Tag: Amina Mohammed

  • UN urges international community to scale up support for Nigerian women, girls

    UN urges international community to scale up support for Nigerian women, girls

    UN urges international community to scale up support for women and girls for  Nigeria to  realise it’s target on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    UN Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed made the call on Thursday in Abuja at a briefing on the findings of the UN mission on issues affecting women in Nigeria

    Mohammed urged governments and international agencies to focus energies on supporting women and girls in Nigeria.

    According to her the UN believes that if a nation would make meaningful progress women should not only be given greater responsibility but be a part of the decision-making body of that society.

    She called for investment in areas that would bring greater empowerment for women as well as ensuring education of the girl child

    She noted that there would be a reduction in the number of cases of violence against women and girls when they are empowered.

    She commended Nigeria’s efforts at addressing issues of violence against women and urged the country to do more

    Mohammed said that the UN planned to scale up assistance for women and girls by investing more in the 17 SDGs relating to women and girls.

    “The level of sexual violence we are seeing in the camps and communities is so alarming.

    “That is why we are seeking support from the international community to help integrate the women back to the society so that they can continue their normal life”, she said.

    Mohammed urged Nigeria to have a zero tolerance for violence against women and girls.

    She urged the nation to take the issue of development seriously, claiming that there is a connection between poverty and violence against women and girls.

    UN under Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN women, Phumzile Mlanbo-Ngcuka in her remarks called for stiffer punishment for abusers of women and girls.

    Mlanbo-Ngcuka urged states that are yet to domestic the violence against women and girls act to do so.

    She said that the UN introduced the method of safe spacing in camps and communities, as part of effort to help victims of violence recover and adjust back to society.

    She disclosed that the UN was considering a situation where more female security officers would be in charge of women in most of the IDPs camps.

    According to her UN is also wants women to be in charge of food and welfare.

  • UN drums support for Nigerian women, girls

    UN drums support for Nigerian women, girls

    Nigeria must empower women and girls if the country must attain the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), UN Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed has said.

    UN Deputy Scribe argued that for a nation to make meaningful progress, women women must be part of decision-making body of the society.

    Mohammed spoke in Abuja Thursday on the findings of the UN mission on issues affecting women in Nigeria.

    She called on governments and international agencies to focus energies on supporting women and girls in Nigeria.

    Amina who until her appointment by the world body was the country’s minister of Environment also called for investment in areas that would bring greater empowerment for women as well as ensuring education of the girl child,  noting that there would be a reduction in the number of cases of violence against women and girls when they are empowered.

    She commended Nigeria’s efforts at addressing issues of violence against women and urged the country to do more, adding that the UN plans to scale up assistance for women and girls by investing more in the 17 SDGs relating to women and girls.

    “The level of sexual violence we are seeing in the camps and communities is so alarming and that I why we are seeking support from the international community to help integrate the women back to the society so that they can continue their normal life”, he said.

    Mohammed in urging Nigeria to have a zero tolerance for violence against women and girls however urged the nation to take the issue of development seriously, claiming that there is a nexus between poverty and violence against women and girls.

    Speaking on their meeting with the rescued Chibok Girls, the UN envoy commended the spirit in which the girls are handling the matter, stating that “They have overcome the initial trauma, and are now talking about their dreams”.

    Also speaking, UN under Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN women, Phumzile Mlanbo-Ngcuka, while calling for stiffer punishment for abusers of women and girls urged states that are yet to domestic the violence against women and girls act to do so.

    She as part of effort to help victims of violence recover and adjust back to society, the UN introduced the method of safe spacing in camps and communities.

    She disclosed that the UN is also considering a situation where more female soldiers would be in charge of women in most of the IDPs camps as well as putting women in charge of food and welfare.

  • Amina Mohammed, UN envoys to visit Osinbajo

    Amina Mohammed, UN envoys to visit Osinbajo

    Ms Amina Mohammed, the UN Deputy Secretary-General, has begun a trip to Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) on Tuesday, the UN has announced.

    Mohammed would be joined by the Executive Director of UN Women, Dr Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, the UN Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Pramila Patten, and the African Union Special Envoy on Women, Peace and Security, Bineta Diop.

    The trip, which is being carried out in conjunction with the African Union, seeks to raise awareness on the importance of women’s participation in peace and security processes, and of ensuring that the women’s voices are heard in all aspects of society.

    The UN officials would travel to Abuja, where they would meet with the Acting President Yemi Osinbajo and hear from women leaders and young women who have been affected by conflicts.

    On Friday, the Deputy Secretary-General would attend the funeral of Dr Babatunde Osotimehin, the former Executive Director of the UN Population Fund.

    The UN deputy chief would briefly be back in New York to attend a Member States’ retreat over the weekend and will then rejoin the mission in the DRC.

    This trip is the first part of a two part mission focused on women’s meaningful participation in peace, security and development.

    A similar mission would cover two further countries later in the year.

    The deputy Secretary-General is expected to be back in New York on July 28.

  • 11m out-of-school children in North-East Nigeria – Brown

    11m out-of-school children in North-East Nigeria – Brown

    The UN Special Envoy for Global Education, Mr Gordon Brown, says there are about 11 million out-of-school children in northeast Nigeria due to the destructive activities of the Boko Haram terrorists.

    Brown, former British Prime Minister and chair of the Commission on Financing Education Opportunity, told the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in New York that the commission was already intervening in the situation.

    The UN envoy explained that the commission was giving more funds to help the Nigerian education system move forward.

    According to him, the commission and Acting President Yemi Osinbajo are already discussing ways to secure global funds to address the education challenges confronting the northeast.

    “We think there are probably around 11 million children that are not in school. We know that the Boko Haram attacks remained a huge problem and the terrain too.

    “These have prevented girls, particularly, from going to school and we know that there have been many abductions.

    “And they are still tragically many of the girls that were kidnapped from Chibok that have not returned,” Brown said.

    The former British premier, however, said his commission wanted every child to be safe at school, adding there is a new proposal to attract resources to fund the project.

    The UN education envoy lauded the 30 million dollars Nigeria’s Safe Schools Initiative launched in April 2014, describing it as a novel idea.

    “We want every girl to be safe and boys also to be safe when they go to school but particularly girls.

    “The Safe Schools Initiative is designed to help fortify the schools and also help the telecommunications between the schools and prevent the attacks.

    “This is so people can get advanced warnings and to give people the security that there might be some better protection in case there was an attack.

    “So the Safe School Initiative has been something that other countries adopted since Nigeria led the way.

    “The Safe Schools Initiative is being implemented in different parts of the world but obviously we need more resources into the Nigerian system and that’s what this new proposal is about.”

    Brown said ground-breaking International Finance Facility for Education could make it possible to fully finance universal education by 2020 and unlock Sustainable Development Goals.

    The UN former British premier commended the UN and the international donors and partners for efforts to raise multilateral education aid to low-income countries from current 1.6 billion dollars to over four billion dollars a year by 2020.

    “This up-front investment in education, modeled on the proposals of Amina Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, to convert billions into trillions.

    “It can ensure the delivery of our Sustainable Development Goal promises. Indeed, an International Finance Facility for Education will not only create more educational opportunity than ever before.

    “It will multiply job prospects, slow population growth, reduce infant and maternal mortality and hasten a 70 per cent increase in GDP per head by 2050.

    “And for the millions of children presently locked out of an education, it will be a jolt of hope,” Brown said.

  • AIDS pandemic far from over – Amina Mohammed

    AIDS pandemic far from over – Amina Mohammed

    Ms Amina Mohammed, Deputy UN Secretary-General, has warned that the AIDS pandemic was still far from over, saying more than 36.7 million people are living with HIV globally.

    Mohammed told delegations at the General Assembly’s annual review of the Secretary-General’s report, this year calling for a reinvigorated global response to HIV/AIDS, that tackling it required a life-cycle approach based on community-level solutions.

    According to her, global optimism has fuelled a major push to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030, the highest ambition within the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

    “I am happy to report that, today, more babies than ever are being born free from HIV. Now we need to do a better job of reaching young women and adolescent girls.

    “This is particularly true for sub-Saharan Africa, where adolescent girls account for three out of four new HIV infections among 15 to 19-year-olds,” she said.

    “Achieving our aims on AIDS is interlinked and embedded within the broader 2030 Agenda. Both are grounded in equity, human rights and a promise to leave no one behind,” Mohammed added.

    In 2016, the UN political declaration on ending AIDS set the world on a fast-track to stamp out the epidemic by 2030.

    In the first phase, countries agreed to reduce new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths to fewer than 500,000 by 2020 and to eliminate HIV-related stigma and discrimination.

    However, according to the report, with less than four years to go, progress on reducing new HIV infections among adults had stalled.

    The report added that financing for the global response had dried up and more importantly, women and girls continued to bear the brunt of the AIDS epidemic.

    “While more than 18 million are now on life-saving treatment, this is just half of those who need it, and there is no decline in the number of new infections each year.

    “People living with HIV who are on treatment can now expect the same life expectancy as someone who is not infected,” the UN chief said.

    Mohammed noted that key populations, including sex workers, people who inject drugs, transgender people, and men who have sex with men, remain at much higher risk of HIV infection.

    More than 10 million additional people living with HIV must access treatment by 2020, while most of them are unaware of their HIV status.

    On his part, President of the General Assembly, Peter Thomson, said that while major advancements have been made, the scale of shortcomings remained deeply concerning.

    “Some 1,800 young people a day are being newly infected with the virus, with young women at particular risk.

    “A blunt assessment would say that to date our achievements have been mixed,” Thomson said.

    He stressed that ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 required a comprehensive and inclusive approach that also targets education, information and services to people living with HIV and to those at risk.

    “Adequate funding remains critical to meet the objectives, he added, emphasizing the need to close the seven billion dollars funding gap for the global AIDS response.

  • We must eradicate poverty urgently — Deputy UN Scribe

    Eradicating poverty is a task that the entire global community must meet with a sense of urgency, Deputy UN Secretary-General, Ms. Amina Mohammed, has said.

    Mohammed, in her message to the three-day 2017 Integration Segment of the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), said that eradicating poverty remained the greatest global challenge.

    She called for a collective and comprehensive approach that recognised the multidimensional nature of the issue and its interaction with other aspects.

    “Addressing poverty, inequality, climate change, food insecurity and a sluggish and unpredictable global economy requires integrated responses and engagement by all actors.

    “It is also an indispensable requirement for sustainable development.”

    She highlighted the importance of broad partnerships and building synergies across all dimensions of poverty eradication and sustainable development.

    She added that different sectors of the economy at national levels needed to address the complex interlinkages.

    The deputy UN scribe noted that the first Sustainable Development Goal (SDG1) is to end poverty in all its forms and everywhere.

    She added that such efforts also provided an opportunity to gauge how national approaches and the recently adopted SDG Indicator Framework could support each other in advancing integrated implementation and reviewing progress.

    “We need options that will enable policy makers at the global, regional and national levels to foster coherent and integrated approaches to poverty eradication.

    “Expectations are very high and now is the time. We have a collective responsibility to deliver results at the country level,” she said.

    Also speaking at the opening, Nabeel Munir, the Vice-President of ECOSOC, underscored the importance of integrated policy frameworks, given the interconnected nature of sustainable development — the economic, social and environmental dimensions.

    “The interlinkages between the different Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) we have defined to achieve our common vision are explicit, unveiling potential synergies and trade-offs.

    “This underlines the importance of integrated policy frameworks for the realization of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

    “It also underlines the significance of this Integration Segment and the discussions that will take place in the context of the 2017 session of the Economic and Social Council’s work,” Munir said.

    The 2017 Integration Segment of ECOSOC brings together key stakeholders to discuss and identify opportunities and challenges in developing integrated approaches to tackle poverty in a sustained, inclusive and sustainable manner.

    The session will also focus on Least Developed Countries.

    The 2017 meeting will also consider best practices, lessons learned and recommendations at the national, regional and international levels.

    This is with a view to extracting policy recommendations to guide integrated policy making for poverty eradication as an integral part of the 2030 Agenda.

    Discussions and outcomes from the Integration Segment will feed into the High-level Segment of ECOSOC as well as into the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development.

  • UN pledges reforms to meet SDGs 2030 target

    UN pledges reforms to meet SDGs 2030 target

    The UN says it is carrying out various reforms of the organisation to help countries to meet its ambitious 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development  aimed at making the world a better place.

    UN Deputy Secretary-General,  Ms Amina Mohammed,  stated this in her remarks to the Regional Forum on Sustainable Development for the UN Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) Region on Tuesday.

    “The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development is ambitious. We have our work cut out for us.

    “Building on past success and with further strengthening of the development system, we will be fit for the task,” the UN deputy scribe said.

    To ensure that the UN  is  well positioned to help countries deliver on the 2030 Agenda and climate commitments, the UN system needs a much higher degree of integration, coordination, accountability and transparency on system wide-results, she said.

    “One of my key priorities in the course of the year will be to support the Secretary-General in repositioning the UN development system at the heart of the United Nations.

    “A key step in this regard will be to undertake a comprehensive review of the UN development system  in line with the Quadrennial Comprehensive Policy Review mandate.

    “We will build on analysis and inputs that already exist, including those emerging from the two-year long ECOSOC dialogue process. We will need to collect some additional data to inform our reform efforts.

    “In this regard, I encourage and count on UNECE to engage in the process, starting with our first ever system-wide review of functions and capacities for delivery for the 2030 Agenda,” Mohammed said.

    She said in close consultation with member states and collaboratively with the UN system, the Secretary-General would deliver a comprehensive proposal.

    According to her, three broad principles will underpin the work ahead in reforming the UN and to achieve the 2030 Agenda.

    They are s strengthening leadership at all levels for stronger coordination and integration,  addressing the trust deficit through a clear and impartial accountability system  and focusing on results at country level as the litmus test for any reform.

    Mohammed said consultations and  formal meetings had begun, adding that she was engaging member states informally in regional groups and other settings.

    “The Regional Commissions will be instrumental in mobilising political leadership across sectors around the SDGs and facilitating regional and inter-regional as well as  South-South partnerships.

    “As the regional think tanks of the system, Regional Commissions can assist with translating regional models into regional and global public goods and promote policy coherence.

    “They are also critical to reinforcing conflict prevention and promoting durable peace through inclusive and sustainable development,” she said.

    Mohammed challenged regional commissions to work hand in hand with the broader UN Development System to support the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.

  • UN official tasks Africa on Boko Haram, conflicts

    The United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, has challenged Nigeria and African countries to learn from the lessons of the Boko Haram insurgency and other violent conflicts ravaging the continent.

    Mohammed, who made the remarks at a “special honorary dinner” organised in her honour by Nigerian women at the Nigeria House in New York, expressed regretted that the gains of peace were easily lost on the continent.

    “We know today that often in Africa, we very quickly might get the gains of peace as we did in South Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Somalia, but they are so quickly lost because we do not invest in the thereafter,” she said.

    “So the lessons learnt is that as we recover from Boko Haram in the Northeast of Nigeria; let us not forget that we need investment 24-seven in large amount for many years to come.

    “This is because the destruction there is not just goods and lives; it is living in the lives of the girls and women who have come back from their horrors and that will take a generation to get back.”

    She said the UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, had given her some clear-cut responsibilities geared toward making the world better for humanity.

    Mohammed said: “The Secretary-General of the United Nations is committed to gender parity, he started it in his office and he hopes to do that by the end of his term.

    “He has committed to seeing an end to sexual exploitation and abuse and it starts with the United Nations itself.

    “But he has also given me a mandate to implement the 2030 agenda, the 17 SDGs, to do the climate agenda, to address migration, to take the leadership in the reform of the United Nations system and also to look into the humanitarian issues that are needed if we are to recover from the conflicts that we come out of.”

    NAN

  • 65 million displaced by conflicts, disasters – Amina Mohammed

    Today, an unprecedented 65 million people around the world have been displaced due to conflict and disaster, the UN Deputy Secretary-General, Ms. Amina Mohammed, has said.

    Mohammed, who made the remarks at the “Solve at the United Nations” event on Tuesday, also said “there are 21 million refugees.

    “Half are under the age of 18. We cannot allow them to become a lost generation.

    “The world is closing its doors on these refugees, even though investing in them is investing in future peace”.

    She said behind the immediate concerns of conflict, refugees and global economic uncertainty, climate change now poses a tangible and increasing threat.

    Climate change is already having devastating effects on communities, nations and regions, she said.

    “And it is a proven threat multiplier, meaning that if we don’t address it now, the chances of future wars, conflicts, disasters and mass displacement will grow.”

    According to her, it is essential for the world to work together as an international community and a global family, for a low carbon future and implement the promise of the Paris Agreement.

    And, we must do this holistically in tandem with working to achieve all the other Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), she said.

    “We need solutions to chronic diseases, such as heart disease, strokes, cancer, respiratory diseases and diabetes.

    “These are now the leading cause of mortality, representing 60 per cent of all deaths.

    “We need better sanitation, cleaner air and water, sustainable cities and agriculture, and governance that puts people first.”

    The UN deputy scribe said working for the SDGs is not charity but self-interest for the present and future generations adding, it is investment in preventing future disaster, conflict and crisis.

    “I worked very closely with member States, business, civil society and academia on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the accompanying Sustainable Development Goals when I was Special Adviser to the Secretary-General.

    “Each of those Goals feels like one of my children. Like a family, the Goals are all different but inter-related, and each depends on the others.

    “Together, they are a bold and transformative blueprint for a world of peace and prosperity where no one is left behind.

    “In practice, that means ending poverty and hunger; providing opportunities for all to fulfil their potential and protecting our home, the planet,” she said.

    ‘Solve at the United Nations’ is a live pitch event, where selected innovators pitch their solutions to solve challenges on refugee education, carbon contributions, and chronic diseases to a panel of expert judges and a live audience.

     

  • UN DSG addresses ECOSOC segment on operational activities

    UN DSG addresses ECOSOC segment on operational activities

    The Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN), Amina Mohammed on Tuesday addressed the 2017 ECOSOC segment on operational activities.

    Her address: Good morning, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    [quote]

    Good morning, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    I am delighted to be here.  My first interaction is coming, of course, off the back of the ECOSOC segment and that is so important to us given the thrust of the reform and the development agenda. I look forward to my time here, working and interacting closely with you. Great privilege to return to New York, again, I have to say today, incredibly humbled by the weight and expectations of the Secretary-General and myself in support of him to actualize his vision.

    Today’s world challenges are much more complex and intertwined; we have seen anxiety that is increasingly mounting across the world.  I’m grateful to the Secretary-General [António Guterres] for his trust and his leadership, ambitious vision for the Organization, a vision that focuses on prevention, really looking at the root causes. It requires that we really do take integration much more seriously and work across all the pillars.

    I will be focusing primarily on helping the SG to reposition sustainable development at the United Nations and as he has stated, sustainable development is an end in itself but it is also the best way that we feel that we can achieve universal peace.

    I’m attaching great importance to the promise of leaving no one behind, so starting with those that are furthest behind, really looking to see how we can address that in a robust manner that brings everyone into the sustainable development agenda, addressing gender barriers that we’ve seen constantly; that we have achieved some success in that, not enough.  We need to go to scale at this point. We also need to empower youth, agents of peace and development. I can say that in the recent 15 months that I have been home, after helping to shape the 2030 Agenda, youth have been the greatest challenge that we have faced but also the greatest potential to finding solutions for peace and development.

    I will be supporting the SG in the comprehensive review of the UN development system; this will be in close consultation with Member States.  

    We have the advantage that the three major agendas that we agreed in 2015, were really from an inclusive process where Member States owned it and lead on it. And so supporting them to get an ambitious response at the country level is one that I believe will have a much easier task than we would have had previously, so therefore, those consultations will be given utmost priority.

    We shall become as the United Nations much more fit for purpose. I think this is across all constituencies, not just the UN but we have to lead in that. We provided an ambitious agenda, where most people are struggling with integration, struggling with universality, a different concept to sustainable development and so for that we need to ensure that our partners too, in the civil society and the private sector, are on board and we are all helping countries and not burdening them with a new agenda.

    I think over the recent times, the 2030 agenda as I have spent the last 15 months trying to see that at country-level, not just in Nigeria but across the region in Africa, with other agendas like [African Union Agenda] 2063, there is an acute need for us to make sure that we are aligning these agendas and not layering them and burdening at the country level some of the issues that need to be addressed as much, as urgently as possible.

    You can count on our utmost commitment to ensure the UN responds in a way that honours our level of ambition, it is an ambitious agenda and once again, just say I’m really happy to be back here in service of humanity.

    Take a few questions?

    Q:  Thank you very much, Deputy Secretary-General, welcome back to the United Nations and your new post. You outlined a very ambitious agenda, which requires, of course, a lot of government support, but also a lot of funding. How concerned are you about the new US administration’s announcement of major cuts, including to the State Department, which helps fund the UN budget? And what would the impact be, since the United States is the largest funder of the United Nations?

    DSG: Thank you for that. I mean, I think any cuts, wherever they come, are of great concern with an agenda that is so much more ambitious, and we have many more complex issues to deal with. I think the important thing that we need to do is to continue to engage with our partners and to show how important it is not to decrease but to increase, and find different ways of doing so. It may not be in the traditional ways forward. I think the UN agenda for transformation reform also speaks to much more accountability for results, and I think, you know, Member States would like to see that. So I am optimistic we can engage. I have to say, in the past few months we have not often seen when we bring together our global community a good response to some of the humanitarian crises. But just recently in Oslo what did we see? Once it had been laid out what pathway countries were looking at to address the challenges in some post-conflict areas, we saw an incredible comeback for support, including the United States, to those crises. So I am, of course, concerned, but I believe that we can find a way of leveraging other resources. Same Member States, different ways, different means.

    Q:  My question is about the famine drive – the $4 billion famine drive. Can you speak to this, what you expect it to be a success, particularly in your native Nigeria?

    DSG: Well again, you know, a huge crisis. We need to be ahead of the curve and not behind it, and so we do press for the support we need in those four countries. This famine is not just going to be limited to them if we don’t address it in a very urgent way. I think that the results that we saw in Oslo recently are warming and I think that this is showing that there is a way forward on some of this. We need to listen to some of the issues that were raised there. Again, bringing agencies and partnerships together in a much more coordinated and coherent manner, will help us get further, leveraging resources from different constituencies now, different partnerships in a global agenda, this is becoming more complex, but it is bringing in more returns and so again, we are not taking our foot off the urgency pedal, it is really urgent that we get much more, much more quickly, but so far the [outings?] have proved to be positive.

    Q:  Do you expect problems in terms of delivering that kind of aid in parts of Nigeria?

    DSG: No, I mean my experience has been that, of recent, where one has seen some of these challenges of coordination, they have been addressed pretty quickly, both at the national level, and at the UN system. It’s a very difficult environment to be in, but at the same time, Nigeria doesn’t just consist of the northeast. It is a much wider arena of processes and support and platforms to do these things. I think they will need additional support, institutional capacity. If you look at what has happened in the northeast there, yes, institutions have been broken down, human resources capacity has been reduced, but there is a lot of willingness to come on board and help, a lot of goodwill. It does have to be better coordinated, and I think that is what we are pushing on right now.

    Q: Thank you very much for this opportunity, and welcome back. What importance do you give to the prevention agenda and the reform launched by Mr. Guterres?

    DSG; Well, it is right up front there. The results that we want to see are actioned on the 2030 agenda. Looking at the root causes, if you look at the integration of the 2030 agenda, you will see a lot of prevention work in there, a lot of addressing the jobless, inequalities, improving peoples’ economies beyond GDP. Looking at partners like the private sector, not just CSR but seeing how their business models themselves can change and also take care of the bottom line which of course is what private sectors and business can do. So I think the prevention agenda gives us an opportunity to look at the three dimensions. We always say there cannot be peace without development, and no development without peace, and human rights at the centre of that. So bringing it closer together is work that we will have to do, and keeping a conscious effort that that is the result that we want to see, that we don’t see these conflicts again which in many, many cases, investments of scale would have prevented.

    Q: Reform?

    DSG: Oh the reform, well the reform has already started. As you can see, the resolution we got on [QCPR?] was a pretty ambitious one. It is our job now to facilitate Member States to put teeth into it, so that we have a robust response to actually delivering on these agendas that have got many, many different issues, not just the transparency, accountability and the efficiency of the system, but we have also got to see how we deal with resources as well, human and financial.

    Q: I saw that you worked on the Green Bond in Nigeria, and I wondered whether you think that that is a model that other emerging markets can use to secure [inaudible] projects, and also do you view it as part of your mandate to work on the issue of Security Council reform, in the sense of making it more representative, and having more countries represented on it? Thanks.

    DSG: Well, on the Green Bond, I have to say it was an exciting initiative to use, to leverage, the implementation of the NDC. The first thought was: how do you do that, beyond the budget, and to bring this whole integration at country level. So, the sovereign Green Bond which will be the first ones issued at the end of March in emerging countries is very exciting, and I think that the model that should be taken there is that countries themselves need to go through a process that strengthens integration and that they institutionally can then rise to the opportunities of other financing coming into the international Green Bond market. And that is huge. It has also brought in a lot of the private sector into this, in a way, I think, that is constructive and gets government providing the enabling environment but the private sector really taking things to scale. It has to be about jobs and our economies improving in Africa, so yes, I do think that that is important.

    On the second question on security reform, that is something that I will work to support the Secretary-General.  I think he has given me a huge amount to deliver on. I think that Security Council reform is a critical part of what we do in the next few years and somehow we have to balance that if we to address the prevention agenda.

    Thank you very much.

    [/quote]