Tag: United Nations

  • Human Rights Day: ‘Stand for someone’s rights today, everyday’ – Ban

    Human Rights Day: ‘Stand for someone’s rights today, everyday’ – Ban

    The global community has been challenged to rise up individually and collectively, for the protection of the rights of people around them at all times.

    UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who made the remarks in his message to mark the 2016 Human Rights Day, observed on Dec. 10, said, “upholding human rights is in the interest of all”.

    “All of us can and must act in our daily lives to advance the human rights of the people around us.

    “This is the driving force behind a new global campaign being launched by the United Nations Human Rights Office “Stand Up for Someone’s Rights Today”.

    “Wherever we are, each of us can make a difference for human rights:  in our neighbourhoods, in school, at work, on social media, at home and even in sporting arenas across the world.

    “Together, let us stand up for someone’s rights today, tomorrow and every day,” the UN scribe said.

    Ban pointed out that he had also underscored that human rights were at the heart of the work and identity of the UN, adding that this understanding is at the core of its ‘Human Rights Up Front’ initiative.

    He said that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights reminded us that recognition of “the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family was the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world”.

    “Step by step, we can build a future based on our shared values of equality and human dignity.

    “That is the spirit that underlies our recently launched “Together” campaign to fight the xenophobia faced by so many refugees and migrants.

    “That is also the spirit we will need to combat extremism, halt the erosion of respect for international humanitarian law, and defend civil society groups facing increasingly harsh measures aimed at preventing them from fulfilling their vital role.

    “The United Nations, along with partners around the globe, must continue to strengthen responses to abuses, and work better to prevent human rights crises.”

    He said he had repeatedly stressed the interdependence of the three pillars of the United Nations:  peace, sustainable development and human rights over the last eight years.

    ”Together, the three pillars form the basis of resilient and cohesive societies rooted in inclusion, justice and the rule of law,” the UN chief said.

  • Lift humanity, work for the common good, Ki-moon urges Trump

    Secretary -of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon has congratulated United States presidential –elect, Donald Trump on his election as forty-fifth President of the United States of America.

    Ki-moon in a statement issued in New York  noted that in the aftermath of a hard-fought and often divisive campaign, it is worth recalling and reaffirming that the unity in diversity of the United States is one of the country’s greatest strengths.

    He therefore encouraged all Americans to stay true to that spirit.

    “ Today’s global challenges demand concerted global action and joint solutions.  As a founding member of the United Nations and permanent member of the Security Council, the United States is an essential actor across the international agenda.  People everywhere look to the United States to use its remarkable power to help lift humanity up and to work for the common good.

    “The United Nations will count on the new Administration to strengthen the bonds of international cooperation as we strive together to uphold shared ideals, combat climate change, advance human rights, promote mutual understanding and implement the Sustainable Development Goals to achieve lives of peace, prosperity and dignity for all.

    “Now more than ever, we must mobilize around the principles and common values of the United Nations Charter,” the UN Secretary General stated.

    He also expressed my appreciation to the defeated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for a lifetime commitment to peace, the advancement of women and the well-being of children.

    “She has been a powerful global symbol of women’s empowerment, and I have no doubt that she will continue to contribute to our work across the world.”

  • UN Secretary-General welcomes Chibok girls

    The Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN) welcomes the reported release of 21 Chibok school girls, following more than two years of captivity.

    According to the Secretary-General in a statement, he remains deeply concerned about the safety and well-being of the remaining schoolgirls and other victims of abduction by Boko Haram, who are still in captivity.

    The Secretary-General urges the international community to continue supporting the government of Nigeria in its efforts to secure their release, rehabilitation and reintegration.

    He called for increased efforts to ensure additional humanitarian access in the north-east of Nigeria, and reiterates the continued commitment of the United Nations in this regard.

    The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for West Africa and the Sahel, in his capacity as High Representative for Nigeria, continues to engage with the Nigerian authorities and international partners on this matter.

  • Portugal’s Antonio Guterres set to become next UN chief

    Portugal’s Antonio Guterres set to become next UN chief

    Former Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Guterres is set to become the next head of the United Nations after he emerged on Wednesday as the favoured candidate among UN Security Council members.

    Guterres, also former head of the UN refugee agency, had been in the lead during five previous straw polls and got no vetoes in the latest poll to find a replacement for South Korea’s Ban Ki-moon.

    He got 13 encouraging votes and two abstentions from the 15-member council.

    None of the permanent members — Britain, China, France, Russia or the U.S. — signaled an intention to cast a veto against Guterres in a formal vote.

    “Today, after our sixth straw poll, we have a clear favourite and his name is Antonio Guterres,’’ Vitaly Churkin, Russian ambassador to the UN, told reporters, with ambassadors representing all members of council standing next to him.

    The council will take a formal vote later Thursday and will then send its recommendation to the UN General Assembly, which will make the final decision in a vote seen as a formality.

    The secretary general oversees all of the operations of the 193-member UN, acting as its chief administrator and top envoy in global trouble spots.

    According to Matthew Rycroft, British ambassador to the UN, it is an important day for the Security Council coming together, uniting behind Antonio Guterres.

    “Guterres will make a very strong, effective secretary general of the UN at a crucial time for the world and for this organisation,’’ Rycroft said.

    Samantha Power, U.S. ambassador to the UN, said that the breakthrough was Guterres performance and experience.

    “In the end, there was just a candidate whose experience, vision, and versatility across a range of areas proved compelling,’’ Power told newsmen.

    The two officials said Guterres would make a statement in Lisbon after the formal vote.

    All of the other nine candidates in the race for next chief got vetoes, a diplomat said on the condition of anonymity, since the straw poll was secret.

    EU Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva, who entered the race just recently, received five encouraging and eight discouraging votes, including two vetoes from permanent members.

    Two countries expressed no opinion on her candidacy.

    However current UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who has held the post for the last 10 years, is stepping down at the end of the year as his second term comes to an end.

  • Readout of UN Secretary-General’s meeting with Buhari

    Readout of UN Secretary-General’s meeting with Buhari

    The Secretary-General of the United Nations on Wednesday met with H.E. Mr. Muhammadu Buhari, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The Secretary-General commended the President’s efforts against corruption and insecurity and to promote economic development.

    The two leaders discussed efforts by Nigeria and the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) against Boko Haram, in the North – East of the country. The Secretary-General reiterated the UN’s continued support for those efforts and underscored the need to ensure full respect of human rights, international humanitarian and refugee law in all operations.

    The Secretary-General thanked President Buhari for Nigeria’s invaluable contribution to international peace and security, including political mediation in the region.

  • “Saving our ship: Global response to refugees and migrants”

    “Saving our ship: Global response to refugees and migrants”

    Perhaps no issue on the global agenda is more susceptible to manipulation by grandstanding demagogues than refugees and migrants. ‘Us’ versus ‘them’ is a timeless if irresponsible unifier, used throughout history to obscure our common humanity by those with dangerously self-serving interests. The difference now is that more people are on the move than ever before, and in an era when storylines spread with viral speed, we see xenophobia rising and too often erupting into violence.

    This week’s United Nations Summit for Refugees and Migrants represents a breakthrough at a breaking point. With so many shrill voices dominating the debate, governments from around the world are responding in measured tones that can yield real results if promises are kept.

    The Summit marks the first-ever gathering of top leaders to discuss refugees and migrants. It will adopt a groundbreaking consensus agreement: the New York Declaration. Fittingly, that document honours a city renowned for its vibrant diversity,–symbolized by the Statue of Liberty standing tall in New York Harbor. Most importantly, the Declaration sets a principled and pragmatic approach for addressing the challenges of people on the move while upholding our most cherished values.

    The stakes are high. There are 244 million migrants in the world. More than 65 million people are now forcibly displaced. Half of them are children. Refugees running for their lives too often face grave dangers on their journey to safety. When they arrive, many suffer discrimination and even detention. Facing difficulties in a mobile world, they often travel farther in search of safety and stability. But legal pathways are scarce, and unscrupulous smugglers take advantage, charging exorbitant sums for a risky chance to escape.

    Wars are lasting longer and refugees are finding it harder to return home – with the length of displacement in some cases stretching across generations. Contrary to prevailing impressions, the vast majority of refugees are not in rich countries; 86 percent are in the developing world. And the poorer countries hosting refugees do not receive nearly enough help. Last year, United Nations humanitarian appeals received barely more than half the funds that were sought.

    Resettlement options are also a fraction of what they should be. Nearly a million people were identified as needing resettlement in 2015, but just over 100,000 received it.

    The challenges are enormous – but we should not forget the benefits.  With the right approach, refugees and migrants can bring benefits to both their adoptive societies and their home countries. This well-documented upside should not be lost in the debate.

    The New York Declaration should be seen in the wider context of new and ambitious international efforts to improve conditions where people live so they are not forced to leave. Central to this is the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, our global plan for peace and prosperity on a healthy planet. We are also pushing to prevent and resolve conflicts – and to sustain peace once the guns fall silent.

    The Summit will feature testimony from those directly affected. I am especially looking forward to meeting again with an extraordinary young woman I first encountered last month at the Olympic Games in Rio.

    Yusra Mardini is Syrian – but she competed on the new refugee team established for athletes who, like millions of other people around the world, have been forced out of their homelands.

    Before she swam in races, Yusra was in a race to save lives.

    Last year, she left Syria on an overcrowded boat. When its engine died, she dove into the Aegean Sea and started pushing the vessel, along with a few other swimmers among the group. It took a gruelling three hours to reach the shore. They arrived exhausted – but they had proven the power of human solidarity to ferry us to safety.

    Humanity is together in one boat. Stoking fear, blaming the ‘other’ or scapegoating minorities will only increase the dangers for all.

    Wise leaders understand that we should instead endeavour to save everyone, optimize the contributions of each, and steer our common ship to our shared destination: a future of opportunity and dignity for all.

     

    By Ban Ki-moon

    Secretary-General of the United Nations

  • Maintaining the momentum: Building on year one of the SDGs

    Maintaining the momentum: Building on year one of the SDGs

    One year ago, leaders of 193 countries came together to commit to ending poverty, combatting climate change, and fighting injustice. They agreed a plan for the future of the world and its people. The plan—the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, offers a better future for billions of people around the world and for our planet as a whole.

    Turning its seventeen Sustainable Development Goals into reality before the 2030 target date will be one of the most ambitious undertakings the global community has ever taken. But I am confident that if people are at the centre of all actions, if the commitment of stakeholders is maintained and if the spirit of partnership prevails, there will be no shortage of success in the next fourteen years.

    I am optimistic is because of the nature of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The Goals are underpinned by 4 powerful principles.  First–they are connected and indivisible, linking development, human rights, peace and security.  Second–they are universal. They apply to every person everywhere. Third–they are to be implemented through inclusive participation of all of society.  Fourth – as they are implemented no-one should be left behind. The SDGs have created a common purpose for the well-being of coming generations and for a planet that is fit for the future. This is why we have seen a fast, strong, and even urgent shift from all sectors toward more sustainable practices and policies.

    In this first year anniversary—“SDG Year 1” —more than 50 governments, and also numerous businesses, scientists and civil society organizations have stepped up their efforts to make the SDGs a central framework for their policies and actions, and have increased their focus and investment on data collection and analysis to guide decisions and leave no one behind.

    At the local level, hundreds of cities and municipalities are adopting their own plans to achieve the goals. And thousands of communities from different sectors of society have accelerated actions under the SDG banner.

    All these steps have built momentum to limiting climate change, advancing gender equality, mitigating natural disasters, addressing mass migration, and reducing inequality.

    This past July, twenty-two governments presented to the United Nations their SDG plans. They showed how they have made the SDGs a central framework for national development. They help ensure that actions are aligned, that programmes work in synergy and that finance is used as efficiently as possible. This means that development cooperation will be aligned with the SDGs.

    The momentum behind the Paris Agreement on Climate Change is also accelerating and so far governments of twenty-seven nations have ratified the agreement—including the world’s largest emitters of greenhouses gases, China and the United States.

    Other sectors are building momentum too. There has been a noticeable transformation in how businesses are done with greater focus on social, economic and environmental dimensions of development. And the UN has shifted to joint working in support of aligned policies from focusing on projects to convening stakeholders, and aligning efforts so that partners can work together in an efficient and effective manner.

    It is clear that enormous strides have been made.

    But much more has to be done to implement the SDG plan.  The SDGs lay out specific targets for all to solve the challenges our planet and people around the world are facing.

    How do we stay on this path and realize a sustainable future?

    That is where the most important stakeholder—the people—comes in. Public support and public pressure will be essential for transforming the SDGs from aspiration into reality. My aim is for 2 billion people around the world to be aware of the SDGs by the end of 2017 and for another million people to become activists—to be change-agents who press decision-makers and who hold them accountable until we have transformed our world and made it more sustainable.

    Children and youth have a particularly important role to play, as the face of social movements, the drivers of social change and the torchbearers of a more sustainable future for generations to come.

    The first anniversary of the adoption of the SDGs is an opportunity to celebrate all achievements made, to do more to make SDGs a reality and most importantly to thank the governments, businesses, civil society groups and young people around the world for all their efforts.

    If all the relevant stakeholders continue to work towards building a sustainable and resilient world, achieving the SDG targets in the next fourteen years and transforming the way we live really is a feasible objective.

    And let’s face it- we really do not have a plan B. There is no planet B.

    Dr. David Nabarro is Special Adviser to the Secretary General for the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and Climate Change.

  • 150,000 Afghans displaced – UN

    150,000 Afghans displaced – UN


    The United Nations said in its conflict latest figures that more than 149,000 Afghans fled their homes in the first six months of the year due to the ongoing conflict.

    The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a bulletin released on Thursday in Kabul that many of those affected were farmers who were missing critical sowing and harvest times.

    It said the crisis has put their livelihoods at risk and increasing food insecurity in Afghanistan.

    The UN noted that the northern province of Baghlan was one of the worst hit by the conflict still affecting 29 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces.

    It complained that it had no access to many of the internally displaced persons.

  • Biafra groups meet in Accra

    Biafra groups meet in Accra

    A four day All Biafra Conference kicked off Friday in Accra, Ghana.

    The first Biafran conference was convened by an independent and neutral international organization affiliated with United Nations, Organisation of Emerging African States (OEAS).

    A statement issued from Accra by the leader of the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) said some Biafra groups in attendance include MASSOB, Biafra Liberation Council, Ekwenche Organization, Biafra Liberation Crusade, Biafra National Youth League, Customary Government of Indegenous People of Biafra (IPOB), representatives of some Niger Delta Ethnic groups.

    Dr Ebenezer Akwanga, secretary general of OEAS who after registration and accreditation briefed the participants on the reasons of the conference emphasized much on the unity and oneness of mind towards Biafra actualization and restoration irrespective of groups’ ideology, interest or modus operandi.

    Immediately after the briefing, the participating groups entered into a family meeting , which is ongoing.

    According to Madu,the reasons of the conference “is to strategize mutually on building synergies and mutual understanding towards Biafra actualization and restoration through establishing a common Biafra platform that will bind the indifferences of Biafra groups together.

    “Secondly to restrategise on the more effective way of securing the release of Biafra detainees in Nigeria and in diaspora.”

     

  • United Nations on the day of Vesak        

    United Nations on the day of Vesak        

    At this time of mass population movements, violent conflicts, atrocious human rights abuses and hateful rhetoric aimed at dividing communities, the sacred commemoration of the Day of Vesak offers an invaluable opportunity to reflect on how the teachings of Buddhism can help the international community tackle pressing challenges.

    The fundamental equality of all people, the imperative to seek justice, and the interdependence of life and the environment are more than abstract concepts for scholars to debate; they are living guidelines for Buddhists and others navigating the path to a better future.

    One Sutra tells the story of Srimala, a woman who pledged to help all those suffering from injustice, illness, poverty or disaster. This spirit of solidarity can animate our global efforts to realize the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, carry out the Paris Agreement on climate change, and promote human rights while advancing human dignity worldwide.

    The actions of Srimala also illustrate the primary role that women can play in advocating for peace, justice and human rights. Gender equality and the empowerment of women remain urgent priorities that will drive progress across the international agenda.

    In just a few days, the United Nations will convene the first-ever World Humanitarian Summit, where leaders will join activists and other partners to address the needs of millions of vulnerable people in crisis.  Buddhists and individuals of all faiths who are concerned about the future of humanity can help advance the Summit’s aims to uphold humanitarian law, protect civilians in conflict, and improve the global response to emergencies.

    On this Day of Vesak, let us pledge to reach out to bridge differences, foster a sense of belonging, and show compassion on a global scale for the sake of our common future.