Tag: U.N

  • UN: 27 migrants’ bodies, including children, discovered in desert of Chad

    The bodies of 27 migrants believed to have died of thirst have been found in the Chadian desert, the U.N. migration agency said on Tuesday.

    According to reports, the migrants reportedly left Moussoro, a crossroads town in West-Central Chad, 17 months ago in a pickup truck, the IOM said in a statement.

    It is believed the truck got lost in the deep desert, broke down due to mechanical issues, and the migrants died of thirst, said the migration organization affiliated with the UN.

    “We are deeply saddened by this most recent tragedy and extend our heartfelt condolences to the migrants’ families,” said Anne Kathrin Schaefer, IOM Chad Chief of Mission.

    Chad, at the crossroads of North and Central Africa, currently hosts about 300,000 refugees in 17 refugee camps and 160,000 internally displaced persons in the eastern and southern parts of the country.

    The forced migration has been caused mainly by conflict and general insecurity in western Sudan, eastern Chad, and parts of the Central African Republic.

    According to the IOM, food insecurity, failed harvests, and inconsistent rains have impacted migration patterns.

    Since 2014, 110 migrant deaths have been recorded within Chad, including this latest incident.

    These numbers are likely higher, as many migrant deaths go unrecorded, leaving families worried and without answers about their loved ones, said the IOM.

    In June, the bodies of 20 Chadians and Libyans were found in the Libyan desert in Koufra, a town located along the Chad-Libya border.

    Source: African News

  • Ukraine needs strong signal from EU, Macron says ahead of possible visit

    President Emmanuel Macron voiced a tougher line on Russia on Wednesday and said Europe needed to send a strong signal to Ukraine as he sought to assuage concerns in Kyiv and among some European allies over his previous stance towards Moscow.

    Macron arrived in Romania on Tuesday for a three-day trip to Ukraine’s eastern neighbors including Moldova, before possibly heading to Kyiv on Thursday on a visit with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi and Romanian President Klaus Iohannis, two diplomatic sources said.

    The symbolic visit would come a day before the European Commission makes a recommendation on Ukraine’s status as an EU candidate, something the biggest European nations have been lukewarm about and are set to discuss at a leaders’ summit on June 23-24.

    “We are at a point when we (Europeans) need to send clear political signals, us Europeans, towards Ukraine and its people when it is resisting heroically,” Macron said, without giving details.

    The French leader has been criticized by Ukraine and eastern European allies for what they perceive as his ambiguous backing for Ukraine in the war against Russia.

    French officials have in recent days sought to strengthen the public messaging, while Macron appeared to take a tougher line on Tuesday evening when he was with his troops. read more

    “We will do everything to stop Russia’s war forces, to help the Ukrainians and their army and continue to negotiate,” he told French and NATO troops at a military base in Romania.

    Speaking alongside Iohannis, Macron downplayed those comments, but insisted that Ukraine, which he hoped would win the war, would eventually have to negotiate with Russia.

    CONSTANTA, Romania, June 15 (Reuters) – President Emmanuel Macron voiced a tougher line on Russia on Wednesday and said Europe needed to send a strong signal to Ukraine as he sought to assuage concerns in Kyiv and among some European allies over his previous stance towards Moscow.

    Macron arrived in Romania on Tuesday for a three-day trip to Ukraine’s eastern neighbors including Moldova, before possibly heading to Kyiv on Thursday on a visit with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi and Romanian President Klaus Iohannis, two diplomatic sources said.

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    The symbolic visit would come a day before the European Commission makes a recommendation on Ukraine’s status as an EU candidate, something the biggest European nations have been lukewarm about and are set to discuss at a leaders’ summit on June 23-24.

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    “We are at a point when we (Europeans) need to send clear political signals, us Europeans, towards Ukraine and its people when it is resisting heroically,” Macron said, without giving details.

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    The French leader has been criticised by Ukraine and eastern European allies for what they perceive as his ambiguous backing for Ukraine in the war against Russia.

    French officials have in recent days sought to strengthen the public messaging, while Macron appeared to take a tougher line on Tuesday evening when he was with his troops. read more

    “We will do everything to stop Russia’s war forces, to help the Ukrainians and their army and continue to negotiate,” he told French and NATO troops at a military base in Romania.

    Macron has in recent weeks repeatedly said it was vital not to “humiliate” Russia so a diplomatic solution could be found when fighting ended and he has continued to keep communication channels open with the Kremlin open, riling more hawkish allies. read more

    Speaking alongside Iohannis, Macron downplayed those comments, but insisted that Ukraine, which he hoped would win the war, would eventually have to negotiate with Russia.

    “We share a continent. Geography is stubborn and at the end of it, Russia is there. It was there yesterday, it’s there today and will be there tomorrow,” he told reporters.

    France leads a NATO battle group in Romania of about 800 troops, including 500 French troops alongside others from the Netherlands and Belgium. Paris has also deployed a surface-to air missile system.

    Macron heads to Moldova later on Wednesday to support a country many fear could be drawn into the conflict in neighboring Ukraine.

    Source: www.reuters.com

  • Beirut blast: Explosion rocks city injuring many

    A large blast has hit the Lebanese capital, Beirut, causing widespread damage and injuring many people, officials say.

    Reports say the explosion was in the port area of the city, with unconfirmed reports of a second blast. It is not clear what caused them.

    Video posted online showed a large mushroom cloud and destroyed buildings.

    It comes at a sensitive time, ahead of the verdict in a trial over the killing of ex-PM Rafik Hariri in 2005.

    A UN tribunal is due to issue its verdict in the trial of four suspects in the murder by car bomb of Hariri on Friday.

    The possible second explosion was reported to be at the Hariri residence in the city.

    Lebanon’s health minister, Hamad Hasan, has spoken of many injuries and extensive damage.

    Local media showed people trapped beneath rubble. A witness described the first explosion as deafening. Video footage showed wrecked cars and blast-damaged buildings.

    The latest reports come amid political tension in Lebanon, with street demonstrations against the government’s handling the worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.

    There has also been tension on the border with Israel, which said last week that it had thwarted an attempt by Hezbollah to infiltrate Israeli territory.

    What’s the Hariri case about?

    On the morning of 14 February 2005, Rafik Hariri – then an MP who aligned himself with the opposition in parliament – was travelling in a motorcade when the explosion went off in a busy area full of hotels and banks, causing widespread damage.

    Mr Hariri had been one of Lebanon’s most prominent Sunni politicians and, at the time of his death, had joined calls for Syria to withdraw troops which had been in Lebanon since 1976 following the start of the civil war.

    The killing brought tens of thousands of demonstrators on to the streets in protest against the pro-Syrian government, with the finger of blame for the assassination pointed at Lebanon’s heavily influential neighbour.

    Within two weeks the government resigned and weeks after that, Syria withdrew its forces.

    After collecting evidence, the UN and Lebanon set up the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) in The Hague in 2007 to investigate the bombing, and ultimately charged four suspects of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah group with terrorism, murder and attempted murder.

    A fifth man linked to the attack, Hezbollah military commander Mustafa Amine Badreddine, was killed in Syria in 2016.

    Hezbollah’s supporters have dismissed the trial, suggesting that the STL process is not politically neutral.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Child vaccinations fall sharply amid pandemic – UN

    The pandemic has led to a sharp fall in the number of children around the world being vaccinated, the UN says.

    The decline in immunisation against diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough over the first four months of the year is the first in nearly three decades.

    World Health Organization head Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus said vaccines were a hugely powerful public health tool.

    He said the suffering and death caused by children missing out on vaccines could dwarf that caused by the virus.

    Immunisation programmes in three-quarters of the more than 80 countries that responded to a UN survey have been disrupted, Unicef and the World Bank said.

    They said the disruptions were linked to a lack of personal protective equipment for health workers, travel restrictions, low health worker staffing levels and a reluctance to leave home, all of which saw programmes curbed or shut down.

    By May this year at least 30 measles vaccinations campaigns had been cancelled or were at risk.

    Measles outbreaks were already rising before the pandemic struck, with 10 million people infected in 2018 and 140,000 deaths, most of whom were children, according to UN data.

    Unicef head Henriette Fore said the coronavirus had made routine vaccinations a “daunting challenge”.

    “We must prevent a further deterioration in vaccine coverage… before children’s lives are threatened by other diseases, she said, adding: “We cannot trade one health crisis for another.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Over one percent of humanity displaced – UN

    Nearly 80 million people have been forced to flee their homes due to violence and persecution, marking a near-doubling of global displacement in a decade, the UN said Thursday.

    By the end of 2019, one out of every 97 people in the world was living uprooted and displaced, according to a fresh report by the United Nations refugee agency, highlighting swelling displacement from conflicts in places like Syria and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    “One percent of the world population cannot go back to their homes because there are wars, persecution, human rights violations, and other forms of violence,” UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi told AFP in an interview.

    The UNHCR agency found that by the end of last year, a record 79.5 million people were living either as refugees, asylum seekers or in so-called internal displacement within their own countries, marking a dramatic increase of nearly nine million from a year earlier.

    “This is a trend that has been going on since 2012: the figures are higher than the year before,” Grandi said, pointing out that this meant “there has been more conflict, there has been more violence that has pushed people away from their homes.”

    It also means, he said, “that there have been insufficient political solutions” to the conflicts and crises that would allow people to return home.

    Grandi pointed out that 10 years ago, the number of people living in displacement around the global stood at around 40 million.

    “So it has basically doubled. And we don’t see this trend diminishing,” he said.

    Fears for 2021

    “With the international community so divided, so unable, so incapable of making peace, unfortunately, the situation won’t stop growing, and I am very worried that next year it will be even worse than this year.”

    Thursday’s report showed that at the end of 2019, nearly 46 million of those displaced remained inside their own country, while 26 million had fled across borders as refugees.

    Another 4.2 million people were asylum seekers, while 3.6 million Venezuelans displaced abroad were tallied separately.

    Last year, some 11 million people were newly displaced, many in a handful of conflict-wracked countries and regions, the report showed.

    They include Syria, which after more than nine years of civil war counts 13.2 million people displaced either inside or outside the country – a full sixth of the global total.

    In fact, Grandi pointed out, a full 68 percent of the world’s refugees come from just five countries: Syria, Venezuela, Afghanistan, South Sudan and Myanmar.

    This, he stressed, “means that if the international community found the unity, the political will and the resources to help these countries get out of crisis and rebuild, most likely we would have solved well over half of the world (refugee) problem.”

    Coronavirus impact?

    The report did not address the evolving displacement situation since the global coronavirus pandemic struck.

    Grandi said it was clear the crisis was complicating the situation for the displaced at a time when everyone is being told that “being on the move is a liability for yourself and for others.”

    But he pointed out that the poor and middle-income countries that host around 85 percent of the world’s refugees had so far been relatively spared the worst health impacts of the pandemic.

    However, he warned, the economic impacts were taking a dire toll.

    “What we have really seen escalating dramatically is poverty,” he said, pointing out that lockdowns in many countries had eliminated any chance most displaced people have of making an income.

    Without significant support for displaced people and their host communities, this could spark “further population movements”, he warned.

    Grandi also reiterated that countries must continue granting asylum to those in need, despite border closures and lockdown measures.

    “One activity that doesn’t seem to have been discouraged by the pandemic is war, or conflict or violence,” he said.

    “Unfortunately people continue to flee their homes because pandemic or not, they are at risk… and they need to continue to be given refuge, protection, asylum.”

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of backend.theindependentghana.com. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: france24.com

  • George Floyd protests: Brother makes impassioned plea to UN

    The brother of George Floyd, whose death last month triggered mass anti-racism protests, has asked the UN to investigate the killing of black people at the hands of US police.

    Philonise Floyd told the UN Human Rights Council the whole world saw how his brother was tortured and killed.

    He said this proved that black lives did not matter in the US.

    UN Human Rights chief Michelle Bachelet criticised the “gratuitous brutality” of Mr Floyd’s death.

    She said the protests were the “culmination of many generations of pain”.

    Ms Bachelet, a former president of Chile, also urged countries to confront the legacy of slavery and colonialism, and to make reparations.

    Mr Floyd died after a white police officer in Minneapolis knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes. The killing spurred global protests led by the Black Lives Matter movement.

    In a separate development on Wednesday, US Senate Republicans unveiled a proposal for police reform, which would discourage tactics like the chokehold that killed Mr Floyd but it stopped short of an outright ban.

    It follows a more radical measure proposed by House Democrats earlier in the month, which would include a ban.

    ‘Tortured and murdered’

    George Floyd’s brother called on UN officials to set up an independent commission to investigate the deaths of African Americans in US police custody, as well as violence against peaceful protesters.

    He was speaking by video link at a debate convened by African countries at the human rights council’s headquarters in Geneva.

    “The way you saw my brother tortured and murdered on camera is the way black people are treated by police in America,” he said.

    “You in the United Nations are your brothers’ and sisters’ keepers in America, and you have the power to help us get justice for my brother George Floyd.

    “I am asking you to help him. I am asking you to help me. I am asking you to help us black people in America.”

    He also denounced police treatment of people involved in the protests which swept the US in the weeks after his brother’s death.

    “When people dared to raise their voice and protest for my brother they were tear-gassed, run over with police vehicles,” he said.

    The BBC’s Imogen Foulkes in Geneva says it is unclear whether the demand for an official investigation will get enough support to be approved.

    The Trump administration pulled the US out of the council two years ago and does not attend its meetings, but our correspondent says some countries are understood to be reluctant to back an inquiry which so clearly singles out the US.

    Source: bbc.com

  • African nations seek UN inquiry into US racism, ‘police brutality’

    African countries are lobbying to set up a U.N. inquiry into “systemic racism” and “police brutality” in the United States and elsewhere, aiming to defend the rights of people of African descent, a draft resolution seen by Reuters shows.

    The text, circulating among diplomats in Geneva, voiced alarm at “recent incidents of police brutality against peaceful demonstrators defending the rights of Africans and of people of African descent”. It is due to be considered at an urgent debate of the U.N. Human Rights Council on Wednesday.

    The 47-member Council agreed on Tuesday to convene at the request of Burkina Faso on behalf of African countries after the death last month of George Floyd, an African American, in police custody in Minneapolis. His death has ignited protests worldwide.

    The United States, which quit the Council two years ago alleging bias against its ally Israel, has not commented on being put in the dock.

    The text, subject to change after negotiation at the Council, calls for setting up “an independent international commission of inquiry … to establish facts and circumstances related to the systemic racism, alleged violations of international human rights law and abuses against Africans and of people of African descent in the United States of America and other parts of the world”.

    The panel should examine federal, state and local government responses to peaceful protests “including the alleged use of excessive force against protesters, bystanders and journalists”.

    The resolution calls on the United States and other countries to cooperate fully with the inquiry, which would report back in a year.

    The Council already has commissions of inquiry or fact-finding missions into human rights violations in hotspots including Syria, Burundi, Myanmar, South Sudan, Venezuela and Yemen.

    Source: reuters.com

  • UN must do more to remove ‘stain of racism’ – Officials

    More than 20 senior United Nations officials from different African countries have spoken about their outrage at systemic racism and police brutality in the United States and across the world.

    The authors of a letter, including the head of the World Health Organization Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and the head of UNAids Winnie Byanyima, say the organisation must do more to remove what they called the “stain of racism on humanity”.

    Writing in a personal capacity they say racism exists within the UN and the organisation needs an honest assessment of itself if it is to lead the wider fight for equality.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Renewables booming but not enough to meet climate targets – UN

    The world added 12 percent more clean power capacity in 2019 than the year before, but new renewable energy planned over the next decade falls far short of what is needed to forestall dangerous global warming, the UN warned on Wednesday.

    An additional 184 gigawatts (GW) of renewable power – mostly solar and wind – came online last year, according to the Annual Global Trends in Renewable Energy Investment report, jointly issued by the UN Environment Programme and Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF).

    One gigawatt is similar to the capacity of a nuclear reactor.

    Total investment in renewables in 2019 was $282.2 billion, led by China ($83.4 bn), the United States ($55.5 bn), Europe ($54.6 bn), Japan ($16.5 bn) and India $9.3 bn), with a record 21 countries each spending at least $2 billion.

    Developing nations – not including China and India – poured an unprecedented $59.5 billion into clean energy.

    The rapidly falling cost of solar and wind power – less expensive in most electricity markets than coal – means more bang for the buck, the report showed.

    Investment in 2019 was the same as the year before but yielded an additional 20 GW of installed capacity.

    But measured against the Paris climate treaty target of capping global warming at “well below” two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, the transition to clean energy is not happening nearly fast enough, the report said.

    The 826 GW of new renewables planned by 2030 – at a cost of about $1 trillion – is only a quarter of the roughly 3,000 GW required to keep us on track for a 2C world, it concluded.

    Investment is lagging as well – more than $2.7 trillion were committed to renewables during the last decade.

    “Clean energy finds itself at a crossroads in 2020,” said BNEF chief executive Jon Moore, one of the report’s authors. “The last decade produced huge progress, but official targets for 2030 are far short of what is required to address climate change.”

    ‘Ever-falling price tag’

    When the current health crisis eases, he added, governments must not only boost renewable power but the decarbonisation of transport, buildings and industry.

    The huge amounts of cash mobilised to jump-start economies stalled by COVID-l9 lockdowns is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to close this “renewables gap” in investment, the authors argue.

    “If governments take advantage of the ever-falling price tag of renewables to put clean energy at the heart of COVID-19 economic recovery, they can take a big step towards a healthy natural world,” said UNEP executive director Inger Andersen.

    “This is the best insurance policy against global pandemics.”

    But the transition from a brown global economy to a green one is strewn with obstacles.

    Investment in renewables last year, for example, was barely half the amount governments spent to subsidise fossil fuels, according to a report last week from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

    Combined subsidies for both consumption and production last year totalled $478 billion in 77 economies, the two intergovernmental agencies found.

    That’s an 18 percent drop compared to 2018, but the decrease was due mainly to lower oil and gas prices.

    Indeed, subsidies for fossil fuel production in 44 countries increased 38 percent last year, OECD figures showed.

    “I am saddened to see some backsliding on efforts to phase out fossil fuel support,” OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria said in a statement.

    Source: france24.com

  • United States accused of blocking Hanna Tetteh’s appointment as UN envoy to Libya

    Germany and France are angry at the Unites States for delaying the appointment of a Hanna Tetteh to replace Ghassan Salamé as the United Nations special envoy for Libya, Ghanaguardian.com can exclusively report.

    Paris and Berlin have expressed their disgust over the slowness in the appointment process of Ghana’s former foreign minister to the position which has been left vacant by the ailing Lebanese diplomat.

    The two European countries are pointing their fingers at Washington without expressly naming the country but its clear their guns are aimed at the United States.

    The post has been vacant since March 2 when the Lebanese Ghassan Salamé resigned from his post as United Nations envoy for Libya for health reasons.

    To replace him, the UN secretary-general, Antonio Guterres, had set his sights on Ramtane Lamamra, the former Algerian Minister of Foreign Affairs but Washington vetoed his appointment , without giving a reason.

    Since then, according to diplomats, Antonio Guterres has submitted another name to the UN Security Council, that of the former Ghanaian minister, Hanna Serwaa Tetteh, 53, who has been the United Nations’ representative to the African Unioon since 2018.

    Some sources say Maddam Tetteh’s profile does not convince a lof the diplomats on the American side but other says Washington is keen on a figure they can control given the strategic nature of their oil interests in the North African country.

    As a result of that her appointment has been stopped which has angered France and Germany, who together denounced the United States, without naming it.

    “We have made no progress,” said French ambassador to the UN, Nicolas de Rivière, during a joint press conference with his German counterpart on Monday. “The first (name) has been rejected and there is still no agreement on the second. It is really painful, ”when there is“ an emergency now ”with a“ very bad situation in Libya.”

    Since 2015, two rival authorities have been fighting for power on the ground: the Government of National Unity (GNA), recognized by the UN and based in Tripoli, and a power embodied by Marshal Khalifa Haftar in the East. Since April 2019, the latter has put a deadlock on any attempt at political settlement by wanting to seize Tripoli militarily.

    Source: Ghana Guardian

  • UN: Sea crews must be labelled key workers

    A number of UN agencies have called for urgent action to designate sea and air crews as key workers.

    In a joint statement, the UN’s maritime, labour and aviation agencies said that worldwide travel restrictions had left crews stranded around the world.

    It said a key worker designation would allow crews on board vessels, such as fishing boats and cargo ships, to more easily changeover and return home.

    “We are seeking the support of governments to facilitate crew changes, operations essential to maintain the global cargo supply chain,” the statement said.

    It added that by next month tens of thousands of seafarers will need international flights to be repatriated safely. It said that many had extended their service on board ships because they cannot be replaced.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Over 660,000 displaced during pandemic despite UN plea – Aid group

    More than 660,000 people have been displaced from their homes in conflict zones around the world since March, despite a UN call for a global ceasefire during the coronavirus pandemic, a top international aid group said Friday.

    The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) said its figures showed that armed conflict around the world had continued during the pandemic, even as much of globe went into lockdown.

    This was despite a call on March 23 by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres for a global ceasefire for the pandemic.

    The NRC said a total of 661,000 people have been displaced in 19 countries since then, with the highest number by far in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    “At a time when health experts tell us to stay at home, men with guns are forcing hundreds of thousands out of their homes and into extreme vulnerability,” said the NRC’s Secretary-General Jan Egeland.

    “This not only hurts those who are forced to flee, it seriously undermines our joint efforts to combat the virus.”

    The NRC accused the UN Security Council of failing to show leadership to encourage peace talks.

    “While people are being displaced and killed, powerful members of the UN Security Council squabble like children in a sandbox,” Egeland said.

    He called on world leaders to “rise to the occasion” and jointly push parties to put down their weapons and unite in protecting all communities from COVID-19.

    “Now is not the time for kindergarten politics,” he added.

    The NRC said it was appealing to UN Security Council members to issue a “clear call” to warring parties to halt the conduct of hostilities and to “settle their conflicts through talks and allow for a systematic response to the pandemic.”

    In DR Congo alone, clashes between armed groups and the country’s military forced 482,000 people to flee their homes, it said.

    Meanwhile fighting has continued in Yemen despite pledges to implement a ceasefire by Saudi authorities, resulting in the displacement of 24,000 people since March 23.

    Africa’s Lake Chad region has also experienced a surge of displacement, the NRC said, with Chad and Niger worst affected.

    Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, Syria, Somalia and Myanmar all saw more than 10,000 people displaced in the same period, the group added.

    Source: france24.com

  • UN chief praises Africa’s ‘swift’ coronavirus response

    UN Secretary General António Guterres has praised Africa’s “swift” response to the coronavirus pandemic, with reported cases much lower than initially feared.

    He said in a statement, “Most [African countries] have moved rapidly to deepen regional coordination, deploy health workers, and enforce quarantines, lockdowns and border closures. Most [African countries] have moved rapidly to deepen regional coordination, deploy health workers, and enforce quarantines, lockdowns and border closures”.

    “They are also drawing on the experience of HIV/Aid and Ebola to debunk rumours and overcome mistrust of government, security forces and health workers.”

    They are also drawing on the experience of HIV/AIDS and Ebola to debunk rumours and overcome mistrust of government, security forces and health workers.”

    The AFP news agency reports him telling RFL radio in France that the developed world could learn from Africa’s response.

    “Most African governments and organisations took in time very brave prevention measures which provide a lesson for some developed nations that did not,” he is quoted as saying.

    However, he warned in his statement that it still might be early days for the pandemic in Africa and recommended international help to strengthen the continent’s health systems and food supplies to avoid a financial crisis.

    The continent has so far confirmed 88,855 coronavirus cases, including 2,848 deaths.

    The number of fatalities has been relatively low compared to about 323,000 deaths worldwide.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN chief calls out countries who ignored WHO on coronavirus

    The planet is paying a heavy price for countries ignoring the recommendations of the World Health Organization to fight the Covid-19 pandemic, UN chief Antonio Guterres told a virtual meeting of the WHO’s World Health Assembly on Monday.

    “Different countries have followed different, sometimes contradictory strategies and we are all paying a heavy price,” the secretary-general told the WHO gathering.

    Speaking after Guterres, the head of the WHO said he would initiate an independent evaluation of its handling of the coronavirus pandemic at the “earliest appropriate moment” and vowed transparency and accountability.

    “We all have lessons to learn from the pandemic. Every country and every organisation must examine its response and learn from its experience. WHO is committed to transparency, accountability and continuous improvement,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the assembly.

    Tedros thanked early high-level speakers for their “strong support for WHO at this critical time” and said that the review must encompass responsibility of “all actors in good faith”.

    “The risk remains high and we have a long road to travel,” Tedros said. Preliminary serological tests in some countries showed that at most 20% of populations had contracted the disease and “in most places less than 10 per cent”, he said.

    Source: france24.com

  • Amid pandemic, world economy projected to shrink 3.2% in 2020: U.N.

    The world economy is projected to shrink by 3.2 percent in 2020 after the coronavirus pandemic sharply restricted economic activity, increased uncertainty and sparked the worst recession since the depression, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

    A report by the U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs said there would likely only be a gradual recovery of lost output in 2021. In January, the department had projected world economy growth of between 1.8 to 2.5 percent this year.

    “The world economy is expected to lose nearly $8.5 trillion in output in 2020 and 2021, nearly wiping out the cumulative output gains of the previous four years,” the report released on Wednesday said.

    The new coronavirus, which causes the respiratory illness COVID-19, has infected some 4.3 million people globally and more than 291,000 have died, according to a Reuters tally. The virus first emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.

    Businesses were shut down and hundreds of millions of people around the world were told to stay home to stop the spread as scientists rush to develop treatments and a vaccine. The U.N. report said the pandemic showed how economic and public health “are inextricably linked and mutually reinforcing.”

    “Countries may seek to reduce inter-dependence, and shorten supply chains, as many may consider the potential costs of a crippling pandemic too high relative to the benefits they receive from economic integration and interdependence,” it said.

    “The fight against the pandemic — if it continues for too long and its economic price becomes too high — will fundamentally reshape trade and globalization,” it added.

    The report also warned that the massive loss of employment and income due to the pandemic will exacerbate global poverty.

    “According to baseline estimates, 34.3 million additional people — including millions working in the informal sector — will fall below the extreme poverty line this year, with African countries accounting for 56 per cent of this increase,” it said.

    Source: reuters.com

  • 3 UN peacekeepers killed in Mali

    Three Chadian UN peacekeepers were killed and four injured in an attack on a UN convoy in northern Mali, a peacekeeping mission there said late Sunday.

    In a statement, the United Nations Integrated Stabilization Mission for Mali (MINUSMA) said the incident took place near Aguelhok in the Kidal region.

    Kidal is the former stronghold of separatist rebels in Mali. But several militant groups are active in the north despite a 2015 peace agreement between the Malian government and Tuareg rebel groups.

    Mahamat Saleh Annadif, head of the mission, condemned the attack against civilians and UN operations in the West African country.

    “We will have to combine all efforts to identify and apprehend those responsible for these terrorist acts,” Annadif said.

    ”The Secretary-General expresses his deep condolences to the families of the victims, as well as the Government and people of Chad. He wishes a speedy recovery to the injured,” Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for the secretary-general, said in a separate statement.

    ”The Secretary-General reaffirms that such cowardly acts will not deter the United Nations from its resolve to continue supporting the people and Government of Mali in their pursuit of peace and stability,” he added.

    No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack, but similar attacks are usually claimed by militias linked to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).

    Mali, one of the poorest countries in the world, suffers from the presence of several terror groups, and French, Malian, and UN peacekeepers carry out counter-terrorism operations there.

    Tensions erupted in Mali in 2012 following a failed coup and a Tuareg rebellion that ultimately allowed al-Qaeda-linked militant groups to take over the northern half of the country. In 2015, a peace deal was signed between the government and some insurgent groups.

    Political and community disputes continue to fuel tensions in the West African nation, thus undermining the implementation of the peace agreement.

    Source: aa.com.tr

  • US prevents UN Security Council vote on pandemic truce

    The United States on Friday prevented a vote in the UN Security Council on a resolution calling for a ceasefire in various countries around the world so they can better fight the coronavirus pandemic, diplomats said.

    “The United States cannot support the current draft,” the country’s delegation told the 14 other stunned members of the Security Council.

    When asked for an explanation of the US move, a State Department official told AFP that China had “repeatedly blocked compromises that would have allowed the Council to move forward.”

    Diplomats told AFP that the language used in the draft to describe the World Health Organization was behind the US move to prevent the vote.

    Last month, US President Donald Trump announced he was suspending funding to the World Health Organization, accusing it of downplaying the seriousness of the outbreak to shield China.

    On Thursday, Washington had accepted an implicit mention of the WHO in the UN text as a compromise.

    Other sources said Washington wanted the Council to return to an initial draft of the resolution which highlighted the need for “transparency” in global cooperation in tackling the pandemic.

    The procedure blocked by the United States would have allowed the sponsors of the resolution, France and Tunisia, to put it to a vote.

    The latest version of the text — which has been the subject of tense negotiations since March, and was obtained by AFP — called for a cessation of hostilities in conflict zones to allow governments to better address the pandemic.

    It called on all nations to “enhance coordination” in the virus fight.

    It also highlighted the “urgent need to support all countries, as well as all relevant entities of the United Nations system, including specialized health agencies, and other relevant international, regional, and sub-regional organization.”

    This wording, which implicitly refers to the WHO without explicitly mentioning it, was seen as a compromise that could win support from both the United States and China.

    “In our view, the Council should either proceed with a resolution limited to support for a ceasefire, or a broadened resolution that fully addresses the need for renewed member state commitment to transparency and accountability in the context of COVID-19,” the State Department official said Friday.

    The US is the largest contributor to the WHO, offering more than $400 million each year, which also goes to combat other diseases around the world including polio and malaria.

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has been pushing for a cessation of hostilities around the world since March 23, urging all sides in conflict to lay down arms and allow war-torn nations to combat the coronavirus.

    Source: france24.com

  • UN decries dangerous Med migrant pushbacks

    The UN voiced alarm Friday at reports that countries are failing to help migrants in distress on the Mediterranean Sea, blocking assistance by NGOs and coordinating pushbacks of their boats.

    UN rights office spokesman Rupert Colville warned during a virtual press briefing that such measures “are clearly putting lives at risk”.

    “We are deeply concerned about recent reports of failure to assist and coordinated pushbacks of migrant boats in the central Mediterranean, which continues to be one of the deadliest migration routes in the world,” he said.

    More than 100,000 migrants tried to cross the Mediterranean last year with 1,200 dying in the attempt, according to the UN’s International Organization for Migration.

    And so far this year, more than 250 migrants have perished trying to make the perilous crossing.

    Colville pointed to claims that distress calls to Maritime Rescue Coordination centres “have gone unanswered or been ignored”.

    “If true,” he said, this “seriously calls into question the commitments of the states concerned to saving lives and respecting human rights.”

    He especially decried reports that Maltese authorities had asked commercial ships to push boats with migrants and refugees in distress back to the high seas.

    And he lamented that humanitarian search and rescue vessels that usually patrol the central Mediterranean have been prevented from helping migrants, even as the numbers of attempted crossings surge.

    – ‘Horrendous conditions’ –

    During the first three months of this year, departures from war-torn Libya increased four-fold compared to the same period in 2019, Colville said, stressing that migrants and refugees embarking on such journeys were entitled to protection under international law.

    “Yet, since April 9, both Italy and Malta have declared their ports ‘unsafe’ for disembarkation due to COVID-19,” he said.

    Italy, the most common destination for rescue boats, has been one of the most affected countries in the pandemic, with nearly 30,000 deaths.

    As a result of port closures, at least three vessels with migrants onboard are awaiting disembarkation, Colville said.

    He pointed to reports that a small group of adults, including pregnant women, and children were allowed to disembark on Thursday after the Maltese government made a concession on humanitarian grounds.

    “While we welcome this effort, we call for all migrants currently being held on board these vessels to be urgently disembarked, as the conditions on merchant vessels are not suitable for long-term accommodation,” he said.

    He also decried that the Libyan Coast Guard continues to turn vessels back to its shores and to detain all intercepted migrants in “horrendous conditions”, warning that overcrowding there also made detainees vulnerable to the novel coronavirus.

    Since the summer of 2018, the European Union has tasked Libya’s coastguard with coordinating search and rescue operations in a vast stretch of the Mediterranean beyond their territorial waters.

    But the UN and others have long warned that it is not safe for migrants to be returned to the conflict-ravaged country.

    “Libya cannot be considered to have a safe port for disembarkation,” UN refugee agency spokesman Charlie Yaxley told Friday’s briefing.

    Source: france24.com

  • Shortages of virus test materials ‘critical’ – UN lab chief

    Shortages of materials needed in tests for the novel coronavirus remain “critical”, according to the head of a UN lab, which is supplying countries with COVID-19 detection kits.

    In particular the chemical reagents for the tests are still in short supply, said Giovanni Cattoli, head of the Animal Production and Health Laboratory run jointly by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

    “There is indeed on the global market a shortage of some items, particularly reagents, because there are demands from all over the world,” Cattoli told AFP this week during a tour of the laboratory at Seibersdorf, 40 kilometres (25 miles) outside Vienna.

    “The situation is still critical,” he said. “We are working … to accelerate purchase and investigate if there are alternative reagents.”

    The tests the lab sends out use the nuclear-derived RT-PCR technology, which is now common for new coronavirus detection and can give results within hours.

    Cattoli said one of the lessons of the crisis was “that we need not to rely only on a single type of test but to have a portfolio of tests and a portfolio of reagents in order to be prepared to have a plan B and possibly a plan C in order to respond effectively and rapidly.”

    The IAEA has received requests from 119 member states for test equipment to supply more than 200 laboratories, Cattoli added.

    Of them, 18 have already received supplies with more on the way.

    The costs of each package of equipment – some 100,000 euros ($108,000) – are borne by the IAEA.

    “Some laboratories in some areas of the world don’t have the necessary equipment. They don’t have the necessary reagents and procedures to rapidly detect the virus,” Cattoli said.

    Those who have received equipment are Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Iran, Kenya, Latvia, Lebanon, Lesotho, Malaysia, Montenegro, Morocco, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Peru, Philippines, Senegal, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Togo.

    The IAEA Laboratories in Seibersdorf are the only ones of their kind operated by the UN in the world.

    They cooperate with the FAO and others to monitor the evolution of the novel coronavirus and other viruses.

    They also work on improvements to RT-PCR technology, which may enable it to be used outside laboratories in the future, Cattoli said.

    Source: france24.com

  • UN calls for end to ‘tsunami of hate’ around virus

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called for an “all-out effort” to end rising racism linked to the Coronavirus pandemic.

    “The pandemic continues to unleash a tsunami of hate and xenophobia, scapegoating and scaremongering,” Guterres said on Friday.

    “Anti-foreigner sentiment has surged online and in the streets. Anti-Semitic conspiracy theories have spread and COVID-19-related anti-Muslim attacks have occurred.”

    Additionally, “journalists, whistleblowers, health professionals, aid workers and human rights defenders are being targeted simply for doing their jobs,” he said.

    He appealed for “an all-out effort to end hate speech globally,” and called on “the media, especially social media companies, to do much more to flag and… remove racist, misogynist and other harmful content.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN pushes for virus vaccine as Trump disinfectant theory sparks outrage

    The United Nations on Friday launched a global push to speed up production of a vaccine for the new coronavirus as US President Donald Trump came under fire for suggesting injecting patients with disinfectant.

    The pandemic has upended life around the planet as nations try to stop the spread of the disease that has so far claimed more than 190,000 lives, infected nearly three million people and hammered the global economy.

    UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said defeating the pandemic will require the biggest health effort ever seen as the United Nations joined forces with world leaders and the private sector to develop, produce and distribute a vaccine for COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

    “We face a global public enemy like no other,” Guterres told a virtual briefing. “A world free of COVID-19 requires the most massive public health effort in history.”

    “None of us is safe until all of us are safe,” the UN chief said. “COVID-19 respects no borders. COVID-19 anywhere is a threat to people everywhere.”

    While the disease appears to be peaking in Europe and the United States, other nations are still in the early stages of the fight and the WHO has warned strict measures should remain until there is a viable treatment or vaccine.

    The race is on around the world to develop one, with the University of Oxford launching a human trial, while Germany announced similar trials will start by next week.

    In a briefing at the White House, scientists said they had found the virus was quickly destroyed by sunlight, raising hopes that the pandemic could ease as the northern hemisphere summer approaches.

    “Is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?” Trump said. “It sounds interesting to me.”

    But his suggestion was met with disbelief by many experts who cautioned against any such experiment.

    “This notion of injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible, and it’s dangerous,” Vin Gupta, pulmonologist and health expert told NBC News.

    The United States is now the worst-affected nation in the world, with about 50,000 coronavirus deaths.

    In a bid to restart its economy, the US state of Georgia will lift restrictions further than most on Friday when it allows businesses like gyms and hair salons to reopen; a move seen as too far by some.

    “This is an irresponsible move that is based solely on dollars over science,” Randy Adler, owner of Babs Midtown restaurant, told AFP. “It is not the right thing to do.”

    Ramadan on lockdown

    Across the globe more than four billion people are still under some form of lockdown or stay-at-home order even as governments begin easing restrictions, weighing the risk of more infections against growing economic fallout.

    Muslims across the world began marking the holy month of Ramadan under the confinement orders on Friday, with bans on prayers in mosques and large gatherings of families and friends to break the daily fast, a centrepiece of the holy month.

    In the Saudi holy city of Mecca, the Grand Mosque, usually packed with tens of thousands of pilgrims during Ramadan, was deserted as religious authorities suspended the year-round umrah pilgrimage.

    “We are used to seeing the holy mosque crowded with people during the day, night, all the time… I feel pain deep inside,” said Ali Mulla, the muezzin who gives the call to prayer at the Grand Mosque.

    But despite the coronavirus threat, clerics and conservatives in some countries including Bangladesh, Pakistan and Indonesia — the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation — have pushed back against social distancing rules, refusing to stop gatherings in mosques.

    Several thousand people attended evening prayers on Thursday at the biggest mosque in the capital of Indonesia’s conservative Aceh province, and there were similar scenes at many sites in Pakistan.

    The WHO called for a stop to some Ramadan activities to lower the risk of infections, and authorities in several countries have explicitly warned of the threat from large religious gatherings.

    Distancing measures and the severe economic impact of the pandemic have also meant many charitable activities during Ramadan, especially food distribution and other donations, have been hit hard.

    Massive economic stimulus

    The economic devastation wreaked by lockdowns indoors is huge, with the world facing its worst downturn since the Great Depression.

    US lawmakers covered their faces with masks and voted in small groups to approve a $483 billion stimulus plan, on top of a $2.2 trillion package already enacted.

    The money will back small businesses on the brink of bankruptcy and hard-pressed hospitals as the world’s biggest economy reels, with more than 26 million people losing their jobs since the pandemic hit.

    In Europe, the hardest-hit continent, leaders haggled by video conference over their own package that could top one trillion euros, as the European Central Bank chief warned of the risk of “acting too little, too late”.

    The 27-nation European Union agreed to ask the bloc’s executive arm to come up with a rescue plan by May 6, sources told AFP.

    The crucial economic discussions come as parts of Europe slowly loosen restrictions after progress on reducing the number of new infections.

    But experts have warned of a possible second wave, and authorities are ramping up their capacity to deal with it in Germany, where curbs on public life have been eased recently.

    The German Football League says it is ready for the Bundesliga to resume from May 9, though without fans in stadiums and with strict player hygiene measures. A final government decision is expected next week.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus pandemic will cause global famines of ‘biblical proportions’ – UN warns

    The world is facing multiple famines of “biblical proportions” in just a matter of months, the UN has said, warning that the coronavirus pandemic will push an additional 130 million people to the brink of starvation.

    Famines could take hold in “about three dozen countries” in a worst-case scenario, the executive director of the World Food Programme (WFP) said in a stark address on Tuesday. Ten of those countries already have more than 1 million people on the verge of starvation, he said.

    He cited conflict, an economic recession, a decline in aid and a collapse in oil prices as factors likely to lead to vast food shortages, and urged swift action to avert disaster.

    “While dealing with a COVID-19 pandemic, we are also on the brink of a hunger pandemic,” David Beasley told the UN’s security council. “There is also a real danger that more people could potentially die from the economic impact of COVID-19 than from the virus itself.”

    The WFP had already warned that 2020 would be a devastating year for numerous countries ravaged by poverty or war, with 135 million people facing crisis levels of hunger or worse. Their updated projections nearly double that number.

    When added to the 821 million people already chronically hungry, that scenario would push more than 1 billion people into dire situations.
    The agency identified 55 countries most at risk of being plunged into famine in its annual report on food crises, released this week, warning that their fragile healthcare systems will be unable to cope with the impact of the virus.

    “These countries may face an excruciating trade-off between saving lives or livelihoods or, in a worst-case scenario, saving people from the coronavirus to have them die from hunger,” the report said.

    Ten countries were singled out as particularly at-risk, after housing the worst food crises last year; Yemen, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Afghanistan, Venezuela, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Nigeria and Haiti.

    Most of those countries have so far been spared the worst of the coronavirus pandemic, with the epicenter moving from China to Europe to North America, but the state of their healthcare institutions means even relatively small outbreaks could be devastating. To date, more than 2.5 million cases of the coronavirus have been confirmed globally.

    Source: cnn.com

  • UN chief warns that coronavirus poses a risk to human rights

    U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Thursday that the coronavirus pandemic is “a human crisis that is fast becoming a human rights crisis.”

    The U.N. chief said in a video message that there is discrimination in the delivery of public services to tackle COVID-19 and there are “structural inequalities that impede access to them.”

    Guterres said the pandemic has also seen “disproportionate effects on certain communities, the rise of hate speech, the targeting of vulnerable groups, and the risks of heavy-handed security responses undermining the health response.”

    He warned that with “rising ethno-nationalism, populism, authoritarianism and a push back against human rights in some countries, the crisis can provide a pretext to adopt repressive measures for purposes unrelated to the pandemic.”

    In February, Guterres issued a call to action to countries, businesses and people to help renew and revive human rights across the globe, laying out a seven-point plan amid concerns about climate change, conflict and repression.

    “As I said then, human rights cannot be an afterthought in times of crisis — and we now face the biggest international crisis in generations,” he said.

    The secretary-general said he was releasing a report Thursday on how human rights must guide the response to the virus and recovery from the pandemic. Neither he nor the report name any countries or parties responsible for human rights violations.

    Guterres said governments must be “transparent, responsive and accountable,” and stressed that press freedom, civil society organizations, the private sector and “civic space” are essential.

    The report said governments also need to take action to mitigate the worst impacts of COVID-19 on jobs, livelihoods, access to basic services and family life.

    Guterres said any emergency measures — including states of emergency — must be “legal, proportionate, necessary and non-discriminatory, have a specific focus and duration, and take the least intrusive approach possible to protect public health.”

    “Emergency powers may be needed but broad executive powers, swiftly granted with minimal oversight, carry risks,” the report warned. “Heavy-handed security responses undermine the health response and can exacerbate existing threats to peace and security or create new ones.”

    The report said the best response is proportionate to the immediate threat and protects human rights.

    “The message is clear: People, and their rights, must be front and center,” Guterres said.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: World risks ‘biblical’ famines due to pandemic – UN

    The world is at risk of widespread famines “of biblical proportions” caused by the coronavirus pandemic, the UN has warned.

    David Beasley, head of the World Food Programme (WFP), said urgent action was needed to avoid a catastrophe.

    A report estimates that the number suffering from hunger could go from 135 million to more than 250 million.

    Those most at risk are in 10 countries affected by conflict, economic crisis and climate change, the WFP says.

    The fourth annual Global Report on Food Crises highlights Yemen, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Afghanistan, Venezuela, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Nigeria and Haiti.

    In South Sudan, 61% of the population was affected by food crisis last year, the report says.

    Even before the pandemic hit, parts of East Africa and South Asia were already facing severe food shortages caused by drought and the worst locust infestations for decades.

    Addressing the UN Security Council during a video conference, Mr Beasley said the world had to “act wisely and act fast”.

    “We could be facing multiple famines of biblical proportions within a short few months,” he said. “The truth is we do not have time on our side.”

    In a call to action, he added: “I do believe that with our expertise and our partnerships, we can bring together the teams and the programmes necessary to make certain the Covid-19 pandemic does not become a human and food crisis catastrophe.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Macron pushes Africa debt relief, seeks Putin’s backing for UN truce plea

    International creditors must relieve African countries of debt payments this year to help them deal with the Coronavirus pandemic, French President Emmanuel Macron said in a wide-ranging interview with RFI on Wednesday in which he also urged Russia to get behind UN calls for a global ceasefire.

    A moratorium on African countries’ debt payments is “an indispensable step” to help the continent weather the coronavirus crisis, the French president told Radio France Internationale (RFI), FRANCE 24’s sister station, calling for the debt to be eventually written off.

    “We must give African economies some breathing space by suspending debt payments during this crisis,” Macron explained, describing the moratorium as a “global first”.

    The French president’s comments come as his finance minister says major international creditors have reached a preliminary agreement to relieve the world’s poorest countries of debt payments this year.

    Macron urged finance officials for the US, China and other G20 nations to finalise that agreement when they meet online on Wednesday.

    In his interview, the French leader said he had secured the agreement of three of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council to back a call by the UN for a global ceasefire so the world can focus on the coronavirus pandemic.

    The UN’s Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for the world truce on March 23, warning that in war-torn countries, health systems have collapsed and the small number of health professionals left were often targeted in the fighting.

    Macron said President Xi Jinping of China, US President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had all confirmed to him they would back the plea.

    The French leader said he was hopeful of securing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s agreement in the coming hours.

    “I spoke to him at the start of this initiative. I haven’t spoken to him since I got the firm confirmations of the other leaders. I will do in the next few hours,” Macron told RFI.

    “I think that for sure President Putin will agree and the day he says he does, we’ll be able to hold this video conference and relay this call in a solemn, forceful and efficient way.”

    Source: France24

  • UN Security Council to meet on coronavirus pandemic

    After weeks of disagreement — especially between the United States and China — the UN Security Council will meet Thursday to discuss the coronavirus pandemic for the first time.

    Led by Germany, nine of the council’s 10 non-permanent members requested the closed-door meeting — a video conference to maintain social distancing — last week, fed up with the body’s inaction over the unprecedented global crisis.

    Talks are moving in the right direction, diplomats said, and Washington is no longer insisting UN language refer to the virus as coming from China, which had infuriated Beijing.

    Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is expected to focus on efforts to fight the pandemic, peacekeeping missions and fostering unity between the non-permanent members and the five permanent ones.

    There are two competing texts up for debate.

    One, spearheaded by Tunisia on behalf of the 10 non-permanent members and obtained by AFP, calls for “an urgent, coordinated and united international action to curb the impact of COVID-19” and urges an immediate global ceasefire on humanitarian grounds.

    That draft resolution has been in development since March 30, though a vote on it is not yet scheduled.

    The second text, proposed by France, focuses on Guterres’s call last month to cease all hostilities around the world as part of a “humanitarian pause” to fight the pandemic.

    That one has so far only had input from the permanent members, which diplomats from non-permanent countries told AFP has been “very frustrating.”

    Efforts to convene a meeting have been stymied by the hospitalization of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Chinese reticence to participate without first setting a clear agenda.

    Richard Gowen, a specialist at the International Crisis Group, told AFP: “It is important to recognize that the main driving force behind the cooperation of the 10 non-permanent members is the bad behaviour of the five permanent members.”

    Several of these non-permanent workers “waged a fierce campaign to win their seat” on the Council and “are dumbfounded by the bickering between China and the United States” that prevent the body from “agreeing on the great crisis of our time.”

    A Western ambassador, speaking anonymously, said the two blocs needed each other.

    “The permanent cannot pass a text without the voices of the non-permanent, the non-permanent cannot impose a text on the permanent because they have a veto. We must necessarily agree and we will try to ‘hear’,” they said.

    In the Security Council, at least nine votes out of 15 are necessary to adopt a resolution, without a veto of one of the five permanent members.

    Source: France24

  • UN Security Council to meet on coronavirus pandemic

    After weeks of disagreement especially between the United States and China — the UN Security Council will meet Thursday to discuss the Coronavirus pandemic for the first time.

    Led by Germany, nine of the council’s 10 non-permanent members requested the closed-door meeting — a video conference to maintain social distancing — last week, fed up with the body’s inaction over the unprecedented global crisis.

    Talks are moving in the right direction, diplomats said, and Washington is no longer insisting UN language refer to the virus as coming from China, which had infuriated Beijing.

    Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is expected to focus on efforts to fight the pandemic, peacekeeping missions and fostering unity between the non-permanent members and the five permanent ones.

    There are two competing texts up for debate.

    One, spearheaded by Tunisia on behalf of the 10 non-permanent members and obtained by AFP, calls for “an urgent, coordinated and united international action to curb the impact of COVID-19” and urges an immediate global ceasefire on humanitarian grounds.

    That draft resolution has been in development since March 30, though a vote on it is not yet scheduled.

    The second text, proposed by France, focuses on Guterres’s call last month to cease all hostilities around the world as part of a “humanitarian pause” to fight the pandemic.

    That one has so far only had input from the permanent members, which diplomats from non-permanent countries told AFP has been “very frustrating.”

    Efforts to convene a meeting have been stymied by the hospitalization of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Chinese reticence to participate without first setting a clear agenda.

    Richard Gowen, a specialist at the International Crisis Group, told AFP: “It is important to recognize that the main driving force behind the cooperation of the 10 non-permanent members is the bad behavior of the five permanent members.”

    Several of these non-permanent workers “waged a fierce campaign to win their seat” on the Council and “are dumbfounded by the bickering between China and the United States” that prevent the body from “agreeing on the great crisis of our time.”

    A Western ambassador, speaking anonymously, said the two blocs needed each other.

    “The permanent cannot pass a text without the voices of the non-permanent, the non-permanent cannot impose a text on the permanent because they have a veto. We must necessarily agree and we will try to ‘hear’,” they said.

    In the Security Council, at least nine votes out of 15 are necessary to adopt a resolution, without a veto of one of the five permanent members.

    Source: AFP