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Saturday, January 10, 2009

UN AGENCY LAUNCHES 'OPERATION LIFELINE GAZA' TO FEED THOUSANDS OF HUNGRY

UN AGENCY LAUNCHES 'OPERATION LIFELINE GAZA' TO FEED THOUSANDS OF HUNGRY
New York, Jan 10 2009 7:10PM
The United Nations food agency today announced an initiative to help ramp up food distribution to the growing number of hungry people in the Gaza Strip, where a military offensive Israel says it launched in response to Hamas rocket attacks is in its 15th day.

Operation Lifeline Gaza is a World Food Programme (WFP) scheme aiming to provide ready-to-eat, culturally acceptable food to hundreds of thousands of people caught in the conflict.

"We are proposing an immediate, innovative solution to hunger in an unusually challenging situation, where many people are suffering from a complete breakdown in access to food and clean water," said WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran.

"Even in the limited windows of opportunity when we can distribute food we have to remember that many people lack the means to cook and prepare meals for their families," said Ms. Sheeran, who went to the Egypt
ian border with Gaza on Friday.

As of yesterday, the violence had already killed an estimated 792 people and wounded over 3,200 in the occupied Palestinian territory, according to reports cited as credible by UN officials.

"We are in the business of feeding hungry people in difficult situations - in earthquake zones, droughts, or after tsunamis - but Gaza presents one of the toughest challenges we have faced because access to the hungry is so limited," said Ms. Sheeran

Ms. Sheeran announced Operation Lifeline Gaza after meeting yesterday with the head of the Egyptian Red Crescent, Suzanne Mubarak, and the Egyptian Minister of Trade and Industry, Rachid Mohamed Rachid.

The Egyptian government, which gathered a large number of companies in Cairo at the launch of the new initiative, has pledged to facilitate the proposal by offering assistance to businesses that can provide food to WFP.

WFP has made repeated appeals for a rapid expansion of humanitarian access to Gaza as its staff
has continued working throughout the conflict, providing food assistance to more than 75,000 people despite the high levels of insecurity.

While WFP has sufficient food stocks to feed around 360,000 people for the next three weeks, the heavy fighting has limited the possibility of wide-scale distributions. Many truck drivers and fork lift truck operators have been unwilling to work fearing for their safety and the civilian population is often too frightened to go to food distribution points.

Jan 10 2009 7:10PM
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AFGHANISTAN: TOP UN OFFICIAL MEETS WITH UNITED STATES VICE PRESIDENT-ELECT

AFGHANISTAN: TOP UN OFFICIAL MEETS WITH UNITED STATES VICE PRESIDENT-ELECT
New York, Jan 10 2009 12:10PM
United States Vice President-Elect, Joseph Biden, today met with the top United Nations official in Afghanistan to discuss the situation on the ground in the war-ravaged country as well as priorities for the next 12 months.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Special Representative Kai Eide held talks with the Democratic Senator touching on security, political, and development issues including donor coordination, police reform, and regional cooperation.

Mr. Eide emphasized the importance of continuing international support for Afghanistan and its people in line with the priorities identified at the Paris Conference in June, at which dozens of countries and organizations committed resources to help rebuild Afghanistan's infrastructure and advance peace, security and development.

"This was a positive and constructive meeting," Mr. Eide said of the discussion in Kabul, which was att
ended by Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and US Ambassador Bill Wood among other officials.

Vice President-Elect Biden expressed his support for the UN and the role of Mr. Eide in leading its efforts in Afghanistan.

Jan 10 2009 12:10PM
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DR CONGO: TOP UN ENVOY MISQUOTED BY REBEL LEADER IN MEDIA REPORT

DR CONGO: TOP UN ENVOY MISQUOTED BY REBEL LEADER IN MEDIA REPORT
New York, Jan 10 2009 11:10AM
The top United Nations envoy, leading peace talks in the war-ravaged eastern region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), today denied remarks attributed to him in an article published yesterday by the Reuters news agency.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon''s Special Envoy for the Great Lakes Region, Olusegun Obasanjo, is tasked with facilitating the talks between the Government and the mainly Tutsi rebel militia (CNDP), aimed at ending the on-going conflict which has uprooted an estimated 250,000 people since August mainly in the North Kivu province.

In the interview, renegade general Laurent Nkunda was quoted as saying that the Special Envoy stated "MONUC [the UN peacekeeping mission in DRC] was wrong" to dismiss CNDP allegations of Government forces redeploying in UN-monitored buffer zones set up to avoid fresh conflict.

Mr. Obasanjo stressed that "he did not express such an opin
ion," in a press release issued by his spokesperson today.

In an earlier press statement on 20 December, he noted that "following investigations the CNDP''s allegations proved to be without foundation. The Special Envoy of the Secretary-General stands by his statement," his spokesperson added.

The Special Envoy also reiterated his full confidence in MONUC and underscored the positive role the mission is playing in the DRC.
Jan 10 2009 11:10AM
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Friday, January 9, 2009

REFUGEE EXODUS ACROSS PERILOUS GULF OF ADEN SOARS BY 70 PER CENT, UN REPORTS

REFUGEE EXODUS ACROSS PERILOUS GULF OF ADEN SOARS BY 70 PER CENT, UN REPORTS
New York, Jan 9 2009 5:10PM
Over 50,000 people fleeing war and poverty made the nearly always perilous and sometimes deadly voyage in smugglers' boats across the Gulf of Aden from Somalia last year, a 70 per cent increase over 2007, the United Nations refugee agency reported today. At least 590 drowned, often at the hands of the smugglers, and nearly 360 others went missing.

"There were again many reports of people being beaten to death during the crossings in 2008, but most of the deaths were due to drowning after passengers were forced overboard in treacherous waters far off the Yemen coast in a bid by the smugglers to avoid detection by Yemen authorities," UN High Commissioner for Refugees (<"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/496771274.html">UNHCR) spokesman Ron Redmond told a news briefing in Geneva.

"The increase in arrivals reflects the desperate situation in Somalia and the Horn of Africa, a region scarred by civil war, political instability, famine and poverty," he said of the statistics, which showed arrivals in Yemen at 50,091, compared with 29,500 in 2007. By contrast the 2007 death toll was substantially higher at 1,400.

UNHCR is beefing up its response in Yemen by improving reception conditions for those who manage to reach its shores and has also carried out information campaigns in the Horn of Africa warning people of the dangers of using smugglers. The agency and its partners also have programmes aimed at improving living conditions of people with protection needs on the Africa side of the Gulf so that they do not need to risk their lives by crossing to Yemen.

Meanwhile, UNHCR called on European Union States, ahead of a Mediterranean ministers' meeting next week, to ensure that people seeking asylum have access to territory and to fair procedures for examining their claims.

Last year, out of a total estimated figure of more than 67,000 people crossing to Europe by sea, some 38,000 arrived in Italy and Malta alone, mostly after transiting through Libya. The vast majority applied for asylum, and more than half of those claimants were found to be in need of international protection.

With few opportunities to enter the EU by regular means, thousands of people threatened by persecution and serious human rights violations in their home countries have no choice but to take the dangerous sea route. "This highlights the vital need to ensure that State agreements and measures to tighten borders do not block access to safety for those seeking protection in the EU," Mr. Redmond said.

The interior ministers of Cyprus, Greece, Italy and Malta are to meet in Rome on 13 January to discuss the problem of irregular migrants arriving by sea, and the issue may also be discussed at an informal meeting of EU justice and home affairs ministers in Prague on 15 January.

Attention has recently focused on large numbers of people landing on the Italian island of Lampedusa.

"UNHCR appreciates the efforts made by States along the Mediterranean to rescue people in distress at sea. We also recognize that boat arrivals put significant strains on the resources of those countries," Mr. Redmond said.

"People seeking asylum must nevertheless be allowed to disembark in a safe place, where they can receive information about their rights and have a genuine opportunity to file an asylum application which will be considered in a fair procedure. Sending refugees back to countries where they cannot enjoy effective protection could violate Member States' international obligations to refrain from refoulement (return to places where they could be at risk)."
Jan 9 2009 5:10PM
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MOBILE PHONES, ADAPTED TO MONITOR CHILD HEALTH, NET UNICEF TOP DEVELOPMENT PRIZE

MOBILE PHONES, ADAPTED TO MONITOR CHILD HEALTH, NET UNICEF TOP DEVELOPMENT PRIZE
New York, Jan 9 2009 5:10PM
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) will share first prize in the United States Development Agency's innovation competition, known as the "Development 2.0 Challenge," for adapting basic cell phones to monitor the health of children in danger of malnutrition.

The "RapidSMS" text-messaging system, to be finalized by graduate students from Columbia University, which shared in the prize, was first developed in Ethiopia to monitor food supplies and will now be used to map and track child malnutrition trends in Malawi more accurately and in real time, enabling quick responses to unfolding food and nutritional crises, according to <"http://www.unicef.org/index.php">UNICEF.

"This is a perfect example of UNICEF's vision of bringing together experts from around the world and from diverse fields such as academia, private sector and civil society," Sharad Sapra, Director of UNICEF's Division of Communication, said.

The initial phases of the Malawi project are expected to run from January to May of 2009. However, the collaborative and open-source philosophy it is based on means that anyone can take, use and adapt RapidSMS for their purposes, UNICEF stressed.

"The aim is to leverage this global knowledge and create solutions which help achieve lasting benefits for children," Dr. Sapra said.
Jan 9 2009 5:10PM
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SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS DOMINATE UN-BACKED TALKS BETWEEN DR CONGO AND REBELS

SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS DOMINATE UN-BACKED TALKS BETWEEN DR CONGO AND REBELS
New York, Jan 9 2009 5:10PM
United Nations-backed talks aimed at bringing an end to the deadly conflict between the Government and rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have been focusing on security matters, including a possible ceasefire, since resuming earlier this week in Nairobi, a senior official said today.

"We have been going into details of elements of the security arrangements such as a ceasefire and cessation of hostilities agreements," co-mediator and former Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa said at the close of today's discussions.

The Nairobi talks, between the Government and the rebel National Congress in Defense of the People (CNDP), began last month with the goal of ending the ongoing conflict, which has uprooted an estimated 250,000 people since late August on top of the 800,000 already displaced in the region, mainly in North Kivu province, which borders Rwanda and Uganda.

Mr. Mkapa later met and briefed his co-mediator Olusegun Obasanjo, the Secretary-General's Special Envoy for the Great Lakes Region and former president of Nigeria, who was returning from three days of consultations with key players Kinshasa, Kigali and eastern DRC.

The talks are set to resume tomorrow under the chairmanship of the Kenyan Foreign Minister, Moses Wetangula, representing President Mwai Kibaki.
Jan 9 2009 5:10PM
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‘GREEN’ STIMULUS PLANS BY JAPAN AND REPUBLIC OF KOREA HAILED BY UN ENVIRONMENT CHIEF

'GREEN' STIMULUS PLANS BY JAPAN AND REPUBLIC OF KOREA HAILED BY UN ENVIRONMENT CHIEF
New York, Jan 9 2009 3:10PM
The announcement that Japan and the Republic of Korea will invest billions of dollars in environmentally smart projects to create jobs and spur economic growth is the latest sign that the Green New Deal advocated by the United Nations is gaining momentum, the head of the UN Environment Programme (<"http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=556&ArticleID=6035&l=en">UNEP) said today.

"UNEP's Global Green New Deal and Green Economy initiative are clearly two ideas whose time has come, as evidenced by the Republic of Korea and Japan's stimulus package announcements alongside those of other key economies and leaders from China to the President-elect of the United States," Executive Director Achim Steiner said.

UNEP launched the Global Green New Deal and Green Economy Initiative as an antidote to current economic woes and as a springboard to a low-carbon, low-impact, high-job and better-managed global economy.

Japan has announced that it aims to expand the 'green business' market and create up to one million new jobs, through measures that include zero-interest rate loans for environmentally-friendly companies.

The Republic of Korea, meanwhile, will invest $38 billion over the next four years in a series of eco-friendly projects to create 960,000 new jobs and lay the groundwork for future economic growth.

The 36 projects include the creation of green transport networks, the provision of two million energy-saving homes and the clean-up of the country's four main rivers.

"Investments in clean-tech and renewable energy; infrastructure such as railways and cycle tracks and nature-based services like river systems and forests, can not only counter recession and unemployment but can also set the stage for more sustainable economic recovery and growth in the 21st century," Mr. Steiner said.

In other news, UNEP announced today that Prince Albert II of Monaco has begun a month-long expedition to Antarctica to asses the impact of global warming on the South Pole.

The Prince, who is a UNEP Champion of the Earth and a patron of the Billion Tree Campaign, will visit scientific outposts and meet with climate change experts from 18 countries to get an overview of the latest research.

UNEP hopes that the trip will also raise worldwide public awareness of the effect of global warming and other environmental change on the Poles.

"The growing environmental efforts of prominent state leaders, like that of Prince Albert II, are very important in raising the understanding in society and among politicians, of the huge risks we are facing with climate change," said Christian Nellemann, senior officer for UNEP's GLOBIO Programme to map human effects on the environment.

UNEP's Polar Programme, based at the Grid-Arendal research centre in Norway, works on early warning assessment of the polar environment and focuses on communicating the key role of the polar regions for the global climate.
Jan 9 2009 3:10PM
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UN TEAM TO EXPLORE WAYS OF SUPPORTING SECURITY IN VIOLENCE-WRACKED SOMALIA

UN TEAM TO EXPLORE WAYS OF SUPPORTING SECURITY IN VIOLENCE-WRACKED SOMALIA
New York, Jan 9 2009 2:10PM
A United Nations team will head to the Horn of Africa next week to explore how the world body can support the African Union (AU) peacekeeping force in Somalia, which has seen an upsurge in violence in recent months despite the signing of a UN-facilitated peace accord last June.

The team, which includes the UN Deputy Special Representative for Somalia, Charles Petrie, as well as representatives from UN Political Office for Somalia (UNPOS) and the departments of peacekeeping, field support and political affairs at UN Headquarters in New York, will hold talks in Nairobi and Addis Ababa.

Violence continues in Somalia, which has not had a functioning central government since 1991, despite the signing in June of the UN-facilitated Djibouti Agreement by the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS).

Both sides agreed in that pact to end their conflict and called on the UN to deploy an international stabilization force to the troubled nation.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has stated that conditions are not yet right for a UN peacekeeping operation in Somalia. Instead, he recommends strengthening the AU Mission in Somalia (<"http://www.africa-union.org/root/AU/AUC/Departments/PSC/AMISOM/amisom.htm">AMISOM) through financing, logistical support, training, equipment and other reinforcements facilitated by the UN and Member States.

Mr. Ban has "undertaken a number of contacts, including with regional leaders, to ensure that AMISOM urgently receives the necessary support," according to a statement issued by <"http://www.un-somalia.org/">UNPOS.

In addition to discussing ways to support AMISOM, the team will also hold consultations on support to Somalia's transitional security forces and police.

UN Special Representative for Somalia Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah said he was hopeful that the visit would result in concrete and swift action.

Meanwhile, the World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/">WFP) reported that gunmen shot and killed one of its staff members yesterday near the Somali capital, Mogadishu – the second killing of a WFP worker in the country in three days.

Mohamud Omar Moallim, a 49-year old food monitor, was killed during a distribution to displaced people about 10 kilometres northwest of Mogadishu, according to the agency.

Despite the challenging security circumstances in Somalia, WFP has managed to provide food aid to more than 1.5 million needy people in the country each month. WFP shipped some 260,000 metric tons of food to Somalia in 2008, almost four times what it provided in 2007.

An estimated of 3.2 million people in Somalia – 43 per cent of the population – are in need of humanitarian assistance as a result of the combined effects of conflict and drought.
Jan 9 2009 2:10PM
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LEBANESE LEADERS, UN ENVOY MEET ON ROCKET FIRING; OLD WEAPONS CACHE FOUND

LEBANESE LEADERS, UN ENVOY MEET ON ROCKET FIRING; OLD WEAPONS CACHE FOUND
New York, Jan 9 2009 2:10PM
One day after at least three rockets were fired into Israel from south Lebanon, the top United Nations envoy there met with Lebanese leaders to discuss measures to keep tensions from Gaza from spreading to that country, while UN peacekeepers discovered an old weapons cache as part of its intensified monitoring efforts.

"Utmost vigilance is required during this period to avoid any tension from spreading to Lebanon," Michael Williams, the UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri agreed during their talks, according to a statement released by the Coordinator's office.

In regard to yesterday's rocket attack, Mr. Williams added, "The United Nations is encouraged by the immediate measures taken by the Lebanese Army, in very close cooperation with the UN Interim Force in Lebanon, to control the situation and to prevent further incidents from taking place."

The two officials also discussed Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's forthcoming visit to the region, which also came up during Mr. Williams' meeting with Lebanese President Michel Sleiman.

The weapons cache found today was hidden inside two disused bunkers located between the hills of Kafer Chouba and Kafer Hammam in the Eastern Sector of the area of responsibility of the UN Force, known as UNIFIL.

According to a UNIFIL press release, the cache comprises approximately 34 Grad-P rockets along with some boxes of ammunition and was covered by camouflage nets.

There was no sign of any recent use of the bunkers and the weapons appear to date from the period of the 2006 conflict between Israel and Hizbollah, UNIFIL added.

It said that UNIFIL Explosive Ordnance Teams together with the Lebanese Armed Forces are currently conducting further inspections at the location, after which the weapons will be handed over to the Lebanese Armed Forces for disposal.

In accordance with UN Security Council resolution 1701 that ended the 2006 fighting, UNIFIL and the Lebanese Armed Forces are charged with ensuring that the area between the Litani River and the Israeli line of withdrawal (Blue Line) is free of armed personnel, assets, and weapons other than their own.

"Recent developments have prompted us to enhance our joint presence on the ground. It was in the course of this intensified patrolling activity that the weapons cache was found," UNIFIL Force Commander Major-General Claudio Graziano said.
Jan 9 2009 2:10PM
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UN AGENCY TO RESUME SUSPENDED AID DISTRIBUTIONS IN GAZA AFTER ISRAELI ASSURANCES

UN AGENCY TO RESUME SUSPENDED AID DISTRIBUTIONS IN GAZA AFTER ISRAELI ASSURANCES
New York, Jan 9 2009 1:10PM
The United Nations will resume suspended aid activities in Gaza as soon as possible after receiving credible assurances from Israel that the security of its personnel, installations and humanitarian operations will be fully respected during the current conflict there.

The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) yesterday suspended food delivery operations to 750,000 Palestinian refugees after Israeli strikes killed one of its drivers and injured a second although they had received Israeli clearance.

"In a high level meeting today at Israeli Ministry of Defense Headquarters in Tel Aviv, the UN was informed that the incidents which led to a temporary suspension of UN staff movements are deeply regretted and do not reflect official government policy," UNRWA and the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (UNSCO) said in a joint statement on the 14th day of the offensive launched by Israel with the stated aim of ending Hamas rocket attacks.

"The UN received credible assurances that the security of UN personnel, installations and humanitarian operations would be fully respected, including undertakings of improved liaison and more effective internal coordination within the IDF [Israeli Defence Forces]. On this basis, UN staff movements suspended yesterday will resume as soon as possible. The UN will keep the safety and security of its staff under constant review."

The UN urged the parties to respect the Security Council ceasefire resolution adopted last night, in particular its call for the unimpeded provision and distribution throughout Gaza of humanitarian assistance, and for an immediate, durable and fully respected ceasefire.
Jan 9 2009 1:10PM
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UN RIGHTS CHIEF SUGGESTS MISSION TO ASSESS POSSIBLE WAR CRIMES IN GAZA CONFLICT

UN RIGHTS CHIEF SUGGESTS MISSION TO ASSESS POSSIBLE WAR CRIMES IN GAZA CONFLICT
New York, Jan 9 2009 12:10PM
The top United Nations human rights official today proposed a mission to assess violations and possible war crimes committed by both Israel and Hamas in the Gaza conflict, and called for immediate implementation of a ceasefire.

"The situation is intolerable. The ceasefire called for by the UN Security Council must be implemented immediately. The violence must stop," High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay <"http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/ViolenceMustStop.aspx">told a special session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

"The vicious cycle of provocation and retribution must be brought to an end," she said, pointing out that the ongoing conflict had already caused the loss of hundreds of lives since Israel started its military operation 14 days ago with the stated aim of ending Hamas rocket attacks from Gaza.

Ms. Pillay stressed unequivocally that international human rights law must apply in all circumstances and at all times, and strongly urged the parties to the conflict "to fulfil their obligations under international humanitarian law to collect, care for and evacuate the wounded and to protect and respect health workers, hospitals, and medical units and ambulances.

"Accountability must be ensured for violations of international law," she said, suggesting that the Council should consider authorizing a mission to assess violations committed by both sides in the conflict in order to establish the relevant facts and ensure accountability.

"I remind this Council that violations of international humanitarian law may constitute war crime for which individual criminal responsibility may be invoked," she added.

She also called on the parties to the conflict to allow the deployment of independent human rights monitors in both Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory to document any violations of international human rights and humanitarian law. She urged that so-called Special Procedures mandate holders be granted unrestricted access to Gaza and the West Bank.

The special session was called in response to a request by Egypt on behalf of the Arab Group and the African Group, Pakistan on behalf of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, and Cuba on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement.
Jan 9 2009 12:10PM
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CITING INCREASING ATTACKS, UN URGES SRI LANKA TO ENSURE SAFETY FOR RETURNEES

CITING INCREASING ATTACKS, UN URGES SRI LANKA TO ENSURE SAFETY FOR RETURNEES
New York, Jan 9 2009 10:10AM
The United Nations refugee agency has called on the Government of Sri Lanka to ensure security for civilians in the eastern part of the strife-torn nation, citing a significant increase in the number of killings, abductions and injuries in areas of return, including 24 civilian deaths recorded in November alone in the Batticaloa district.

"We're also worried about the negative impact these security incidents may have on the sustainability of the return process," Ron Redmond, a spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) told reporters in Geneva.

Most of the more than 200,000 people displaced during fighting between Government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the eastern districts of Trincomalee and Batticaloa have returned home over the past two years.

However, returnees in the Batticaloa area report they increasingly feel intimidated and face restrictions on their movement, Mr. Redmond noted.

"More than 50 families have already left their villages in some of the return areas in Batticaloa due to fear and insecurity. Others are no longer sleeping in their own homes, but gather several families in one house at night," he said.

UNHCR called on the Government to investigate the security incidents and urged the relevant authorities to provide adequate security to all civilians living in these areas.

The agency said it is also concerned about the abduction of four refugee returnees from India in the Trincomalee district.

"UNHCR is heartened by the fact that more than 1,500 Sri Lankan refugees returned from camps in Tamil Nadu in southern India in 2008, either spontaneously or with our facilitated voluntary return programme," said Mr. Redmond. "We are keen to see this positive trend continue this year."

UNHCR is also keeping a close eye on the situation in the country's north, where some 250,000 people remain displaced due to intensified clashes in recent months.
Jan 9 2009 10:10AM
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MOVING SUDANESE NORTH-SOUTH PEACE PACT FORWARD WILL REQUIRE REDOUBLED EFFORTS – UN

MOVING SUDANESE NORTH-SOUTH PEACE PACT FORWARD WILL REQUIRE REDOUBLED EFFORTS – UN
New York, Jan 9 2009 10:10AM
While commending the parties to the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended the long-running north-south civil war in Sudan for the progress achieved so far, the United Nations today marked the fourth anniversary of the signing of the pact by urging them to redouble their efforts on key goals such as elections and border demarcation.

The 21-year conflict between the Sudanese Government and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) devastated a significant part of the vast African nation and took a heavy toll on its people.

More than two million people died, four million were uprooted and some 600,000 people sought shelter beyond Sudan's borders as refugees before the war was brought to an end with the signing of the CPA four years ago.

In a statement issued today, the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) commended the parties to the CPA for their achievements to date including the maintenance of the ceasefire.

"Accomplishments and challenges over the past year such as the conduct of the Census and ongoing concerted efforts to restore normalcy in Abyei have reminded all of us of how vital partnership and mutual trust are to sustained and full implementation of the CPA and of how vital the CPA is to the peace process and to the people of Sudan," the Mission stated.

"Now, as implementation of the CPA enters another year, the milestones ahead ranging from elections and border demarcation to the launch of the DDR [disarmament, demobilization and reintegration] process will require the redoubled commitment of both the parties and the international community," it added.

The Mission said it stands ready to continue assisting the parties and the people of Sudan in fulfilling these commitments and achieving full and effective implementation of all aspects of the CPA.
Jan 9 2009 10:10AM
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Thursday, January 8, 2009

FURTHER EXTENSION AND DOWNSIZING PROPOSED FOR UN PRESENCE IN NEPAL

FURTHER EXTENSION AND DOWNSIZING PROPOSED FOR UN PRESENCE IN NEPAL
New York, Jan 8 2009 6:10PM
The peace process in Nepal remains a fragile one, with critical agreements on the reintegration of former Maoist combatants still lacking, and will continue to need United Nations assistance, according to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who proposes an extension of the UN presence there, albeit at a slightly reduced capacity.

In a new <"http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=s/2009/1">report released today, Mr. Ban recommends that the Security Council extend the UN Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) for another six months, with the Mission being subject to further downsizing from 23 January, as requested by the Nepalese Government.

UNMIN was established in early 2007 as a special political mission tasked with helping advance the peace process in Nepal, which endured a decade-long civil war that claimed an estimated 13,000 lives until the Government and the Maoists signed a peace deal in 2006.

Following landmark elections last April, the newly-formed Constituent Assembly voted in favour of a federal democratic republic, leading to the abolition of the monarchy and the election of Ram Baran Yadav as the country's first President.

In addition to assisting with the elections, <"http://www.unmin.org.np/">UNMIN has also been tasked with the monitoring of the management of arms and armed personnel of the Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M) and the Nepal Army.

Mr. Ban, who witnessed the country's progress firsthand during a visit to Nepal in October of last year, expresses his disappointment at having to "report so little progress regarding the issues most relevant to the mandate of UNMIN.

"It is particularly regrettable that the political parties have to date failed to reach agreement regarding the special committee to supervise, integrate and rehabilitate the Maoist army personnel so that it can begin its important work," he states.

"That is one important indication of the wider tensions among the political parties, which could imperil the completion of the peace process and the drafting of the Constitution," he adds.

The Secretary-General notes that he and his Special Representative for Nepal, Ian Martin, have repeatedly drawn attention to the fact that an exit strategy for UNMIN requires decisions regarding the future of those in the Maoist army cantonments and have urged that that issue be addressed through the agreed process – the special committee.

An advisory team that visited the country last December found that all the Nepalese interlocutors were looking to the UN to play a role in assisting the special committee once it is functioning, and believed that the world body has an important role during the process of integration and rehabilitation, as well as during the discharge of minors and others disqualified by the UNMIN verification process.

"It is clear that the United Nations, if it is not to risk jeopardizing the peace process, cannot immediately terminate the support it has been providing through UNMIN as requested by the Government of Nepal," states the Secretary-General.

"But neither can the United Nations be expected to maintain indefinitely the monitoring of arms and armed personnel while the process for deciding the future of the former combatants is further delayed," he writes.

Mr. Ban proposes that the number of arms monitors contributed by Member States should be retained at the strength of 73, authorized when UNMIN was downsized in July 2008, but that most of the 18 remaining civilian posts which have been filled by retired military officers should be abolished as at 23 January 2009.

In addition, the Mission's Political Affairs Office will be further reduced, and a number of other substantive posts eliminated, achieving a reduction of one third in substantive posts. The support services will also be substantially reduced and remaining functions increasingly performed by national staff; international support posts will be approximately halved.

Furthermore, with the additional downsizing, UNMIN would be headed by a representative, instead of a special representative of the Secretary-General.
Jan 8 2009 6:10PM
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DR CONGO: UN-BACKED GOVERNMENT-REBEL TALKS MAKING PROGRESS

DR CONGO: UN-BACKED GOVERNMENT-REBEL TALKS MAKING PROGRESS
New York, Jan 8 2009 6:10PM
The latest round of United Nations-supported Government-rebel political negotiations seeking to quell the violence engulfing the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) continued today, with the co-chair reporting slow but steady progress.

Talks between the Government and the mainly Tutsi group known as the National Congress in Defense of the People (CNDP) began last December, and the substantive phase kicked off yesterday in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.

Co-mediator Benjamin Mkapa, the former Tanzanian president who is representing the African Union (AU) and the International Conference on the Great Lakes (ICGLR), chaired today's meeting and said the parties have made steady, albeit slow, progress on substantive issues.

The escalating conflict between Government forces (FARDC) and the CNDP has uprooted an estimated 250,000 people since late August on top of the 800,000 already displaced in the region, mainly in North Kivu province, which borders Rwanda and Uganda.

Olusegun Obasanjo, the Secretary-General's Special Envoy and former Nigerian president, is currently holding consultations, including on the possibility of holding a gathering this month of the leaders of Great Lakes nations to update them on progress made so far and obstacles that remain in achieving peace between the Government and CNDP. He is expected to join the talks tomorrow.

Meanwhile, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) has launched a work plan to contain Ebola, a haemorrhagic fever, in the DRC's Kasai Occidental province.

It is estimated that 42 people – including at least 28 women and 14 children – are infected with Ebola, with 13 people having died of complications related to the virus and 160 others under watch.

WHO staff and other relief workers will visit all parts of the province to sensitize the population on Ebola.
Jan 8 2009 6:10PM
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UN JOINS FORCES WITH MEDITERRANEAN NATIONS TO PROMOTE SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE

UN JOINS FORCES WITH MEDITERRANEAN NATIONS TO PROMOTE SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE
New York, Jan 8 2009 6:10PM
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) today announced its new partnership with a Mediterranean intergovernmental organization to promote crops and improve fisheries, among other sustainable activities.

The collaboration between the <"http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/9262/icode/">FAO and the International Centre for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies (CIHEAM) seeks to expedite the modernization of irrigation in the region and prevent forest fires.

The Mediterranean could become a free trade area next year, triggering fears that this could lead to pest dissemination. The FAO-CIHEAM partnership aims to control pest entrance and spread in the region by introducing harmonized protocols of pest monitoring.

Founded in 1962, CIHEAM comprises 13 Mediterranean member countries: Albania, Algeria, Egypt, Spain, France, Greece, Italy, Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, Portugal, Tunisia and Turkey.
Jan 8 2009 6:10PM
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NUMBER OF CHOLERA CASES IN ZIMBABWE CLIMBS TO NEARLY 36,000 – UN

NUMBER OF CHOLERA CASES IN ZIMBABWE CLIMBS TO NEARLY 36,000 – UN
New York, Jan 8 2009 5:10PM
The United Nations World Health Organization (<"http://www.who.int/en/">WHO) says the number of suspected cases of cholera in Zimbabwe has now reached almost 36,000 while nearly 1,780 people have died from the infection since the outbreak began over five months ago.

The relief community has boosted its response capacity and coordination in order to manage the outbreak, the worst ever in the country's history, amid a collapsing health system and worsening humanitarian situation.

WHO says that since August 2008, all 10 provinces in the southern African nation have reported a cumulative total of 35,931 suspected cases and 1,778 deaths.

During the past one week, relief agencies in the health cluster launched a cholera awareness campaign and announced an operational framework where cholera command centres will be established from national to household levels with rapid response teams established at every level.

The World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?n=31">WFP) is also assisting by coordinating local logistical support.

The UN stresses that preparedness measures and contingencies need to be strengthened because cholera cases are likely to be on the increase with the beginning of the rainy season.
Jan 8 2009 5:10PM
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GAZA CEASEFIRE MOVES GAIN IMPETUS AT UN

GAZA CEASEFIRE MOVES GAIN IMPETUS AT UN
New York, Jan 8 2009 5:10PM
Diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire in the Gaza conflict moved into higher gear at United Nations Headquarters in New York today with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calling senior officials in the region, the Security Council holding consultations and the General Assembly going into session.

Mr. Ban, who this morning telephoned Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal and is trying to reach Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, "is appealing urgently to the Security Council to come to a binding agreement to this effect, so this devastating violence can be brought to an end," spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters.

"The Secretary-General continues his around-the-clock efforts with world leaders to achieve an immediate ceasefire in Gaza," she added, noting that yesterday he held meetings with the United States Secretary of State, and the Foreign Ministers of the United Kingdom, Egypt, France, Jordan, Norway and Saudi Arabia.

The Security Council held a two-day high-level meeting earlier this week but has not yet come up with a ceasefire resolution. The 15-member body is meeting again this evening to continue efforts to bring an end to the conflict, which erupted 13 days ago when Israel launched a military operation with the stated aim of ending Hamas rocket attacks into Israel.

The operation has so far killed 758 people in Gaza, of whom 257 were children and 56 women, with 3,100 wounded, 1,080 of them children and 452 women, according to Palestinian reports cited as credible by UN officials.

General Assembly President Miguel D'Escoto chided the lack of action in announcing his decision to call a meeting of the Assembly, also this evening.

"I can't stand the smell of formaldehyde," he told a news briefing at Headquarters. "Rigor mortis seems to have taken over, and we are failing the world, we are failing the cause of peace," he added, referring to "the dysfunctionality of the Security Council."
Jan 8 2009 5:10PM
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MORE ATTENTION MUST BE PAID TO UNDERREPORTED CONFLICTS, SAYS TOP UN REFUGEE OFFICIAL

MORE ATTENTION MUST BE PAID TO UNDERREPORTED CONFLICTS, SAYS TOP UN REFUGEE OFFICIAL
New York, Jan 8 2009 5:10PM
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) today called for stepped up action to help victims of conflicts, rising in number worldwide, who do not receive international attention because they are not believed to affect global security.

Unlike the "increasingly interrelated" situations in such places as Afghanistan and Iraq, the impact of these underreported crises is "local or at best regional," António Guterres told the Security Council in an open meeting.

He <"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/49661c7e4.html">cited the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) as an example, noting that the world's attention has recently been focused on the volatile North Kivu province, where the "current tragedy" has a "complex historical heritage coming from the colonial rule and exacerbated more recently by the Rwanda genocide and two Congolese wars."

The escalating conflict between Government forces (FARDC) and the rebel group known as the National Congress in Defense of the People (CNDP) has uprooted an estimated 250,000 people since late August on top of the 800,000 already displaced.

"But the DRC is not just North Kivu," Mr. Guterres reminded the Council, noting that significant population displacements and rights violations targeting women and girls are taking place in other parts of the vast African nation.

"Every six months, the number of people who die unnecessarily in the country as a result of armed conflict and material deprivation is equivalent to the number of people killed by the 2004 Asian tsunami."

The High Commissioner also warned of new forms of displacement, with natural disasters on the rise due to climate change.

"Conflict, climate change and extreme deprivation will inter-relate, strengthening each other as a cause of displacement," he said.

One of the biggest challenges in responding to humanitarian crises is how to respond in situations where there is no peace to keep, Mr. Guterres said, underscoring the need for "sufficiently clear and strong" protection mandates that are backed by political and material support.

The safety of relief workers is also of paramount concern, he said, adding that "ensuring staff safety must be a top priority of every humanitarian organization and the UN as a whole. That is non-negotiable."

Compared to 2006, when he reported to the Council that the number of refugees had dropped to just over 9 million, the lowest level in 25 years, he said today that the total number of refugees under UNHCR's mandate now stands at 11 million, driven mainly by the situations in Iraq and Somalia. That figure, he said, does not include the nearly 5 million Palestinians for whom the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) has responsibility.

Today, UNHCR works in almost 120 countries on behalf of 32 million refugees, internally displaced persons (IDPs) and others.
Jan 8 2009 5:10PM
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TOP UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE ACCESS FOR FOREIGN JOURNALISTS INTO GAZA

TOP UN OFFICIAL CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE ACCESS FOR FOREIGN JOURNALISTS INTO GAZA
New York, Jan 8 2009 3:10PM
The chief of communications and public information for the United Nations today called on the Israeli Government to ensure immediate access for international media into Gaza, stressing the need for "full and independent" coverage of events unfolding in the territory which has been the target of an Israeli offensive launched nearly two weeks ago.

"Access to objective and factual information is of vital importance at all times, and plays a particularly important role in emergency situations," Kiyo Akasaka, Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information, writes in a letter to Israel's Ambassador to the UN, Gabriela Shalev.

Citing reports, including from the Foreign Press Association of Israel, that international media are not being allowed access to Gaza, Mr. Akasaka reminds the Israeli Government of the right to information enshrined in article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

He also recalls Security Council resolution 1738, in which the 15-member body urged all parties involved in situations of armed conflict to respect the professional independence and rights of journalists.

Member States have expressed a keen interest in what is taking place in Gaza, he states, adding that it is "of great importance to all concerned that international reporting be allowed to take place so that accurate information about the situation can inform global responses."

A chorus of UN officials, including Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, have repeatedly called for an immediate halt to the fighting in Gaza and stressed the need to ensure humanitarian access to assist the 1.5 million civilians struggling amid rapidly deteriorating conditions.
Jan 8 2009 3:10PM
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UN DEVELOPMENT CHIEF ANNOUNCES DECISION TO STEP DOWN

UN DEVELOPMENT CHIEF ANNOUNCES DECISION TO STEP DOWN
New York, Jan 8 2009 3:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said today that he accepts with regret the decision of the head of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to leave the post in March.

Due to personal and family reasons, <"http://content.undp.org/go/newsroom/2009/january/undp-administrator-announces-departure.en">UNDP Administrator Kemal Dervi&#351 said he will step down on 1 March.

In a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3651">statement, Mr. Ban said that he will start the process of selecting a successor, expressing his gratitude to Mr. Dervi&#351 for "so ably leading UNDP at a critical juncture" and his "great leadership."

The Administrator "has led the UNDP programmes in support of the developing countries to expand substantially over the last four years and to make solid progress in the 'delivering as one' agenda concerning the UN's development work as a whole at the country level."

A former Turkish Finance Minister credited with leading his country out of a major economic crisis, Mr. Dervi&#351 was named to the post by former Secretary-General Kofi Annan for a four-year term in 2005.

He had previously served for 22 years at the World Bank, where he was Vice President for Middle East and North Africa and Vice President for Poverty Reduction and Economic Management.

UNDP is the largest of the independently funded UN agencies and, under its special General Assembly mandate, leads the UN's work on eradicating extreme poverty and promoting good governance in the developing world.

Meanwhile, Japan will provide a $17 million grant to a UNDP-backed disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) programme in Sudan, it was announced today.

Japan's contribution will go towards the $385 million needed to reintegrate nearly 200,000 ex-combatants into civilian life. Last October, Italy donated $4 million to the initiative.

Ameerah Haq, who serves as the Secretary-General's Deputy Special Representative and UNDP Resident Representative, called on donors to follow the lead of Japan and Italy.

She also appealed to the Government of National Unity and the Government of Southern Sudan to expedite the setting up of offices to ensure that the DDR programme "becomes effectively nationally-owned and led."

The funding from Japan will be used by UNDP to support DDR Commissions of North Sudan and South Sudan to, among other activities, train staff and provide economic re-integration opportunities for ex-combatants, including many women and disabled former fighters.

The DDR programme is a key component of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) which ended the long-running north-south civil war between the Government and the former southern rebels.
Jan 8 2009 3:10PM
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UN URGES RESTRAINT AFTER ROCKETS FIRED INTO ISRAEL FROM SOUTH LEBANON

UN URGES RESTRAINT AFTER ROCKETS FIRED INTO ISRAEL FROM SOUTH LEBANON
New York, Jan 8 2009 1:10PM
The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) has confirmed that at least three rockets were fired into Israel from south Lebanon, with Israeli forces returning fire, and called for maximum restraint following the attack, which comes amid the ongoing conflict in Gaza.

<"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unifil/index.html">UNIFIL said the rockets fired into Israel came from the general area of Tayr Harfa in south Lebanon. The Israeli Defense Force (IDF) returned fire with a few artillery rounds directed at the location from where the rockets originated.

The IDF meanwhile is continuing with the military operation it began on 27 December, with the stated aim of ending rocket and other attacks by militants in Gaza. The nearly two-week operation has reportedly led to some 680 deaths and injured more than 3,000.

UNIFIL Force Commander General Claudio Graziano is maintaining close contact with the parties and has called for maximum restraint in order to prevent any escalation of the situation.

The parties reassured the Force Commander about their continued commitment to maintain the cessation of hostilities, in accordance with Security Council resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Israel and Hizbollah.

UNIFIL, in coordination with the Lebanese Armed Forces, has taken immediate measures to identify the perpetrators of the attack, for which no one has yet claimed responsibility.

Additional troops have been deployed on the ground and patrols have been intensified across UNIFIL's area of operations to prevent any further incidents. The Lebanese Armed Forces has also decided to deploy additional units in the south in order to further enhance security in the area.
Jan 8 2009 1:10PM
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MAJOR UN AGENCY SUSPENDS GAZA RELIEF OPERATIONS AFTER ISRAELI STRIKE KILLS TWO DRIVERS

MAJOR UN AGENCY SUSPENDS GAZA RELIEF OPERATIONS AFTER ISRAELI STRIKE KILLS TWO DRIVERS
New York, Jan 8 2009 1:10PM
A United Nations agency that is a lifeline for 750,000 Palestinian refugees in Gaza suspended food delivery operations today after Israeli strikes killed two of its drivers on the 13th day of an offensive launched with the stated aim of ending Hamas militant rocket attacks into Israel.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the Israeli firing and once again called for an immediate ceasefire.

The attack on the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) workers followed Israeli shelling near an UNRWA school two days ago when over 40 people were killed. Israel said it was returning fire from the area. UN officials have stressed that there were no Hamas or other militants inside the school.

In a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3650">statement issued by his spokesperson, Mr. Ban said two UNRWA contract workers were killed and another injured when the UN aid convoy came under fire.

"According to reports from UN agencies, this incident took place during the three-hour humanitarian lull announced by the IDF [Israeli Defence Forces]. Since the conflict began 13 days ago, four <"http://www.un.org/unrwa/english.html">UNRWA local staff have been killed. The UN is in close touch with the Israeli authorities about full investigation of this and other incidents, and about the need for urgent measures to avoid them in the future," it added.

"The Secretary-General calls once again for an immediate ceasefire in order to facilitate full and unhindered humanitarian access, and to allow aid workers to work in safety to reach persons in need. UNRWA has been forced to suspend food distribution as it cannot guarantee the safety of its staff. The inability of the UN to provide assistance in this worsening humanitarian crisis is unacceptable."

<B><I>MORE TO FOLLOW…</I></B>
Jan 8 2009 1:10PM
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NUCLEAR MONITORING PACT BETWEEN UN WATCHDOG AND US ENTERS INTO FORCE

NUCLEAR MONITORING PACT BETWEEN UN WATCHDOG AND US ENTERS INTO FORCE
New York, Jan 8 2009 12:10PM
An Additional Protocol to the nuclear safeguards <"http://www.iaea.org/NewsCenter/News/2009/usap.html">agreement between the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the United States that boosts access to nuclear information and sites has now entered into force, making the US the last of the five nuclear-weapon States party to a key global non-proliferation pact to fulfil this obligation.

The Additional Protocol entered into force yesterday when US Ambassador Gregory Schulte formally handed over the notification of the completion of the country's ratification procedures to IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei.

With the entry into force of the US' Additional Protocol, all five nuclear-weapon States party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) have fulfilled their undertaking, assumed at the time of approval by the IAEA Board of Governors of the Model Additional Protocol in 1997, to conclude such agreements, the Agency said in a news release.

The Vienna-based IAEA said the entry into force of the US's Additional Protocol contributes to efforts aimed at achieving universal application of this key document which grants the Agency complementary inspection authority to that provided in underlying safeguards agreements.

A principal aim is to enable the IAEA inspectorate to provide assurance about both declared and possible undeclared activities. Under the Protocol, the IAEA is granted expanded rights of access to information and sites.

To date, 118 countries have signed an Addition Protocol with the IAEA and 89 countries have ratified it.
Jan 8 2009 12:10PM
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CÔTE D’IVOIRE ELECTION PROCESS MOVING AHEAD, UN OFFICIAL REPORTS

CÔTE D'IVOIRE ELECTION PROCESS MOVING AHEAD, UN OFFICIAL REPORTS
New York, Jan 8 2009 12:10PM
Despite some problems, voter identification and registration in Côte d'Ivoire have been positive overall in the run-up to elections, a key element in resolving a political crisis that in 2002 divided the West African country into a rebel-held north and Government-controlled south, a top United Nations official said today.

"As of today, we have 3 million people identified and in a few months the identification process will be complete," Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's Special Representative Y. J. Choi told reporters after meeting with Alassane Ouattara, leader of the opposition Republican Rally.

The elections have already been delayed several times and Mr. Choi reaffirmed the commitment of the international community to provide the logistical, technical and financial support needed to sustain the registration process.

The UN Mission in Côte d'Ivoire (UNOCI) was set up in 2004 with support for the organization of open, free, fair and transparent elections a key element in its mandate to bring peace and stability to the world's largest cocoa exporter. Presidential and legislative elections were originally slated to take place by 31 October 2007 at the latest.
Jan 8 2009 12:10PM
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UN AGENCIES DELIVERING LIFE-SAVING SUPPLIES TO GAZANS AMID ONGOING TURMOIL

UN AGENCIES DELIVERING LIFE-SAVING SUPPLIES TO GAZANS AMID ONGOING TURMOIL
New York, Jan 8 2009 11:10AM
Despite the violence in Gaza, where a military operation Israel says it launched in response to Hamas rocket attacks has been ongoing for two weeks, United Nations agencies are delivering vital supplies to civilians caught up in the deadly conflict.

The UN World Food Programme (WFP) <"http://www.wfp.org/english/?ModuleID=137&Key=3031">delivered wheat flour to 30 Gaza bakeries, enabling them to bake bread for civilians who are finding it increasingly difficult to access food. Amid the recent hostilities, only 12 out of 47 bakeries were functioning earlier this week.

WFP-contracted bakeries can now produce 5,000 3-kilogramme bread parcels per day, but it is difficult to get the bread from the bakeries to the people who need it most, the agency noted in a news release.

The violence that began on 27 December has killed an estimated 680 people so far and wounded over 3,000, according to UN officials, who have repeatedly stressed the need for an immediate halt to the fighting and humanitarian access to assist those affected.

WFP has reached more than 50,000 people from its regular caseload of 265,000 non-refugee Palestinians in Gaza. It stressed that while it has food stocks in Gaza, it is vital to ensure that all crossing points into Gaza are re-opened to ensure food assistance over the coming months.

Essential humanitarian supplies were already in short supply in Gaza before the military operation began because Israel kept border crossings into the area closed, citing rocket and other attacks by Gaza militants.

Some 150 trucks carrying about 4,500 tons of WFP food have been waiting for several days to deliver into Gaza at the southern Kerem Shalom crossing point, which is currently the only available crossing point from Israel into Gaza.

The agency welcomed the Israeli announcement on Wednesday of a three-hour daily ceasefire from 7 January, as a first step towards creating the necessary "breathing space" to resume full-scale distributions.

Yesterday's three-hour ceasefire provided a small window of opportunity for the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) to release essential pre-positioned supplies for delivery to families in Gaza, including 560 family water kits and 5 health kits.

"The ceasefire is a first small step in addressing the urgent needs of children caught in the conflict, but a great deal more needs to be done to protect the vulnerable, including children, and an immediate and durable cease-fire by all parties is the only means by which their urgent needs can be met," the agency said in a news release.

UNICEF noted that many Gazans have fled their homes, seeking shelter with friends, relatives or in schools, while others are sleeping in the cold. Parents say children have had very little sleep and they show the common signs of trauma including severe anxiety, bed wetting, loss of appetite and general malaise.

The agency is working with child protection partners to produce and broadcast radio and television messages designed to help parents keep their children as safe as possible and to enable them to identify and manage symptoms of distress.

In addition, five UNICEF-supported psychosocial teams, each composed of 20-30 social workers, psychologists, lawyers and volunteers, are on standby to conduct emergency home and hospital visits, and provide psychosocial and socio-legal assistance as soon as access is possible and security permits.

According to information received by UNICEF, over a million Gazans – approximately 75 per cent of the total population – do not have electricity. In addition, hospitals are struggling to function, with the availability of fuel – needed to keep generators running – at precariously low levels. Gaza's water and sewage system is also on the verge of collapse due to the lack of fuel and power.

UNICEF is working closely with partners to stockpile drugs and supplies to meet needs in coming months and to move them to the affected area. Supplies ranging from family hygiene kits, water purification tablets and emergency education material are already on route from UNICEF country offices in the region.

The UN World Health Organization (WHO) reported that three mobile clinics were damaged amid the fighting on Monday, during which new specialized medical equipment was destroyed. The ongoing violence has also meant that many health workers have not been able to reach their workplaces. In addition, the capacity of emergency rooms and intensive care units to treat the injured is quickly being overwhelmed.

Meanwhile, the International Labour Office (ILO) has voiced its deep concern about the impact of the violence on workers and their families, "who have lived through the hardships of long months of closures and are now exposed to the devastation of a war situation."

Even before the recent turmoil, Gaza had the highest unemployment rate in the world, the agency noted in a news release. It joined calls for an immediate ceasefire and the need to permit access to emergency humanitarian supplies and assistance.

"Of special urgency are essential food, water and medical supplies, fuel for electricity generation and cash for the payment of civil servants. These have to be promptly followed by emergency social protection and employment measures," the agency stated.
Jan 8 2009 11:10AM
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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

DR CONGO: UN-BACKED GOVERNMENT-REBEL TALKS ENTER SUBSTANTIVE PHASE

DR CONGO: UN-BACKED GOVERNMENT-REBEL TALKS ENTER SUBSTANTIVE PHASE
New York, Jan 7 2009 6:10PM
The latest round of the United Nations-supported dialogue between the Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and a leading rebel group entered into its substantive phase today, in a bid to quell the violence engulfing the vast nation's east.

The third session of talks kicked off between the Government and the mainly Tutsi group known as the National Congress in Defense of the People (CNDP) today in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.

The escalating conflict between Government forces (FARDC) and the CNDP has uprooted an estimated 250,000 people since late August on top of the 800,000 already displaced in the region, mainly in North Kivu province, which borders Rwanda and Uganda.

Olusegun Obasanjo, the Secretary-General's Special Envoy and former Nigerian president, is facilitating the dialogue, along with Benjamin Mkapa, representing the African Union (AU) and the International Conference on the Great Lakes (ICGLR) who is also the former leader of Tanzania.

In the absence of Mr. Obasanjo, Mr. Mkapa chaired today's talks and stressed the humanitarian consequences of the clashes.

It will be "critical for you during this session to reach an understanding concerning a formal and joint cessation of hostilities, or truce, in order to alleviate the human suffering that continues in the areas affected by conflict," he said.

The UN envoy is currently holding consultations, including on the possibility of holding a gathering this month of the leaders of Great Lakes nations to update them on progress made so far and obstacles that remain in achieving peace between the Government and CNDP.

He is scheduled to join the dialogue later this week.
Jan 7 2009 6:10PM
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ISRAEL’S DAILY 3-HOUR TRUCES IN GAZA GOOD FIRST STEP, BUT NOT NEARLY ENOUGH, UN WARNS

ISRAEL'S DAILY 3-HOUR TRUCES IN GAZA GOOD FIRST STEP, BUT NOT NEARLY ENOUGH, UN WARNS
New York, Jan 7 2009 4:10PM
The daily three-hour pause that Israel began today on the 12th day of its Gaza offensive against Hamas was a good first step but totally insufficient for the United Nations to aid the 1.5 million civilians living in "increasingly appalling" conditions amid credible reports of 680 people killed so far and over 3,000 wounded, senior UN officials warned.

They also said that the outline of a way out of the crisis, which started on 27 December with Israeli air strikes against Gaza with the stated aim of stopping Hamas rocket attacks into Israel, was emerging with moves in the Security Council, ceasefire plans proposed by Egypt and France, and continuing diplomatic efforts by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

"This [the pause] is potentially a positive step but because we did not have enough warning and because there was a lack of clarity about what this was going to mean, it was very hard for us to make significant use of it, certainly today," UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes told a news conference in New York, noting that it was still necessary to move through checkpoints.

"I hope we will be able to use such pauses more in the future if it's clear that they're going to be at a fixed time, if it's clear they're going to be respected and Gaza-wide… [But] three hours a day is simply totally insufficient for us to be able to do that [get food and supplies to all who need it] which is why it cannot be any kind of substitute for a full end to the hostilities which would allow us to really gear up our humanitarian operation," he said.

"The single biggest problem we have at the moment, apart from getting goods in, is moving around Gaza both for ourselves and the population. The International Red Cross has said and they're not prone to exaggeration that people are dying because ambulances cannot get to them in time, people cannot get to hospitals."

UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Robert Serry also called the lull a good step but not nearly enough, while UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (<"http://www.un.org/unrwa/english.html">UNRWA) Director of Operations in Gaza John Ging, speaking by video link, gave an eyewitness account of the civilian population's reaction to the pause.

"I just want to convey to you the phenomenal feeling, the relief of psychological pressure for those couple of hours, it was palpable," he said of the people going out to get water, food and other essential items. "They still continue to believe in the United Nations… [and are asking], why only three hours, if they can do it for three hours, why not 24 hours," he added.

"That was a precious three hours and sadly now we have 21 more hours to go before they have another three hours of safety, and God knows how many will be killed and injured in the coming period."

Mr. Ging said he visited the UNRWA school that was the scene of Israeli shelling yesterday that killed 43 people and injured 100 others, and all staff there insisted there were no Hamas militants inside the compound itself. Israel says it was returning fire against mortars coming from the area of the school and some media reports have quoted residents corroborating this.

Mr. Ging said the three Israeli shells impacted right up against the boundary of the school and both he and Mr. Holmes said the conflicting reports underscored why an independent investigation of the incident was so necessary.

Mr. Holmes also cited "other dreadful incidents that are coming to our notice," such as a house in Zaitoun, south of Gaza City, where 30 people may have been killed in a strike, with many still under the rubble.

"The apparent level of civilian casualties continued to rise and to be particularly distressing," he said, also stressing the need for more fuel, food and medical supplies to be allowed in. Israel has opened the border crossings to scores of supply lorries a day but much more is needed, he added. Meanwhile, there was an alarming build-up of a sewage lake due to the lack of power, with the danger of a potentially health-threatening flood.

On the political front, Mr. Serry said it seamed that the outline of a way out of the crisis was rapidly emerging "but more work needs to be done quickly to flesh out a package and secure the buy-in of crucial players." Mr. Ban will be travelling to the Middle East next week, looking to lock in the elements of an international consensus.

"A return to the status quo ante, the previous situation, cannot be an option," Mr. Serry said, enumerating the essential elements to a settlement: an immediate and permanent ceasefire, immediate relief for the civilian population of Gaza including open crossings, and a viable system to ensure that borders are properly functioning and that the issue of smuggling is addressed. Israel cited ending rocket and other arms smuggling by Hamas from Egypt as one of the goals of its offensive.

Mr. Serry added that third parties would need to provide assistance on the ground and in diplomatic support to safeguard all the elements of the ceasefire, including a possible international monitoring force.

"There will need also, and this is very important, to be a massive humanitarian reconstruction and economic revival effort for Gaza and the United Nations intends to be in the forefront of responding to that enormous challenge," he declared. "There can be no more band-aid solutions for Gaza."

He also stressed that Gaza, where Hamas seized control from the rival Fatah movement in 2007, must be united with the West Bank, governed by Palestinian President and Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas, whom he called the "umbrella" under which these efforts should be advanced. "Only negotiations and a political solution can empower those who want to live side by side with Israel in peace and stem the appeal of violence and radicalism," he said.

President Abbas and Fatah embrace the two-State solution of Israel and Palestine living side by side while Hamas rejects Israel's right to exist.

In other developments, the Security Council today continued its high-level meeting on the crisis, with several foreign ministers in attendance, while the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva will hold a special session on Friday, at the request of Egypt, Pakistan and Cuba, to address "the grave violations of human rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including the recent aggression in the occupied Gaza Strip."

UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (<"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=44341&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html">UNESCO) Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura and Mr. Ban's Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Radhika Coomaraswamy today expressed grave concern over the attacks against UNRWA schools and associated facilities set up by the UN as places of refuge for civilians fleeing the fighting in Gaza.
Jan 7 2009 4:10PM
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NUMBER OF BHUTANESE REFUGEES RESETTLED FROM NEPAL LAST YEAR TOPS 8,000 – UN

NUMBER OF BHUTANESE REFUGEES RESETTLED FROM NEPAL LAST YEAR TOPS 8,000 – UN
New York, Jan 7 2009 3:10PM
More than 8,000 refugees from Bhutan left their camps in Nepal for resettlement in third countries in 2008, with the vast majority of them going to the United States, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) announced today.

Nearly 7,550 of the refugees have gone to the US, which announced that it would resettle 60,000 refugees and even more if needed. The rest of them have resettled in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Netherlands, Norway and Denmark.

"We are pleased to see so many refugees starting their lives afresh after living in difficult conditions in the camps for the last 18 years and to learn that those resettled are adapting well in their new country," said Daisy Dell, <"http://www.unhcr.org/home.html">UNHCR Representative in Nepal.

The programme to resettle Bhutanese refugees living in Nepal, one of UNHCR's largest and most promising resettlement programmes, began in November 2007. Since then more than half of the 60,000-strong refugee population have already expressed their interest for resettlement.

Currently, there are some 103,000 refugees from Bhutan living in seven camps in eastern Nepal, with some having been in exile for as long as 18 years. Some 16,000-18,000 of them are expected to leave Nepal in 2009.

UNHCR noted that, while it continues to assist with resettlement efforts, it will also continue to advocate for the option of voluntary repatriation to Bhutan for those refugees who wish to do so.
Jan 7 2009 3:10PM
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SECRETARY-GENERAL NAMES TWO NEW SENIOR UN ENVOYS

SECRETARY-GENERAL NAMES TWO NEW SENIOR UN ENVOYS
New York, Jan 7 2009 2:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has informed the Security Council of his intention to appoint Christopher Ross of the United States as his Personal Envoy for Western Sahara and Michael von der Schulenburg as his Executive Representative for the UN Integrated Peacebuilding Office in Sierra Leone (UNIPSIL).

Mr. Ross, who replaces Peter van Walsum, has had a long and distinguished career with the US State Department in which he focused on Middle Eastern and North African affairs.

A former US Ambassador to Syria and to Algeria, he was most recently Senior Adviser for the Middle East and North Africa at the US Mission to the UN.

"Mr. Ross will work with the parties and neighbouring countries based on the most recent Security Council Resolution 1813 and previous resolutions, building on progress made to date, in pursuit of a just, lasting and mutually acceptable political solution, which will provide for the self-determination of the people of Western Sahara," UN spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters.

Several rounds of UN-led talks, bringing together representatives from Morocco and the Frente Polisario, held last year resulted in the parties agreeing to continue negotiations in good faith towards a solution to the issue.

Morocco holds that its sovereignty over Western Sahara should be recognized, while the Frente Polisario's position is that the Territory's final status should be decided in a referendum that includes independence as an option.

Mr. von der Schulenburg, who replaces Victor Da Silva Angelo, is currently Acting Executive Representative for the UN Office in Sierra Leone.

He brings with him a wide range of experience that covers virtually all aspects of UN activities from development assistance to humanitarian aid and managerial reforms, and from combating illicit drug trafficking to conflict resolution and political affairs.

His career with the UN includes assignments in Haiti, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq. Most recently, he served that as the Principal Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Political Affairs with the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq.
Jan 7 2009 2:10PM
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DARFUR: BAN WELCOMES US PLEDGE TO AIRLIFT CRITICAL SUPPLIES TO UN-AFRICAN UNION FORCE

DARFUR: BAN WELCOMES US PLEDGE TO AIRLIFT CRITICAL SUPPLIES TO UN-AFRICAN UNION FORCE
New York, Jan 7 2009 2:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has thanked United States President George W. Bush for his country's recent commitment to airlift supplies urgently needed by the joint United Nations-African Union (AU) peacekeeping force in the strife-torn Darfur region of Sudan.

"The expedited arrival to Darfur of this material, which includes trucks and other essential equipment, will strengthen the ability of the United Nations to protect civilians and carry out other aspects of its mandate," Mr. Ban's spokesperson said in a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=3649">statement.

The hybrid force, known as <"http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/missions/unamid/index.html">UNAMID, was set up by the Security Council to protect civilians in Darfur, where an estimated 300,000 people have been killed and another 2.7 million have been forced from their homes since fighting erupted in 2003, pitting rebels against Government forces and allied Janjaweed militiamen.

The US initiative "sets a constructive precedent for broad international support to expeditiously deploy UNAMID," the statement noted, adding that the Secretary-General calls on other Member States to consider similar efforts to speed up the deployment of the mission.

At full strength, UNAMID, which marked its first anniversary last week, is slated to become the world body's largest peacekeeping operation with some 26,000 military and police personnel.

One year on from transferring the task of suppressing the violence to UNAMID from the AU Mission in Sudan (AMIS), some 12,374 blue helmets are now in place across Darfur, which is 63 per cent of the 19,555 military personnel authorized by the Security Council.
Jan 7 2009 2:10PM
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UNICEF GATHERING ASSESSES HOW TO PROTECT CHILDREN IN FACE OF GLOBAL ECONOMIC WOES

UNICEF GATHERING ASSESSES HOW TO PROTECT CHILDREN IN FACE OF GLOBAL ECONOMIC WOES
New York, Jan 7 2009 1:10PM
A United Nations Children's Fund (<"http://www.unicef.org/media/media_47027.html">UNICEF) meeting in Singapore drew over 150 academics, policy advisors, finance ministers and other senior officials to discuss how to best protect children in the face of tightening budgets due to the global economic slowdown.

All countries in the Asia-Pacific region have ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which specifically says that children "should have the first call on resources, especially in times of economic challenge," said Anupama Rao Singh, UNICEF Regional Director for East Asia and the Pacific.

The worldwide financial crisis is exacerbating the effects of the twin food and fuel crises, and governments are finding their budgets slashed at a time when women and children are most vulnerable.

Due to falling household incomes, some children are leaving school to join the work force too early and many youngsters are eating less, resulting in stunted physical growth and decreased intellectual capacity. Both are detrimental to long-term national economic growth.

Participants at the two-day conference at the National University of Singapore are sharing lessons learned from the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis. They are also discussing health, nutrition, education and family income policies.
Jan 7 2009 1:10PM
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NEW UNICEF CAMPAIGN AIMS TO REDUCE CHILD DEATHS IN CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

NEW UNICEF CAMPAIGN AIMS TO REDUCE CHILD DEATHS IN CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
New York, Jan 7 2009 12:10PM
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has embarked on one of the largest vaccination campaigns in the history of the Central African Republic (CAR), aiming to give 800,000 children the tools they need to address the three leading causes of preventable death: malaria, measles and diarrhoea.

"UN agencies and non-governmental organizations run campaigns all the time, but this is a big one and we want it to stand out," UNICEF Representative in CAR Mahimbo Mdoe said of the 10-day initiative.

"What we're saying is – here are three preventable diseases killing a lot of children and this week we're going to visit every corner of the country to give children and their families tools to prevent these deaths."

UNICEF said nearly a year has been spent preparing for the campaign, including pre-positioning equipment throughout the country, training over 1,750 health volunteers and identifying 885 sites where vaccinations will occur.

"Getting all the materials in place is a huge challenge but so is convincing families that it's important to get their children vaccinated and get them sleeping under mosquito nets and using soap regularly," Eli Josoa Ramamonjisoa, who heads UNICEF's Health Section in CAR, said.

An extensive multimedia campaign is also being carried out in the country in preparation for the drive, during which some 800,000 children under the age of five will be vaccinated for measles as well as given free bars of soap to help prevent diarrhoea, along with a treated mosquito net to eliminate malaria, the leading cause of death among children in CAR.

The awareness campaign includes posters, radio spots and news articles, as well as text messages sent by private cell phone companies to their customers and a rock concert featuring public health messages.

UNICEF reported that the awareness campaign appears to be paying off, with hospitals and health centres across the country reporting long lines of mothers and children waiting for vaccinations.
Jan 7 2009 12:10PM
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REAL LIVES TOUCHED BY DRUG TRADE IN ‘GOLDEN TRIANGLE’ FEATURED IN UN PHOTO STORIES

REAL LIVES TOUCHED BY DRUG TRADE IN 'GOLDEN TRIANGLE' FEATURED IN UN PHOTO STORIES
New York, Jan 7 2009 11:10AM
The lives of real people affected by the illicit drug trade in the area known as the Golden Triangle – Thailand, Laos and Myanmar – are showcased in a new set of photo stories published by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

The second volume of the photojournalism book "De Narcoticis" is produced by award-winning photographer, journalist and UNODC Goodwill Ambassador, Alessandro Scotti.

The project "gives a face" to a problem that is often depicted through data and numbers, and focuses on a range of actors, including law enforcement officers, traffickers, plantation workers and addicts, notes Mr. Scotti.

"It's an underworld which has been examined closely enough to give us plenty of figures and statistics, but which is less known for its personal stories," he says.

"The people involved in trafficking have only a very partial perception of the overall phenomenon, and yet their lives are powerfully affected by it. They are simple people with a limited perception of the impact of their actions.

"Most are in any case tied to the 'job' for their very survival; desperate people with otherwise limited life chances or opportunities," he says.

This is why UNODC's work is so important, Mr. Scotti adds. "UNODC offers a holistic approach including development strategies which allow alternative businesses to grow and become sustainable. A stronger economic and social framework leads to a different balance."

The first volume of "De Narcoticis" focused on Colombia, which now produces only 5 per cent of the world's opiates – down from over 70 per cent some 30 years ago – and where UNODC has been partnering with local authorities in combating the drug trade.
Jan 7 2009 11:10AM
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UN URGES END TO NEPALESE PRACTICE OF USING YOUNG GIRLS AS DOMESTIC WORKERS

UN URGES END TO NEPALESE PRACTICE OF USING YOUNG GIRLS AS DOMESTIC WORKERS
New York, Jan 7 2009 10:10AM
The United Nations has urged Nepal to end the practice of sending young girls from indigenous families to work in private homes, where they risk being exploited, and to ensure justice for those who have been abused as well as search for those who have gone missing.

The practice – known as Kamalari – is outlawed in Nepal, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Nepal (OHCHR-Nepal) noted in a news release issued in the capital, Kathmandu.

However, despite a September 2006 Supreme Court order on the implementation of an existing law that prohibits child exploitation, including the Kamalari system, no concrete steps have been taken to end the practice and adolescent girls from poor Tharu families continue to be subjected to it, the Office added.

"It is clear that parents send their daughters to be Kamalaris as a last resort when they are under extreme pressure to settle debts; many of them end up being trafficked," said the Representative of OHCHR-Nepal, Richard Bennett.

Yesterday Mr. Bennett met with a 10-member delegation representing 600 Kamalaris from the Mid and Far Western regions of the country, who came to the capital to campaign for the implementation of the Supreme Court decision and for the liberation and rehabilitation of all Kamalaris.

The delegation is also seeking clarification of the fate of Kamalaris who have gone missing and justice for those who have been subject to sexual or other kinds of exploitation. In addition, they are calling for an end to the practice of contracting Kamalaris during the Tharu festival of Maghi, which is celebrated in mid-January.

OHCHR-Nepal's Mid Western Regional Office has been supporting the Civil Society Network in Dang to end the practice and support former Kamalaris and their families, including by enhancing understanding and knowledge about human rights standards and monitoring violations.

"I urge the Government to take concrete steps to prohibit this practice, search for the missing Kamalaris, and provide for rehabilitation to those who have been victims of this practice," said Mr. Bennett.
Jan 7 2009 10:10AM
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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

SECURITY COUNCIL MEETS ON GAZA FIGHTING, BAN RENEWS CEASEFIRE CALL

SECURITY COUNCIL MEETS ON GAZA FIGHTING, BAN RENEWS CEASEFIRE CALL
New York, Jan 6 2009 6:10PM
The Security Council convened on the Israel-Hamas conflict in Gaza this evening, with Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warning that today's deadly Israeli shelling of United Nations schools where hundreds of Gazans had sought refuge made a ceasefire more urgent than ever.

<B><I>MORE LATER</I></B>
Jan 6 2009 6:10PM
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UN REACHES VILLAGES IN NORTH-EASTERN DR CONGO ATTACKED BY UGANDAN REBELS

UN REACHES VILLAGES IN NORTH-EASTERN DR CONGO ATTACKED BY UGANDAN REBELS
New York, Jan 6 2009 4:10PM
The United Nations refugee agency has reached towns in the strife-torn eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the scene of bloody attacks carried out by the notorious Ugandan rebel group known as the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA).

Over the weekend, a team from the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (<"http://www.unhcr.org/news/NEWS/496385334.html">UNCHR) and other UN agencies carried out a mission in the towns of Tadu and Faradje in Orientale Province.

Faradje, which lies 100 kilometres west of the DRC's border with Sudan and Uganda, was attacked from 25-26 December, leaving over 70 people dead and displacing nearly 40,000 others. Those who fled the town and local organizations said that more than 80 women were raped during the two-day period.

UNHCR said that people in the district are shocked and traumatized by the attacks. "Our mission found Faradje pillaged and destroyed by fire," agency spokesperson Ron Redmond told reporters in Geneva.

Over 800 houses, three schools, government buildings and health care centres had burned, with most families losing their annual harvest in the fire.

The nearby village of Nagero came under attack on 3 January, claiming eight lives and uprooting 3,500 people.

Up to 500 Congolese civilians have been killed since the start of a joint Congolese, Sudanese and Ugandan operation against the LRA on 14 December, Mr. Redmond said.

According to UN estimates, over 50,000 people have been forced to flee their homes since mid-December, on top of 50,000 others in the region who were displaced by an earlier escalation of clashes between last September and November.

Mr. Redmond said the agency has received a preliminary report of another attack yesterday on the village of Napapo which claimed up to eight lives and houses were set on fire. "An unknown number of people were reportedly kidnapped," he said, adding that there are reports that this incident has uprooted even more people.

The UNHCR team has met with local non-governmental organizations and the newly displaced are currently being registered in Tadu, Faradje and neighbouring villages.

Key needs include food, shelter and medicine, Mr. Redmond said. "However, the area remains highly volatile and insecurity is a key obstacle for access by us and other agencies."
Jan 6 2009 4:10PM
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GUNMEN KILL UN FOOD AID WORKER IN SOUTHERN SOMALIA

GUNMEN KILL UN FOOD AID WORKER IN SOUTHERN SOMALIA
New York, Jan 6 2009 1:10PM
The United Nations World Food Programme (<"http://www.wfp.org/english/?ModuleID=137&Key=3030">WFP) has urged all parties to the ongoing conflict in Somalia to ensure the safety of humanitarian aid workers after one of the agency's staff members was gunned down while monitoring a school feeding programme in the southern part of the war-torn nation.

WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran condemned the killing of 44-year-old Somali national Ibrahim Hussein Duale, calling it a "shocking attack on one of our staff while he was doing his job."

Mr. Duale was shot by three masked gunmen while he was monitoring school feeding in a WFP-supported school in Yubsan village, six kilometres from the Gedo region capital of Garbahare in southern Somalia. Witnesses say the gunmen approached him while he was seated, ordered him to stand up and then shot him.

Mr. Duale, who joined WFP in 2006, leaves behind a wife and five children. He is the third WFP staff member killed since August 2008 in Somalia, one of the most dangerous places in the world for humanitarian workers. Five WFP-contracted transport staff were killed in Somalia in 2008.

Somalia, which has not had a functioning national government since 1991, has been plagued by fighting and humanitarian suffering for decades. Continuing instability, coupled with drought, high food prices and the collapse of the local currency have only worsened the dire humanitarian situation in recent months.

The UN estimates that some 3.2 million people, or 40 per cent of the population, are in need of assistance.

"We call on all parties to allow us to do our job – providing food to feed the hungry at this critical time," said Ms. Sheeran. "We are an impartial international organization and we need a minimum of security to serve the Somali people."

Despite the precarious security situation, WFP has been feeding more than 1.5 million people every month in Somalia. Some 90 percent of the agency's food aid for Somalia arrives by sea on ships currently escorted by European Union naval vessels to protect them from piracy.
Jan 6 2009 1:10PM
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