Tag: United Nations

  • UN tasks Nigerian leaders on violence against women, children

    UN tasks Nigerian leaders on violence against women, children

    Leaders at all levels in Nigeria have been told to ensure that all hands are on deck in fighting to a standstill the rising trend of gender based violence (GBV) and violence against children (VAC)

    The representative of United Nations (UN) Women to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Dr. Grace Ongile spoke in Gombe during a one-day consultative meeting aimed at strengthening partnership and commitment with community and religious leaders in the state towards tackling the menace

    She said the UN under its Women, Peace and Security Programme has called on community and religious leaders because they are value bearers, spiritual mentors and critical stakeholders in the quest for sustainable peace.

    Ongile who was represented by Peter Mancha, Deputy Programme Manager, UN Women said violence against women slows down poverty eradication, just as much as it is a consequence of discrimination against women.

    She nevertheless emphasised the need for GBV/VAC prevention strategy to be backed by political will and holistic participation of all sectors of the community so that it could have a long-lasting and permanent impact.

    In his remark, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development, Muhammadu Adamu Bappah said a draft copy of the domesticated Child right Law was before the state Ministry of Justice for consideration and onward presentation to the as bill to the State Assembly.

    He said it was against this background that they were community and religious leaders and other stakeholders to discuss how best to handle and manage GBV/VAC in our communities.

    “I wish to call on all of us to reconsider our belief systems, norms, values and practice which provide acceptable ways.

    “These are traits that shape our perception, thinking and behaviours on GBC/VAC. We are aligned to our thinking in this modern age and present realities (digital age). GBC/VAC is moral imperatives,” he said.

    He therefore called on participants to step down the benefits of the forum in their respective areas.

     

  • UN@70: Seven schools exhibit 78 works of arts in Lagos

    UN@70: Seven schools exhibit 78 works of arts in Lagos


    School Arts Exhibition has taken the centre stage in Lagos as seven schools, public and private, converged at the Library Auditorium of the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC) Lagos to express what the United Nations (UN) meant to them in different artistic forms.

    From oil paints on canvass to pencil drawing, tie-dye, modeling, textile design and waste-to-wealth cultural Industry exhibits, the students put on display a total of seventy-seven (78) creative works of arts which reflected their rich knowledge of the works of the UN and what the organisation stands for.

    Curating their works, the students explained the UN as a Peace-keeper, the human rights protector, a gender equality advocate, an umbrella organisation of all nations and the hope of the people. They also exhibited works that show what the UN does in the area of environment, housing, culture, education and health.

    Addressing the students and other participants, the National Information Officer of the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC) Lagos, Oluseyi Soremekun, conveyed the gratitude of the Centre to the participating schools and urged the students and pupils to continue to learn about the United Nations having earlier made a presentation on ‘UN for school children’.

    The one-week Exhibition which will end on Thursday 3 December 2015, was on the opening day livened up by music rendition by the Dothedream band led by Olaiwo Stephen and another solo by ‘Tripple T’ all from Yaba College of Technology, Lagos.

    Participating schools are Covenant University Secondary School, Ota; Intesida Schools, Alagbado; Ojodu Junior Grammar School, Ojodu; Southfield Academy; Sunglee Formation Schools, Awoyaya and The Outliers Schools, Surulere, all in Lagos.

  • Buhari to attend 2015 Commonwealth meeting in Malta

    Buhari to attend 2015 Commonwealth meeting in Malta

    President Muhammadu Buhari will depart Abuja on Thursday, November 26 for Malta to participate in the 2015 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

    The 2015 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting will begin on Friday, 27th November 2015 in the island nation of Malta.

    This is contained in a statement issued by Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media, Garba Shehu on Wednesday.

    The Commonwealth is made up of Britain, Nigeria and 51 other countries that work together to pursue common goals and promote development, democracy, peace, security and good governance.

    According to the statement, the President and other Heads of State and Government who will be in Malta for this year’s summit are expected to deliberate on fresh Commonwealth initiatives on development & climate change with a view to adding greater value to ongoing efforts in these areas.

    The statement reads: “The Head of the Commonwealth, Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, will formally declare the summit open.

    “Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II is expected to host a banquet in honor of Buhari & other participating Heads of State & Government

    “At the conclusion of the Summit on Sunday, President Buhari will leave Malta for Paris where he will present Nigeria’s statement at the United Nations Climate Change Conference scheduled to open in the French capital on Monday, November 30.

    “President Buhari will join over 100 other world leaders at the Leaders Event on the opening day of the conference.

    “The Conference will be hosted by President Francois Hollande of France and the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr. Ban Ki Moon. Pres. Buhari will also participate in a summit of the Heads of State & Government of the Lake Chad Basin Commission & Benin Republic which has been scheduled to take place on December 2 in Paris on the sidelines of the United Nations Conference on Climate Change.

    “Deliberations at the Paris meeting of the Lake Chad Basin Commission & Benin Republic will focus mainly on the war against Boko Haram and other security issues of common interest to participating countries.

    “President Buhari will be accompanied on the trip by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Geoffrey Onyeama, the Minister of Environment, Mrs. Amina Mohammed and the National Security Adviser, Maj.-Gen. Babagana Monguno (rtd.).”

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  • What UN expects from Climate Change Conference in Paris

    What UN expects from Climate Change Conference in Paris

    For the nearly nine years that I have been Secretary-General, I have travelled the world to the front-lines of climate change, and I have spoken repeatedly with world leaders, business people and citizens about the need for an urgent global response.

    Why do I care so much about this issue?

    First, like any grandfather, I want my grandchildren to enjoy the beauty and bounty of a healthy planet.  And like any human being, it grieves me to see that floods, droughts and fires are getting worse, that island nations will disappear and uncounted species will become extinct.

    As His Holiness Pope Francis and other faith leaders have reminded us, we have a moral responsibility to act in solidarity with the poor and most vulnerable who have done least to cause climate change and will suffer first and worst from its effects.

    Second, as the head of the United Nations, I have prioritized climate change because no country can meet this challenge alone.  Climate change carries no passport; emissions released anywhere contribute to the problem everywhere.  It is a threat to lives and livelihoods everywhere.  Economic stability and the security of nations are under threat.  Only through the United Nations can we respond collectively to this quintessentially global issue.

    The negotiation process has been slow and cumbersome. But we are seeing results.  In response to the UN’s call, more than 166countries, which collectively account for more than 90 per cent of emissions, have now submitted national climate plans with targets. If successfully implemented, these national plans bend the emissions curve down to a projected global temperature rise of approximately 3 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.

    This is significant progress.  But it is still not enough. The challenge now is to move much further and faster to reduce global emissions so we can keep global temperature rise to below 2 degrees Celsius.  At the same time, we must support countries to adapt to the inevitable consequences that are already upon us.

    The sooner we act, the greater the benefits for all: increased stability and security; stronger, more sustainable economic growth; enhanced resilience to shocks; cleaner air and water; improved health.

    We will not get there overnight.  The climate change conference in Paris is not the end point.  It must mark the floor, not the ceiling of our ambition.  It must be the turning point towards a low-emission, climate-resilient future.

    Around the world, momentum is building.  Cities, businesses and investors, faith leaders and citizens are acting to reduce emissions and build resilience. The responsibility now rests with Governments to conclude a meaningful, binding agreement in Paris that provides clear rules of the road for strengthening global ambition.  For this, negotiators need clear guidance from the top.

    I believe this is forthcoming.  The leaders of the G20, who met earlier this month in Antalya, Turkey, showed strong commitment to climate action.  And more than 120 Heads of State and Government have confirmed their participation in Paris, despite heightened security concerns in the wake of the terrorist attacks.

    I see four essential elements for Paris to be a success: durability, flexibility, solidarity and credibility.

    First is durability.  Paris must provide a long-term vision consistent with a below 2 degrees trajectory, and send a clear signal to markets that the low-carbon transformation of the global economy is inevitable, beneficial and already under way.

    Second, the agreement must provide flexibility so it does not need to be continually renegotiated.  It must be able to accommodate changes in the global economy and strike a balance between the leadership role of developed countries and the increasing responsibilities of developing countries.

    Third, the agreement must demonstrate solidarity, including through financing and technology transfer for developing countries.  Developed countries must keep their pledge to provide $100 billion a year by 2020 for adaptation and mitigation alike.

    Fourth, an agreement must demonstrate credibility in responding to rapidly escalating climate impacts.  It must include regular five year cycles for governments to assess and strengthen their national climate plans in line with what science demands.  Paris must also include transparent and robust mechanisms for measuring, monitoring and reporting progress.

    The UN stands fully ready to support countries in implementing such an agreement.

    A meaningful climate agreement in Paris will build a better today – and tomorrow.  It will help us end poverty. Clean our air and protect our oceans. Improve public health.  Create new jobs and catalyze green innovations.  It will accelerate progress towards all of the Sustainable Development Goals. That is why I care so deeply about climate change.

    My message to world leaders is clear: success in Paris depends on you.  Now is the time for common sense, compromise and consensus.  It is time to look beyond national horizons and to put the common interest first.  The people of the world – and generations to come – count on you to have the vision and courage to seize this historic moment.

    The writer is Secretary-General of the United Nations

     

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  • United Nations

    United Nations

    •A toast at 70 but also time for far-reaching reforms

    The guns of World War II were still booming when representatives of 22 nations, contemplating the carnage and devastation the conflict had wrought across the globe, gathered in San Francisco to set up the United Nations, with a primary goal of “saving succeeding generations from the scourge of war.”  It had been three years in the making.

    Today, 70 years later, the global landscape is still scarred by armed conflict, insurgency and terrorism, situated largely within countries or across regions.  But here has been no World War III, and in this era of globalization, such a war is almost inconceivable.

    The UN has succeeded largely in restraining the impulse to war, served as a platform for mediation and conciliation, and helped keep the peace in strife-torn parts of the world. It is to its credit that, though much criticized, its abolition has never been seriously canvassed.

    Unlike its doomed predecessor, the League of Nations, it has declined to lend its authority to the revanchism which  was the defining attribute of the Treaty of Versailles that formally ended World War I. Hitler would later seize upon the monumental inequities of that instrument to rearm Nazi Germany and seek to conquer the world.

    The UN also successfully resisted attempt to wring from it an imprimatur for the invasion and destruction of Iraq to rid that country of “weapons of mass destruction” it did not possess – an invasion that the best authorities now accept was a mistake, if not illegal outright.

    The UN’s specialized agencies have made the world a better place.  The Geneva-based World Health Organization has taken the lead in mobilizing resources to containing diseases like HIV-AIDS and Ebola fever, which threatened the entire global community.  Recently, it announced that polio, a disease that cripples its victims, has virtually been eradicated.

    The New York- based children’s fund UNICEF has catered with great success to the development and well-being of children all over the world, just as the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization has been promoting best farming practices and global food sufficiency.  The Paris-based UNESCO has with much success advanced literacy, education, science, and media pluralism while helping to preserve the world’s cultural heritage.

    The UN’s environmental agency UNEP, based in Nairobi, Kenya, monitors threats to the environment and promotes programmes and policies to safeguard an increasingly fragile ecology.

    More than a dozen UN Commissions or agencies dealing with such subjects as atomic energy, the weather, human rights, refugees, forests, population, statistics, and the elimination of discrimination against women, have made the UN a beneficent force in human affairs.

    But after 70 years, it is time to review and redesign its architecture to reflect more accurately the balance of needs, power and influence in the world.  It is inherently inequitable to assign permanent seats, with the right of veto, to only five of more than150 member-countries.

    It is time, therefore, to democratize the Council by assigning permanent membership to countries outside the league of the superpowers.  India, Japan, Germany, Brazil, South Africa, and Nigeria, have been suggested as candidates for permanent membership.  It is time to move the issue to substantive discussion.

    The UN’s work has often been constrained by its unstable finances.  Some of the most affluent member-countries think nothing of being in default  for as long as possible and rushing in with their dues only when they want to use the UN to prosecute their private agenda.

    A  UN that enjoys financial stability will be able to pursue its global agenda more effectively, for the benefit of all humankind.

  • United Nations mark peace day in style

    United Nations mark peace day in style

    The 2015 International Day of Peace has been marked in Lagos with fanfare as youths, government and NGO partners trooped to the street to ‘Walk for peace’.

    The peace day observance, which started with a press briefing, was addressed by the Governor of Lagos State, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode who was represented by the Solicitor General and Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Justice, Mrs. Funlola Odunlami and the Director of the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC) in Lagos, Mr Ronald Kayanja.

    The conclusion of the press briefing marked the beginning of an exciting ‘Walk for Peace’ as organised by UNIC in Lagos and Citizens’ Mediation Centre (CMC).

    Delivering his message on the theme for 2015 observance – ‘Partnerships for Peace – Dignity for All’, the United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, called on all warring parties to lay down their weapons and observe a global ceasefire.

    “To them I say: stop the killings and the destruction, and create space for lasting peace.” The Secretary-General who was represented by the Director of UNIC Lagos further said: “There is no group more poised to help realize this dream than today’s young people. They are part of the largest generation of youth in history, more aware and connected than any before.”

    Speaking earlier, Governor Ambode thanked the UN Information Centre for the partnership and pledged that the CMC would adopt the International Day of Peace as an annual event to propagate the ethos of peaceful co-existence among residents in Lagos State.

    Flagged off by Mrs Odunlami and led by Mr Kayanja and the CMC Director, Mrs Oluwatoyin  Odusanya, the road show started from the Lagos State Secretariat Alausa, Ikeja through Obafemi Awolowo Way and terminated at Ikeja-under-bridge where a citizens’ mediace dayation session was held by the CMC, an agency of the Lagos State government under the supervision of the Ministry of Justice.

    The CMC serves as a non-adversarial dispute resolution Centre using mediation mechanism in dispensing justice fairly and speedily to the satisfaction of both parties.

    With participants numbering over 100 and clad in branded T-shirts, dancing to contemporary songs, to the admiration of members of the public, the ‘Walk for Peace’ road show stopped intermittently at intersections to give room for professional dancers to entertain while leaflets with peace building messages were shared with members of the public.

  • Photo: Buhari meet Korea President

    Photo: Buhari meet Korea President

    L-R; National Security Adviser, Major General Babagana Monguno, President Muhammadu Buhari, Sokoto State Governor, Rt Hon Aminu Tambuwal, President, Republic of Korea, Her Excellency, Mrs Geun-Hye Park,  Nigerian Permanent Representatives, Prof Joy Ogwu and the Permanent Secretary Ministry of foreign Affairs, Ambassador Bulus Z. Lolo after a bilateral meeting during the 70th Session of the UN General Assembly in NEW YORK. PHOTO; SUNDAY AGHAEZE
    L-R; National Security Adviser, Major General Babagana Monguno, President Muhammadu Buhari, Sokoto State Governor, Rt Hon Aminu Tambuwal, President, Republic of Korea, Her Excellency, Mrs Geun-Hye Park, Nigerian Permanent Representatives, Prof Joy Ogwu and the Permanent Secretary Ministry of foreign Affairs, Ambassador Bulus Z. Lolo after a bilateral meeting during the 70th Session of the UN General Assembly in NEW YORK. PHOTO; SUNDAY AGHAEZE
  • ‘How Nigeria can fund newly adopted development goals’

    ‘How Nigeria can fund newly adopted development goals’

    Nigeria may need to find innovative ways of funding the newly adopted Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Unlike before when the country received international aid to implement the Millennium Development Goals, there are indications that Nigeria and other developing nations may have to look inwards to fund the global goals adopted by world leaders last Friday at the United Nations headquarter in New York.

    Thomas Gass, an Assistant Secretary General of the United Nations who spoke with The Nation in New York said it is important for government of developing countries like Nigeria to ensure the flow of funding within the country to support the goals.

    “It is very clear that this new agenda cannot be paid for only by Development Corporations. It would be important that the developed countries raise their Official Development Assistance (ODA ) to 0.7 of Gross National Income (GNI) and many countries are still far from that. Government needs to ensure that all the flows of funding within the country actually support sustainable development.
    ” They need to ensure that all the companies operating are paying their taxes properly and see to it that international companies do not shift their profits to other countries where they don’t have to pay for taxes,” Gass said.

    Asked if the United Nations will compel developed countries to pay compensation to African countries hit by the effects of climate change, he said that the UN is working towards a green climate fund through which countries can be supported in adapting and mitigating the effect of climate change.

    “There is work on a green climate fund through which countries can be supported in adapting and mitigating the effects of climate change but compelling countries to do something never works very well. We have lots of experience of that in the United Nations.
    ” It needs to be about convincing them that is in the best interest of the whole community for everyone to be able to shoulder the weight that they can carry, and that weight is heavier for some countries than it is for others. The importance of climate change is that every country participates in a way that is based on the solidarity between people and between nations.”

    The UN official also reacted to concerns that 17 goals may be a long list for developing countries that are faced with other constraints stating that although countries may set priorities where they will start, it is important they have a commitment to achieve all the goals as the 169 targets are closely linked and indivisible.
    “It is a long list because the needs and aspirations of the people are very complex and diverse. The global goals are a new contract between government and their people and therefore must include all the issues that people need. Of course countries will set priorities where they will start but it is very important that they have the commitment to achieve all the goals at all the time.”

    Acknowledging that countries in the Lake Chad basin facing the Boko Haram menace may have more difficulties in achieving the SDGs, he hoped that the conflicts in the region can be resolved using the right approach and strategies especially as the new goals points to some of the root cause of the crisis such as poverty and inequality.

  • Boko Haram: UN wants help for displaced people

    The United Nations, Chad, Niger and Cameroon appealed on Friday for help for millions of people in the Lake Chad Basin region forced to flee the violence of Boko Haram and hit with repeated droughts and floods that have brought malnutrition and disease.

    But while the militants operate out of Nigeria and UN aid chief, Stephen O’Brien, said that is where most people have been displaced by their attacks, Nigeria did not send anyone to the event.

    United States and European Union diplomats said they were disappointed that Nigeria did not attend the event chaired by O’Brien on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

    The Nigerian UN mission was not immediately available to comment on its absence.

    A regional offensive by Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon earlier this year drove Boko Haram from much of the territory it held in northern Nigeria. But the militants have since struck back with a renewed wave of deadly raids and suicide bombings.

    “These (displaced) families are being used as ammunition because it is the children that are used as bombers in markets and in train stations,” Reuters quoted Chad’s Foreign Minister, Moussa Faki Mahamat, as saying on the matter.

    “Trade is virtually wiped out in this area.”

    Several UN diplomats at the event warned that the aid emergency in Lake Chad Basin risked being forgotten amid other humanitarian crises in Syria, Yemen and South Sudan.

    Niger Prime Minister, Brigi Rafini, said the region was in the midst of a “genuine disaster.”

  • UNICEF ambassadors back new development era for children

    UNICEF ambassadors back new development era for children

    UNICEF Goodwill ambassadors, Shakira and Angélique Kidjo have joined in celebrating the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals with powerful performances before an audience at the United Nations General Assembly including over 130 heads of state and government.
    Following an address from His Holiness Pope Francis, Shakira on Friday took to the stage to sing “Imagine”, John Lennon’s iconic anthem of love and peace.
    “We live in a world in which many who are born poor will die poor. It is up to us to be the first society to eradicate poverty and bring justice and equality to the most disenfranchised people on earth,” Shakira, a passionate advocate of children’s rights, told the assembled world leaders before her performance. “Our children have the right to equal opportunities; to thrive, to be happy, healthy, and safe.”
    Angélique Kidjo, who has been a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador since 2002, sang a moving version of ‘Afirika’ – her hymn to the continent she calls home.
    “Africa and its children have the most to gain from the Sustainable Development Goals, but they also have the most to lose if our leaders do not fully commit to this new agenda for peace and prosperity,” Kidjo said. “As an artist I want to use my voice to make sure that people around the world understand the new global goals and why they matter, so that they can hold their leaders accountable for their success or failure.”
    Flanked by a group of young people from across the world, Malala Yousafzai then delivered a message of hope for today’s children before the SDGs were ratified by world leaders.
    The Sustainable Development Goals represent an ambitious plan of action that aims to eliminate extreme poverty and hunger, provide quality lifelong education for all, protect the planet and promote peaceful and inclusive societies.
    These new global goals offer a historic opportunity to provide children with the fair start in life.