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Saturday, September 20, 2008

BAN DEPLORES 'HEINOUS' TERRORIST ATTACK IN PAKISTANI CAPITAL

BAN DEPLORES 'HEINOUS' TERRORIST ATTACK IN PAKISTANI CAPITAL New York, Sep 20 2008 7:10PM Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has strongly condemned today's "heinous" terrorist attack on the Marriott Hotel in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, which has reportedly killed and injured a large number of people.

"He expresses his heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims of this appalling attack, as well as to the Government and people of Pakistan," Mr. Ban's spokesperson said in a statement.

Media reports say the bombing killed at least 40 people and wounded some 200.

"No cause can justify the indiscriminate targeting of civilians," today's statement added.

2008-09-20 00:00:00.000

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UN URGES CONGOLESE PARTIES TO CEASE FIRE AMID FRESH FIGHTING IN NORTH KIVU

UN URGES CONGOLESE PARTIES TO CEASE FIRE AMID FRESH FIGHTING IN NORTH KIVU New York, Sep 20 2008 5:10PM The United Nations peacekeeping force in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has called for an immediate ceasefire between the Government and rebels, as new clashes broke out today in North Kivu, leading to further displacement in the troubled region.

According to the UN mission, known as MONUC, heavy fighting took place today between DRC armed forces (FARDC) and the National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP) near the town of Sake, located some 20 kilometres from Goma, the capital of North Kivu province.

MONUC tried, unsuccessfully, to obtain a ceasefire between the parties, all the while stressing the impact of the fighting on civilians, particularly the tens of thousands of displaced that are already living in camps in the area.

Recent fighting in the eastern part of the vast African nation has been some of the worst in more than a year and a violation of the Actes d'engagement signed by the parties in January.

Earlier this week, the Government approved global disengagement plans provided for in the Actes as prepared by MONUC.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has welcomed the Government's acceptance of the plan and urged it to work closely with MONUC to ensure its timely implementation.

In a statement issued yesterday by his spokesperson, Mr. Ban also called on the CNDP and all other armed groups "to accept and urgently implement" the disengagement plan without further delay.

2008-09-20 00:00:00.000

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Friday, September 19, 2008

ON EVE OF AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT MEETING, UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR RESOLUTE LEADERSHIP

ON EVE OF AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT MEETING, UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR RESOLUTE LEADERSHIP New York, Sep 19 2008 8:10PM Resolute leadership is needed to transform existing commitments to meet African development needs into action, a senior United Nations official has stressed, days before a major United Nations General Assembly gathering on the issue.

Under-Secretary-General Cheick Sidi Diarra, the UN Special Adviser on Africa, told a press conference yesterday that Monday's high-level meeting in New York on African development is expected to be attended by representatives of more than 160 countries, including many world leaders.

He said the meeting should serve to help streamline actions and upgrade priorities towards the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), the internationally agreed plan to help improve the continent's economic performance.

Mr. Diarra warned that Africa's economic development still faces enormous obstacles, including violent conflict, internal public mismanagement and, in some cases, a lack of international support.

Her added that "resolution and leadership [is needed] to turn existing African and international commitments into results," urging the international community to show greater support.

Many countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, are lagging in the race to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – such as the halving of extreme poverty – by the target date of 2015.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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UN OFFICIALS HAIL PARTNERSHIP WITH PRIVATE SECTOR IN ACHIEVING ANTI-POVERTY TARGETS

UN OFFICIALS HAIL PARTNERSHIP WITH PRIVATE SECTOR IN ACHIEVING ANTI-POVERTY TARGETS New York, Sep 19 2008 7:10PM United Nations officials have lauded the involvement of the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) in efforts to attain the Millennium Development Goals (<"http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/">MDGs), the eight anti-poverty targets world leaders have pledged to achieve by 2015, noting the increasingly vital role played by the private sector in tackling today's most pressing challenges.

"The private sector, it is increasingly recognized, has the capacity and the power to make a difference," Georg Kell, Executive Director of the UN Global Compact Office, told a news conference at UN Headquarters today.

The Compact pledges participating businesses – now numbering some 5,000 in over 100 countries – to observe principles regarding human rights, labour rights, environmental sustainability and the fight against corruption.

Mr. Kell welcomed the involvement of the CGI in the work of the UN, stating that its "innovative model of securing actionable commitments has not only been an inspiration for the CGI members but for many other voluntary initiatives."

Ever since former United States president Bill Clinton set up the initiative in 2005, CGI members have made commitments designed to, among others, reduce poverty and hunger, work toward education for all and combat disease.

"CGI is not a typical philanthropic organization. We don't give away any money at all," said Bob Harrison, the Initiative's chief executive officer.

"We create an opportunity for people with ideas to connect with people with resources. We distinguish ourselves from other meetings by a track record of converting ideas into solutions with tangible results," he added.

CGI members commit themselves to action in one of four focus areas, which this year are education, climate change, global health and poverty alleviation.

"Through those four focus areas, CGI members are doing their part toward achieving the Millennium Development Goals set out by the United Nations," Mr. Harrison said.

An example of this is the commitment made two years ago by corporate member Procter and Gamble to provide clean, safe drinking water to one million African children. Working with 17 non-governmental organizations (NGO), the company is distributing a product known as PUR, which, when put in dirty water, produces potable drinking water.

"The initiative had reached over 700,000 children so far, clearly addressing several of the MDGs," said Mr. Harrison.

He added that, over the past three years, members have made nearly 1,000 commitments valued at upwards of $30 billion to improve more than 200 million lives in over 150 countries. Over 230 of those commitments have been completed to date.

In addition, CGI has had about 20 commitments made in partnership with the UN. At its fourth annual meeting next week, the Initiative will be announcing some 10 more.

More than 130 leading business leaders and over 50 current and former Heads of State have confirmed their attendance at the 23-26 September meeting, set to coincide with the UN high-level event on the MDGs on 25 September.

Among those slated to address the CGI gathering are Queen Rania of Jordan, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Afghan President Hamid Karzai, and United States presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL TAKES UP RACISM AND DEFAMATION OF RELIGIONS

HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL TAKES UP RACISM AND DEFAMATION OF RELIGIONS New York, Sep 19 2008 7:10PM The United Nations Human Rights Council, currently meeting in its ninth session, <"http://www.unog.ch/unog/website/news_media.nsf/(httpNewsByYear_en)/5B5AAA339975D4B9C12574C900454019?OpenDocument">discussed racism, racial discrimination and the defamations of religions today in Geneva.

In his first address to the 47-member panel, Githu Muigai, the new Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, presented a report by his predecessor, Doudou Diène.

That report deals with the defamation of religions, in particular the serious ramifications of Islamophobia.

The study deals with the mainstreaming of racist and xenophobic ideas through their adoption by political parties in democratic countries and ongoing efforts to give credence to racist and xenophobic ideas through science, among other issues.

It calls for a universal approach in tackling all forms of discrimination, urging Member States to shift the focus of the discussion, currently framed as solely the defamation of religions, to the legal implications, based on international treaties, of inciting national, racial and religious hatred.

Mr. Muigai stated that the best response to hate speech is more speech, albeit of a different kind: dialogue touting tolerance that both educates people on cultural differences and promotes diversity.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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CONDITIONS RIGHT FOR CONGOLESE TO RETURN HOME FROM ZAMBIA, SAYS UN AGENCY

CONDITIONS RIGHT FOR CONGOLESE TO RETURN HOME FROM ZAMBIA, SAYS UN AGENCY New York, Sep 19 2008 7:10PM The United Nations refugee agency is encouraging the remaining 51,000 Congolese refugees in northern Zambia to return home, saying conditions in many areas of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are suitable for repatriation.

While the decision to repatriate is voluntary, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported today that many towns and villages are accessible by road and former combat zones have been cleared of landmines.

The agency is offering security to returning refugees as well as basic services, including schools, health clinics and potable water.

"We encourage you to seriously consider voluntary repatriation while assistance is still available," <"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/48d3b7f64.html">UNHCR Representative in Zambia, James Lynch, told refugees in Kwala and Mwange refugee camps, more than 1,000 kilometres from the capital Lusaka.

"We'll assist those that want to go back," he added, referring to the food, farming tools and housing materials given to returnees.

In recent weeks, UNHCR has embarked on a campaign to promote repatriation by disseminating information by radio and going door-to-door in the two camps. Combined with the impact of "come-and-tell" visits from the DRC, the effect has been positive, with a growing number of refugees expressing interest in returning home to Katanga province in the south.

During the first week in October, UNHCR will organize "go-and-see" visits for refugees to explore the areas of the DRC they fled during the civil war that ended earlier this decade.

Since voluntary repatriation began last year, 13,284 Congolese have gone home from Zambia, and UNHCR plans to help 30,000 more return in the next year.

Zambia currently hosts about 87,000 refugees, and around 57,000 live in four camps in Western, North Western, Northern and Luapula provinces, with another 30,000 living outside the camps. Congolese make up the majority of refugees, followed by Angolans, and smaller numbers from Rwanda, Burundi and Somalia.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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UN ASSISTS CHINA WITH CRISIS OVER CONTAMINATED POWDERED INFANT FORMULA

UN ASSISTS CHINA WITH CRISIS OVER CONTAMINATED POWDERED INFANT FORMULA New York, Sep 19 2008 6:10PM The United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) is assisting Chinese authorities with a melamine-contaminated powdered food crisis that has caused more than 6,000 cases of kidney stones in infants and three deaths across the country.

Chinese health ministry officials have confirmed these cases are related to melamine-contaminated powdered formula consumed by the infants. WHO, the UN coordinating authority for health, has taken action in disseminating information on the situation to its Member States through the International Food Safety Authorities Network (IFOSAN).

A chemical most commonly found in the form of white crystals, melamine can cause kidney stones when consumed, potentially stop the production of urine, lead to kidney failure and in some cases death.

Following investigations carried out by China's national inspection agency, 22 dairy manufacturers were found to have melamine in a number of different brands of powdered infant formula, in one brand of a frozen yoghurt dessert and in one brand of canned coffee drink. <"http://www.who.int/en/">WHO has stated on their website that all these products were most probably manufactured using ingredients made from melamine-contaminated milk.

While two of the companies exported products to Bangladesh, Burundi, Myanmar, Gabon and Yemen, contamination in the distributed products remains unconfirmed. A recall has however been issued from China and IFOSAN has specifically alerted the five countries importing the products.

Last year a range of pet food manufactured in China and exported to the United States was similarly melamine-contaminated which caused the death of a large number of dogs and cats due to kidney failure.

WHO remains in close communication with the Chinese health ministry to monitor the situation and assist with information dissemination.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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SENIOR UN OFFICIAL APPEALS FOR URGENT FUNDS AS CRISIS DEEPENS IN HORN OF AFRICA

SENIOR UN OFFICIAL APPEALS FOR URGENT FUNDS AS CRISIS DEEPENS IN HORN OF AFRICA New York, Sep 19 2008 5:10PM The United Nations humanitarian relief chief made a passionate plea today for more funding to avoid a famine in the Horn of Africa on the scale witnessed in the 1980s.

The Horn of Africa is facing a humanitarian crisis, with as many as 17 million people, including 3 million children, in urgent need of food and other critical assistance over the coming month, UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes told the press in New York.

"The overall food security situation in the Horn of Africa – Ethiopia, Somalia, Djibouti, Eritrea, parts of northern Kenya and north-eastern Uganda – is getting even more serious than it was before because of the combined effects of drought, rising food prices and in some places conflict," said Mr. Holmes.

"This number could rise if the drought deepens and the hunger season continues," added Mr. Holmes, who is also Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Coordinator of the High-Level Task Force on the Global Food Security Crisis.

Mr. Holmes urged the donors and Member States to finance the $716 million shortfall in the emergency funding needed to provide the food and pay for the emergency relief effort, including medium-term agricultural recovery, for the rest of this year.

"What we need is more funds and more funds now. Otherwise the situation will become even more catastrophic than it is today," Mr. Holmes urged. "We do need extra resources very quickly indeed if we are to avoid going back to famine situations [similar to the 1980s and 1990s].

"In particular in the Somali region of Ethiopia where the main rains have failed for the third successive year. People there talk to me in desperation about the worst situation since 1928 when the whole of their livestock died."
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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NO REAL PROGRESS ON ACCORD BETWEEN CHADIAN GOVERNMENT AND REBELS, UN REPORTS

NO REAL PROGRESS ON ACCORD BETWEEN CHADIAN GOVERNMENT AND REBELS, UN REPORTS New York, Sep 19 2008 5:10PM The situation in Chad remains fragile and there has been no notable progress towards implementing a year-old agreement between the Government and the main rebel groups, a senior United Nations official said today.

"Moreover, instability and insecurity are likely to increase with the end of the rainy season when roads will become passable again and rebel activities will resume," the head of the UN Mission in the Central African Republic and Chad (<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/minurcat/index.html">MINURCAT), Victor Angelo, <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sc9449.doc.htm">told the Security Council.

The Council set up the mission a year ago with a mandate to help bring stability to eastern Chad and north-eastern Central African Republic (CAR), which have both been wracked by violence and civilian displacement in recent years involving hundreds of thousands of people.

Presenting Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon latest report on MINURCAT, Mr. Angelo reported that relations between Chad and Sudan remain tense despite regular meetings of a contact group.

Eastern Chad currently shelters 290,000 refugees, mainly Sudanese escaping from the fighting in the neighbouring Darfur region, and 180,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) who depend on humanitarian aid to survive.

"The protection of civilians remains a major concern," he said. "Villages are regularly attacked, impunity remains a critical issue and criminals are rarely investigated or found guilty. Vulnerable groups, particularly women and children, are the most affected."

The situation in CAR is also volatile, he added.

In his report, Mr. Ban proposed sending 6,000 UN troops to replace a European Union (EU) force in both countries. The mandate of the EU military force, known as EUFOR, is set to expire on 15 March 2009, and currently comprises 3,300 troops. At present MINURCAT has 768 personnel on the ground out of the 1,549 authorized.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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NEW SCHOOL YEAR HAS BEGUN IN GEORGIA BUT NOT ALL CHILDREN BACK IN CLASS - UN

NEW SCHOOL YEAR HAS BEGUN IN GEORGIA BUT NOT ALL CHILDREN BACK IN CLASS – UN New York, Sep 19 2008 4:10PM Not all children in Georgia have been able to return to class even though the new school year began earlier this week, according to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), which is working to ensure access to education in the aftermath of last month's conflict.

The Caucasus country is still recovering from the fighting involving Georgian, South Ossetian and Russian forces that began on 8 August and uprooted some 192,000 people.

Earlier this month, UNICEF, in partnership with the Government and other partners, launched a back-to-school campaign, ahead of the start of the new school year on 15 September.

But the agency's Robert Cohen <"http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=28131&Cr=&Cr1=">told a news conference in Geneva today that only 143 out of the 220 schools in Tbilisi started classes, adding that many of the schools in the capital had not opened for classes because displaced persons were still living in them, or because repairs were being made.

The students from those schools were being integrated into other schools, usually through a second shift system, he said. Most of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) who were not being sheltered in schools had been moved into kindergartens, and now all kindergartens in Tbilisi were occupied.

The authorities said that all internally displaced schoolchildren – around 10,000 – would be in school by 1 October.

Meanwhile, UNICEF has distributed to the authorities in Gori some 265 school-in-a-box kits and 235 recreation kits for 26,000 conflict-affected children in and around that Georgian town.

Mr. Cohen added that a UNICEF team visiting villages in the buffer zone north of Gori yesterday had reported that schooling had not begun because the situation was not yet safe.

The agency was working to get children back to school through the collection and distribution of textbooks, provision of school-in-a-box and recreation kits, improving hygiene in the schools and providing psychosocial support through teacher training. Also, mine-risk education had begun in communities in the Gori-Tskhinvali corridor.

In a related development, the UN inter-agency humanitarian assessment mission that is visiting areas affected by the recent conflict has wrapped up two days of discussions in South Ossetia and has left for North Ossetia (Russia).
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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KOSOVO: UN ENVOY PROVIDES DETAILS ON SCALED-DOWN PEACEKEEPING MISSION

KOSOVO: UN ENVOY PROVIDES DETAILS ON SCALED-DOWN PEACEKEEPING MISSION New York, Sep 19 2008 3:10PM The head of the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Kosovo, known as UNMIK, today unveiled details of the its reconfigured role, noting that the mission must evolve in line with realities on the ground.

"After nine years, the situation in Kosovo has changed and that means <"http://www.unmikonline.org/">UNMIK, too, has to change," Lamberto Zannier, the Secretary-General's Special Representative, told the mission's staff at a town-hall meeting in Pristina.

He pointed out that the upcoming changes are just part of the many reconfigurations the mission has undergone since its establishment.

UNMIK, which will be scaled down in size, will continue its key functions as mandated by Security Council resolution 1244, which calls for facilitating dialogue on practical issues between Kosovo and Serbia.

Further, the mission will maintain, as needed, its field presence in Mitrovica and three smaller offices in other parts of Kosovo, as well as boost its interaction with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

Mr. Zannier stressed that Kosovo's minority communities will continue to be a central focus of the mission's work.

He also said that he understands the needs of UNMIK staff, many of whom will be leaving the mission between now and the end of the year. "We are doing our utmost to find them jobs elsewhere, including in other UN peacekeeping missions," he said.

Last month, Nicholas Haysom, the Secretary-General's Acting Principal Deputy Special Representative for Kosovo, unveiled plans for UNMIK's downsizing, including an enhanced operational role for the European Union in the area of rule of law under a UN "umbrella" headed by the Secretary-General's Special Representative and in line with the 1999 Security Council resolution that established the mission.

A reconfigured UNMIK would continue to carry out many functions, including those related to a dialogue with Serbia on provisions in six areas: police, courts, customs, transport and infrastructure, boundaries and Serbian patrimony.

Outlining details of the reconfiguration, Mr. Haysom told reporters it will also eliminate components and offices whose powers for interim civil administration can no longer be exercised.

"To some extent the downsizing is a reality brought about by the fact that the UN is no longer performing the role that it is used to, that Kosovo institutions have assumed many of the functions that the UN had performed and we have to adjust to that reality," he stated.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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WORLD ON 'THE BRINK' OF ELIMINATING MALARIA DEATHS, SAYS UN ENVOY

WORLD ON 'THE BRINK' OF ELIMINATING MALARIA DEATHS, SAYS UN ENVOY New York, Sep 19 2008 3:10PM Leading figures from government, business and civil society will meet next week in New York to highlight how close the world is to ending malaria deaths by the target date of 2015, a goal that the United Nations special envoy for the disease says is clearly within reach.

According to a report released by the World Health Organization (<"http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2008/pr32/en/index.html">WHO) yesterday, progress in malaria control has accelerated dramatically since 2006, particularly in the wake of the Secretary-General's call for universal malaria control coverage by the end of 2010.

"If we accomplish the Secretary-General's goal then we will be able to bring malaria deaths to near zero by 2015 at the latest," Ray Chambers, the Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Malaria, said in an interview with the UN News Centre.

"I'm very optimistic that it will happen sooner than that. We're on the brink of bringing it under control and eliminating deaths," he stated, adding that funding, awareness-raising and partnerships, particularly to increase access to bed nets and medicines, have been key to the success achieved so far.

Mr. Chambers noted that an "unprecedented" amount of funding is being given to malaria, which kills about 3,000 children every day and claims one million lives every year.

"I believe we have the funding, and are likely to have the funding, to complete the Secretary-General's call for universal coverage by the end of 2010," he said.

On 25 September, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and General Assembly President Miguel D'Escoto Brockmann are convening a high-level gathering to review progress to date, identify gaps and commit to concrete steps to ensure that all countries can achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The Goals, with a target date of 2015, range from eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, and achieving universal primary education, to reducing child mortality and combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases.

Mr. Chambers will be hosting a special event that day which will see the announcement of increased funding and additional partnerships to tackle malaria and help achieve the 2010 and 2015 goals.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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UN CRIME FIGHTING AGENCY BOOSTS ANTI-TRAFFICKING EFFORTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA

UN CRIME FIGHTING AGENCY BOOSTS ANTI-TRAFFICKING EFFORTS IN CENTRAL AMERICA New York, Sep 19 2008 2:10PM The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (<"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/unodc-strengthens-anti-trafficking-units.html">UNODC) has strengthened its efforts to tackle human trafficking in Central America by bolstering national prosecutors' capacities and improving regional cooperation in law enforcement.

UNODC, in concert with the UN Latin America Institute for the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, is assessing strengths and weaknesses of public prosecutors and police to create training courses to be held in 2009-2010 at the national and regional levels.

This scheme seeks to boost law enforcement agencies' investigative and prosecutorial capacities and aims to increase collaboration in Central America on investigations, witness protection programmes and investigative techniques.

"We need to make this a long-term, sustainable programme capable of supporting not only public prosecution and police services in the fight against trafficking, but also other justice operators, such as the judiciary and border control authorities," said Felipe De La Torre, a crime prevention expert with UNODC based in Mexico City.

"Prosecutors, especially in rural areas, still conduct investigations from a very local perspective, paying no attention to elements that can lead to cases of a transnational nature."

He noted that strong domestic and regional stewardship is crucial in effectively curbing human trafficking, lauding the commitment demonstrated by Central American prosecutors and attorneys-general.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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UN ATOMIC EXPERTS CONDUCT REVIEW OF GERMAN NUCLEAR REGULATORY SYSTEM

UN ATOMIC EXPERTS CONDUCT REVIEW OF GERMAN NUCLEAR REGULATORY SYSTEM New York, Sep 19 2008 1:10PM An international team of experts assembled by the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (<"http://www.iaea.org/NewsCenter/PressReleases/2008/prn200812.html">IAEA) has wrapped up a two-week review of Germany's nuclear regulatory system, offering advice on how to improve in certain areas.

The 14 experts, who conducted their mission at Germany's request, visited Bonn, Stuttgart and Berlin from 7 to 19 September.

"The team members were impressed by the extensive preparation and dedication" of the staffs of the federal and the state of Baden-Württemberg's ministries of environment to "excellence in nuclear safety," said Mike Weightman, who led the IAEA mission.

He voiced hope that this review will lead to improvements in regulating the safety of nuclear power in Germany and in other countries.

The team noted the strengths of the European country's nuclear regulatory bodies, and recommended that they bolster the flow of communication between federal and state agencies.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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UN AGENCY VOICES CONCERN OVER SENTENCING OF LABOUR ACTIVIST IN MYANMAR

UN AGENCY VOICES CONCERN OVER SENTENCING OF LABOUR ACTIVIST IN MYANMAR New York, Sep 19 2008 1:10PM The United Nations labour agency today expressed concern at the recent sentencing of an activist in Myanmar to two years of hard labour, saying it raises questions about the honouring of an agreement between the Asian country and the agency.

The International Labour Office, the permanent secretariat of the International Labour Organization (<"http://www.ilo.org/global/About_the_ILO/Media_and_public_information/Press_releases/lang--en/WCMS_098374/index.htm">ILO), called on the Government of Myanmar to urgently review the sentence of U Thet Way and immediately release the activist.

"The ILO governing body has been watching this case with interest and in March of this year expressed the expectation that he would retain his freedom," the agency said in a press release issued from its headquarters in Geneva.

"This expectation was reconfirmed by the 97th Session of the International Labour Conference in June of this year. The case has been the subject of direct discussion with the Government at a senior level," the ILO added.

U Thet Way has facilitated the lodging of complaints on behalf of victims of forced labour, including under-age recruitment into the army, and many of these complaints have been successfully resolved, according to the ILO.

The agency said this was in line with the Supplementary Understanding, an agreement in force between Myanmar's Government and the ILO.

"The Supplementary Understanding provides full protection and retaliation for persons making or supporting complaints of forced labour, including under-age recruitment. The charge on which he was sentenced may formally be unrelated to his ILO-related activities; two further charges with direct links to the ILO were withdrawn before final sentencing.

"The sentence given is heavy and the maximum permissible under the law. The ILO cannot but consider that the sentence imposed is related to U Thet Way's role in complaining on forced labour practices."
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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FIGHTING SEVERELY RESTRICTS HUMANITARIAN ACCESS IN SUDAN'S NORTH DARFUR - UN

FIGHTING SEVERELY RESTRICTS HUMANITARIAN ACCESS IN SUDAN'S NORTH DARFUR – UN New York, Sep 19 2008 12:10PM Fresh fighting between Government and rebel forces in the north of Sudan's war-torn Darfur region has severely restricted the delivery of critical aid amid unconfirmed reports that thousands more people have been driven from their homes, the United Nations said today.

"The United Nations urges both parties to immediately cease hostilities and requests humanitarian access to the affected areas in North Darfur," the Office of the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator said in a statement.

Coordinator Ameerah Haq yesterday visited El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state, and called on all parties to comply with their responsibilities to protect civilians and allow humanitarian access.

"In this context, reports of incursions into Zam Zam IDP [internally displaced persons] camp earlier this week by Government of Sudan police are of concern and the Humanitarian Coordinator urges restraint by all parties," the statement said.

About 300,000 people are estimated to have been killed, either through direct combat or as a result of disease, malnutrition or reduced life expectancy, and more than 2.7 million others have been uprooted from their homes in the five-year conflict that pits rebels against Government forces and allied Janjaweed militiamen.

A hybrid UN-African Union peacekeeping mission to Darfur (UNAMID), which has so far reached less than half its mandated deployment of 26,000 troops and police officers, has not yet established a presence in the area of the latest clashes because of security reasons.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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NEARLY ALL MATERNAL DEATHS OCCUR IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, UNICEF REPORT FINDS

NEARLY ALL MATERNAL DEATHS OCCUR IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, UNICEF REPORT FINDS New York, Sep 19 2008 11:10AM Over 500,000 women die unnecessarily every year due to complications from pregnancy and childbirth, with 99 per cent of those deaths occurring in developing countries, according to a new report released today by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).

"Progress for Children: a report card on maternal mortality" shows that the worst regions in which to give birth are sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, which together account for 84 per cent of maternal deaths.

In the developing world, the risk of death from complications relating to pregnancy and childbirth over the course of a woman's lifetime is one in 76, compared with one in 8,000 in the industrialized world. The riskiest place to give birth is Niger, where that risk is estimated to be one in seven.

"The tragic fact is that every year more than half a million women lose their lives as a result of complications due to pregnancy or childbirth," <"http://www.unicef.org/childsurvival/index_45681.html">said Peter Salama, UNICEF's Chief of Health. "The causes of maternal mortality are clear – as are the means to combat them. Yet women continue to die unnecessarily."

According to the report, haemorrhage is the most common cause of death, particularly in Africa and Asia. A woman's overall health – including her nutritional level and HIV status – also influences the chances of a positive outcome to her pregnancy and childbirth.

Poverty, inequity and general attitudes towards women and their health also play a part in maternal mortality rates, as did cultural or traditional practices that often prevent women from seeking delivery or post-partum care, the report stated.

UNICEF emphasized that most maternal deaths are avoidable, especially with better health care during the critical pregnancy, delivery and post-partum periods. It noted there have been improvements in maternal health interventions in recent years. Coverage of antenatal care in the developing world has risen by 15 percentage points in the past decade, with 75 per cent of expectant mothers now receiving some antenatal care.

Many countries have also boosted coverage of skilled delivery attendance, such as in Asia, where the proportion of women who have a skilled attendant present during delivery jumped from 31 to 40 per cent between 1995 and 2005. Increases have also been seen in many African countries.

"Ensuring that skilled personnel are present at all deliveries and that these personnel have access to emergency care where necessary is the most effective means of saving the lives of mothers," stressed UNICEF.

At the same time, the agency calls for speeding up progress in the developing world to attain the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) on maternal health, which calls for a 75 per cent reduction in maternal mortality by 2015.

"Saving mothers' lives is not only a moral imperative, but a sound investment that benefits their children, their families, their communities and their countries," said Tessa Wardlaw, UNICEF's Chief of Statistics and Monitoring.

"Indeed, there is a clear connection between maternal health and other Millennium Development Goals, such as eradicating extreme poverty, reducing child mortality, and combating HIV and AIDS and other diseases," she added.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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'ELECTRONIC CIGARETTE' NOT A SAFE OR PROVEN QUITTING METHOD FOR SMOKERS, WARNS UN

'ELECTRONIC CIGARETTE' NOT A SAFE OR PROVEN QUITTING METHOD FOR SMOKERS, WARNS UN New York, Sep 19 2008 10:10AM The United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) said today that, contrary to claims by advertisers, the electronic cigarette – a battery-powered product usually made of stainless steel and resembling a real cigarette – has not been proven a safe or legitimate nicotine replacement therapy for smokers trying to quit.

Marketers have claimed that the product helps smokers break their addictions to tobacco, with some even going so far as to imply that WHO views it as a legitimate nicotine replacement therapy like nicotine gum, lozenges and patches.

"The electronic cigarette is not a proven nicotine replacement therapy," <"http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2008/pr34/en/index.html">said Dr. Ala Alwan, Assistant Director-General of WHO's Non-communicable Diseases and Mental Health Cluster.

"WHO has no scientific evidence to confirm the product's safety and efficacy. Its marketers should immediately remove from their web sites and other informational materials any suggestion that WHO considers it to be a safe and effective smoking cessation aid."

Users puff on the electronic cigarette as they would a real one, but they do not light it, and it produces no smoke. Rather, the product, which has a chamber for storing liquid nicotine in various concentrations, produces a fine, heated mist, which is absorbed into the lungs.

The electronic cigarette is sold in China, where it was developed in 2004, and in a number of other countries, including Brazil, Canada, Finland, Israel, Lebanon, the Netherlands, Sweden, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

WHO said it has no evidence that the product helps people quite smoking, adding that it knows of no studies showing that it is a safe and effective nicotine replacement therapy. The agency added that the only way to know if the product works is to test it.

"If the marketers of the electronic cigarette want to help smokers quit, then they need to conduct clinical studies and toxicity analyses and operate within the proper regulatory framework," said Douglas Bettcher, acting director of WHO's Tobacco Free Initiative.

"Until they do that, WHO cannot consider the electronic cigarette to be an appropriate nicotine replacement therapy, and it certainly cannot accept false suggestions that it has approved and endorsed the product," he added.

The WHO Study Group on Tobacco Product Regulation is set to address the electronic cigarette, among other topics, when it meets from 12 to 14 November in Durban, South Africa.
2008-09-19 00:00:00.000

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Thursday, September 18, 2008

TOP UN LEGAL OFFICIAL URGES STEPPED-UP IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERNATIONAL PACTS

TOP UN LEGAL OFFICIAL URGES STEPPED-UP IMPLEMENTATION OF INTERNATIONAL PACTS New York, Sep 18 2008 7:10PM Nearly three dozen Member States have indicated that they intend to sign, ratify or accede to at least one international treaty as part of the annual campaign to promote such conventions during the opening of the General Assembly session next week, the top United Nations legal official said today.

"In a globalized world, where people, commerce and ideas cross borders with ever-increasing frequency, countries have long recognized that international norms and standards are essential for modern society to function," Patricia O'Brien, who recently took up the post of UN Legal Counsel, told reporters in New York.

This year's treaty event, the tenth in the series, will be held on the sidelines of the General Assembly's General Debate at UN Headquarters.

As 2008 also marks the 60th anniversary of adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the event will centre on the theme "Universal Participation and Implementation – Dignity and Justice for All of Us."

Some 53 global pacts on human rights, the environment, transit, disarmament and the safety of UN personnel – none of which enjoy participation by all Member States – will be highlighted by this year's event.

Ms. O'Brien stressed that Member States are also invited to take action on the other nearly 500 treaties deposited with the Secretary-General.

Also addressing journalists today, Ngonlardje Mbaidjol, who heads the New York branch of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (<"http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Pages/WelcomePage.aspx">OHCHR), underscored the need for the universal ratification and implementation of the "core" international rights pacts.

Regarding the Disabilities Convention, which he said is the fastest human rights treaty ever to enter into force, has 37 States Parties and 131 signatories to date. "But we need more countries to ratify or accede to the Convention in order to ensure that persons with disabilities are fully able to claim their rights as active members of our society," he said.

Mr. Mbaidjol also called on Member States to take expedient action on the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance as well as the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture.

Some of the treaties highlighted by the event focus on the environment, and Clarissa Brocklehurst of the UN Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) noted that bolstered sanitation – which she characterized as a "neglected" issue – could lead to improved human health, economic gains and social development.

This year is also the International Year of Sanitation, raising awareness of the fact that over one-third of the world's population, or 2.5 billion people, lack adequate sanitation facilities.

"People are realizing the importance of the issue that has long been thought of as the last taboo," Ms. Brocklehurst said.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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DR CONGO: UN STEPS UP EMERGENCY AID FOR CHILDREN AFFECTED BY NEW FIGHTING

DR CONGO: UN STEPS UP EMERGENCY AID FOR CHILDREN AFFECTED BY NEW FIGHTING New York, Sep 18 2008 7:10PM The United Nations Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) is scaling up existing emergency programmes in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where increased fighting has forced over 100,000 people to flee their homes, social services to close, and humanitarian organizations to suspend aid.

"This fighting is again having a brutal impact on the children and women of the Kivus," UNICEF's eastern DRC Chief of Field Operations Julien Harneis said of the two provinces affected by the new hostilities that erupted two and a half weeks ago between the army and rebels loyal to the former general Laurent Nkunda.

"Many children are split up from their families as they flee; in displacement they are even more vulnerable to malaria, measles, cholera, and malnutrition. Over the last year we were able to bring down rates of malnutrition below emergency levels but this renewed fighting puts that all into question."

Some 1,000 children have been separated from their families with many being exploited and abused. Water springs have been sabotaged cutting off clean water to thousands of civilians and communicable diseases such as cholera and measles are at risk of spreading. Malnourishment is again in danger of rising past emergency levels, access to school is being reduced and the farming season is stunted, reducing children's survival and healthy development prospects.

With its non-governmental organization (NGO) partner Save the Children, UNICEF has identified some 500 separated children and launched family tracings to reunify them. Mercy Corps is trucking clean water to over 60,000 people on the Goma-Rutshuru road and Oxfam Quebec is reinstalling chlorination points in Kirotshe to meet the needs of 35,000 people.

Emergency measles vaccinations for up to 100,000 children are being prepared with the Government and assessments in nutrition, essential household items and emergency shelter, and education sectors are being coordinated to ensure all new needs are met.

Children continue to be abused, exploited, and to die from easily preventable diseases from the ongoing instability in North Kivu, UNICEF reported, calling on all armed groups to respect children's rights and ensure that they have access to the protection of their family, their community, clean water, health care, and education.

Hostilities have continued in eastern DRC despite stabilization in much of the rest of the vast country, which was torn by years of civil war.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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ISRAELI ATTACK ON BEIT HANOUN A POSSIBLE WAR CRIME - HEAD OF UN-BACKED PROBE

ISRAELI ATTACK ON BEIT HANOUN A POSSIBLE WAR CRIME – HEAD OF UN-BACKED PROBE New York, Sep 18 2008 5:10PM Israel's shelling of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip in November 2006, which killed 19 Palestinian civilians, may constitute a war crime, the head of the United Nations-backed investigation into the incident said today.

The attack "took lives, inflicted horrendous physical and mental injuries, tore families apart, destroyed homes, took away livelihoods and traumatized a population," Archbishop Desmond Tutu told reporters in Geneva, after presenting the final report of the high-level fact-finding mission set up by the UN Human Rights Council.

The mission, which was able to travel to Beit Hanoun in May this year through Egypt after 14 months of trying to gain entry through Israel, also included Professor Christine Chinkin of the London School of Economics.

During their visit to Gaza, the team spoke to a range of people, including survivors, Government officials, staff from the UN and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), as well as former Palestinian prime minister Ismail Haniyah and other members of Hamas.

"The story of the Beit Hanoun shelling is, if anything, a story of the failure of the rule of law," Mr. Tutu said. "Nineteen civilians [including seven children] were killed and many more injured yet no verifiable explanation has been offered, no independent, impartial and transparent investigation has been held, no one has been held to account."

The Israeli military has admitted responsibility for the attack but claimed a technological error, noted Mr. Tutu.

"Faced with this absence of a well-founded explanation from the Israeli military, the mission has to conclude that there is a possibility that the shelling of Beit Hanoun constituted a war crime," he stated.

"Accountability involves providing a remedy and redress for victims," he added. "To date, neither has been forthcoming from Israel, despite its admission of responsibility for the attack."

The report also noted that the shelling of Beit Hanoun took place in the context of the firing of rockets towards Israeli civilians by Palestinian militants. Noting that accountability is "a two-way street," Mr. Tutu said Hamas has a legal obligation to respect international humanitarian law prohibiting the targeting of civilians.

The team stressed the need to have an independent, impartial investigation to establish the facts of the incident. "War crimes are very serious charges and require a great deal of detailed evidence collecting and determination of the legal situation against the factual situation," noted Professor Chinkin.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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DJIBOUTI-ERITREA BORDER TENSION COULD ESCALATE, WARNS UN TEAM

DJIBOUTI-ERITREA BORDER TENSION COULD ESCALATE, WARNS UN TEAM New York, Sep 18 2008 4:10PM The situation on the Djibouti-Eritrean border remains volatile after a flaring of tensions on the border in June left over 35 dead and dozens wounded, a United Nations fact-finding mission reported today.

The mission concluded that Djibouti is being drawn into a crippling and expensive military mobilization to deal with a situation that may threaten national, regional and international peace.

In early June serious clashes were reported between the Djibouti Armed Forces (DAF) and the Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF) along the undemarcated border between the two Horn of Africa countries in an area known as Doumeira. The armed combat followed several weeks of military build-up and growing tension between the two sides since April.

The team also noted that Eritrea refused to receive the UN fact-finding mission, and consequently only Djibouti's version of events was made available to them.

"If not addressed in a timely and comprehensive manner, the Djibouti-Eritrea issue could have a major negative impact on the entire region and the wider international community," the report stated.

"The possible destabilization of Djibouti and the militarization of the Bab el-Mandeb Strait [connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden and a strategic link to the Mediterranean] do not augur well for peace in the region or for international shipping and investment. Solutions must therefore be found as a matter of the utmost priority."

The <"http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=s/2008/602">report placed the onus on Eritrea, which has alleged aggression by Djibouti, to cooperate with the UN and establish the facts to support its allegations.

The UN should persuade Eritrea and Djibouti to demilitarize the border and return to the "status quo ante as at February," according to the report.

"The Djibouti army has since pulled back. It is only logical that the Eritrean forces do the same, as was demanded by the Security Council. No country should be allowed to disregard the decisions of the Security Council with impunity."

The fact-finding mission also drew attention to the need for both parties to agree on which of the colonial treaties and protocols should be accepted as the basis for defining their common border – the 1897 Abyssinia-France treaty, the 1900-1901 France-Italy protocols, or the 1935 France-Italy treaty.

"It is tragic that the two countries have been on the verge of war over treaties and protocols negotiated when they did not exist as independent States."
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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UN HELPS LIBERIA FEED SCHOOLCHILDREN LEFT HUNGRY BY HIGH FOOD PRICES

UN HELPS LIBERIA FEED SCHOOLCHILDREN LEFT HUNGRY BY HIGH FOOD PRICES New York, Sep 18 2008 4:10PM The Liberian Government and the United Nations have launched a new school feeding programme in the capital Monrovia for 150,000 children going hungry because of high food prices.

Another 400,000 rural school children are already benefiting from joint feeding programmes organized by the Government and the World Food Programme (WFP), according to a press statement issued by the UN agency today.

"As the Government of Liberia responds to the impact of high food prices, <"http://www.wfp.org/english/?n=31">WFP remains in the forefront of efforts to lessen this impact by working in close collaboration with the Ministry of Education to confront the obstacles in achieving universal primary education and to help children in the face of food insecurity," WFP West Africa Regional Director Thomas Yanga said.

Liberia is particularly vulnerable to high global food prices because of its heavy reliance on imports to meet national needs. High rates of poverty, food insecurity and malnutrition mean that the poorest people have difficulty coping with food price shocks.

The Government has formulated a strategic response aimed at protecting vulnerable groups through safety net interventions such as school feeding, WFP said.

In isolated south-eastern counties, low school enrolment and a wide gender gap in upper primary education coincide with high levels of chronic food insecurity and malnutrition.

The Government and WFP have responded with a three-year development school feeding project which will run from September 2008 to August 2011 in Grand Gedeh, Grand Kru, Maryland, River Gee and Sinoe Counties.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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ZIMBABWE: UN RUSHES IN LIFE-SAVING AID, ADDITIONAL FUNDS NEEDED

ZIMBABWE: UN RUSHES IN LIFE-SAVING AID, ADDITIONAL FUNDS NEEDED New York, Sep 18 2008 3:10PM The United Nations and other organizations are rushing to provide basic life-saving aid to millions of Zimbabweans following the recent political settlement in the southern African country and urgently need additional funds, the top UN humanitarian official said today.

"This is a critical moment, which comes immediately after the peaceful resolution of the political stalemate in Zimbabwe and the lifting of the restrictions on field operations of non-governmental organizations (NGOs)," UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes said in a statement.

"Already, NGOs and UN agencies are re-establishing operations to provide basic life-saving assistance and expect to reach nearly 3 million people across the country by October.

"During this period when humanitarian needs are particularly acute, we – the United Nations, the Government of Zimbabwe, the humanitarian and development communities and regional countries – must work more closely than ever to ensure that these needs are met," he added.

Zimbabwe suspended all field operations by NGOs, often the UN's main implementing partners in delivering aid, in the run-up to presidential elections that led to the political crisis, now resolved through a power-sharing agreement.

The 2008 Consolidated Humanitarian Appeal for Zimbabwe is currently funded at 60 per cent of the $394 million required. Critically under-funded sectors include emergency agriculture and education. Funding in health, water and sanitation also remains low.

"This is worrying at a time when the people of Zimbabwe urgently need food, seeds, fertilizers and essential drugs, among so many other priorities," Mr. Holmes said. "While the humanitarian community must urgently step up immediate interventions, I call on the donor community to step up its funding in parallel, particularly to priority sectors and projects."

The Government must also ensure safe, unfettered access by the humanitarian community as it undertakes its critical work. "For our part, we will continue close cooperation with the Government of Zimbabwe, regional countries and organizations as well as development partners to support humanitarian efforts and recovery initiatives," he added.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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TIME FOR DECISIVE STEPS IN MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS, UN OFFICIAL SAYS

TIME FOR DECISIVE STEPS IN MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS, UN OFFICIAL SAYS New York, Sep 18 2008 2:10PM The peace process between Israel and the Palestinians is at a crossroads and needs to make decisive advances in the months ahead, as disturbing developments counter-balance recent positive steps, a senior United Nations official said today.

"It appears so far that no agreement has been reached on the core issues," UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (<"http://www.unsco.org/Default.asp">UNSCO) Robert Serry <"http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs//2008/sc9448.doc.htm">told the Security Council. "However, it also appears that there have been substantive discussions, the potential of which must be built on with a continuation of intensive negotiations."

Noting Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni's election yesterday as head of the ruling Kadima party, he called on the new government she intends to form to stop all settlement activity in the occupied Palestinian territory.

On the positive side he cited the "unsung success story" of the gradual and systematic process of Palestinian self-empowerment in the West Bank under President Mahmoud Abbas, "real strides" in implementing a security plan there, including action against militants, and "notable gains" in other areas, such as public financing procedures.

"A reflection of improved security is that the casualty rate from violent clashes in this past month is one of the lowest in recent years," he said, nevertheless noting that there had been several clashes, leaving two Palestinians, including a child, dead and 128 others injured, 84 of them children. Eleven Israelis, including a child, were also injured.

While welcoming Israel's release of 198 Palestinian prisoners and the dismantling of several checkpoints, Mr. Serry underlined that over 600 obstacles to movement remain across the West Bank and actions taken so far to ease closures are insufficient to enable security and economic efforts by the Palestinian Authority (PA).

He also noted that Israeli settler violence had intensified and settlement activity continues despite repeated statements by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that all such activity contravenes Israel's commitments under the so-called Road Map plan, which foresees a two-State solution with Israel and the Palestinians living side by side in peace.

"Rectifying this unacceptable situation should be the urgent priority of any new Israeli government," he said.

On the Gaza Strip, Mr. Serry reported that the humanitarian situation remained "extremely grim" given the continued Israeli closures, with imports decreasing by 21 per cent over the past month and UN priority projects stalled by the shortfall in materials, while 95 per cent of local industry was closed.

The one piece of positive news is the continuation of the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which has made efforts to prevent the launching of rockets and mortars into Israel. But he blamed Hamas, which has seized PA institutions in Gaza, for compounding the Strip's problems by divorcing these institutions from the PA.

"It is clear that the only way to begin addressing the overall crisis, and indeed to lay the basis for a two-State solution, is for Gaza to be peacefully reunited with the West Bank within the framework of the legitimate Palestinian Authority in a manner which allows the peace process to advance," he said, welcoming Egypt's efforts to achieve Palestinian reconciliation.

Turning to Lebanon, Mr. Serry hailed efforts for a national dialogue but noted that the security situation remained precarious between the various groups and that Israeli air violations continued on a daily basis.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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POLAND AGREES TO ENFORCE SENTENCES IMPOSED BY UN WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL

POLAND AGREES TO ENFORCE SENTENCES IMPOSED BY UN WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL New York, Sep 18 2008 2:10PM Poland today became the sixteenth European country to sign an accord agreeing to enforce the sentences imposed by the United Nations tribunal set up to deal with the worst war crimes committed during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s.

Anyone convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and given a jail term can now serve that sentence in a Polish prison after the agreement was signed in The Hague, the Dutch city where the tribunal is headquartered.

Italy, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Austria, France, Spain, Germany, Denmark, the United Kingdom, Belgium, Ukraine, Portugal, Estonia and Slovakia have already entered into similar enforcement of sentences agreements with the <"http://www.un.org/icty/">ICTY.

More than 51 people convicted by the tribunal have either served, or are currently serving, their sentence in one of the countries which have signed an agreement. Three others are awaiting transfer to one of the States.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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UNESCO VOICES NEW CONCERN OVER DEATHS OF JOURNALISTS IN CAUCASUS

UNESCO VOICES NEW CONCERN OVER DEATHS OF JOURNALISTS IN CAUCASUS New York, Sep 18 2008 1:10PM The head of the United Nations agency mandated to defend press freedom today voiced renewed concern over the safety of journalists in the Caucasus region, this time citing the deaths of two newsmen in the Russian Federation.

"I am deeply shocked about the all too numerous reports of violent attacks against journalists in the Caucasus," UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura <"http://portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID=27515&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">said in a news release. "I call on all authorities in the region to do everything they can to improve the safety of media workers."

Abdullah Alishaev from the Republic of Dagestan, who reported on religious affairs for the local television station TV-Chirkei, died on 3 September from wounds sustained when he was shot by unknown assailants the previous evening in Dagestan's provincial capital, Makhachkala.

Magomed Yevloyev, the founder, owner and former editor-in-chief of the independent news website www.ingushetiya.ru, died after he was detained by the police on his return to Ingushetia from a visit to Moscow on 31 August. Police brought him to hospital where he died from gunshot wounds to the head.

"The killings of journalists are crimes against society as a whole as they deal a blow to freedom of expression and access to independent information for the people of the region," Mr. Matsuura said. "I trust that the investigation launched by the authorities will allow the culprits to be brought to justice."

Last month he deplored the killing of at least three journalists in the fighting in Georgia between Georgian, Russian and South Ossetian forces.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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UN EXPERT DEPLORES ANTI-INDIGENOUS VIOLENCE IN BOLIVIA

UN EXPERT DEPLORES ANTI-INDIGENOUS VIOLENCE IN BOLIVIA New York, Sep 18 2008 12:10PM The United Nations expert on the human rights of indigenous people today condemned the recent wave of violence in Bolivia directed at indigenous communities, individuals and institutions that work in their defence.

James Anaya, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people, expressed deep concern that these attacks are occurring in a context of a systematic policy adopted by officials in four eastern regions to counter. Government initiatives aimed at guaranteeing the rights of indigenous people.

"I condemn the ongoing acts of violence perpetrated against indigenous and rural people as well as the threats made against their representatives," he said.

In recent weeks, the hostility has resulted in dozens of deaths, hundreds of injured and in an undetermined number of people disappearing from the Andean country, according to a statement in his press release.

"I particularly denounce the murders committed on 11 September 2008 in Porvenir, Department of Pando, when paramilitary groups ambushed and killed members of the Rural Workers Union of Pando and students at the Filadelphia Teachers Training College, the majority of whom are indigenous," said James Anaya.

The Special Rapporteur called for an urgent end to the violence and urged State authorities to take all necessary steps to protect the human rights and freedoms of the affected indigenous and rural groups, as well as investigate the recent human rights violations and bring those responsible to justice.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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GREATER ACCOUNTABILITY NEEDED TO BOOST WOMEN'S RIGHTS, UN AGENCY SAYS

GREATER ACCOUNTABILITY NEEDED TO BOOST WOMEN'S RIGHTS, UN AGENCY SAYS New York, Sep 18 2008 11:10AM Stronger accountability measures are needed to track progress governments and multilateral organizations have made in implementing their commitments to enhancing women's rights, according to a new report by the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM).

The publication – "Progress of the World's Women 2008/2009, Who Answers to Women? Gender and Accountability" – <"http://www.unifem.org/news_events/story_detail.php?StoryID=731">says that there is a long way to go to ensuring that pledges to women's rights are translated into changes in their lives.

In legislatures, women decision-makers are outnumbered 4 to 1, while women earn on average 17 per cent less than men do. Some one-third of women are victims of gender-based violence during their lives, and 1 in 10 women dies while pregnant despite the fact that preventing maternal mortality is relatively inexpensive.

The report points out that accountability mechanisms work best for women when they can ask for explanations, information and – when needed – compensation or investigations.

"If any man asks why I support better accountability to women, here's my response: because a government that answers to women will answer to you, too," said Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

The publication's launch comes one week before world leaders converge on UN Headquarters in New York to discuss the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), eight anti-poverty goals with a 2015 deadline.

UNIFEM Executive Director Inés Alberdi said that the report "shows us that backing international commitments made to women with stronger accountability measures would bring us a lot closer to achieving the MDGs."

She added that it not only draws attention to the obstacles that remain for gender equality to be realized in practice, "but it also draws attention to the efforts of millions of women who expose discrimination, demand redress and have changed the meaning of accountability."

The UNIFEM study calls on multilateral aid and security institutions to step up efforts to work towards their own standards regarding gender equality, noting that organizations such as the UN have no agreed means to assess the amount of funding earmarked for women's rights.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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HIGH FOOD PRICES PLUNGE ANOTHER 75 MILLION PEOPLE INTO HUNGER, SAYS UN AGENCY

HIGH FOOD PRICES PLUNGE ANOTHER 75 MILLION PEOPLE INTO HUNGER, SAYS UN AGENCY New York, Sep 18 2008 10:10AM Rising food prices have pushed 75 million more people into the ranks of the world's famished, and threaten efforts to realize the goal of halving the number of those in hunger by 2015, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said today.

According to new figures released by the agency ahead of next week's General Assembly high-level event on the global anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the number of people suffering from hunger is now roughly 925 million.

Contributing to this growth is soaring food, fuel and fertilizer prices, FAO said. Food prices rose 52 per cent between 2007 and 2008, and fertilizer prices have nearly doubled over the past year. The hardest hit have been the poorest, the landless and female-headed households.

"The devastating effects of high food prices on the number of hungry people compound already worrisome long-term trends," <"http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2008/1000923/index.html">said Hafez Ghanem, FAO Assistant Director-General for Economic and Social Development. "Hunger increased as the world grew richer and produced more food than ever during the last decade."

Not only does this development impact efforts to achieve the hunger-related MDG, but it also affects progress towards many of the Goals, said Mr. Ghanem. Hunger negatively impacts labour productivity, health and education, all factors for economic growth.

"Reducing the number of hungry people by 500 million in the remaining seven years to 2015 will require an enormous and resolute global effort and concrete actions," he added.

FAO stressed the need for action on two fronts – making food accessible to the most vulnerable, and helping small producers raise their output and earn more.

In December 2007 the agency launched its Initiative on Soaring Food Prices to help vulnerable countries boost food supplies and improve access to food. Measures include the distribution of seeds, fertilizer, animal feed and other farming tools and supplies to smallholder farmers.

"Urgent, broad-based and large-scale investments are needed to address in a sustainable manner the growing food insecurity problems affecting the poor and hungry," said Mr. Ghanem. "No single country or institution will be able to resolve this crisis on its own."
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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UN-BACKED CONFERENCE IN BOLOGNA TACKLES RACISM IN EUROPEAN CITIES

UN-BACKED CONFERENCE IN BOLOGNA TACKLES RACISM IN EUROPEAN CITIES New York, Sep 18 2008 10:10AM A United Nations-backed conference to fight racism and discrimination in the everyday lives of people living in European cities starts in Bologna today in partnership with the European Coalition of Cities against Racism and FC Barcelona.

The three-day meeting, organized by the City of Bologna, the European Coalition and UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization <"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=43437&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">(UNESCO), aims to provide participants with opportunities to formulate recommendations to fight racism encountered in daily life.

After the mayor of Bologna opens the conference, which is entitled "DiverCity: European Cities for an Inclusive Society", a round-table discussion will be held focusing on how mayors can identify the challenges posed by racism and develop strategies to rid their municipalities of the scourge.

Conference participants will also hear debates on issues revolving around Muslim communities in Europe and discrimination, as well as the intolerance faced by Sinti and Roma communities and the implementation of a 10-point action plan to combat racism.

One of the working groups, Youth Voices against Racism, will also use the conference to develop their project providing practical suggestions for fighting discrimination in sport, through physical and sports education, and in partnership with the European Parliament.

The Coalition of Cities against Racism was launched by UNESCO in 2004 forming a network to share experiences and join forces in the fight against racism, discrimination and xenophobia. Coalitions have been established in all the world's regions to address the specific characteristics of racism in their areas.

The European Coalition of Cities against Racism, which has 80 member cities in 17 countries, was the first such regional coalition.
2008-09-18 00:00:00.000

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Wednesday, September 17, 2008

PALESTINIAN ECONOMIC PROSPECTS LOOK BLEAK, ACCORDING TO WORLD BANK REPORT

PALESTINIAN ECONOMIC PROSPECTS LOOK BLEAK, ACCORDING TO WORLD BANK REPORT New York, Sep 17 2008 7:10PM The Palestinian economy is becoming increasingly aid dependent, and Israel's policy of border crossings closures in the Gaza Strip is eroding the occupied territory's industrial backbone and paralyzing its municipal services, a <"http://www.worldbank.org/">World Bank report warns today.

Real per capita gross domestic product (GDP) is now 30 per cent below its height in 1999 as the economy shrinks and the population grows, according to the report on Palestinian economic prospects.

The <"http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTWESTBANKGAZA/Resources/AHLCSept15,08.pdf">report has been published amid growing concern over the occupied Palestinian territories' stability, with recent UN reports indicating that unemployment has reached nearly 30 per cent, and the percentage of those living below the national poverty rose to 57 per cent in 2006.

Today's report noted that so far this year the Palestinian Authority has received $1.2 billion in external budget support but requires another $650 million and $300 million in development aid, highlighting the fact that as the Palestinian economy declines, it is becoming more aid dependent.

It also draw attention to the crippling economic effect of Israel's blockade on the Gaza Strip, stating that 98 per cent of its industrial operations have been shut down – out of 3,900 industries, only 23 are operating.

"Closure of Gaza is also resulting in the collapse of the municipal sector. Municipalities, providing key services such as water, sewage, solid waste [disposal] etc. are facing a deep financial crisis," the report stated.

"The impoverishment of the population and the near absence of private sector activities imply that municipalities are unable to collect fees for service provision and are unable to pay staff salaries."
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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UN-LED GROUP DISCUSSES HOW TO IMPLEMENT RECENT SOMALI PEACE DEAL

UN-LED GROUP DISCUSSES HOW TO IMPLEMENT RECENT SOMALI PEACE DEAL New York, Sep 17 2008 6:10PM A United Nations-chaired international group of countries and organizations supporting the consolidation of peace in conflict-wracked Somalia has met in neighbouring Djibouti to discuss how to put a recent reconciliation agreement by the Horn of Africa nation's warring political groups into practice.

The International Contact Group (ICG), led by Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, the Secretary-General's Special Representative, met yesterday to confer on how best to implement to implement the so-called Djibouti Agreement signed between the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and the rebel group known as the Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia (ARS) last month.

Somalia has not had a functioning national government since 1991, and the country was further plunged into violence when the TFG, backed by Ethiopian forces, dislodged the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) from Mogadishu and much of the country last December.

"Members of the ICG urge the parties to the Djibouti Agreement to agree on concrete measures to implement the cessation of armed confrontation to allow the timely withdrawal of Ethiopian forces and the deployment of the stabilization force requested" in the pact, according to a communiqué issued by the participants.

The Group voiced its readiness to support the pact both politically and financially, as well as addressing justice, impunity and the political future of the two sides, among other issues.

"The ICG condemns the continuing violence in Somalia especially the most vulnerable members of society – women and children," it said. "It condemns all attacks against humanitarian workers and calls on all parties to immediately cease all hostilities and allow free and unhindered access for humanitarian aid and calls for an increase in international support for humanitarian needs."

The communiqué voiced its strong support for the efforts of the UN-backed African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM) to stabilize the country, condemning attacks against its troops and urging the international community to contribute more resources to allow it to deploy at full capacity.

It also expressed concern over the rise in piracy off the country's coast, which threatens the delivery of urgently-needed relief, welcoming support by countries for UN World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/">WFP) seaborne shipments to Somalia.
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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UN REMAINS COST-EFFECTIVE OPTION FOR GLOBAL PEACEKEEPING, SAYS TOP OFFICIAL

UN REMAINS COST-EFFECTIVE OPTION FOR GLOBAL PEACEKEEPING, SAYS TOP OFFICIAL New York, Sep 17 2008 6:10PM The United Nations, which currently deploys some 110,000 personnel in 18 peace operations worldwide at a price tag of $7.2 billion, remains the most cost-effective option for global peacekeeping, the senior official leading those efforts said today.

Speaking at his first news conference since taking up the post of Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Alain Le Roy cited a 2006 study by the United States Government Accountability Office which estimated that it would cost the US about twice as much as the UN to conduct a peacekeeping operation similar to the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/minustah/">MINUSTAH).

He also recalled a separate study by the RAND Corporation which found that the UN is far more cost-effective at nation-building than individual governments.

"While $7.2 billion may seem like a lot," stated Mr. Le Roy, "if we compare the figures that UN missions cost to the costs that other institutions would incur… the UN remains cost effective."

He highlighted the important role UN peacekeeping operations have played in places like Sierra Leone, Liberia, Haiti and Timor-Leste. "It is very clear that the UN has made a positive contribution, has had an impact and made a difference."

At the same time, the new peacekeeping chief expressed concern that the same could not be said as yet in Darfur, the strife-torn region of Sudan where a five-year long conflict between the Government and rebels has claimed the lives of about 300,000 people and displaced more than 2.7 million.

Recent weeks have witnessed fresh violence in the region, despite the deployment of a joint African Union-UN force – known as <"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unamid/index.html">UNAMID – which is slated to become the world body's largest peacekeeping operation with some 26,000 personnel at full strength. Currently, it has only 9,900 personnel on the ground and still lacks essential equipment, including helicopters.

"So far UNAMID, to my eyes, is clearly not making enough difference on the ground," Mr. Le Roy stated, adding that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) will continue to work with the Department of Field Support (DFS) to make sure the deployment happens as soon as possible.

Although the target to have 80 per cent of the mission deployed by the end of this year is "a bit over optimistic," he did note that 3,000 additional personnel – mostly from Ethiopia and Egypt – will be joining UNAMID in the next two months. This will bring the total number of troops by the end of November to about 13,000, or 50 per cent of the estimated 26,000 expected at full deployment.

Aside from attaining the needed troops and equipment, a challenge for UN peacekeeping in recent years has been dealing with sexual abuse and exploitation by personnel deployed in the world body's missions.

Mr. Le Roy acknowledged that while the UN is "making huge efforts on the ground," there are still cases of misconduct, such as those alleged to have been committed by members of the UN peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), known as <"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/monuc/index.html">MONUC.

The UN has a strict "zero-tolerance" policy on the matter, and a conduct and discipline unit was established last month within DFS, with branches in all peacekeeping missions in the field.

Mr. Le Roy noted that while the UN does not have the legal means to force any troop contributing country (TCC) to pursue a trial for someone who has been accused of misconduct, it can engage the government concerned as much as possible to ensure that the matter is followed up.

Last week a French court sentenced a former UN employee to nine years in prison for sexual abuse committed while working in Africa. "I will use that as an example to convince other countries to do the same," said Mr. Le Roy, a French national.

Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Edmund Mulet noted that the UN is engaging more and more with countries that contribute troops on this issue.

"If an incident of this kind happens, we are also now making sure that the countries that do not follow up, do not apply sanctions, do not apply disciplinary measures against the people who are involved in these incidents… those countries will not be welcomed as TCCs in the future," he stated.
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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UN ADVOCATE FOR CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT HAILS UNITED STATES LEGISLATIVE STEPS

UN ADVOCATE FOR CHILDREN IN ARMED CONFLICT HAILS UNITED STATES LEGISLATIVE STEPS New York, Sep 17 2008 6:10PM The United Nations envoy for children and armed conflict today praised the United States for the introduction of new legislation that aims to tackle the recruitment and use of the estimated 250,000 child soldiers worldwide.

Radhika Coomaraswamy, the Secretary-General's Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, <"http://www.un.org/children/conflict/pr/2008-09-17190.html">said the passage of one act dealing with the scourge and the imminent passage of another was a welcome step forward.

"The Child Soldiers Prevention and Accountability Act send a clear message that recruitment and use of child soldiers is unlawful," she said, according to a press release issued by her office. "Perpetrators of such crimes could also become accountable under US domestic legislation. "

The Child Soldiers Accountability Act, which received bipartisan support from the Senate and House of Representatives, criminalizes the recruitment and use of child soldiers, while also giving the US the authority to deny admission or to deport individuals for such grave child rights violations.

Still to be passed, the Child Soldiers Prevention Act will heighten the campaign against child soldiering through restricting the transfer of military technology, the prohibition of arms export licences, and provision of US military assistance to curb governments or paramilitaries conscripting children under the age of 15.

Today, more than 250,000 children continue to be exploited as child soldiers. The global fight against impunity for the recruitment and use of child soldiers will be strongly enhanced, Ms. Coomaraswamy said, by the implementation of both acts.

Collaborative efforts over the last eight years between the Office of the Special Representative, the United Nations Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) and other UN entities and Member States have resulted in significant advances, actions and tangible results for children affected by armed conflict, according to her office.

Ms. Coomaraswamy stated: "The unique engagement of the Security Council through resolution 1612 played a crucial role in awakening the conscience of the international community and has started to bring results at a global level."

Previous indictments for violations of international law through the recruitment and use of child soldiers include: Thomas Lubanga Dyilo, founder and leader of the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC); and Major Jean-Pierre Biyoyo of the Mudundo Forty armed group in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). A former head of State, Charles Ghankay Taylor of Liberia, is currently on trial in the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) facing an 11-count indictment for crimes against humanity, including the act of enlisting child soldiers.

The Special Representative embraced the US move as a catalyst to further the global fight against child soldiering. "US engagement will add impetus in bringing tangible changes to the child soldiers issue around the globe," she said.
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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UN AGENCY CALLS FOR RISE IN FARM PRODUCTION TO COMBAT GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS

UN AGENCY CALLS FOR RISE IN FARM PRODUCTION TO COMBAT GLOBAL FOOD CRISIS New York, Sep 17 2008 6:10PM Agricultural production must be raised to end the global food crisis, which has driven more than 75 million additional people into hunger and poverty, the head of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (<"http://www.fao.org/">FAO) told the Italian Parliament today.

Jacques Diouf, Director-General of the Rome-based UN agency, warned a joint parliamentary committee hearing that prices are likely to remain high for several years, even though bumper cereal harvests are expected this year.

"We are facing a challenge of enormous proportions," Mr. Diouf said. "We must mobilize $30 billion a year in order to double food production so as to feed a world population of nine billion in 2050."

The Director-General noted that the proposed spending figure is modest when compared with the amount already given in agricultural subsidies by members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) – estimated at $376 billion in 2006.

He urged the international community to unite and ensure that the ranks of the malnourished – about 850 million people even before the current crisis began – receive immediate support.
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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UN AGENCIES EXPAND EMERGENCY OPERATIONS IN STORM-STRICKEN CARIBBEAN

UN AGENCIES EXPAND EMERGENCY OPERATIONS IN STORM-STRICKEN CARIBBEAN New York, Sep 17 2008 5:10PM United Nations agencies are ramping up their relief efforts in hurricane-ravaged Haiti, where some 160,000 people are still living out in the open exposed to disease and malnutrition, the humanitarian wing of the UN reported today.

In the last week the UN World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?n=31">WFP) has tripled the quantity of food it has distributed, feeding some 217,000 people in the impoverished Caribbean State.

Since 14 September WFP has delivered 1,000 tons of rice, beans, cooking oil, fresh water and other supplies with the help of the UN Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/">UNICEF) and the peacekeeping mission to Haiti, known by its French acronym <"http://www.un.org/depts/dpko/missions/minustah/">MINUSTAH.

"Despite challenging conditions that mean we can only transport by air or sea, we have increased the amount of food we are getting to people who are in desperate need," said WFP Country Director Myrta Kaulard.

She added that logistical support from the United States, Canada and Spain, as well as a $1 million donation from the European Commission, had helped kick-start the emergency aid operation.

A $108 million appeal launched last week by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (<"http://ochaonline.un.org/">OCHA) has only received 2 per cent of the funding required for relief and recovery assistance over the next six months.

"Although the waters have resided and the situation in Gonaïves [the city hardest hit by the recent storms] is returning more and more to normal, some 158,600 are still without permanent shelter," said OCHA spokesperson Elisabeth Byrs.

"The Haitians are facing higher food prices and an increase in cases of malaria. One of the main challenges is to clean the cities that are filled with mud and garbage and there is still no electricity in Gonaïves," added Ms. Byrs at a press briefing in Geneva.

WFP reported that the four tropical storms – Fay, Gustav, Hanna and Ike – that hit Haiti one after the other over the past month have destroyed homes, livelihoods, crops and the entire road system.

Storm damage has left seven of the mountainous country's key bridges impassable and Gonaïves completely cut off from the rest of Haiti, with 40 per cent of the city still underwater.

WFP staff in Gonaïves are working alongside the MINUSTAH blue helmets in thigh-high mud and water, often distributing food after nightfall to avoid violence breaking out as crowds rush to distribution points, according to the agency's press release.

WFP is also urgently appealing for $54 million to provide food and assistance as well as logistical support for the relief and recovery operation over the next six months.

Meanwhile in Cuba, the UN World Health Organization (<"http://www.who.int/">WHO) has secured $524,000 to re-equip health facilities and provide maternal and child health care on the southern coast of the island after Gustav and Hanna caused widespread damage to medical facilities.

WHO has developed a $1.2 million project, almost half of which has been funded by the UN, to buy medical supplies, including beds, as well as sterilizing and operating equipment.

The priority for WHO is to ensure that health-care needs are met, particularly those of vulnerable groups, such as pregnant women, children, the elderly, the disabled and injured, according to its press release.

The project aims to ensure access to health services for nearly 200,000 people now living in shelters and another 2 million affected by the storms in Cuba's eastern and western provinces.
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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MOZAMBIQUE: UN AGENCY SUPPLIES OVER $30 MILLION TO HELP POOR FARMERS

MOZAMBIQUE: UN AGENCY SUPPLIES OVER $30 MILLION TO HELP POOR FARMERS New York, Sep 17 2008 4:10PM Small farmers in Mozambique, where two-thirds of the population live below the poverty line, will be able to boost their incomes thanks to a new $31 million boost from the United Nations International Fund for Agricultural Development (<"http://www.ifad.org/media/press/2008/43.htm">IFAD).

The new scheme seeks to help 200,000 smallholder farmers and 375 small-scale traders to market their surpluses more profitably to augment their earnings by improving the terms of trade for the planters.

It will increase access to agricultural markets, as well as create stronger links between Government agencies, farmers' organizations, agribusiness enterprises and service providers.

The programme – co-financed by the group the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa – also aims to improve transport, leading to better access to markets and social services.
2008-09-17 00:00:00.000

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