Tag: UN

  • Boko Haram: UN yet to receive sanction request

    The United Nation on Friday denied receiving a letter reportedly written by a former President of the Senate, Chief Ameh Ebute, in which he accused some of Nigeria’s neighbours of complacency in the fight against the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Ebute wants such countries sanctioned.

    The letter was supposed to have been addressed to the UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, and a copy sent to the Chief Prosecutor, International Criminal Court, Hague.

    However, Mr. Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman for the Secretary-General, denied knowledge of the letter.

    “I’ve seen the press reports. I have not seen the letter,” he said.

    “Obviously, the question of sanctions is up for the Council.

    “And I think for the UN, for our part, we’ve always counted on the cooperation of all countries in the Lake Chad Basin in the fight against Boko Haram.”

    Ebute had said in the letter “that each time the insurgents strike in Nigeria, they escape into either or all of these countries for refuge, during which time, they recuperate, re-energise, re-arm and surface to attack new targets in Nigeria.

    “It must be emphasized that the three countries have always been the entry and exit points for terrorists into and out of Nigeria.

    “Since the fall of Sambisa forest, their safest haven in Borno State, residues of insurgents have relocated to these countries, from where they stray into Nigerian territories to launch random attacks on soft and obscure targets.”

    The former Senate President urged the UN Secretary-General to invoke relevant instruments, particularly Article 99 of the UN Charter.

    He added that the Secretary-General should draw the attention of the Security Council to investigate the “nuances of the consuming terrorism undercurrents” in Nigeria, which are potent enough to cause international breach of peace and security.

  • 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]

  • UN: 32 personnel killed in 2016

    UN: 32 personnel killed in 2016

    No fewer than 32 UN officials were killed in 2016, with most of them killed in deliberate attacks, the UN has said.

    Mr Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesperson for UN Secretary-General, said that at a press briefing on Tuesday that most of the victims were UN Peacekeepers.

    “The Standing Committee for the Security and Independence of the International Civil Service of the UN Staff Union says that at least 32 UN personnel were killed in deliberate attacks in 2016.

    “They are mostly peacekeepers but also two security guards, one civilian staff member and one contractor,” he said.

    Haq explained that for the third year in a row the greatest loss of lives was recorded in Mali.

    According to him, at least 23 UN personnel were killed in the country during that year.

    “In the past five years, almost 240 United Nations personnel have died in deliberate attacks,” Haq regretted.

  • NEPC, UN streamline export procedure

    NEPC, UN streamline export procedure

    The Federal Government and the United Nations have partnered to streamline the process for exporting goods to the global market.

    The Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC) in partnership with the United Nations Centre for Trade facilitation and Electronic Business agreed to simplify national and international transaction.

    This partnership is in line with recent successes recorded in the country’s quest to ease the time spent on doing business. According to World Bank report, Nigeria recorded marginal improvement from 169 to 149 out of the 190 countries surveyed globally.

    The Executive Director/CEO Nigeria Export Promotion Council NEPC, Olusegun Awolowo said the UN/CEFACT’s goal is simple, transparent and effective processes for globsl commerce. The organisation aims to help businesses, trade and administrative organisation, from countries at all levels of development, exchange products and services effectively.

    He spoke at a National Workshop on Trade Facilitation in Abuja, stating that the UN/CEFACT focuses on simplifying national and international transactions by harmonising processes, procedures and information flows, rendering them more efficient and streamlined, with the ultimate goal of contributing to the growth of global commerce.

    He said: “Just two weeks ago, Nigeria became  107th member of the World Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) in Davos. Ratification of the TFA shows Nigeria’s dedication to UN/CEFACT recommendation and it is a reflection of the country’s commitment to creating an enabling environment for businesses.

    “By ratifying the TFA, Nigeria has moved closer to overcoming our cumbersome trade processes and streamlining our trade procedures. The TFA contains provision for expediting the movement, release and clearance of goods. It also sets out measures for effective cooperation between customs and other appropriate authorities on trade facilitation and customs compliance.

    “According to a 2015 WTO (World Trade Organisation) study, full implementation of TFA can reduce members trade costs by an average of 14.3 per cent with developing countries having the most to gain. Recommendation 33 establishing a single window interoperability are two more essential UN/CEFACT recommendations with which NEPC has been proud to participate.

  • Ki-moon won’t vie for South Korea’s presidency

    Ki-moon won’t vie for South Korea’s presidency

    Former United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, once considered the front-runner to be next president of South Korea, ruled out running for the top job on Wednesday, disappointed at the “selfish ways” of some politicians in his home country.

    The 19th South Korean presidential election is scheduled to be held on or before Dec. 21, 2017.

    Ban said at an unscheduled news conference at parliament, after meeting leaders of conservative parties, that it was “meaningless” to join them.

    “I have decided to give up the pure intention of trying to lead political change and accomplish national reconciliation,” he said.

    Ban returned to South Korea on Jan. 12 after serving 10 years as UN chief but had been unable to capitalise on his much-anticipated homecoming, cutting a sometimes-irritable figure in public and mired in a series of perceived PR gaffes and a scandal involving family members.

    Even without announcing his intention to run, his support ratings in opinion polls had slipped to second place behind the presidential candidate for the main opposition Democratic Party, after peaking at nearly 30 percent last year.

    Conservative President Park Geun-Hye has been impeached by parliament amid a wide-ranging corruption scandal, complicating any run by Ban.

    He had been expected to run as a conservative but was unable to secure any party affiliation.

    If the impeachment vote against Park is upheld by the Constitutional Court, she will have to quit and an election would be held two months later.

    A ruling is expected as soon as late this month.

  • Boko Haram: ‘UN House ready soon’

    The first phase of renovation work on the United Nations, (UN) House in Abuja has since been completed and the second phase comprising security equipment and furnishing is being fast-tracked to enable its agencies move back into the building.

    Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Malam Muhammad Bello, dropped this hint when the United Nations Development Programme Resident Representative in Nigeria, Mr. Edward Kallon paid him a visit.

    The Minister said that the government would do everything possible to complete the remaining phase of the renovation work and deliver it to the end-users as soon as possible.

    According to a statement issued by the Deputy Director/Chief Press Secretary, Muhammad Sule, the minister assured that the FCT Administration will strengthen its relationship with the UN Agencies and will continue to support them to achieve their mandate in the country.

    He revealed that the FCT Administration had made efforts to complete abandoned projects in the Federal Capital City and intends to carry development to the Satellite Towns and Area Councils to reduce pressure on the city centre this year.

    The UNDP Resident Representative, Mr. Edward Kallon who is a Sierra Leonean, promised to connect the FCTA with global development partners.

    He said that the UNDP would also work to promote ICT development in the FCT to assist in making Abuja a smart city for youth development.

    It may be recalled that the FCT Minister, Malam Muhammad Musa Bello, during an unscheduled visit to the site directed the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) to hasten the complete rehabilitation of the House to ensure quick handover.

  • ‘Mohammed’s UN appointment proves global confidence in Nigeria’

    The choice of Minister of Environment, Mrs. Amina Mohammed, as Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations has been described as another testimony of the confidence reposed in Nigeria by the global community.

    The National President of the National Council for Women Societies, NCWS, Dr. (Mrs.) Gloria Shoda, stated this in a congratulatory message to the Deputy Secretary-General designate of the world body at the weekend.

    She said: “Mrs. Mohammed’s appointment should not come as a surprise to people who know her worth, inherent capabilities, and her record of impeccable and meritorious service to Nigeria and the United Nations.”

    It further added that the development is reaffirmation of the global community’s confidence in Nigeria and its commitment to enhancing the status of the female gender.

    In another letter forwarded to President Muhammadu Buhari, the NCWS commended the president for supporting the candidacy of Mrs. Muhammed.

    She noted the development would undoubtedly serve as a morale booster for women all over the world and encourage Nigeria’s female population to take their rightful places in accordance with the various Conventions on Women Development.

    The NCWS also commended  the wife of the president,  Mrs. Aisha Buhari, for her untiring efforts at ensuring that Nigerian women are accorded due recognition locally and internationally.

  • Nigeria 14th largest UN troops contributing nation – Report

    Nigeria 14th largest UN troops contributing nation – Report

    Nigeria is the world’s 14th largest troops contributing nation to UN Peacekeeping operations, according to the latest data published by the UN peacekeeping.

    The data obtained by the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in New York, showed that Nigeria contributed a total of 2, 170 peacekeeping personnel in 2016.

    It showed that as at August 31, 2016, Nigeria had provided 403 policemen, 46 military experts and 1,721 troops, out of which 232 were females.

    According to the data, the largest contributors to UN peacekeeping missions are Ethiopia with 8,326, India with 7,471 personnel and Pakistan which contributed 7,161.

    Jamaica, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Latvia, and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, contributed the least with one each.

    According to the report, Nigeria ranks eighth in Africa after Ethiopia, Burkina Faso – 3,036, Egypt – 2,889, Ghana – 2,972, Rwanda – 6,146, Senegal – 3,617 and Tanzania – 2,341.

    “As we start this new year (2017), more than 115,000 people from 123 countries work hard to maintain peace.

    “They are civilian, police and military personnel deployed in 16 UN peacekeeping missions across the world,” the report said.

    It added that the peacekeeping personnel were seconded to work with the UN by member countries.

    “They come from nations large and small, rich and poor.

    “They bring different cultures and experience to the job, but they are united in their determination to foster peace.”

    It said UN peacekeeping helps countries torn by conflict to create conditions for lasting peace.

    “Peacekeeping has proven to be one of the most effective tools available to the UN to assist host countries navigate the difficult path from conflict to peace.

    “Peacekeeping has unique strengths, including legitimacy, burden sharing, and an ability to deploy and sustain troops and police from around the globe, integrating them with civilian peacekeepers to advance multidimensional mandates.

    “UN Peacekeepers provide security and the political and peacebuilding support to help countries make the difficult, early transition from conflict to peace.”

    According to the report, UN peacekeeping is guided by three basic principles: consent of the parties; impartiality; and non-use of force except in self-defence and defence of the mandate.

    “Peacekeeping is flexible and over the past two decades has been deployed in many configurations.

    “There are currently 16 UN peacekeeping operations deployed on four continents.

    “Today’s multidimensional peacekeeping operations are called upon not only to maintain peace and security but also to facilitate the political process, protect civilians, assist in the disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration of former combatants; support the organisation of elections, protect and promote human rights and assist in restoring the rule of law.

    “Success is never guaranteed because UN Peacekeeping almost by definition goes to the most physically and politically difficult environments.

    “However, we have built up a demonstrable record of success over our 60 years of existence, including winning the Nobel Peace Prize.”

  • $310m UN humanitarian aid plan for Cameroon

    $310m UN humanitarian aid plan for Cameroon

    The UN has launched a $310 million U.S. dollars humanitarian response plan for crisis-affected communities in Cameroon.

    UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Cameroon, Najat Rochdi, said in a statement issued on Wednesday by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

    “A 310 million U.S. dollars humanitarian response plan, backed by the United Nations, has been launched to provide life-saving assistance to 1.2 million people in Cameroon’s northern and eastern regions.

    “Cameroon continues to confront a complex crisis deeply affecting the lives and livelihoods of millions of people,” Rochdi said in the statement.

    The UN official commended the Government of Cameroon for its show of hospitality to refugees from Nigeria and the Central African Republic.

    “The Government and people of Cameroon are showing great hospitality to hundreds of thousands of Nigerian and Central African refugees.

    “We call for the renewed engagement of humanitarian partners and international donors to match this generosity and assist the people most in need,” she added.

    She said Cameroon hosts some 360,000 refugees from neighbouring Central African Republic and Nigeria.

    According to her, the number of internally displaced people has more than doubled in 2016 to almost 200,000 people.

    “Malnutrition remains equally high, affecting some 200,000 children.

    “In 2017, almost three million people in Cameroon are expected to be in need of assistance.

    “Around 2.6 million will face crisis and emergency levels of food insecurity, mostly in the arid Sahel belt of the northern regions,” she said.

    The 2017 response plan, launched by the Government of Cameroon with the UN and humanitarian organisations, covers the immediate needs of the most vulnerable and emphasises complementary action and cooperation with government and development partners.

    Over the last three years, humanitarian needs and financial requirement in Cameroon have steadily increased leading to a significant scale up of response capacity and a number of partners.

    Budget constraints, however, caused significant gaps across all sectors.

    In 2016, only 64 per cent of the required 232 million U.S. dollars was funded, according to the statement.

  • CAR: Two UN peacekeepers killed, two injured in ambush

    CAR: Two UN peacekeepers killed, two injured in ambush

    The UN peacekeeping mission in the Central African Republic (CAR) on Wednesday announced the killing of two peacekeepers and the injuring of two others in an ambush.

    The Special Representative of the Secretary-General in the country, Parfait Onanga-Anyanga, in a statement on Wednesday, condemned the ambush.

    “The United Nations peacekeeping mission in the today condemned a deadly ambush on a convoy in the south-eastern part of the country which killed two blue helmets from Morocco and wounded two others.

    “No claim can justify that individuals direct their grievances against peacekeepers whose presence here has no other objective than to help the country to end this cycle of violence,” he warned

    Onanga-Anyanga, who is also Head, UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in CAR (MINUSCA), added that “every effort” would be made to track down those responsible and bring them to justice.

    “An attack on a peacekeeper may constitute a war crime,” he said.

    According to MINUSCA, the attack took place about 60 kilometres (37 miles) west of Obo.

    “The convoy was heading to the city with fuel picked up at Zemio when unknown insurgents surprised them, killed two peacekeepers, and then escaped into the bush.”

    Speaking to UN News from Bangui, MINUSCA’s spokesperson, Vladimir Monteiro, said the two injured peacekeepers were receiving treatment, one of them for severe injuries.

    “Attacks such as these are not only on UN peacekeepers but also on humanitarian actors and particularly the civilian population,” Monteiro.

    Clashes between the mainly Muslim Séléka rebel coalition and anti-Balaka militia, which are mostly Christian, plunged the country of 4.5 million people into civil conflict in 2013.

    Despite significant progress and successful elections, CAR has remained in the grip of instability and sporadic unrest.

    In December 2016, the Mission supported a new dialogue between 11 of the 14 armed groups, as part of an ongoing effort to disarm the factions.

    “MINUSCA is still pushing to adhere to this dialogue,” Monteiro said.