.htm">message to the <"http://www.ifad.org/events/gc/31/index.htm">Governing Council of the UN International Fund for Agricultural Development (<"http://www.ifad.org/">IFAD) in Rome.

Meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – especially halving poverty and hunger by 2015 – is crucial to assist the world's poorest, the Secretary-General noted.

Climate change poses challenge to development, undermining "both existing advances while threatening future gains," he observed, by disrupting agricultural production and potentially causing severe food crises.

Mr. Ban lauded the work of IFAD, the UN's rural development arm, for its work in supporting smallholder farmers and others.

"Over its 30 years IFAD has supported programmes to reduce poverty directly in rural areas, where three quarters of the world's poorest live," he said. "It has also generated many insights and models that can provide guidance to all concerned with the eradication of poverty.

The agency's head appealed for greater global investment to help the plight of the poverty-stricken, most of whom live in rural areas and depend on agriculture, to help them address the "triple scourge of poverty, climate change and rising food prices."

Speaking at the gathering attended by delegates from IFAD's 164 Member States, its President Lennart Båge emphasized that "poor rural people are often powerless but they are not irrelevant."

Poor nations' spending on agriculture has dropped dramatically over the past three decades, with development aid for the sector also falling from 18 per cent of total assistance in 1979 to less than 3 per cent in 2006.

Mr. Båge also voiced concerns about climate change, which will impact the poorest – who are least responsible for the problem – the most. "Put simply, the price of development just went up. Substantial and additional money will be needed to help poor countries adapt to climate change and make our investments 'climate-proof,'" he noted.
2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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IN JORDAN, UN'S TOP REFUGEE OFFICIAL THANKS KING FOR HOSTING UPROOTED IRAQIS

IN JORDAN, UN'S TOP REFUGEE OFFICIAL THANKS KING FOR HOSTING UPROOTED IRAQIS New York, Feb 13 2008 8:00AM The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, currently on a weeklong mission to the Middle East to spotlight the plight of uprooted Iraqis, in Jordan thanked King Abdullah II for his country's generosity in hosting more than half a million of them.

António Guterres said the international community must to recognize the huge burden borne by host countries, particularly Jordan and neighbouring Syria, and do more to ease that load.

The High Commissioner, who arrived in Amman on Monday, also met Tuesday with Prime Minister Nader Dahabi and other senior officials before scheduled travel to the Syrian capital of Damascus.

UNHCR and its partners estimate that out of a total population of 26 million, some 4.4 million Iraqis are still uprooted, including 2.4 million displaced inside Iraq and 2 million outside, mainly in Syria and Jordan. In addition, more than 41,000 non-Iraqi refugees are in Iraq, including Palestinians, Iranians, Turks and others.

The agency this year has appealed for $261 million for programmes to support the most vulnerable of the uprooted inside and outside Iraq.

UNHCR has been assisting internally displaced Iraqis, but said in a news release that getting help to many of them is "extremely difficult" because of prevailing insecurity.

Last year, UNHCR registered more than 250,000 Iraqis in neighbouring states; gave health assistance to some 210,000 cases and provided educational support in Syria, Jordan and other countries that enabled tens of thousands of refugee children to attend school. Under the 2008 appeal, UNHCR has set a target of bringing the total to 200,000 children in school by the end of this year.

In addition, the agency is providing direct assistance to vulnerable families, including a project that provides cash cards for limited monthly withdrawals. Together with the World Food Programme (WFP), UNHCR will provide food for up to 360,000 Iraqi refugees in Syria this year. In both Syria and Jordan the refugee agency is distributing items such as blankets, heaters, mattresses and other support items.

It is also conducting a resettlement programme for the most vulnerable Iraqis.

2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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UN FOOD AGENCY TEAMS UP WITH PARTNERS TO IMPROVE EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS

UN FOOD AGENCY TEAMS UP WITH PARTNERS TO IMPROVE EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS New York, Feb 13 2008 8:00AM The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) today announced the creation of a global partnership with the Vodafone Group Foundation and the UN Foundation aimed at increasing the effectiveness of information and communications technology (ICT) response to major emergencies around the world.

With a $4.3 million commitment from The Vodafone Group Foundation-United Nations Foundation Technology Partnership as well as a further $1.8 million contribution from the WFP, the initiative will develop the first-ever ICT training programme which will be open to the global community of humanitarian relief organizations, the food agency said in a news release.

"Over the next three years, this partnership will help contribute to our work to help save millions of lives," said Josette Sheeran, WFP's Executive Director. "Better telecommunications mean we can respond faster and more efficiently, with much greater access to those in urgent need."

She added that WFP was greatly encouraged that The Vodafone Group Foundation and UN Foundation recognized that telecommunications are essential to food aid convoys, aircraft and medical teams delivering vital relief assistance.

The focus of the partnership will be to standardize ICT solutions used by global aid organizations to speed the ability to set up critical communications networks in the immediate aftermath of a humanitarian crisis. Other aspects planned for the next three years include supporting the immediate deployment of rapid response ICT teams.

Kathy Bushkin Calvin, Chief Operating Officer of the United Nations Foundation, pinted out that in 2007, aid groups responded to 19 major crises worldwide. "By investing in disaster response before disaster strikes, and by opening this partnership to the entire relief community, we know that this will help strengthen everyone's efforts on the ground."

The programme builds on funding provided by the two Foundations in 2006 to research and develop ICT best practices.

2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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AS TEMPERATURES DIP IN TAJIKISTAN, UNICEF RUSHES IN AID

AS TEMPERATURES DIP IN TAJIKISTAN, UNICEF RUSHES IN AID New York, Feb 13 2008 8:00AM With Tajikistan facing the harshest winter in three decades amid severe shortages of water and gas supplies, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has rushed in emergency supplies to meet immediate critical needs.

"Our immediate concern right now is to urgently provide life-saving measures and assistance to children and women," said Ruth Leano, UNICEF's Deputy Representative, in Tajikistan.

Half of the estimated 7 million people affected by the crisis are children, close to 1 million of them under the age of five, when they are most vulnerable.

Since the onset of the severe weather and the energy shortage over the past weeks, UNICEF has delivered emergency health kits, jerry cans, baby blankets, hygiene sets, high protein biscuits, and generators to child and maternity hospitals and residential child care institutions in Tajikistan.

The agency said that all 3,800 primary schools and 400 kindergartens have almost no, or very limited, heating.

Tajikistan's Ministry of Health reports that acute respiratory infections including pneumonia have increased by two-fold and maternal mortality has also doubled in comparison with the same period last year. There are reports of some newborn deaths in maternity departments of hospitals owing to electricity cuts and the cold weather.


2008-02-13 00:00:00.000


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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

TIME TO PUNISH PARTIES WHO USE OR ABUSE CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICTS - UN ENVOY

TIME TO PUNISH PARTIES WHO USE OR ABUSE CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICTS – UN ENVOY New York, Feb 12 2008 8:00PM The Security Council must "take concrete and targeted measures" against those parties that persistently use or abuse children during armed conflicts around the world, the United Nations envoy on the issue said today, urging that well-meaning words be transformed into effective actions.

Addressing the Council during a day-long <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sc9246.doc.htm">open debate, the Secretary-General's Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy noted the ongoing impunity for those persistent violators that use or abuse children during wars.

From the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to Myanmar and from Sri Lanka to Uganda, parties to armed conflicts kill, maim, abduct or sexually assault children; deny humanitarian access to children in need; and recruit and use child soldiers. In total, at least 58 parties are known to be offenders.

Ms. Coomaraswamy called for the establishment of a mechanism by the 15-member Council to review and oversee targeted measures against violators to end their impunity.

"It is most important that the Council make good on its promise in order to ensure the credibility of this exercise," she said. "The targeted measures could include the imposition of travel restrictions on leaders and their exclusion from any governance structures and amnesty provisions, the imposition of arms embargoes, a ban on military assistance, and restriction on the flow of financial resources to the parties concerned."

While acknowledging that some parties have made important commitments in peace accords and action plans to stop recruiting child soldiers, the Special Representative warned that in some regional conflicts – such as those in the Great Lakes and Horn regions of Africa – cross-border recruitment from refugee camps is surging.

The detention of children for alleged association with armed groups is also worrying and a violation of international standards, she said, noting that many detained children face ill-treatment, torture, interrogations and food deprivation.

In addition, systematic and deliberate attacks against schoolchildren are escalating in numerous conflicts, particularly Afghanistan, while in the DRC and Burundi "appalling levels of sexual and gender-based violence" are occurring.

UN Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) Executive Director Ann M. Veneman told the Council debate that it was possible to reintegrate children used by armed forces and groups, especially once they are given the necessary skills and assistance to become productive members of their communities.

"Yet reintegration is a difficult and long-term process requiring patience and long-term commitment," Ms. Veneman said, adding that UNICEF is already working in several countries – notably the Central African Republic (CAR), Côte d'Ivoire and Sudan – to reintegrate children.

She also highlighted the particular vulnerability of girls and women during armed conflicts because of sexual violence.

"Allow me to share with you one story as told by a 14-year-old girl in Liberia. She said: 'The attackers tied me up and raped me because I was fighting. About five of them did the same thing to me until one of their commanders who knew my father came and stopped them, but also took me to make me his wife. I just accepted him because of fear.' We need to put an end to the abuse, the rapes and the sexual violence."

Representatives of dozens of countries then addressed the Council during today's debate, which follows the recent release of a UN report stating that children are still recruited and used in armed conflicts in at least 13 nations worldwide. They are Afghanistan, Burundi, Chad, the CAR, Colombia, the DRC, Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines, Somalia, Sudan, Sri Lanka and Uganda.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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MANY DISPLACED ARE ON THE MOVE AGAIN IN KENYA, SAYS UN

MANY DISPLACED ARE ON THE MOVE AGAIN IN KENYA, SAYS UN New York, Feb 12 2008 7:00PM With the security situation easing after a wave of violence tore through Kenya following last December's contested elections, the United Nations reported that large numbers of displaced are returning to their "ancestral homes," potentially straining resources in the nation's western region.

The movement of internally displaced persons (IDPs) is mainly occurring from central to western areas of the country, and its impact is already being felt in Western and Nyanza provinces where educational and health systems are overextended, according to the UN Country Team.

Additionally, the large influx of IDPs could threaten food security, the team noted.

Currently, there are 12,000 people in over two dozen displacement camps in the capital Nairobi, and plans are afoot to create a site to shelter 15,000 IDPs in Kasarani, on the outskirts of the city.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA) said that 47 tons of food have been distributed to 19 displaced settlements in the Kipelion and Nakuru districts, the first such delivery in the South Rift Valley.

Some 1,000 people have lost their lives and more than 310,000 others displaced since the December 2007 elections in which President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner over opposition leader Raila Odinga. In addition, some 12,000 Kenyans have fled to neighbouring Uganda.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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WORLD-FAMOUS ACTORS, HUMANITARIANS JOIN UN CALL TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

WORLD-FAMOUS ACTORS, HUMANITARIANS JOIN UN CALL TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN New York, Feb 12 2008 6:00PM Award-winning actresses Catherine Deneuve and Hillary Swank and humanitarian Sir Bob Geldof have added their names to an ever-growing list of names on a United Nations Development Fund for Women (<"http://www.unifem.org/index.php?f_page_pid=6">UNIFEM) online petition which aims to eliminate violence against women.

"Can you believe that one in three women will be a victim of violence?" asked Ms. Deneuve, the French film star, encouraging others to sign the "Say NO to violence against women" petition.

Hundreds of names – including British actor Christopher Lee and German Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul – were added to the petition last night in Berlin at the Cinema for Peace event that seeks to promote understanding through film. Additionally, $100,000 was raised for UNIFEM's UN Trust Fund to End Violence Against Women.

"Glittering evenings are generally not the place to dwell on hard truths," UNIFEM Goodwill Ambassador Nicole Kidman, who also serves as the campaign's spokesperson, said in a video message to the Berlin event.

"But we cannot be together without our conscience being deeply troubled by the situation in Darfur, in Eastern Congo and in so many under-reported conflicts where women's bodies have become part of the battlefield, where rape is being used intentionally as a weapon of war," she added.

To date, the campaign, which will run until the end of this November, has garnered nearly 35,000 signatures. Last month, the UN Foundation (UNF) announced that it will donate $1 dollar for each of the first 100,000 signatures.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UN READIES TO PROVIDE MORE LASTING HELP FOR CHADIAN REFUGEES IN CAMEROON

UN READIES TO PROVIDE MORE LASTING HELP FOR CHADIAN REFUGEES IN CAMEROON New York, Feb 12 2008 6:00PM United Nations aid officials in Cameroon are preparing plans to deliver protection and assistance for some months to as many as 20,000 Chadian refugees who fled their homeland last week because of deadly fighting between Government forces and armed opposition groups.

An estimated 30,000 refugees are currently in Kousséri, in north-eastern Cameroon, and UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) local representative Jacques Franquin said that after handling the group's immediate life-saving needs, the agency expects about two thirds will not return to Chad in the coming weeks.

"We expect such number to remain in Chad in the medium term," Mr. Franquin said. "We are now working with our donors to ensure funding so that we can provide the protection and assistance required."

This weekend <"http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/news">UNHCR and its aid partners will start officially registering the new refugees and offering some of them transport to a camp near the town of Maltam, about 32 kilometres from Kousséri.

Silvia Luciani, the acting representative in Cameroon of the UN Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF), said vaccinations against measles and polio will start tomorrow for up to 44,000 children among the refugees and the local host communities.

UNICEF has also been providing 48,000 litres of drinking water to the refugees each day since Saturday, when the World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?n=31">WFP) began systematic distributions of food. The Chadians will also receive blankets, soaps, buckets and jerry cans.

Sophie de Caen, the UN Resident Coordinator for Cameroon, said that while the living and hygienic conditions for the refugees were harsh, UN agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) operating in the area were getting the situation under control. A cargo plane chartered by UNHCR landed in Garoua, Cameroon, on Sunday, carrying another 45 tons of relief items.

Although people are still crossing back and forth over the bridge between Kousséri and the Chadian capital, N'Djamena, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA) said the refugee inflow has almost stopped.

Meanwhile, UNHCR reported that some 6,000 to 7,000 Central Africans have fled their homeland for southern Chad since late January because of the increasing risk of bandit attacks in the Central African Republic (CAR).

UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis said the agency is sending a team today to assess the recent arrivals, who are largely located in several villages near Gore, the main town in southern Chad.

Mostly women and children, the refugees are in poor condition, arriving with no possessions and relying on the generosity of locals. There are now an estimated 50,000 Central African refugees living in Chad.

Both Chad and the CAR have been plagued by violence, instability and impoverishment and last year the Security Council authorized the establishment of a multi-dimensional UN presence – including a peacekeeping mission known as MINURCAT – to try to remedy the situation.

Victor Angelo, the Secretary-General's Special Representative in Chad and the CAR, said today that he would work to persuade armed groups in the region to lay down their weapons and join a political process.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UNICEF SEEKS $856 MILLION TO AID CHILDREN AND WOMEN CAUGHT IN CRISIS

UNICEF SEEKS $856 MILLION TO AID CHILDREN AND WOMEN CAUGHT IN CRISIS New York, Feb 12 2008 5:00PM The United Nations Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/media/media_42830.html">UNICEF) today asked donors for $856 million to assist children and women who are victims of emergencies, ranging from the conflicts in Chad and Kenya to flood-hit areas such as Mozambique.

Launching its Humanitarian Action Report 2008 in Geneva today, the agency said the funds will be used to provide urgent assistance in health, education and nutrition.

In Kenya, some 150,000 children are among the 300,000 people who were forced from their homes, while in Chad, an estimated 30,000 of the 52,000 who have been driven from the country are vulnerable and urgently need help.

"In both these conflicts, and in the 37 other crises described in this report, children and women continue to bear the brunt of conflict and displacement," UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Hilde Johnson told a press briefing in Geneva.

Funding is also being sought for humanitarian activities in Sudan, especially the strife-torn Darfur region, home to 2.1 million internally displaced persons (IDPs). UNICEF-supported programmes in Sudan, totalling over $150 million, aim to boost health, nutrition and education, increase access to safe water and sanitation, and promote child protection and mine action.

In West Africa, nearly 1 million people are currently displaced by conflict and young children face the risk of under-nutrition. In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), more than half of the deaths of young children are attributed to malnutrition. UNICEF is requesting $106 million to help Congolese children.

"We must make sure that children and women are protected as much as possible from these atrocities, and that those responsible for these crimes are eventually brought to justice," Ms. Johnson stressed.

Last year, thanks to an increase in the contributions received from new funding mechanisms such as the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), 52 per cent of UNICEF's requested emergency funds were received. The agency today said it hopes donors and other partners will help increase the efficiency of disaster preparedness and response.

Steve Adkisson, who represented UNICEF in Chad from 2004 to 2007, said financing up front can save costs in the long run. "If the funding does not come in a consistent and timely manner, goods need to be delivered by air rather than by road," he noted. And each time that happens, "more funding goes to the delivery of the goods."
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UN TO LAUNCH DRIVE AGAINST HUMAN TRAFFICKING AT UPCOMING GLOBAL FORUM

UN TO LAUNCH DRIVE AGAINST HUMAN TRAFFICKING AT UPCOMING GLOBAL FORUM New York, Feb 12 2008 5:00PM The United Nations this week will convene the first global forum against human trafficking in Vienna, where some 1,200 experts, legislators, law enforcement teams, business leaders, non-governmental organization (NGO) representatives and trafficking victims are expected to launch an international campaign to combat the crime.

"The blood, sweat and tears of trafficking victims are on the hands of consumers all over the world," said the Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/un.gift-and-unodc-host-first-global-forum-on-human-trafficking.html">UNODC), Antonio Maria Costa, ahead of the 13-15 February forum, explaining that the problem is so widespread within the global economic system that all share complicity.

Because of the lack of information about human trafficking, Mr. Costa called it "a monster whose shape, size and ferocity we can only guess."

But experts agree that the scourge accompanies other unlawful activities, like illegal migration, forced labour, paedophilia, child exploitation, civil conflicts and organized prostitution.

"It's time for the world to open its eyes to this form of modern slavery," the UNODC chief declared.

However, he cautioned against empty platitudes. "Moral outrage is not going to stop the traffickers; we need high impact law enforcement measures to make human trafficking a riskier business."

Forum participants will discuss practical measures to increase the effectiveness of preventing human trafficking and bringing the perpetrators to justice. Measures under consideration include tracking and blocking Internet payments for human trafficking transactions; innovative technology to pinpoint frequently used trafficking routes; help-lines to report suspected child prostitution or sex slavery; codes of conduct to curb sex tourism; improved controls on supply chain management; and efforts to stop the forced removal and trade of human organs.

Mr. Costa pointed out that global campaigns have been waged against the trade in blood diamonds, fur, and illegal timber, while efforts to stop the trade in people "lag behind."

In addition to experts and other officials, the forum has attracted the participation of celebrities and public figures, including Suzanne Mubarak, the First Lady of Egypt; Emma Thompson, the Oscar-winning British actress; and Ricky Martin, the Grammy Award-winning Puerto Rican pop star.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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LATEST DARFUR REFUGEES FACE RISK ALONG BORDER, UN AGENCY WARNS

LATEST DARFUR REFUGEES FACE RISK ALONG BORDER, UN AGENCY WARNS New York, Feb 12 2008 5:00PM Some 12,000 Sudanese who fled into Chad following Friday's deadly attacks against three West Darfur towns remain in a precarious situation along the volatile border region as they await transfer into formal campsites, the United Nations refugee agency said today.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (<"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/47b189004.html">UNHCR) may start relocating the Sudanese to camps later today, spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis told journalists in Geneva, with daily convoys eventually planned.

The first batch of 200 refugees, currently based in Figuera in the Birak area, will be relocated towards Kounoungou camp near Guereda, and UNHCR is also holding talks with Chadian authorities about extending Mile camp to house some of the refugees.

The new arrivals are expected to place severe strains on UNHCR's 12 camps in eastern Chad, with many of the camps – and their limited water supplies – already at or close to capacity.

Ms. Pagonis said most of the refugees are destitute, having escaped by night across the border without any possessions and lacking nourishment. Families have been separated in the turmoil and the refugees include unaccompanied minors; most of the refugees are living in the open and sheltering under trees at night.

An assessment team that visited the area on Sunday provided basic supplies to the refugees and local Chadians have offered water and food that they can spare.

But unidentified armed groups are roaming around the area, Ms. Pagonis said, and the security situation is particularly tense near Guereda, where the market and school have been looted by unknown men.

UNHCR is reinforcing its numbers in eastern Chad to cope with the latest influx of Sudanese refugees, which followed deadly attacks on the towns of Abu Suruj, Sirba and Seleia on Friday, reportedly by Janjaweed militia backed by Sudanese Government forces.

The three towns are located about 50 to 70 kilometres north of El Geneina, the provincial capital of West Darfur, and that area is known to be a stronghold of the Darfurian opposition group known as the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

More than 200,000 people have been killed and at least 2.2 million others forced to flee their homes across Darfur since rebel groups began fighting Government forces and allied militia in 2003.

The hybrid UN-African Union peacekeeping mission (UNAMID) was deployed at the start of the year to try to quell the violence and restore stability to the war-wracked and impoverished region on Sudan's western flank.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UN REFUGEE CHIEF IN MIDDLE EAST TO URGE INCREASED ASSISTANCE FOR UPROOTED IRAQIS

UN REFUGEE CHIEF IN MIDDLE EAST TO URGE INCREASED ASSISTANCE FOR UPROOTED IRAQIS New York, Feb 12 2008 4:00PM António Guterres, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (<"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/47b189032.html">UNHCR), has traveled to the Middle East in a bid to raise awareness of the millions of Iraqis displaced by violence and host countries that are helping them.

Mr. Guterres is in Amman, Jordan, today to meet with senior Government officials, visit UNHCR's registration centre and confer with a group of Iraqi refugees, before travelling to Damascus, Syria, this evening.

During his week-long mission, the Commissioner hopes to "assure governments in the region of our continued commitment to and engagement in efforts to ease the plight of those displaced in the region and beyond," UNHCR spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis told reporters in Geneva.

Additionally, Mr. Guterres will emphasize the ongoing need for resources and global support and will thank governments such as Jordan and Syria for the generosity they have shown to Iraqi refugees.

According to UNHCR and its partners, out of Iraq's total population of 26 million, some 4.4 million are displaced, with 2.4 million uprooted within the war-torn nation's borders and 2 million in other countries. Over 40,000 non-Iraqis -- including Palestinians, Iranians and Turks -- are taking refuge inside Iraq.

This year, the agency hopes to raise $261 million to assist the most vulnerable of displaced Iraqis, both in and out of their home country, through programmes such as counselling, provision of household and shelter items; protection and legal help; and support for camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs). It also wishes to send 200,000 Iraqi refugee children to school in Syria, Jordan and other host countries through the appeal.

For UNHCR -- which operates within Iraq with some 30 local and internal staff in collaboration with Iraqi aid agencies -- helping the displaced has proven to be difficult given the insecurity plaguing much of the country.

Last year, the agency registered over a quarter of a million Iraqis in nearby countries, provided health services to more than 200,000 people and directly aided vulnerable families through initiatives such as giving cash cards to households headed by females, widows and people with disabilities.

In a joint effort with the UN World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/">WFP), UNHCR will feed up to 360,000 Iraqi refugees in Syria this year.

"We will also continue our resettlement programme for the most vulnerable Iraqis," Ms. Pagonis noted. Last year, UNHCR submitted over 21,000 Iraqi resettlement cases to more than one dozen governments for consideration.

2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UN REFUGEE AGENCY SEEKS $63 MILLION TO HELP SOUTHERN SUDANESE RETURN HOME

UN REFUGEE AGENCY SEEKS $63 MILLION TO HELP SOUTHERN SUDANESE RETURN HOME New York, Feb 12 2008 3:00PM The United Nations refugee agency today launched an appeal for $63 million to help it administer the voluntary return and reintegration of 80,000 Sudanese still living in neighbouring countries as a result of the north-south civil war that ended in early 2005.

The appeal by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (<"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/47b168952.html">UNHCR), unveiled in Geneva, aims to ensure that the agency's voluntary repatriation scheme would be able to continue.

So far, more than 169,000 refugees and an estimated 1.9 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) have returned to southern Sudan since the Government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) signed a comprehensive peace agreement in January 2005.

But another 260,000 Sudanese refugees still live outside the borders of the country and UNHCR is hoping that 80,000 will return this year, with more than half expected to return from Uganda and the remainder from Kenya, Ethiopia and Egypt.

Marjon Kamara, Director of UNHCR's Africa's bureau, warned that "if the pace of return is not adequately supported, the challenges for sustainable reintegration may become even greater."

Returning refugees and IDPs receive reintegration assistance in the form of aid packages and community-based projects, especially in those parts of southern Sudan most lacking in basic services and infrastructure.

Despite the signing of the peace accord, southern Sudan is plagued by insecurity and a lack of usable roads, especially during the May to November rainy season, makes travel more hazardous.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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RWANDAN INVESTIGATOR ACCUSED OF MANUFACTURING EVIDENCE APPEARS AT UN TRIBUNAL

RWANDAN INVESTIGATOR ACCUSED OF MANUFACTURING EVIDENCE APPEARS AT UN TRIBUNAL New York, Feb 12 2008 2:00PM A Rwandan defence investigator accused of trying to fabricate evidence for the appeal in the genocide trial of the country's former higher education minister has made his first appearance in his own case before the United Nations tribunal set up to deal with the mass killings that engulfed the small African nation in 1994.

During an initial appearance yesterday before the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (<"http://69.94.11.53/default.htm">ICTR), in Arusha, Tanzania, Léonidas Nshogoza pleaded not guilty to two charges of contempt of the Tribunal and two counts of attempting to commit acts punishable as contempt.

Mr. Nshogoza voluntarily surrendered to the ICTR on Friday after an international warrant was issued for his arrest late last month.

The indictment accuses him of intending to fabricate evidence and procure false statements for use in the appeal against the conviction and sentencing of Jean de Dieu Kamuhanda. It also accuses him of interfering in the administration of justice.

Mr. Kamuhanda is serving concurrent life sentences after being convicted of genocide and extermination by the ICTR, which found that he had supervised the killings in his native Gikomero commune in the Kigali-Rural prefecture. He distributed firearms, grenades and machetes to the Hutu Interahamwe militia and led attacks at the parish church and adjoining school in Gikomero, where several thousand Tutsi civilians were killed.

Last December the Tribunal convicted a former witness – identified only by the code name GAA – in the Kamuhanda trial to nine months' jail for giving false testimony.

In less than three months starting in early April 1994, some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were murdered across Rwanda, often by machete or club.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UN-BACKED PROJECT TO ASSIST THOUSANDS IN NORTHERN CHINA'S COUNTRYSIDE

UN-BACKED PROJECT TO ASSIST THOUSANDS IN NORTHERN CHINA'S COUNTRYSIDE New York, Feb 12 2008 2:00PM About 125,000 households in China's Inner Mongolia region stand to benefit from better access to financial services, markets, technology and information under a new programme backed by the United Nations agency tasked with trying to reduce rural poverty.

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (<"http://www.ifad.org/media/press/2008/09.htm">IFAD) announced today that the $70.9 million programme will target households – particularly those headed solely by women – with per capita incomes of less than $1 a day and limited access to financial services such as microcredit and savings schemes.

The six-year project will promote greenhouse and organic crop production with links to markets and buyers, and it will also establish village development funds to pay for infrastructure and activities selected by local communities.

IFAD said it expects that the project could benefit households in more than 720 villages across nine counties of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, which has not experienced the same economic growth as other parts of the country in recent years.

Thomas Rath, IFAD's country programme manager for China, said the programme aims to tap into the skills and abilities of the local people.

"So far, Government and donor-funded programmes have used the same poverty reduction strategies in different locations," he said. "Sometimes this has led to reduced results. This suggests that we needed to try new approaches. We need to target with specific approaches tailored to the local needs of people and their institutions."

The programme will be funded in part by a $30 million loan from IFAD, as well as loans from the Chinese Government ($31.1 million) and the Rural Credit Cooperatives ($5.7 million). Participants in the scheme will contribute the remaining $4.1 million.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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CLEAR GLOBAL STRATEGY CRUCIAL IN FIGHTING CLIMATE CHANGE - ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT

CLEAR GLOBAL STRATEGY CRUCIAL IN FIGHTING CLIMATE CHANGE – ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT New York, Feb 12 2008 2:00PM To build on the momentum generated by last December's historic United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali, Indonesia, it is now critical to formulate a plan of action for the world body to tackle climate change comprehensively, the General Assembly's President said today.

In Bali, 187 countries agreed to launch a two-year process of formal negotiations on a successor pact to the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

At the start of today's General Assembly thematic debate on combating global warming, President Srgjan Kerim underscored the urgency of taking effective action.

"We can't wait for tomorrow," he said. "We need to act today."

Under the so-called Bali Roadmap, key issues during the upcoming negotiations will be adaptation, mitigation, the deployment of climate-friendly technology and financing.

"Many countries cannot wait until the effects of mitigation targets have an impact," he said. "We need both targets and immediate practical actions that can help the most vulnerable adapt to climate change."

The UN system seeks to "deliver more than the sum of its parts" and requires clear political support from Member States, the President noted.

He called on the over 100 delegates from Member States and organizations in attendance to consider what the UN's goals should be following the Kyoto Protocol's expiration in 2012 as well as how to link the fight against climate change with efforts to bolster development.

The debate is expected to continue in the coming days.
2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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UNESCO CHIEF CONDEMNS MURDER OF NEPALESE JOURNALIST

UNESCO CHIEF CONDEMNS MURDER OF NEPALESE JOURNALIST New York, Feb 12 2008 8:00AM The Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) today condemned the murder last month of Nepalese journalist Pushkar Bahadur Shrestha.

The 57-year old publisher of two local weeklies was shot in the back on the evening of 12 January while with his brother in a town near Birgunj on the border with India. A man who said he was the local representative of the Janatantrik Tarai Mukti Morcha militia claimed responsibility for the murder, saying Mr. Shrestha was killed because he was a "pahadi" journalist, meaning from the hill region and not the southern plains population.

"I condemn the murder of Pushkar Bahadur Shrestha," Koïchiro Matsuura said in a statement. "Through him, the murderers were obviously standing against freedom of expression but also against an ethnic group they are in conflict with."

The head of the Paris-based agency said the targeting of journalists "must cease in order for Nepal to reach, at long last, democracy and the rule of law."

According to IFEX, violence against journalists increased drastically in 2007 in areas where armed groups claiming to defend the Madhesi, the people of the south, have launched protest movements. Janatantrik Tarai Mukti Morcha has been involved in dozens of cases of threats and violence since its creation in August 2006.

2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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TIMOR-LESTE: UN ENVOY DECRIES POLITICAL ATTACKS, HAILS GOVERNMENT RESPONSE

TIMOR-LESTE: UN ENVOY DECRIES POLITICAL ATTACKS, HAILS GOVERNMENT RESPONSE New York, Feb 12 2008 8:00AM A senior United Nations envoy today decried attempts on the life of the President of Timor-Leste, who was wounded yesterday in a shooting, and the Prime Minister, who escaped a separate attack on his motorcade, while praising the maintenance of calm in the country.

"I left New York within hours of hearing the terrible news that President José Ramos-Horta had been injured in a shooting incident early yesterday morning and that Prime Minister [Xanana] Gusmao had also been attacked," said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Special Representative, Atul Khare, who had been headed to UN Headquarters to brief the Security Council before reversing course and returning to the country, which the UN helped shepherd to independence in 2002.


Mr. Ramos-Horta is in a serious condition in hospital in Australia after earlier undergoing surgery following the shooting at his home. The Prime Minister was not injured in a separate attack on his motorcade, but the fugitive leader Alfredo Reinado was killed in fighting, according to the UN Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT).

"I am deeply disturbed by yesterday's violence," said Mr. Khare, "but I am also very impressed by the calm manner in which the country has reacted to these events," he added, noting that investigations are underway.

He praised the conduct of the Government, Parliament and the opposition, while welcoming the fact that State institutions have continued to perform their functions, and leaders have adhered to the Constitution in this time of crisis. "It is a positive sign and a point that I will be conveying to Dr. Ramos-Horta at the earliest available opportunity."

Mr. Khare said the President "plays a crucial role in leading this country on its path to development, and in enhancing its culture of democratic governance" and voiced hope for his recovery.

Mr. Reinado had been the target of investigations by the UN Independent Special Commission of Inquiry for Timor-Leste, set up to examine the deadly violence that erupted in the tiny nation in April-May 2006. It found the Major and his group were reasonably suspected of committing crimes during the fighting.

The 2006 crisis, attributed in part to differences between Timor-Leste's eastern and western regions, began in April with the firing of 600 striking soldiers, a third of the overall armed forces. Ensuing violence claimed at least 37 lives and drive 155,000 people, or about 15 per cent of the total population, from their homes. The Security Council created UNMIT in August that year to help restore stability.


2008-02-12 00:00:00.000


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Monday, February 11, 2008

SECURITY COUNCIL DEPLORES ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF TIMORESE LEADER

SECURITY COUNCIL DEPLORES ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF TIMORESE LEADER New York, Feb 11 2008 7:00PM The Security Council today joined Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in condemning the attempt to assassinate Timorese President Jose Ramos-Horta during an attack on his residence in the fledgling Asian country's capital, Dili, this morning.

Mr. Ramos-Horta is in a serious condition in hospital in Australia after earlier undergoing surgery following the shooting at his home. Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão was not injured in a separate attack on his motorcade, but the fugitive leader Alfredo Reinado was killed in fighting, according to the UN Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT).

In a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sc9244.doc.htm">statement read out by Ambassador Ricardo Alberto Arias of Panama, which holds the rotating presidency of the 15-member panel, Council members condemned both attacks "on the legitimate institutions of Timor-Leste.

"The Security Council calls on the Government of Timor-Leste to bring to justice those responsible for this heinous act, and urges all parties in Timor-Leste to cooperate actively with the authorities."

The presidential statement also stressed that all Timorese should exercise restraint and maintain stability in the weeks ahead and urged the country's political parties to resolve any disputes they have through political and peaceful means only.

In addition, it endorsed the Government's efforts to strengthen democracy and ensure public security and stability.

This morning's attacks were also deplored by Mr. Ban's spokesperson in a <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sgsm11407.doc.htm">statement and by Finn Reske-Nielsen, his Acting Special Representative to the country. UN Police in Timor-Leste remain on high alert and are coordinating with Timorese authorities and with the International Security Forces (ISF).

Mr. Reinado had been the target of investigations by the UN Independent Special Commission of Inquiry for Timor-Leste, set up to examine the deadly violence that erupted in the tiny nation in April-May 2006. It found the major and his group were reasonably suspected of committing crimes during the fighting.

The 2006 crisis, attributed in part to differences between Timor-Leste's eastern and western regions, began in April with the firing of 600 striking soldiers, a third of the overall armed forces. Ensuing violence claimed at least 37 lives and drive 155,000 people, or about 15 per cent of the total population, from their homes. The Security Council created UNMIT in August that year to help restore stability.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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BIOSPHERE RESERVES PLAY MAJOR ROLE IN COMBATING CLIMATE CHANGE - UNESCO

BIOSPHERE RESERVES PLAY MAJOR ROLE IN COMBATING CLIMATE CHANGE – UNESCO New York, Feb 11 2008 7:00PM Biosphere reserves can spur efforts to mitigate and adapt to climate change as well as encourage increased use of renewable energy, according to a recent declaration adopted by a meeting backed by the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (<"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=29008&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">UNESCO).

Following a week of deliberations, the more than 800 participants adopted the Madrid Declaration, which underscores the "potential for action" of reserves to tackle challenges such as the loss of traditional knowledge, cultural diversity and arable land, as well as global warming.

It also calls for the establishment of a sustainable funding mechanism to reinforce the reserves, urging collaboration between UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere programme (MAB) and the agency's other intergovernmental scientific initiatives.

Last week, Russia's Rotowsky reserve and Mexico's Marietas Islands joined UNESCO's World Network of Biosphere Reserves, bringing the global total to 531 reserves in 105 countries.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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MENINGITIS EPIDEMIC THREATENS ONE MILLION CENTRAL AFRICANS, SAY UN OFFICIALS

MENINGITIS EPIDEMIC THREATENS ONE MILLION CENTRAL AFRICANS, SAY UN OFFICIALS New York, Feb 11 2008 7:00PM Up to one million people in the Central African Republic (CAR) are at risk from a meningitis epidemic sweeping across the northwest of their country, and overwhelmed local health authorities do not have enough vaccine stocks to meet demands, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned today.

An outbreak was declared after numerous deaths were reported in the districts of Ouham, Ouham Pendé and Nana-Grebizi in the first five weeks of this year, <"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA said in a press statement, and UN agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the country's Government are working together to try to combat the epidemic.

Following a request from the World Health Organization (<"http://www.who.int/en/">WHO), some $100,000 has been released from the UN's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) for the CAR so that enough vaccines can be bought to protect about 80,000 people.

John Holmes, the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, said that "protecting the people in the north of the Central African Republic will prevent meningitis from spreading to the rest of the country and into neighbouring Chad."

Toby Lanzer, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in the country, said the ERF injection has ensured that aid workers can immediately help many of those who need vaccines.

"We count on donors to continue supporting our efforts so that more lives can be saved," he said.

The meningitis epidemic is the latest crisis to hit the CAR, which has been buffeted by deadly fighting between Government forces and armed rebels and also by widespread bandit attacks against civilians. Life expectancy in the impoverished, landlocked nation stands at just 43.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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LA NIÑA WEATHER PATTERN LIKELY TO LAST FOR SOME MONTHS - UN AGENCY

LA NIÑA WEATHER PATTERN LIKELY TO LAST FOR SOME MONTHS – UN AGENCY New York, Feb 11 2008 7:00PM The current La Niña weather pattern is expected to strengthen and continue through the middle of the year, bringing wetter conditions to Australia and the western Pacific and a drier climate to the Americas, the United Nations World Meteorological Agency (WMO) reported today.

In its latest forecast, the <"http://www.wmo.ch/pages/index_en.html">WMO states that the latest La Niña – which began in the third quarter of 2007 – has picked up strength in the past three months, with sea surface temperatures now about 1.5 to 2 degrees Celsius colder than average over large parts of the eastern and central equatorial Pacific Ocean.

"This La Niña is in the mid-range of past historically recorded events, but the slight further cooling in recent months will likely place it on the stronger side of the middle range," the agency said in a press release.

During a La Niña pattern, the cooler sea surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific shapes weather conditions across much of the world: heavy rain and thunderstorms, for example, become much more frequent in the western Pacific. It is the opposite of the El Niño phenomenon, which is considered to have ended its current cycle last year.

The agency noted that La Niña has already begun influencing climate patterns over the last six months in the Equatorial Pacific and across the Indian Ocean, Asia, Africa and the Americas.

WMO said it was rare for a La Niña event to continue for two years or more, although this did occur from early 1998 to early 2000. The most likely current scenario is that neither La Niña nor El Niño will prevail from the latter stages of this year.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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UN SUSPENDS OPERATIONS IN SOMALIA FOLLOWING ATTACKS

UN SUSPENDS OPERATIONS IN SOMALIA FOLLOWING ATTACKS New York, Feb 11 2008 7:00PM The United Nations today announced a suspension of its operations in Somalia following attacks on its compound in Mogadishu, the capital.

Although there were no casualties in the attacks, the world body said it was forced to suspend operations in Mogadishu as well as the major towns of Afgooye and Kismayo for the remainder of this week.

A number of international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have also temporarily suspended staff travel to the countryside, where similar attacks have taken place in the past week, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA).

The new constraints compound other obstacles to aid deliveries, including roadblocks, shelling and violence as well as rising threats against aid workers, who are at times directly targeted in Somalia.

Last month, a roadside bomb near the southern Somali town of Kismayo killed three humanitarian workers serving with the international NGO Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

The worsening security situation has also led to an increase in the vulnerable population. Over the past two months, some 40,000 people have fled Mogadishu. The UN refugee agency (<"http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home">UNHCR) puts the total number of those displaced by the ongoing fighting since the end of last October at over 294,000.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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EXPERTS MEET AT UN FOR FIRST TALKS ON POSSIBLE ARMS TRADE TREATY

EXPERTS MEET AT UN FOR FIRST TALKS ON POSSIBLE ARMS TRADE TREATY New York, Feb 11 2008 6:00PM Experts gathered at United Nations headquarters in New York today to begin talks on a possible treaty governing the trade in conventional arms.

The five-day meeting brings together nearly 30 countries that are members of the Group of Governmental Experts examining the feasibility, scope and draft parameters for a comprehensive, legally binding instrument establishing common international standards for the import, export and transfer of conventional arms.

The Group is chaired by Ambassador Roberto García Moritán, Secretary of Foreign Affairs at the Foreign Ministry of Argentina. He is not new to UN disarmament issues, having served in 2006 as the Chairman of a group of governmental experts reviewing the UN Register on Conventional Arms.

The General Assembly resolution that set the talks in process cited "growing support across all regions for concluding a legally binding instrument negotiated on a non-discriminatory, transparent and multilateral basis, to establish common international standards for the import, export and transfer of conventional arms."

The Group's members are Algeria, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Romania, Russian Federation, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine, United Kingdom and the United States.

The Group, which will hold its second and third sessions in New York from 12 to 16 May and from 28 July to 8 August, is expected to produce a report for the General Assembly's next session.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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DR CONGO: UN ENVOY WELCOMES PROGRESS ON KIVUS WHILE URGING MORE ACTION

DR CONGO: UN ENVOY WELCOMES PROGRESS ON KIVUS WHILE URGING MORE ACTION New York, Feb 11 2008 6:00PM The senior United Nations envoy to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has welcomed progress in the follow-up to last month's agreements on restoring order in the troubled Kivus, where fighting has forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee in recent months.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Special Representative Alan Doss, speaking in Goma on Saturday, hailed the creation of a temporary ceasefire monitoring mechanism, which has as its focal point the UN Mission in the DRC (<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/monuc/index.html">MONUC).

He also welcomed a recent Government order creating official follow-up bodies on the agreements, the reinforcement of MONUC blue helmets on the ground, and the transfer of the mission's general headquarters from Kisangani to Goma.

Mr. Doss called on all armed groups to respect the agreements, warning that signing alone would not automatically restore order in the Kivus. He emphasized the need to make good on all aspects of the agreement and reaffirmed MONUC's readiness to monitor the ceasefire on the ground.

The UN-backed Conference on Peace, Security and Development, held in Goma, North Kivu, ended with the signing on 22 January of 'Actes d'engagement' committing the Government and armed groups to end their hostilities.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has estimated that over there are 800,000 displaced people in the North Kivu who have been uprooted either by last year's fighting or previous conflicts.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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AMERICAN ACTRESS AND ENGLISH ENTREPRENEUR ISSUE CALL FOR CLIMATE ACTION - UN

AMERICAN ACTRESS AND ENGLISH ENTREPRENEUR ISSUE CALL FOR CLIMATE ACTION – UN New York, Feb 11 2008 6:00PM American actress Daryl Hannah and Sir Richard Branson, Founder and Chairman of the Virgin Group, appealed in New York today for concerted global action to face the challenges posed by climate change.

The response to global warming "comes down to a question of values and I think it's important on a personal level to really examine the ramifications of our actions and of our daily choices," Ms. Hannah said at a <"http://www.un.org/News/briefings/docs//2008/080211_Climate_Change.doc.htm">press briefing on the occasion of a General Assembly climate change debate which kicked off today.

"I'm thrilled to see that people are finally starting to recognize the urgency of the situation," the actress, famous for her work in films like "Splash" and her support for renewable energies, noted.

Speaking at the same briefing, Mr. Branson proposed the creation of an "international war room," a politically-independent gathering of scientists, economists and others to catalyze the public sector, businesses, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and governments to act on a large scale.

"The war room will be a unique combination of entrepreneurial muscle, the best possible data and the power to mobilize resources and influence policy," he said.

Mr. Branson, whose company has offered a $25 million prize to encourage scientists and inventors to figure out how to extract carbon from the environment, also underscored the necessity of finding a technical solution to the issue of global warming.

In a separate press conference, the top UN climate change official urged increased financial investment and technological innovation to tackle the issue.

Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), said that they are "the glue that connects action on the part of developed and developing countries."

Increased financing and emphasis on technology "is not going to come unless rich countries take on ambitious reduction targets and the money is not going to be spent and the technology is not going to be driven unless developing countries put in place real measurable and verifiable mitigation action," he pointed out.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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CONGOLESE REBEL LEADER MAKES FIRST APPEARANCE AT INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT

CONGOLESE REBEL LEADER MAKES FIRST APPEARANCE AT INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT New York, Feb 11 2008 6:00PM The former Congolese rebel leader Mathieu Ngudjolo Chui today made his first appearance before the International Criminal Court (ICC), where he is facing nine counts of war crimes that include allegations of sexual slavery and the use of child soldiers.

Judges at the <"http://www.icc-cpi.int/press/pressreleases/337.html">ICC, which sits in The Hague, verified Mr. Ngudjolo Chui's identity and had the full arrest warrant read out to him, four days after he was arrested by authorities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and handed over to the court.

The ICC is scheduled to hold a hearing tomorrow to determine whether to join the charges against Mr. Ngudjolo Chui with the charges against Germain Katanga, another indictee before the tribunal.

Currently a colonel in the DRC's national armed forces, Mr. Ngudjolo Chui is a former commander of the rebel National Integrationalist Front (FNI), and he faces three counts of crimes against humanity and six of war crimes.

He is alleged to have played a key role in designing and carrying out a deadly attack on the village of Bogoro, in the north-eastern DRC province of Ituri, in February 2003.

The ICC is an independent, permanent court that tries persons accused of the most serious crimes of international concern – namely genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

The situation in the DRC is one of four situations currently under investigation by the ICC Prosecutor. The others are the Darfur region of Sudan, the Central African Republic and Uganda.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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UNESCO CHIEF HERALDS UNITED STATES PUSH TO RATIFY ANTI-DOPING PACT

UNESCO CHIEF HERALDS UNITED STATES PUSH TO RATIFY ANTI-DOPING PACT New York, Feb 11 2008 5:00PM Calling doping in sport "a veritable plague," the head of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has welcomed the decision by United States President George W. Bush to ask his country's Senate to ratify a major anti-doping convention.

Koïchiro Matsuura, Director-General of <"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=29008&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">UNESCO, said in a statement from the agency's headquarters in Paris on Friday that he hopes the Senate will now quickly ratify the International Convention against Doping in Sport.

"This convention is a vital weapon in the struggle to eliminate a destructive practice that undermines everything that sport stands for… The rapid ratification of the Convention by the US Senate, in this Olympic year, would send a powerful message to athletes around the world that such behaviour will not be tolerated," he said.

Since it was adopted by UNESCO's General Conference in October 2005, the pact has been ratified by 75 countries and entered into force in February last year.

The Convention calls on States Parties to support, devise or implement anti-doping education and training programmes and to promote the active participation of their athletes and support personnel in all aspects of the anti-doping process.

The text of the pact also stipulates that all the world's athletes be subject to the same doping rules and that they are regularly tested, with uniform sanctions and penalties for any infractions.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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EFFECTIVE PARTNERSHIPS KEY TO TACKLING CLIMATE CHANGE, SAYS ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT

EFFECTIVE PARTNERSHIPS KEY TO TACKLING CLIMATE CHANGE, SAYS ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT New York, Feb 11 2008 5:00PM Effective partnerships and a clear global strategy for the United Nations are essential to address climate change comprehensively, General Assembly President Srgjan Kerim <"http://www.un.org/ga/president/62/statements/ccthematicdebate110208.shtml">said today in New York at the start of a two-day meeting on the issue.

"The UN cannot address climate change alone. No one can," Mr. Kerim said at the opening of the Assembly debate, stressing the importance of collaboration in confronting global warming.

"Inevitably, we need as many actors as possible to get involved and unite in order to address its effects," he added.

The Assembly President also appealed for a global strategy for the world body to respond to the obstacles posed by climate change.

"Many steps have already been taken by the Untied Nations and its Member States," he noted. "We must now concentrate on streamlining the UN system's many programmes and focusing resources where they will have the greatest effect."

Mr. Kerim called for attention to the economic aspirations of developing countries. "The challenge is to find policies, instruments and technologies that can create low-carbon economies which promote sustainable economic growth and provide incentives for the individuals to change behaviour."

Also <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sgsm11408.doc.htm">speaking at the start of the <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/ga10687.doc.htm">debate was Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who called on developed nations to lead the effort to combat global warming in order to spur action by poorer ones.

"The more ambitious the commitments by developed countries, the more actions we can expect from developing countries," he stated. "The more developing countries engage, the more ambitiously the developed countries will commit."

The Secretary-General urged participants to build on the momentum generated by the breakthrough at last December's landmark UN Climate Change Conference held in Bali, Indonesia, where ended with 187 countries agreeing to launch a two-year process of formal negotiations on a successor pact to the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

He pointed out that there is a "silver lining" in the form of the opportunity for cooperation in a "global, collective, inclusive and low-carbon approach to growth and development."

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg detailed the metropolis' plans to reduce its carbon footprint by nearly one third by 2030.

"Reducing your carbon production increases the social and economic well-being of your people," he told the debate, citing such examples as New York's taxis converting to hybrid cars, congestion pricing to reduce pollution and the planting of 1 million trees over the next decade to capture carbon dioxide.

If the United States and developing countries were to make similar commitments, the prospects of reaching agreement on a post-Kyoto regime would improve drastically, Mr. Bloomberg said.

In parallel with the Assembly debate, two panels are being convened, on "Rising to the Challenge: Partnerships on Climate Change" and "Responding to a Multifaceted Challenge: The UN at Work." Participants include representatives from the private sector, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the UN family and media.

Plenary meetings, at which delegates from more than 100 countries and organizations are expected to speak, will kick off tomorrow.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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THOUSANDS FLEE DEADLY ATTACKS ON THREE WEST DARFUR TOWNS - UN REFUGEE AGENCY

THOUSANDS FLEE DEADLY ATTACKS ON THREE WEST DARFUR TOWNS – UN REFUGEE AGENCY New York, Feb 11 2008 4:00PM As many as 12,000 Sudanese have fled across the border into Chad since Friday's deadly attacks, reportedly by Janjaweed militia supported by national armed forces, against three towns in West Darfur, the United Nations refugee agency reported today.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and its humanitarian partners have dispatched an emergency mission to Figeira, in the Birak area of Chad's volatile eastern border region, to assess the situation, according to information released by the agency.

An estimated 4,000 to 6,000 Darfurian refugees have sought refuge around Birak, while a similar number is believed to be near Koruk, also in eastern Chad.

<"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/47b081fc2.html">UNHCR assessment team members report that the refugees they have seen so far in the Birak area have been destitute and terrified, and have detailed how their towns were looted and burned and then encircled by militia to prevent locals from fleeing.

The hybrid UN-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur (<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unamid/">UNAMID) has received reports indicating that some 200 people were killed from fighting in Abu Suruj, Sirba and Seleia and that Abu Suruj has been burned to the ground. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has condemned the attacks.

The three towns are located about 50 to 70 kilometres north of El Geneina, the provincial capital, and that area is known to be a stronghold of the Darfurian opposition group, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM).

UNHCR official Jorge Holly, who was part of the assessment team, said most of the refugees had already been previously displaced in Darfur.

"They are really tired of being attacked and having to move," Mr. Holly said. "All the new refugees we talked to said they did not want to go back to Darfur at this point; they wanted to be transferred to a refugee camp in eastern Chad."

Urgent measures are now under way in Chad to move the new refugees by truck, probably tomorrow, to established camps in the east of the country. UNHCR is already taking care of some 240,000 refugees scattered across 12 camps.

Meanwhile, following Chad's own recent upheavals, in which heavy fighting between armed opposition groups and Government forces has forced thousands of people to leave the landlocked and impoverished country, the UN and its partner NGOs are now assessing the humanitarian needs for those in the capital, N'Djamena.

Last week's fighting has caused scores of deaths and hundreds of casualties and destroyed or damaged widespread infrastructure, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/News/tabid/1080/Default.aspx">OCHA) reported. Banditry has also spiked as a result.

Kingsley Amaning, the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Chad, said a skeleton team of UN staff had remained in N'Djamena throughout the fighting.

"We stayed in order to assess the security situation and its humanitarian consequences in the capital, and to work for the continuation of our activities in the east of the country," Mr. Amaning said. "Now that the situation in N'Djamena appears calm, the priority for humanitarians is to get a clear picture of the most pressing needs of the population."

About 30,000 Chadians, mostly from N'Djamena, have fled to neighbouring Cameroon, where UNHCR staff are providing emergency assistance, including food, drinking water and vaccinations against measles, polio and meningitis.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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WESTERN SAHARA: UN ENVOYS CONTINUES CONSULTATIONS IN THE REGION

WESTERN SAHARA: UN ENVOYS CONTINUES CONSULTATIONS IN THE REGION New York, Feb 11 2008 3:00PM The United Nations envoy for Western Sahara is continuing his in-depth consultations with the parties and neighbouring countries in the region ahead of the next round of scheduled talks between Morocco and the Frente Polisario.

Peter van Walsum, the Secretary-General's Personal Envoy for Western Sahara, met Secretary General Mohamed Abdelaziz and other members of the Frente Polisario leadership in Rabouni on Saturday, UN spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters.

Those consultations followed meetings with senior Moroccan officials in the country's capital, Rabat, late last week.

Mr. van Walsum told journalists that he was in the region to listen to the views of both the parties and the neighbouring States, Algeria and Mauritania, on how to move into more substantial negotiations on how to provide for the self-determination for the people of Western Sahara.

He is scheduled to hold discussions later this week in Algiers and Nouakchott, the Algerian and Mauritanian capitals.

Mr. van Walsum said that while the positions of the Moroccan Government and the Frente Polisario remain far apart, the two sides have reiterated their plans to participate in UN-brokered talks next month. Those talks will take place in Manhasset, New York, on 11-13 March.

The UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) has been in the Territory since 1991 to monitor the ceasefire between Morocco and the Frente Polisario.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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MYANMAR: UPCOMING REFERENDUM MUST BE INCLUSIVE, TRANSPARENT - BAN KI-MOON

MYANMAR: UPCOMING REFERENDUM MUST BE INCLUSIVE, TRANSPARENT – BAN KI-MOON New York, Feb 11 2008 2:00PM Reacting to Myanmar's announcement of a constitutional referendum to be held this May, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today called on authorities to ensure that the process represents the views of all of the South-East Asian nation's people.

The Government also announced that the upcoming referendum will be followed by "multi-party democratic elections" in 2010, marking the first establishment of a timeframe for Myanmar to implement its "political roadmap process."

Mr. Ban "renews his call to the Myanmar authorities to make the constitution-making process inclusive, participatory and transparent in order to ensure that any draft constitution is broadly representative of the views of all the people of Myanmar," according to a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=2992">statement issued by his spokesperson.

The statement stresses that the Government must begin a "substantive and time-bound" dialogue with detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other parties relevant to the national reconciliation process.

Given the announcement of the referendum and elections, the Secretary-General underscored that it is crucial that his Special Adviser Ibrahim Gambari be able to visit Myanmar "without further delay."

Mr. Gambari plans to travel to the region shortly, his office said. He is scheduled to visit Beijing from 18-19 February, as well as Jakarta and Singapore.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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ESTONIA AGREES TO ENFORCE SENTENCES IMPOSED BY UN WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL

ESTONIA AGREES TO ENFORCE SENTENCES IMPOSED BY UN WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL New York, Feb 11 2008 2:00PM Estonia today became the fourteenth European country to agree to enforce a sentence imposed by the United Nations war crimes tribunal that was set up to deal with the worst crimes committed during the Balkan conflicts in the 1990s.

Anyone convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (<"http://www.un.org/icty/">ICTY) and given a jail term can now serve that sentence in an Estonian prison after an agreement was signed in Tallinn, the capital.

Italy, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Austria, France, Spain, Germany, Denmark, the United Kingdom, Belgium, Ukraine and Portugal have already entered into similar agreements with the Tribunal.

More than 35 people convicted by the ICTY either have served, or are currently serving, their sentence in one of the European countries which have signed an agreement. Seven others are awaiting transfer to one of the States.

Under today's agreement, which must be ratified by the country's Parliament, Estonia will only enforce ICTY sentences when the length of the jail term does not exceed the highest maximum sentence for a relevant crime under its domestic laws.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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BAN KI-MOON MOURNS DEATH OF TOM LANTOS, 'CHAMPION OF COMMON HUMANITY'

BAN KI-MOON MOURNS DEATH OF TOM LANTOS, 'CHAMPION OF COMMON HUMANITY' New York, Feb 11 2008 2:00PM United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today mourned the passing of United States Congressman Tom Lantos, paying tribute to the late legislator's courage as a champion of humanity.

"The Secretary-General was deeply saddened to learn of the death of his friend Tom Lantos, the veteran United States legislator, Holocaust survivor, human rights advocate and long-time supporter of the United Nations," a spokesperson for Mr. Ban said in a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=2993">statement.

Mr. Ban paid tribute to the California Congressman's "exceptional courage and contribution, in the national and international arenas, as a champion of our common humanity."

He said Mr. Lantos' "immeasurable efforts in attuning the consciousness and the conscience of people to the dangers of intolerance and human rights violations will long be remembered."

Spokesperson Michele Montas added that the Secretary-General "joins Mr. Lantos' colleagues in the United States Congress, the Jewish community and the international community in giving thanks for his life."

The Secretary-General met Mr. Lantos, Chairman of the House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee, as recently as last June in Washington, DC, but the two shared a friendship dating back to Mr. Ban's days as foreign minister of the Republic of Korea. In that capacity, he met both Mr. Lantos and his wife, Annette, in pursuit of their shared goals of promoting human rights and tolerance.

In today's statement, Mr. Ban extended his condolences to Annette and the entire Lantos family.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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NEARLY $89 MILLION NEEDED TO RESPOND TO FLOODS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA -- UN

NEARLY $89 MILLION NEEDED TO RESPOND TO FLOODS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA -- UN New York, Feb 11 2008 8:00AM The international relief aid community is seeking nearly $89 million to help hundreds of thousands of people in flood-hit parts of Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said today.

The appeal aims to respond to floods that have destroyed thousands of homes, devastated crops and left some 449,000 people in immediate need of humanitarian assistance. With fears that continued rains could cause even worse flooding, the funds will also be used to prepare for a possible deterioration of the situation.

"The governments have done an excellent job. And they urgently need the support of the international community to ensure that all those displaced by the floods receive the food, shelter, water, medicine and other basic necessities they require to survive," said John Holmes, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator.

"We are only halfway through the rainy season and with more heavy rain expected, we must be able to assist potentially hundreds of thousands more people," he added.

In Mozambique, the hardest hit country, the international humanitarian community requires more than $35 million to respond to the needs of 258,000 people affected by the floods, including more than 90,000 who have been displaced during the past month and are now living in resettlement areas.

In addition, about 90,000 hectares of crops have been swamped, destroying the livelihoods of many subsistence farming families. The funds will be used to support the relief effort being led by the Government of Mozambique by providing vital food, water and sanitation supplies, shelter, family kits, medicines and education materials.

In Malawi, international partners are seeking about $17 million as a result of heavy rains and subsequent floods that affected more than 152,000 people. Already more than 700 cholera cases have been reported and the situation will likely worsen in the coming weeks, OCHA warned.

Nearly $18.5 million is needed in Zambia to respond to the needs of more than 20,000 affected people. Floods have caused extensive damage to infrastructure and ruined large areas of crops, which could drastically reduce this year's harvest in many areas.

International responders in Zimbabwe are seeking nearly $15.8 million following localized flooding that began in mid-December 2007, affecting more than 15,000 people. The Government is leading the response to the floods with support from humanitarian partners, who have already distributed shelter items, food, water and sanitation supplies.

The flood-affected regions in the four countries have some of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world, and OCHA noted that the displacements and losses caused by floods will have deeper consequences on HIV-affected households by disrupting health services.

"Despite the scale of these floods, the governments and the international humanitarian community have so far prevented this crisis from becoming a catastrophe," said Mr. Holmes. "Without additional funds, we might not be able to cope if the situation does get worse -- and that would leave large numbers of people at greater risk," he added.


2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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BAN KI-MOON CONDEMNS SHOOTING OF TIMORESE PRESIDENT, URGES CALM

BAN KI-MOON CONDEMNS SHOOTING OF TIMORESE PRESIDENT, URGES CALM New York, Feb 11 2008 8:00AM United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today strongly condemned Sunday's attack on Jose Ramos-Horta, the President of Timor-Leste who was shot and wounded at his home, calling on the country's people to remain calm.

The convoy of Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao was also attacked, according to a statement released by Mr. Ban's spokesperson in New York. No one was killed in the attack on the motorcade, the UN Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT) reported.

One of the two confirmed dead was fugitive Alfredo Reinado, according to the mission.

The President underwent surgery before being medivaced to Australia. He was described as being in "stable but serious" condition.

"The Secretary-General condemns in the strongest possible terms these unacceptable attacks on the legitimate institutions of the state and calls on the Timorese people to remain calm and refrain from all violent acts," the spokesperson said.

At a press briefing in Dili, Acting Special Representative Finn Reske-Nielsen strongly deplored the violence.

United Nations Police are on a high state of alert and is coordinating with the International Security Forces (ISF) and the Timorese authorities.

Mr. Ban's Special Representative, Atul Khare, was in the United States at the time of the attack but immediately headed back to back to Dili.

Mr. Reske-Nielsen joined the Secretary-General in urging the people of Timor-Leste to remain calm. "We are also appealing to all of them to ensure a peaceful resolution to any disagreement," he said.

The fugitive Reinado was the target of investigations by the UN Independent Special Commission of Inquiry for Timor-Leste, set up to look into the deadly violence that erupted in May and April 2006.

It found that Maj. Reinado and his group were reasonably suspected of committing crimes against life and person during the fighting.

The crisis, attributed to differences between eastern and western regions, erupted in late April with the firing of 600 striking soldiers, a third of the armed forces. Ensuing violence claimed at least 37 lives and drove 155,000 people, 15 per cent of the total population, from their homes.

Last year, Timorese President Xanana Gusmao asked for an ISF operation against Maj. Reinado after he ransacked several border police posts, stealing weapons and other equipment.

The Security Council created UNMIT in August 2006 to help restore order after the violence.


2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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Sunday, February 10, 2008

TIMOR-LESTE LEADER WOUNDED IN SHOOTING - UN

TIMOR-LESTE LEADER WOUNDED IN SHOOTING - UN New York, Feb 10 2008 10:00PM Jose Ramos-Horta, President of Timor-Leste, is receiving medical treatment after a shooting took place at his residence in the capital Dili, the United Nations mission in the country reported.

Several people were wounded during the incident, and the mission, known as UNMIT, said that it "regrets that such incidents have taken place."

Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao of the country, which the UN helped shepherd to independence in 2002, is safe in his office and coordinating with UNMIT and international forces.

UN Police (UNPol) is currently on a state of high alert following the shooting.
2008-02-11 00:00:00.000


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KENYA: UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF REPEATS CALL TO CONTINUE ASSISTING DISPLACED

KENYA: UN HUMANITARIAN CHIEF REPEATS CALL TO CONTINUE ASSISTING DISPLACED New York, Feb 10 2008 9:00PM Wrapping up a three-day mission to Kenya to assess the humanitarian situation following the outbreak of post-election violence, the United Nations Emergency Relief Coordinator today reiterated the world body's determination to help those forced to flee their homes by clashes.

"I have met a lot of people in a very sad and tragic psychological state," said John Holmes, who also serves as Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs. "The stories about what had happened to them and their fears for the future were moving, and that has reinforced the determination that I and my colleagues have to do all we can to help in the situation."

Some 1,000 people have lost their lives and more than 310,000 displaced since last December's elections in which President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner over opposition leader Raila Odinga. In addition, some 12,000 Kenyans have fled to neighbouring Uganda.

The Rift Valley, Western and Nyanza provinces and slum areas of Kenya's capital Nairobi have been hardest hit by the unrest.

While visiting displacement camps near Nairobi, the Coordinator heard from internally displaced persons (IDPs) of their concerns about leaving the settlements and moving within Kenya.

The Coordinator underscored that the UN is continuing its support for mediation efforts led by former Secretary-General Kofi Annan to find a sustainable solution to the East African nation's political problems. Simultaneously, the world body is providing impartial humanitarian aid to those in need regardless of their political or ethnic affiliations.

In the Tigoni area, Mr. Holmes was able to witness first-hand Kenya's fluid displacement situation. With the subsiding of the violence, many IDPs are returning home, with some 6,000 displaced leaving the Tigoni camp yesterday on buses to return to the Western and Nyanza provinces.

During his visit to the country, he held talks with Mr. Odinga, the opposition leader, and Foreign Affairs Minister Moses Wetangula, during which he appealed for a resolution of the political crisis and called for the voluntary repatriation of IDPs.

"We welcome the calm in the recent days which has created an opportunity for politicians to tackle the problems that are clearly fundamental," the Under-Secretary-General noted. "We hope the violence will stop and we strongly emphasize the need for accountability for those responsible for that violence."
2008-02-10 00:00:00.000


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