UN Daily News - 15 March 2016
UN Daily News - 15 March 2016
UN Daily News - 15 March 2016
www.un.org/news
UN Daily News
Tuesday, 15 March 2016
Issue DH/7116
In the headlines:
Syrian opposition raises issue of detainees, aid
Syrian opposition raises issue of detainees, aid access as UNmediated talks continue
15 March On a day that began with a minute of silence in honour of
those that have lost their lives during the five-year conflict in Syria,
the United Nations envoy mediating peace talks among the Syrian
parties gave a progress report, saying that opposition representatives
raised the issue of detainees today, as well as humanitarian aid to
Daraya and other sites of heavy fighting.
There has been so far, as you know, the issue of humanitarian aid
and the reduction of violence, but on the detainees aspect we have
been having nothing in terms of outcome,
Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura updates the press on the
Intra-Syrian Geneva Talks. UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferr (file)
This was the second day of the new round of intra-Syrian talks,
proximity discussions between Government and opposition representatives being mediated by Mr. de Mistura.
He said the HNC also raised the issue of extending humanitarian aid to more areas. These could include Daraya, where
control has shifted between pro and anti-Government forces over the past years.
Both issues, the envoy said, could be taken up by the humanitarian taskforce, which has been created by the International
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Syrian Support Group (ISSG) to oversee aid delivery since a cessation of hostilities took hold on 27 February. The ISSG, of
which the UN is a member along with the Arab League, the European Union and 18 countries including the United States
and Russia has been seeking a path forward for several months.
Reacting to the announcement by President Vladimir Putin that Russia is withdrawing the bulk of its forces from Syria, Mr.
de Mistura called it a significant development which we hope will have a positive impact on the progress of the
negotiations.
In addition to exchanging ideas, Mr. de Mistura has said that he and the HNC exchanged papers on how to get deeper into
the discussion at the next meeting on the transitional aspect of the political process.
The UN envoy had also received a paper from the Government, with whom he met yesterday, as part of his effort to get all
the input from all the sides and then metabolize them, see where there are overlapping, contradictions or even common
thinking.
Mr. de Mistura said that he would meet again tomorrow morning with the Government delegation. He would then leave for
Bern, where he would inform the Swiss Government, which is supporting the process, about the discussions.
As an addition to his international team, the UN envoy appointed Vitaly Naumkin, a Russian expert and academic who will
report to Mr. de Mistura.
The UN official said he offered the same option to the United States, who is the other co-chair of the ISSG.
The more they are able to contribute professionally to my own capacity of better understanding, the better it is for us, Mr.
de Mistura said.
More than 40 countries and 120 stakeholders have committed to more than $125 billion over the next five years to carry out
the Every Woman Every Child Strategy.
The Strategy, which Mr. Ban launched in 2010 and updated in 2015, aims to end preventable deaths among all women,
children and adolescents; to greatly improve their health and well-being; and to bring about the transformative change
needed to shape a more prosperous and sustainable future.
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At the event, global gender equality advocates Women Deliver presented the first-ever Delivering for Girls and Women
award to Mr. Ban in recognition of his work and achievements to improve the lives of women and girls worldwide.
Accepting the Award, Mr. Ban said the true champions are fighting on the frontlines for health rights everyday.
Also speaking at todays event, the Executive Director of UN Women, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, said that women are
crucial to a resilient health system: Womens health is a womens right. Without it, health hangs in the balance.
Ms. Mlambo-Ngcuka also spoke about the health of women and girls expanding to political, social and economic spheres.
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On a positive note, since his previous briefing, the presence of Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL/Da'esh) has been
confined to a smaller area to the east of the country, following operations by Afghan security forces with support from the
international military.
Divided political situation
On the political transition, the Government continues to be subject to criticism on account of the economic and security
deterioration even though this is not of its own making. It is being challenged by fractious political elite, the erosion of a
necessary sense of national unity, and consequentially that most precious political commodity, confidence in the future, he
said.
In the face of calls for reviewing the current political framework, the United Nations and the international community have
made it clear to all stakeholders that it stands firmly behind the new Government. Despite delays in effective decisionmaking, the Government has now appointed an Attorney General and a Minister of Interior. A number of key posts,
however, remain to be filled.
With an election date of 15 October announced, electoral reform is important for the National Unity Government to indicate
progress in democratisation. The Government has finally issued a decree establishing a new Selection Committee to
nominate Independent Election Commissioners this week. Yet the urgency to complete preparations remains.
Medium-term funding needs
In the coming months, the international community will make critical decisions at Warsaw and Brussels on the level and
type of assistance it will continue to provide to Afghanistan, Mr. Haysom said.
As the country continues to rely on external funding sources for 69 per cent of Government expenditures, failure by the
international community to pledge a medium-term commitment to Afghanistan will have a devastating impact, both
materially and on the levels of confidence of ordinary Afghans. Donor expectations of Afghanistan's reform agenda must be
realistic, taking into account the formidable challenges facing the country.
Progress towards peace
The final hurdle is progress towards a sustainable peace. Afghan's want peace, they deserve peace, but most importantly
they need peace, he said. Without a peace process, the sustainability and viability of all of efforts, in Brussels, Warsaw,
New York, and elsewhere to bring stability and prosperity to Afghanistan will be called into question.
The establishment of the Quadrilateral Coordination Group is a welcome development that has reinvigorated efforts to put a
peace process on track, he said, acknowledging the efforts of Pakistan to assist in midwifing such talks. A successful peace
process will require the support of neighbouring countries and the wider region.
He, however, called for direct talks between the Taliban and the Afghan Government, noting that he again met with the
Taliban Political Commission last week and stressed the need for an intra-Afghan dialogue involving Taliban. They
however reiterated that they were not yet ready to engage directly with the Government, he said.
He welcomed today's adoption by the Council of a resolution which renewed UNAMA's mandate until 17 March 2017 and
reaffirmed its important supporting role, at the request of the Afghan Government.
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Women and girls must also enjoy the same employment, legal rights, leadership and decision-making opportunities, he
added.
Launched at the World Economic Forum in Davos this January, the Panel is expected to provide recommendations linked to
the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development on how to improve economic outcomes for women and promote their
leadership in driving sustainable and inclusive, environmentally sensitive economic growth, according to UN Women.
The Panel, which is co-chaired by Costa Rican President Luis Guillermo Solis and Simona Scarpaleggia, the CEO of IKEA
Switzerland, will produce the first report this September, followed by a final report in March 2017.
According to Mr. Ban, the Panel is strategically positions to demonstrate high-level leadership and commitment to realizing
womens economic empowerment; to set priorities for accelerating womens economic empowerment, and to demonstrate
how they are already being successfully carried out; and to serve as examples of how government, business, civil society
and development partners can join forces for womens economic empowerment.
The Panel is backed by the UN Women, the UN International Labour Organization (ILO), the International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank, with support for its work provided by the UK Department of International Development.
Todays meeting took place on the second day of the CSW, the principal global intergovernmental body exclusively
dedicated to the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of women. The priority theme for the 60th session is
womens empowerment and its link to sustainable development.
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At the heart of sustainable development is the ability of a woman to regulate her fertility, Ms. Judd said.
She also spoke out about violence against women, saying that the family is often the seat of gender-based violence and other
violations of human rights.
In a press release, UNFPA commended Ms. Judd for her strong commitment to social justice and passionate advocacy of
the right of every girl and boy to enter adulthood safely and empowered.
Being a girl is not a crime, it is a privilege, she said. I am excited to do what I can to help girls and women everywhere
contribute to their potential which is indeed awesome to the progress of all humankind.
Ms. Judds appointment comes at the opening of the historic 60th session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women,
the principal global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality and the
empowerment of women. The priority theme for the 60th session is womens empowerment and its link to sustainable
development.
Goodwill Ambassador Judd will give the keynote address tomorrow, at a special event at the UN General Assembly Hall,
using words and music to call for an end to female genital mutilation (FGM), child marriage and son preference.
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on the chaos, with foreign fighters and sectarian militias continuing to pour into Syria, Mr. Ban said.
The conflict has been the scene of the use of chemical weapons, siege and starvation as a tool of war, unlawful detention,
torture, and the indiscriminate and criminal shelling and aerial bombardment of civilians, said Mr. Ban.
Syrian men, women and children feel abandoned by the international community, he said, urging those responsible for these
crimes to be held to account.
I repeat my call to the Security Council to refer the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court, Mr. Ban said.
In Syria as elsewhere, peace without justice is not sustainable.
Meanwhile, the intra-Syrian talks commenced this week with UN Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura at the helm.
The talks are being convened in the context of the full implementation of the Geneva Communiqu as the basis for a
Syrian-led political transition.
Reacting today to the announcement by President Vladimir Putin that Russia is withdrawing the bulk of its forces from
Syria, Mr. de Mistura called it a significant development which we hope will have a positive impact on the progress of
the negotiations.
More than funding needed
As the peace negotiations continue in Geneva, there are nearly five million refugees who had been forced to flee to
neighbouring countries.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, and the agencys Special Envoy, Angelina Jolie Pitt, today called
on Governments to follow through on financial pledges, as well as jobs, education, and other forms of international support
for refugees.
A tragedy of this scale demands solidarity beyond funding. Put simply, we need more countries to share the load by taking
a greater share of refugees from what has become the biggest displacement crisis of a generation, said Mr. Grandi.
Five years on, the conflict has spawned 4.8 million refugees in neighbouring countries, hundreds of thousands in Europe,
and 6.6 million people displaced inside Syria against a pre-war population of over 20 million.
In London last month, Governments pledged $5.9 billion for the 2016 appeal for humanitarian and development aid. In
todays statement, Mr. Grandi called for additional forms of support, including better access to livelihoods and educations,
and a greater sharing of responsibility by countries that are limiting and blocking numbers of refugees seeking safety in their
borders.
The international community is at a crossroads, he said, and if the world fails to work together due to short-term
interests, lack of courage and knee-jerk reactions to shift the burden elsewhere, we will look back ruefully on this lost
opportunity to act with solidarity and shared humanity.
Call for reason, calm and foresight
In Lebanon, Ms. Jolie Pitt today marked the grim anniversary by helping the UN agency in an informal refugee settlement
in Fayda, in Lebanons Bekaa Valley.
Speaking to reporters in pouring rain, she urged Governments to focus on the absolute root causes, and to display courage
and foresight in their decisions.
My plea today is that we need governments around the world to show leadership: to analyse the situation and understand
exactly what their country can do, she said, to figure out how many refugees can be assisted and in what time frame, and to
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Several partners, including the UN Childrens Fund (UNICEF), World Food Programme (WFP) and Mdecins Sans
Frontires (MSF), are providing essential services in Kapise, including water boreholes, food and health care, but conditions
generally remain tough.
Mozambicans who arrived earlier in the year spoke of having fled deadly attacks on their villages. More recent arrivals have
said they were fleeing out of fear of clashes this month between Government forces and RENAMO, the main opposition
group, which wants to take control of six northern provinces, namely Manica, Sofala, Tete, Zambezia, Nampula and Niassa.
Lack of funding for UNHCR and others is a problem. About $1.8 million is required to meet immediate needs, but more will
be needed to cope with the growing number of arrivals.
Malawi also hosts some 25,000 refugees, mostly from the Great Lakes region and the Horn of Africa, in the Dzaleka camp,
about 50 kilometres from the capital city of Lilongwe. The site is full to capacity, and food rations have been cut to 50 per
cent since October and resources to assist refugees are limited.
Meanwhile, in todays resolution extending the mandate, the Council also requested that the UN Secretary-General report
within 60 days following consultations with the Libyan authorities on recommendations for UNSMILs support to the next
phases of the Libyan political transition process.
In a press statement yesterday, the Security Council reiterated its support for the Libyan national unity government and
renewed its call on UN Member States to end official contact with parallel institutions that claim legitimate authority, but
are outside of Decembers political agreement.
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In particular, Syria figured high in Mr. Ban's speech, as today also marked the start of a sixth year of conflict there. For five
years, the people of that country have endured horrific and widespread human rights abuses including extrajudicial
executions and torture, he said, noting that over 250,000 Syrians have been killed, and nearly half of all Syrians have been
displaced from their homes.
Mr. Ban repeated his call to the Security Council to refer the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court, while
also urging Syrian parties, regional and international stakeholders and the Security Council, to make the inter-Syrian talks
successful, to end this human rights and humanitarian catastrophe.
The UN chief said an important task for the 47-member Human Rights Council is to reinforce the links between human
rights, peace and security, and development. This interdependency is also at the heart of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development adopted by the Assembly last year, which serves as the global blueprint for ending poverty and
building a safer, healthier world.
While Member States have the primary responsibility for upholding rights, it is Member States that are all too often in
breach of their commitments, he said, urging the Human Rights Council to more than ever pursue its work with courage
and persistence.
The UN Daily News is prepared at UN Headquarters in New York by the News Services Section
of the News and Media Division, Department of Public Information (DPI)