Category: United Nations

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 4 April 2025 Departmental update The 7th Global Ministerial Summit on Patient Safety 2025

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Message by the WHO Director-General

    The 7th Global Ministerial Summit on Patient Safety, organized by the Department of Health of the Republic of the Philippines and co-sponsored by WHO, was held in Manila, Philippines, on 3–4 April 2025. The Summit, themed “Weaving Strengths for the Future of Patient Safety Throughout the Health-care Continuum,” brought together delegates from 64 countries, experts from academia, professional and international organizations as well as patients and their representatives. It focused on addressing the implementation gaps identified in the first Global Patient Safety Report 2024.

    Despite the progress made by countries in implementing the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030, there is an urgent need for accelerated action and improvement. Addressing the Summit, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros said, “Patient safety must be a non-negotiable priority in all health systems, at all levels of care, in all communities and at all income levels.”

    The Summit discussed the need to support countries in implementing the Global Patient Safety Action Plan through partnerships, learning and innovation, and increased accountability through data and monitoring.

    At the conclusion of its deliberations, the Summit adopted the Mandaluyong Declaration, which recognizes the need for a renewed sense of urgency to accelerate action and calls for making patient safety a universal imperative by establishing patient safety as a foundational pillar of resilient, people-centred and equitable health systems that deliver quality care and drive improve health outcomes.

    The Summit is part of a series of Global Ministerial Summits on Patient Safety that have led the way in advancing the global patient safety agenda. Beginning with the first Summit in London in 2016 and continuing at various locations, and Santiago in 2024 most recently, these Summits have provided a high-level platform for bridging technical knowledge and expertise with political commitment. They laid the ground work for the adoption of the WHA resolution (WHA72.6.) on Global action on patient safety in May 2019, and continue to respond to the call for action articulated by the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030 (WHA74(13) decision).

    Going forward, the Summits will continue to play a critical role in translating political commitments into action, ensuring that the fight against preventable harm to health remains at the heart of global health.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: At least 173,855 pregnant women at risk following Myanmar Earthquake

    Source: United Nations Population Fund

    New York, April 4, 2025 – The 7.7-magnitude earthquake that hit Myanmar on March 28th has killed thousands of people and upended the lives of millions more, including at least 173,855 pregnant women living in affected areas, many of whom have lost access to lifesaving reproductive health services. 

    The earthquake plunged Myanmar – already severely impacted by violence as its civil war continues –  deeper into humanitarian crisis. The cities of Sagaing, Mandalay and Naypyidaw were worst-affected with widespread damage to buildings, including health clinics and hospitals. Affected areas are facing a critical shortage of medicines and medical equipment, as well as clean water, food, shelter and other survival essentials. 

    “Birth does not stop, even in an earthquake,” said UNFPA Representative in Myanmar, Jaime Nadal Roig. “UNFPA teams are working night and day to ensure that women and girls get the lifesaving support they need. We cannot allow this crisis to take away from women’s rights, their safety, or their futures.”

    UNFPA has allocated US$500,000 from its Emergency Fund to address the urgent needs of affected women and girls. UNFPA’s rapid response team is on the ground in Mandalay coordinating with partners to distribute dignity kits with essential hygiene supplies, and clean delivery kits to support safe births. A clinic on a boat supported by UNFPA has resumed operations in Mandalay, and three mobile health teams have been deployed to deliver primary health care, reproductive health services, and emergency medical response in impacted areas.

    However, a lack of power and water, and challenges with access, damaged infrastructure, and resupplying of kits are hindering aid delivery. Further funds are also desperately needed for UNFPA and all UN agencies to scale up.

    UNFPA calls upon the international community to urgently support lifesaving efforts in Myanmar. All humanitarian response agencies must also be ensured unhindered humanitarian access to people in need in line with humanitarian principles. 

    For further inquiries contact: 

    Link to Photo Assets

    About UNFPA

    UNFPA is the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. UNFPA’s mission is to deliver a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: WFP and Italy partner to expand home-grown school feeding and resilience interventions in Malawi

    Source: World Food Programme

    LILONGWE, Malawi – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) welcomes a contribution of €4 million from the Government of Italy to expand the Home-Grown School Feeding programme and support climate-smart agriculture and sustainable school meals by connecting schools with local farmers in Malawi’s Chikwawa District.

    The funding will enable WFP to provide daily nutritious meals to 20,800 children in seventeen primary schools across Chikwawa and supports the national school feeding programme reaching over 800,000 children across Malawi. By sourcing ingredients locally, the initiative creates stable market opportunities for smallholder farmers – especially women – helping them increase production and income, while directly contributing to children’s well-being.

    WFP Malawi Country Director ad interim, Simon Denhere, said the support from the Government of Italy will drive lasting impact by integrating food security, education, and livelihoods.

    “This initiative goes beyond school meals; it strengthens entire communities. By linking smallholder farmers to schools and equipping them with resilience practices, we are improving children’s nutrition while helping communities recover from weather related shocks and to prepare for the future,” said Denhere.

    “This partnership is a game-changer for Malawi, linking nutritious school meals to improved attendance and academic success, while empowering local farmers and enhancing community food security,” said Maureen Maguza Tembo, Deputy Director of School Health, Nutrition and HIV/AIDS  in the Ministry of Education.

    Beyond school feeding, the initiative strengthens smallholder farmers’ resilience by improving access to weather resistant crops, promoting sustainable farming techniques, and expanding irrigation and financial services. These efforts help farming communities increase productivity and better withstand shocks.

    The Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of Education, WFP, and Save the Children will jointly implement the project in Chikwawa District, with Save the Children and the District Council leading field interventions.

    “Investing in school feeding and agriculture lays the foundation for lasting benefits for children, farmers, and the broader economy, fostering self-reliance and stability,” said H.E. Enrico de Agostini, Ambassador of Italy to Malawi and Zambia.

    Malawi continues to experience climate shocks, including the recent El Niño-induced drought, making recovery efforts essential for families and communities.

    “Smallholder farmers are the backbone of our agricultural sector, yet they face numerous challenges, including limited access to markets, inputs, and climate-related shocks,” said Geoffrey Mamba, Principal Secretary responsible for Irrigation in the Ministry of Agriculture. “This initiative will enhance smallholder farmers’ productivity and market access, particularly for women farmers, by integrating them into the school feeding system.”

    The contribution was announced today by representatives from the Government of Italy, the Ministry of Agriculture, and the Ministry of Education.

    Since 1999, WFP has supported school feeding in Malawi, currently reaching approximately 837,500 children across 778 schools. In addition to school feeding, WFP implements resilience-building projects in four districts in southern Malawi, targeting 57,914 households with initiatives that strengthen livelihoods, enhance agricultural productivity, and help communities withstand climate-related shocks.

    #                    #                       #

    About WFP

    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability, and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters, and the impact of climate change.

    Follow us on X @wfp_media | @wfp_malawi

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Myanmar military’s attacks continue despite quake truce, warns UN’s Türk

    Source: United Nations 2

    Humanitarian Aid

    Myanmar’s military has continued to launch airstrikes and other attacks against opposition forces in the devastated country, one week since a 7.7 magnitude earthquake struck and despite announcing a ceasefire, UN human rights chief Volker Türk said on Friday.

    “In the days following the deadly earthquake that tore through central Myanmar last week, the Myanmar military continued operations and attacks, including airstrikes – some of which were launched shortly after tremors subsided,” said Ravina Shamdasani, spokesperson for the High Commissioner for Human Rights.

    “We urge a halt to all military operations and for the focus to be on assisting those impacted by the quake,” she told journalists in Geneva, reiterating Mr. Türk’s call for an “inclusive political solution” to end more than four years of fighting sparked by the junta’s February 2021 coup d’état.

    Latest data from the UN human rights office, OHCHR, points to at least 61 reported attacks across Myanmar since the disaster happened, including 16 since the ceasefire announced by the military took effect on 2 April.

    The tactics of the military – known as the Tatmadaw in Myanmar – include using near-silent adapted paragliders to bomb communities, said James Rodehaver, Head of OHCHR’s Myanmar team: “What those are is an individual military operative who uses a hang-glider with a backpack attached to his back or to his torso with a large fan on it and he uses that to essentially paraglide using the fan as a motor over areas and drop hand-held bombs or munitions onto targets below.”

    Widespread needs

    The development follows an urgent call by UN Secretary-General António Guterres for immediate and unrestricted humanitarian access to the country after the disaster claimed more than 3,000 lives and left millions in urgent need of aid.

    Speaking to reporters at UN Headquarters in New York, the UN chief warned that the earthquake had “supercharged the suffering”. “Myanmar today is the scene of utter devastation and desperation,” he said.

    The regions most impacted by the earthquake which struck at approximately 12.50pm local time on 28 March are Mandalay – the country’s second city and home to 1.2 million people – Sagaing, Nay Pyi Taw, Bago, Magway, Shan South and East.

    Assessments have shown widespread destruction across central Myanmar to critical infrastructure – including health facilities, road networks and bridges.

    In an update, the UN World Health Organization also reported that electricity and water supplies remain disrupted, worsening access to health services and heightening risks of waterborne and foodborne disease outbreaks.

    The UN refugee agency, UNHCR – which issued an appeal on Friday for $16 million to support 1.2 million survivors – said that up to 80 per cent of structures in Mandalay are estimated to have collapsed.

    Access obstacles

    UNHCR spokesperson Babar Baloch explained that the UN agency has already deployed existing emergency relief including plastic sheets and kitchen sets for 25,000 survivors in Mandalay, Sagaing and Bago regions, as well as the capital, Nay Pyi Taw, and parts of Shan State.

    UN partner the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) meanwhile reported that 136 townships have been affected by the earthquake “and about 25 per cent are in areas not controlled by the Government, so that’s complicating the access”.

    Echoing those concerns, Ms. Shamdasani from the UN human rights office said that the scale of the disaster had been made worse by the information blackout caused by internet and telecommunications shutdowns “imposed by the military”.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: EU, IOM Senior Officials in Brussels for Eleventh Strategic Cooperation Meeting on Migration

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Brussels, 04 April 2025 – Senior officials from the European Union (EU) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) met in Brussels today for their eleventh annual meeting under the EU-IOM Strategic Cooperation Framework.    

    The high-level exchange – co-chaired by Acting Director-General for Migration and Home Affairs, European Commission, Beate Gminder, and IOM Director General Amy Pope – centred on the importance of the strategic partnership between the EU and IOM to ensure well-managed migration policies that respond to emerging global challenges.  

    IOM Director General Amy Pope commended the EU’s long-standing support and reaffirmed IOM’s commitment to the dialogue and working with the EU on all aspects of migration and mobility.  

    “The partnership between IOM and the EU has been fundamental to serving the most vulnerable people in the world and assisting States to manage migration in a safe, orderly, and effective way,” said DG Pope. “More than ever, our cooperation needs to deliver. It should be focused, global in scope and comprehensive in practice.”   

    Acting DG Gminder emphasized how the historic agreement on the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum will contribute to more predictable and sustainable migration management and better rights protection in the EU, thanking IOM for its longstanding support.  She stressed the importance of continued cooperation in delivering on agreed policy and operational priorities working with partner countries along the migration routes to the EU.   

    “The International Organization for Migration is a key partner in our efforts to strengthen migration governance in the EU, to work towards safe, orderly and regular migration globally, and for finding and implementing sustainable solutions for existing and future challenges,” said B. Gminder.   

    Among the issues addressed, the senior officials focused on the latest developments in Ukraine, Syria and the region, a route-based approach to migration governance, effective return and reintegration in line with European and international law, and promoting regular pathways for migration.    

    Both sides also exchanged views on the new political and funding environment, confirming the EU as a strong and stable donor given its commitment to a strong multilateral system with the United Nations at its centre.  

    The EU and IOM agreed that enhanced partnerships and cooperation between countries are vital to address issues comprehensively at different points along the routes. This includes providing emergency assistance, humanitarian aid and protection, offering durable solutions to internal displacement, innovative approaches to climate mobility, and enhancing safe, regular pathways for migrants and displaced people, addressing irregular migratory flows and combating smuggling of migrants and trafficking in human beings.   

    Overall European Commission funding to IOM reached over EUR 590 million in 2024. Together with its Member States, the EU continues to be IOM’s key donor.   

    The EU-IOM meeting was hosted by the Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs (DG HOME). IOM Director General Amy Pope and senior IOM officials joined senior representatives from the Directorate-General for European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (DG ECHO), the Directorate-General for Enlargement and Eastern Neighbourhood (DG ENEST), the Directorate-General for International Partnerships (DG INTPA), the Directorate-General for Middle East, North Africa and the Gulf (DG MENA) and the European External Action Service (EEAS). On this occasion, DG MENA’s and DG ENEST’s participation in the Strategic Cooperation was also announced.  

    Background     

    In July 2012, the EU and IOM established a Strategic Cooperation Framework to enhance dialogue and collaboration on migration, development, humanitarian response and human rights issues. This built on their shared interest in bringing the benefits of well-managed international migration to migrants and society. Today’s meeting, the eleventh of its kind since the launch of the Strategic Cooperation, was one of the high-level discussions that advance cooperation between the two organizations. The first EU-IOM Senior Officials Meeting under the Strategic Cooperation Framework was held in Brussels on 3 May 2013.   

    For more information, please contact:  

    In Brussels: Ryan Schroeder, rschroeder@iom.int  

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 4 April 2025 Departmental update The 7th Global Ministerial Summit on Patient Safety 2025 “Weaving Strengths for the Future of Patient Safety Throughout the Health-care Continuum”

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Message by the WHO Director-General

    The 7th Global Ministerial Summit on Patient Safety, organized by the Department of Health of the Republic of the Philippines and co-sponsored by WHO, was held in Manila, Philippines, on 3–4 April 2025. The Summit, themed “Weaving Strengths for the Future of Patient Safety Throughout the Health-care Continuum,” brought together delegates from XX countries, experts from academia, professional and international organizations as well as patients and their representatives. It focused on addressing the implementation gaps identified in the first Global Patient Safety Report 2024.

    Despite the progress made by countries in implementing the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030, there is an urgent need for accelerated action and improvement. Addressing the Summit, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros said, “Patient safety must be a non-negotiable priority in all health systems, at all levels of care, in all communities and at all income levels.”

    The Summit discussed the need to support countries in implementing the Global Patient Safety Action Plan through partnerships, learning and innovation, and increased accountability through data and monitoring.

    At the conclusion of its deliberations, the Summit adopted the Mandaluyong Declaration, which recognizes the need for a renewed sense of urgency to accelerate action and calls for making patient safety a universal imperative by establishing patient safety as a foundational pillar of resilient, people-centred and equitable health systems that deliver quality care and drive improve health outcomes.

    The Summit is part of a series of Global Ministerial Summits on Patient Safety that have led the way in advancing the global patient safety agenda. Beginning with the first Summit in London in 2016 and continuing at various locations, and Santiago in 2024 most recently, these Summits have provided a high-level platform for bridging technical knowledge and expertise with political commitment. They laid the ground work for the adoption of the WHA resolution (WHA72.6.) on Global action on patient safety in May 2019, and continue to respond to the call for action articulated by the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030 (WHA74(13) decision).

    Going forward, the Summits will continue to play a critical role in translating political commitments into action, ensuring that the fight against preventable harm to health remains at the heart of global health.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Global experts meet in Sendai, Japan, to bridge knowledge and technology gaps in disaster risk reduction

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Experts from around the world met in Sendai, Japan, on 8 March 2025 to explore how emerging and disruptive technologies can reshape disaster risk reduction (DRR) and resilience-building, particularly in the Global South. 

    The ‘Leveraging Emerging and Disruptive Technologies for Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR): Bridging Science, Technology, Academia, and Private Sector Nexus’ workshop, on the sidelines of the World Bosai Forum, brought together national and local governments, academia, the private sector, and financial institutions to overcome barriers and identify opportunities in integrating innovations such as AI, satellite systems, IoT, blockchain, and advanced analytics into DRR strategies. 

    The workshop emerged from to the Sendai Framework’s midterm review, which called on the DRR community to address persistent gaps in applying scientific and technological advances in disaster resilience efforts. 

    As disasters grow more complex, there’s a pressing need to ensure that countries, especially those most vulnerable, can access and use emerging technologies effectively, Sujit Mohanty, Chief of Intergovernmental, Interagency Cooperation and Partnerships at UNDRR, remarked during his opening remarks. 

    Mr Mohanty emphasised that while new tools are being rapidly developed, countries face challenges related to affordability, infrastructure, expertise, and cross-sector collaboration. Overreliance on untested technologies, he warned, may introduce new risks if not managed with care. 

    Real-world barriers and solutions 

    A highlight of the event was the roundtable discussion featuring speakers from Bangladesh, the Philippines, Mexico City, Sendai City, Japan’s private sector and academia. 

    Bangladesh’s representative, Mr Mohammad Nazmul Abedin, noted how the country has drastically reduced disaster-related deaths—from over 100,000 in 1991 to near zero in 2024—yet struggles to scale satellite-based flood monitoring and data-sharing mechanisms. He said the Bangladesh needs a national technology policy that integrates AI and blockchain, along with more investment and public-private partnerships. 

    Echoing similar constraints, Assistant Secretary Bernardo Rafaelito R. Alejandro IV of the Philippines outlined his country’s efforts, such as the GeoRisk platform and IoT-enabled early warning systems. Technology is part of the solution, but it must be paired with good governance, inclusive policies and international collaboration, he noted. 

    Sendai City showcased successful collaboration through initiatives like BOSAI-TECH—a public-private-academic platform fostering DRR innovation and technology commercialisation. Ms. Satoko Shibuya, Director at Sendai’s Disaster-Resilient and Environmentally Friendly City Promotion Office, explained that local partnerships have yielded practical tools like evacuation guidance drones and voice-enhanced disaster alerts. 

    Financing innovation and building trust 

    Speakers representing private sector participants discussed the financial and regulatory environments needed to bring DRR technologies to scale. Mr. Yoshiki Hiruma of the Development Bank of Japan shared insights into DRR-linked financing that rewards clients with reduced loan rates for resilience-building initiatives. He noted that risk financing must embrace a challenge mindset to support DRR innovation. 

    Mr. Shoichi Tateno, of Weathernews Inc., stressed the importance of mutual understanding and trust between governments and private weather service providers – particularly in countries where state meteorological services dominate the sector. He offered the inclusive platform approach of Japan’s Meteorological Service Act as a model of such trust. 

    Academia can offer reliable innovation and policy integration 

    Participants from academia stressed the need for adaptive governance and robust dialogue.  

    Professor Rajib Shaw of Keio University called for more systematic evaluation of successful DRR tech collaborations and piloting through initiatives like the upcoming Association of Pacific Rim Universities (APRU) DRR Innovation Hub. He pointed out that governments and technology developers operate at different speeds, and that it requires structure, trust, and experimentation in order to bridge that divide. 

    Professor Kimio Takeya of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) and Tohoku University said that while proven technologies remain essential for national governments, they must be extended with emerging tools that offer new ways to improve operations. He cited JICA’s Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development (SATREPS) programme – which funds international research on disaster risk reduction – as a model for innovation grounded in collaboration. 

    A global partnership and a dedicated knowledge resource 

    In closing, Mr Mohanty said that UNDRR will facilitate Global Partnership on Emerging and Disruptive Technologies for Disaster Resilience which will foster long-term collaboration and ensure that the next wave of DRR innovation is inclusive, actionable, and globally accessible. 

    He remarked that the workshop had spotlighted the urgent need for a dedicated knowledge resource – one that captures good practices and deepens understanding of how emerging technologies are shaping the current DRR landscape.  

    Such a tool could bridge persistent gaps and drive more effective, widespread integration of innovation into disaster risk reduction efforts. 

    Read the full summary report on the workshop

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 4 April 2025 News release WHO brings countries together to test collective pandemic response

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Over the past two days, WHO convened more than 15 countries and over 20 regional health agencies, health emergency networks and other partners to test, for the first time, a new global coordination mechanism for health emergencies.

    The two-day simulation, Exercise Polaris, tested WHO’s Global Health Emergency Corps (GHEC), a framework designed to strengthen countries’ emergency workforce, coordinate the deployment of surge teams and experts, and enhance collaboration between countries.

    The exercise simulated an outbreak of a fictional virus spreading across the world.

    Participating countries included Canada, Colombia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Ethiopia, Germany, Iraq, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Mozambique, Nepal, Pakistan, Qatar, Somalia Uganda and Ukraine, with additional countries as observers. Each country participated through its national health emergency coordination structure and worked under real-life conditions to share information, align policies and activate their response.

    Regional and global health agencies and organizations, including Africa CDC, European CDC, IFRC, IOM, UNICEF and established emergency networks such as the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network, the Emergency Medical Teams initiative, Stand-by partners and the International Association of National Public Health Institutes, worked together to support country-led responses. More than 350 health emergency experts connected globally through this exercise.

    “This exercise proves that when countries lead and partners connect, the world is better prepared,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “No country can face the next pandemic alone. Exercise Polaris shows that global cooperation is not only possible – it is essential.”

    Throughout the simulation, countries led their own response efforts while engaging with WHO for coordination, technical guidance and emergency support. The exercise provided a rare opportunity for governments to test preparedness in a realistic environment, one where trust and mutual accountability were as critical as speed and capacity.

    “The exercise sought to put into practice the procedures for inter-agency response to international health threats. Efficient coordination and interoperability processes are key to guaranteeing timely interventions in health emergencies,” said Dr Mariela Marín, Vice Minister of Health of Costa Rica, thanking the Pan American Health Organization for their support and the members of the National Risk Management System for their engagement.

    “Polaris demonstrated the critical importance of cultivating trust before a crisis occurs,” said Dr Soha Albayat from Qatar. “The foundation of our collaborative efforts is significantly stronger than in years past. We’ve moved beyond reactive measures, and are now proactively anticipating, aligning, and coordinating our cross-border emergency response plans.”

    “The Global Health Emergency Corps has evolved into a powerful platform, building on practice, trust and connection,” said Dr Mike Ryan, Executive Director of WHO’s Health Emergencies Programme. “Exercise Polaris showed what is possible when countries operate with urgency and unity supported by well-connected partners. It is a strong signal that we are collectively more ready than we were.”

    At a time when multilateralism is under pressure and preparedness is often framed through a national lens, Exercise Polaris reaffirmed that health is a global issue.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s video message at the Central Asia in the Face of Global Climate Challenges; Consolidation for Common Prosperity International Conference

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Download the video:
    https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/downloads2.unmultimedia.org/public/video/evergreen/MSG+SG+/SG+3+April+25/3357789_MSG+SG+COMMON+PROSPERITY+INTL+CONFERENCE+03+APR+25.mp4

    Excellencies.

    Thank you for your invitation.

    I commend President Mirziyoyev for hosting this conference — and for declaring 2025 the year of environmental protection and the green economy. 

    I also applaud the environment of dialogue and cooperation that characterises the region today.

    This approach is reflected in the recent summit between Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, and their trilateral agreement on the Junction Point of State borders.

    And it is reflected in this International Conference today.

    Excellencies,

    The climate crisis is taking hold around the world. 

    The evidence is all around us – with the hottest days, the hottest months, the hottest years, and the hottest decade on record. 

    We see it clearly in Central Asia with soaring temperatures, glacier retreat, droughts, and worsening dust storms.

    Left unchecked, this crisis will only escalate – pummelling economies, taking lives, devastating livelihoods, and imperilling food and water supplies.

    The tragedy of the Aral Sea also shows how environmental destruction hurts people and communities.

    Cooperation throughout Central Asia is essential.

    And regional action must be complemented by global action.

    New national climate plans – or NDCs – due this year must align with limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, as promised.

    And cover all emissions and the whole economy.

    The G20 must lead. 

    This is an opportunity to bring together energy transition strategies and sustainable development priorities with climate action – to attract investment and build prosperity and security.

    I urge all countries to take it.

    And to act to ensure the world makes good on climate finance commitments.

    We need confidence the new $1.3 trillion climate finance goal will be delivered.
     
    We need developed countries to honour the promise of at least $40 billion a year for adaptation, by this year.

    And we must strengthen support for loss and damage to help the most vulnerable countries and people.

    Excellencies,

    Once again, thank you for coming together to forge a path forward – and deliver.

    I wish you a successful conference.

    Thank you.
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 4 April 2025 Fatima: crossing deserts to protect mothers and newborns in Pakistan

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Maloka’s story highlights how the Government of Pakistan, in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO), has transformed the prevention of maternal neonatal tetanus (MNT) across the country. Around 80% of Pakistan’s population (190 million people) now live in areas where the spread of neonatal tetanus is under controlled limits – less than 1 case of tetanus per 1000 live births. Islamabad Capital Territory and Pakistan-administered Kashmir achieved elimination in March 2025, Sindh in December 2024 and Punjab in 2016.

    Fatima administers a vaccine to a pregnant woman. Photo: WHO / Pakistan

    Fatima, Maloka’s “angel”, is one of 17 000 Lady Health Workers deployed in the province of Sindh, and 30 000 across the country. For mothers like Maloka, Lady Health Workers are heroes, but they do not work alone. More than 140 000 Lady Health Visitors, Lady Health Supervisors, Lady Health Workers and midwives work across Pakistan, covering even the most remote areas, keeping mothers and newborns safe.  

    Maloka lost her first child, a baby girl, to neonatal tetanus. The pain of that loss fueled her determination to protect any future children. When Maloka became pregnant again, Fatima was there, a steady source of support and guidance. She ensured Maloka received the necessary tetanus vaccinations, advised her on safe delivery practices and provided antenatal care. Today, Maloka cradles her healthy 1-year-old son, a symbol of hope and resilience.

    Maloka’s story underscores the crucial role of frontline health workers like Fatima who provide advice from mother to mother. Fatima acts as a bridge between communities and the health care system, building trust and empowering women to take control of their health.

    Fatima prepares to administer tetanus-diphtheria vaccine to Maloka in a remote area of Sindh. Photo: WHO Pakistan  

    Despite progress, Pakistan remains among 10 countries worldwide that have yet to eliminate MNT. In 2024, a total of 322 cases and 6 deaths were reported across the country, though WHO experts estimate that only 30% of cases are notified to the authorities. 

    WHO will continue to partner with Pakistan and its frontline health workers as they work to eliminate MNT from the country and protect future generations from this preventable disease.

    As the sun sets over the Thar desert, casting long shadows across the sand dunes, health workers like Fatima are bringing hope for a healthier future to the most remote settlements. “Initially, it was an uphill battle,” Fatima recalls. “Many were hesitant, bound by traditional beliefs and misconceptions about vaccines. Now, the smiles of healthy babies and the relief in mothers’ eyes are the greatest reward. It is a reminder that, even in the most challenging circumstances, we can make a difference, one vaccine at a time.”

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    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s message on the International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action [scroll down for French version]

    Source: United Nations MIL-OSI 2

    round the world, more than 100 million people are at risk from landmines, explosive remnants of war and improvised explosive devices.

    From Afghanistan to Myanmar, from Sudan to Ukraine, Syria, the Occupied Palestinian Territory and beyond, these deadly devices litter rural and urban communities, indiscriminately killing civilians and blocking vital humanitarian and development efforts. 

    Even when the guns fall silent, these remnants of war remain, lurking in fields and on pathways and roadways, threatening the lives of innocent civilians and the livelihoods of communities.   

    Year in and year out, the brave mine action personnel of the United Nations work with partners to locate and remove these weapons, provide education and threat assessments, and ensure people can live, work and travel safely. They do so at great risk – as demonstrated most recently in Gaza.

    This year’s theme for the International Day of Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action — Safe Futures Start Here — reminds us of the critical role of mine action in rebuilding shattered communities, supporting survivors and forging peace.

    I appeal to all States that have not yet done so to ratify and fully implement the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, the Convention on Cluster Munitions and the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons. The humanitarian norms and principles enshrined in these treaties must be upheld and preserved.

    And I urge States to uphold the global commitments in the recently adopted Pact for the Future to restrict or refrain from the use of explosive weapons in populated areas, and to support all efforts to end the threat of explosive ordnances.

    Mine action works. Together, let’s commit to build safe futures — starting here and now.

    ***
    Plus de 100 millions de personnes dans le monde vivent sous la menace des mines terrestres, des restes explosifs de guerre et des engins explosifs improvisés.

    De l’Afghanistan au Myanmar, du Soudan à l’Ukraine, en passant par la Syrie, le Territoire palestinien occupé et bien d’autres territoires, ces engins meurtriers jonchent les communautés rurales et urbaines, tuent sans distinction des civils et entravent les efforts vitaux en matière d’aide humanitaire et de développement.

    Même lorsque les armes se taisent, ces restes de guerre subsistent, tapis dans des champs, des sentiers ou des routes, et menacent ainsi la vie de civils innocents et les moyens de subsistance des populations locales.

    Année après année, les courageux spécialistes de la lutte antimines de l’ONU travaillent aux côtés de partenaires pour localiser et éliminer ces armes, sensibiliser les esprits aux risques et évaluer les menaces, et veiller à ce que les populations puissent vivre, travailler et se déplacer en toute sécurité. Ils le font à leurs risques et périls, comme cela s’est vu récemment à Gaza.

    Le thème de la Journée internationale pour la sensibilisation au problème des mines et l’assistance à la lutte antimines de cette année, « Agir maintenant pour bâtir un avenir sûr », nous rappelle que la lutte antimines joue un rôle essentiel dans la reconstruction des communautés dévastées, le soutien aux rescapés et l’instauration de la paix.

    J’engage les États Membres qui ne l’ont pas encore fait à ratifier la Convention sur l’interdiction des mines antipersonnel, la Convention sur les armes à sous-munitions et la Convention sur certaines armes classiques, et à les mettre pleinement en œuvre. Les normes et principes humanitaires inscrits dans ces traités doivent être respectés et préservés.

    J’exhorte également les États à respecter les engagements mondiaux énoncés dans le Pacte pour l’avenir récemment adopté, c’est-à-dire à ne pas utiliser d’armes explosives dans les zones peuplées ou à en limiter le recours, et à soutenir tous les efforts visant à mettre fin à la menace que représentent les engins explosifs.

    La lutte antimines porte ses fruits. Ensemble, engageons-nous à bâtir un avenir sûr, ici et maintenant.

    ***
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ‘Not an extension of Australia’ – Trump’s tariffs ‘reinforces’ Norfolk Island’s independence hopes

    By Caleb Fotheringham, RNZ Pacific journalist

    Norfolk Island sees its United States tariff as an acknowledgment of independence from Australia.

    Norfolk Island, despite being an Australian territory, has been included on Trump’s tariff list.

    The territory has been given a 29 percent tariff, despite Australia getting only 10 percent.

    It is home to just over 2000 people, sitting between New Zealand and Australia in the South Pacific

    The islands’ Chamber of Commerce said the decision by the US “raises critical questions about Norfolk Island’s international recognition as an independent sovereign nation” and Norfolk Island not being part of Australia.

    “The classification of Norfolk Island as distinct from Australia in this tariff decision reinforces what the Norfolk Island community has long asserted: Norfolk Island is not an extension of Australia.”

    Norfolk Island previously had a significant level of autonomy from Australia, but was absorbed directly into the country’s local government system in 2015.

    Norfolk Islanders angered
    The move angered many Norfolk Island people and inspired a number of campaigns, including appeals to the United Nations and the International Court of Justice, by groups wishing to re-establish a measure of their autonomy, or to sue for independence.

    The Chamber of Commerce has taken the tariff as a chance to reemphasis the islands’ call for independence, including, “restoration of economic rights” and exclusive access to its exclusive economic zone.

    The statement said Norfolk Island is a “sovereign nation [and] must have the ability to engage directly with international trade partners rather than through Australian officials who do not represent Norfolk Island’s interests”.

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters yesterday: “Norfolk Island has got a 29 percent tariff. I’m not quite sure that Norfolk Island, with respect to it, is a trade competitor with the giant economy of the United States.”

    “But that just shows and exemplifies the fact that nowhere on Earth is safe from this.”

    The base tariff of 10 percent is also included for Tokelau, a non-self-governing territory of New Zealand, with a population of only about 1500 people living on the atoll islands.

    US President Donald Trump’s global tariffs . . . “raises critical questions about Norfolk Island’s international recognition as an independent sovereign nation.” Image: Getty/The Conversation

    US ‘don’t really understand’, says PANG
    Pacific Network on Globalisation (PANG) deputy coordinator Adam Wolfenden said he did not understand why Norfolk Island and Tokelau were added to the tariff list.

    “I think this reflects the approach that’s been taken, which seems very rushed and very divorced from a common sense approach,” Wolfenden said.

    “The inclusion of these territories, to me, is indicative that they don’t really understand what they’re doing.”

    In the Pacific, Fiji is set to be charged the most at 32 percent.

    Nauru has been slapped with a 30 percent tariff, Vanuatu 22 percent, and other Pacific nations were given the 10 percent base tariff.

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Every piece tells a story’: Bombs to beauty, from Gaza to Ukraine

    Source: United Nations 2

    By Eileen Travers

    Culture and Education

    What happens to bombs after they land? Some explode. Some don’t, leaving behind a deadly legacy of war, but now the remnants of conflict and devastation are being turned into wearable messages of peace.

    “The purpose was to transform the negative energy of destruction into the positive energy of creation,” said Ukrainian designer Stanislav Drokin, who turns shrapnel into fine jewellery from his whimsical, functional home studio in war-torn Kharkiv.

    As the world marks the International Day for Mine Awareness, observed annually on 4 April, ongoing demining initiatives are painstakingly removing and safely disposing unexploded weapons left behind on battlefields while artists like Mr. Drokin are crafting some of these fragments of war into one-of-a-kind jewellery, ornaments and sculptures.

    For designers, there is plenty of material to work with.

    From trenches to trinkets

    Today, tens of millions of these deadly weapons remain scattered in former battle zones across the world long after the conflicts have ended.

    Laos and Ukraine have among the world’s highest concentrations of unexploded ordnance. In Laos alone, only one per cent of the estimated 80 million now banned cluster bombs dropped during the Viet Nam War more than half a century ago have been safely deactivated and removed.

    Unexploded ordnance continues to kill people around the world despite the history of mine action showing hard-won progress, according to UNMAS, the UN agency that runs demining operations, from Gaza to Ukraine.

    In Ukraine, Mr. Drokin’s loft is both his workshop and home, where the renowned artist and university lecturer tells the story of war using shrapnel fragments brought to him by friends, colleagues, volunteers and military personnel following Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

    “At the very beginning of the war, my creative workshop became a temporary warehouse for volunteers of the Kharkiv military hospital,” Mr. Drokin said.

    © UNDP Ukraine/Kseniia Nevenche

    A sign in Ukraine warns of landmines.

    Portable stories of wartime Ukraine

    Wondering how he could help Ukrainians when his frontline city is under constant artillery shelling, Mr. Drokin started working on the first of several collections in early May 2022.

    Since then, he launched the Forget-me-not sculpture project, shaped from shell fragments and stylised titanium flowers, one of which sold for more than $14,000 at Sotheby’s in Geneva, all of which went to Lviv-based Superhumans, a centre serving adults and children maimed as a result of the war.

    Next came the Revival collection, which unfolded after Mr. Drokin was contacted by Elizabeth Suda, founder of Article 22, a New York startup that sells pieces made of bomb remnants and supports demining in the territories contaminated by the tools of war.

    “Pieces from the collection are symbols aimed at preserving information about tragedies, destruction and grief that wars bring in the memory of mankind,” Mr. Drokin said.

    © Courtesy of Stanislav Drokin

    Designer Stanislav Drokin is interviewed by a local news team in Kharkiv, Ukraine.

    ‘Every piece tells a story’

    At the Pen and Brush Gallery in New York’s trendy Flatiron neighbourhood, bracelets made from cluster bombs jangle on the arms of Kendall Silwonuk, who is setting up a pop-up shop with an array of Mr. Dorkin’s necklaces and other Article 22 items.

    “Every piece tells a story,” Ms. Silwonuk said.

    Holding up a heavy wooden block that Laotian artisans use to make bracelets, she explained the process. Artisans collect aluminium bomb casings from demining operations, melt them down and pour the liquified substance into heavy wood block molds. Once cooled, out pops a bracelet.

    She said Article 22 supports initiatives to help communities to rebuild their lives, including through the US-based Legacy of War Foundation, founded by photojournalist Giles Duley, a triple amputee following injuries caused by an improvised explosive device in Afghanistan in 2011 and the first UN Global Advocate for persons with disabilities in conflict and peacebuilding situations.

    UN News

    Kendall Silwonuk at an Article 22 pop-up shop in New York with an array of jewellery made of remnants of war.

    ‘Conscious commerce’

    In Laos, Article 22’s Ms. Suda met with artisans crafting spoons out of cluster bomb remnants in the early 2000s and was determined to bring their skills and story to a wider audience.

    She said the company’s name comes from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in which Article 22 states that “everyone, as a member of society, has the right to social security and is entitled to realisation, through national effort and international cooperation and in accordance with the organization and resources of each State, of the economic, social and cultural rights indispensable for his dignity and the free development of his personality.”

    “This is a humanitarian issue that the public can be involved in by being first aware by supporting organizations that work to clear unexploded bombs from the land and by supporting any organization or business that is doing this work through a conscious commerce,” she said.

    For the Laotian artisans working with Article 22, the collaboration has meant more income and cleared minefields now used to grow rice.

    UNDP Lao PDR/Tock Soulasen Phomm

    A local rice farmer in Laos.

    Blending chaos with harmony

    Back in Kharkiv, Mr. Drokin is now sketching new designs using precious coloured stones and diamonds to “combine them with fragments created by the crazy energy of the explosion” for his growing audience. That includes presidents, volunteers, journalists, mayors, doctors, philanthropists and military heroes, with some pieces gracing private collections, from the National Museum of the History of Ukraine to the East Wing of the White House in Washington.

    “I love to combine harmony and chaos, use the emotions of colour and its combinations and emphasise the images and forms created by man and nature,” he said. “As a lecturer, I want to pass on knowledge and accumulated experience to students to bring a sense of responsibility, harmony and peace to the younger generation.”

    Does he have a favourite piece?

    “It will be the last piece I create after the war, when the long-awaited and just peace comes, people stop dying and the contaminated land of Ukraine is cleared of unexploded mines, missiles and shells,” Mr. Drokin said. 

    While some artisans in Laos and Ukraine continue to ply a brisk trade, the trend of salvaging and recycling remnants of war into wearable art is emerging around the world.

    UN Photo/Martine Perret

    Deminers in Bunia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    Here are just a few:

    • In Colombia, even before the decades-old war ended, jewellery designers produced collections crafted from bullet casings, with some continuing to this day
    • In Cambodia, remnants of half-century-old brass bombshells are being salvaged by an association and incorporated into jewellery to promote peace
    • In the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), retrieved bullet casings and AK47 machine gun are being integrated into wristwatches and wedding bands
    • In Israel and Palestine, some of the tens of thousands of fallen bombs and rockets are now mezuzahs, statues, necklaces and charms

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Following Discovery of Mass Grave in Gaza with Bodies of 15 Aid Workers, Human Rights Chief Warns Security Council about Heightened Risk of Atrocity Crimes

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Note: Full coverage of this afternoon’s meeting of the Security Council will be available Friday, 4 April.

    Following the recent discovery of a mass grave in Gaza — in which the bodies of 15 humanitarian workers were interred — the United Nations human-rights Chief warned the Security Council today of a high and increasing risk that atrocity crimes are being committed in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

    “I am appalled by the recent killing of 15 medical personnel and humanitarian aid workers, which raise further concerns over the commission of war crimes by the Israeli military,” said Volker Türk, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.  Additionally, he observed that the temporary relief granted by the ceasefire “has been shattered”.  According to the Ministry of Health in Gaza, Israeli military operations have killed more than 1,200 Palestinians, including at least 320 children, since 1 March. Bombardments of residential buildings, tents, hospitals and schools continue, including places where Palestinians have been ordered to move.

    Pointing out that a month has passed since the Israeli military imposed a complete blockade on vital aid and supplies to Gaza, he underscored: “The blockade and siege imposed on Gaza amount to collective punishment and may also amount to the use of starvation as a method of war.”  He also noted that, as of 1 April, the World Food Programme (WFP) shut its 25 bakeries in Gaza — leaving many without access to bread — and he spotlighted a “return to the breakdown of social order that preceded the ceasefire”. Additionally, he said that inflammatory rhetoric by senior Israeli officials regarding seizing, dividing and controlling territory “raises grave concerns about the commission of international crimes”.

    Further noting that the situation in the West Bank is “extremely alarming”, he said that the announcement that residents must not return to their homes for a year “raises serious concerns about long-term mass displacement”.  While “nothing can justify” the horrific attacks committed on 7 October 2023, he stressed that the same is true for the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.  Urging immediate restoration of the ceasefire in Gaza, he warned:  “There is a high and increasing risk that atrocity crimes are being committed in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

    ‘Many Appalling Records’ Broken in Gaza, with Highest Number of Aid Workers Killed in Any Conflict

    “Many appalling records have been broken in this war,” observed Younes Al-Khatib, President of the Palestine Red Crescent Society.  The war on Gaza, he said, has seen the greatest number of aid workers killed in any conflict.  Recently, a mission coordinated by the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs uncovered a mass grave, where 15 first responders — including eight Palestine Red Crescent Society paramedics, six civil-defence members and one UN officer — were buried.  “They were killed while on mission to save lives,” he said.

    Noting the Society’s documentation of the mission’s timeline, as well as dispatch communications and what one team “had witnessed when they went back to the scene”, he added that Asad Al-Nasasra, a Society member, had reported that his team was being fired upon and that several colleagues were injured.  He is still missing.  “We call on the Israeli occupation forces to provide information on his fate,” he urged. Also calling for a thorough investigation and the immediate resumption of aid delivery, he added:  “We call on the Security Council — and on the whole international community — to spare no effort to return to the ceasefire.”

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: DR Congo: Armed violence displaces thousands as cholera outbreak worsens

    Source: United Nations 2

    Humanitarian Aid

    Ongoing violence in North and South Kivu in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) continues to kill, injure and displace civilians, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has warned. 

    Intense clashes between local armed groups and M23 rebels were reported on Thursday in the town of Masisi Centre in North Kivu.

    Preliminary reports from partners on the ground indicate at least two civilian fatalities and multiple injuries, with several wounded evacuated to Masisi General Hospital.

    Meanwhile, many civilians remain confined to their homes due to active crossfire, intensifying fear and limited access to basic needs and services.

    “The volatility of frontlines and ongoing combat have rendered comprehensive assessments impossible,” OCHA said.

    Despite international support, armed groups have made significant recent gains, particularly the M23 movement, which claims to defend the interests of Congolese Tutsi – many of whom were exiled to Rwanda – and is reportedly backed by Rwandan forces. The extremist Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) also remain active in the region.

    Delivering lifesaving aid

    In eastern Masisi, where the security situation allows, UN partners are delivering critical aid to displaced and returning populations.

    OCHA noted that since yesterday, partners have been distributing household and hygiene kits to more than 500 displaced households in Sake’s collective centre.

    Furthermore, 19 of 24 water points in Sake have been rehabilitated, restoring access to safe water for over 4,000 households.

    Fresh clashes in South Kivu

    In South Kivu, fighting flared again on Tuesday in Fizi Territory, as local armed groups clashed with M23 fighters.

    The violence struck the villages of Mulima and Lusuku – both already sheltering thousands of displaced families – prompting another wave of forced displacement. 

    Cholera outbreak

    Meanwhile, in the southern province of Tanganyika, a rapidly escalating cholera outbreak is placing thousands at risk. 

    As of Wednesday, nine out of 11 health zones in the province are affected, with more than 1,450 confirmed cases and 27 deaths reported since January – a six-fold increase compared to the same period last year.

    UN health partners point to severely limited access to safe water – with less than 20 per cent coverage in affected areas – and insufficient healthcare capacity to manage cases effectively. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Activities of Secretary-General in Bangladesh, 13-16 March

    Source: United Nations 4

    The Secretary-General arrived in Dhaka, Bangladesh on the afternoon of 13 March.

    That evening, he had an internal meeting with his delegation.

    The next morning, he met with Foreign Adviser, Md. Touhid Hossain and the High Representative for Rohingya Crisis, Khalilur Rahman at his hotel.

    He then met with the Chief Adviser, Professor Muhammad Yunus in his office.

    The Secretary-General expressed appreciation for the close cooperation between the United Nations and Bangladesh, including its contributions to peacekeeping.  The Secretary-General and the Chief Adviser discussed the situation of the Rohingya and Bangladesh’s domestic issues.  The Secretary-General also expressed his solidarity with Bangladesh’s reform and transition process.  The Secretary-General and Mr. Yunus then travelled together to Cox’s Bazar.

    In Cox’s Bazar, the Secretary-General had the chance to meet with refugees, many of them young men and women, who told him about their experiences and concerns.  He spoke to children who were grateful to be able to go to school in the camps but missed their homes in Myanmar.  He met young people who still have hope to return to their homeland, but are also worried about the impending funding cuts which would dramatically reduce their monthly food rations — from $12.50 to $6 per month.  The Secretary-General also visited a jute centre, where he had a chance to hear from women who are trying to build a livelihood inside the camps.  The Secretary-General assured every one of the people he met that he would do everything he can and to stop the funding cuts, and he apologized to them because the UN and the international community have not been able to stop the conflict in Myanmar. 

    He later had a press encounter in which he said that he had heard two clear messages:  First, Rohingyas want to go back to Myanmar; and second, they want better conditions in the camps.

    And at sunset, the Secretary-General and Mr. Yunus shared an Iftar with some 60,000 refugees.  The Secretary-General told them that sharing an Iftar with them is a symbol of his deep respect for their religion and their culture.  He also said that we are facing a deep humanitarian crisis with the announced funding cuts, and he lamented that as a result, many people will suffer and some people might die.  “My voice will not end until the international community understands that they have the obligation to invest now in the Rohingya refugees,” he told them.  (See Press Release SG/SM/22587.)

    That evening, the Secretary-General and Mr. Yunus travelled back together to Dhaka.

    The next morning, the Secretary-General took part in the opening of the new UN Common Premises.  He then met with the UN country team.  This was followed by a meeting with all the staff in Dhaka.

    In the afternoon, he went back to his hotel where he met with members of the Reform Commissions.  This was followed by a meeting with youth.  He then had a short meeting with Chief of Army Staff General Walker-Uz-Zaman, and then with members of civil society.

    In the evening, he held a joint press briefing with the Foreign Adviser.  This was followed by an Iftar hosted by Chief Adviser Yunus.

    The Secretary-General then gave a short interview to the RTP journalists who accompanied him on the visit.

    The Secretary-General left Dhaka on Sunday morning, 16 March.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: World News in Brief: Israeli military escalation in Syria, Nicaragua rights probe, South Sudan talks

    Source: United Nations 2

    Peace and Security

    The UN Special Envoy for Syria has condemned the repeated and intensifying military escalations by Israel in the country, including airstrikes that have caused civilian casualties.

    Such actions undermine efforts to build a new Syria at peace with itself and the region, and destabilize Syria at a sensitive time,” Geir Pedersen said on Thursday in a statement.

    He called on Israel to cease these attacks which could amount to serious violations of international law, to respect Syria’s sovereignty and existing agreements, and to cease unilateral actions on the ground.

    The Special Envoy urged all parties to prioritize diplomatic solutions and dialogue to address security concerns and prevent further escalation.

    Nicaragua: Rights report names 54 officials for alleged violations    

    Top independent experts reporting to the Human Rights Council on Thursday named dozens of Nicaraguan officials who they say are responsible for grave violations, abuses and crimes.

    The Group of Human Rights Experts on Nicaragua was established by the Council following the deadly suppression of protests in 2018 against President Daniel Ortega, who is serving his fourth term, currently with his co-president and wife Rosario Murillo.

    The experts – who are not UN staff – have previously alleged that the Central American country has become an authoritarian State by means of a “tightly coordinated system of repression”, from the President down to local officials.

    On 27 February, one day before the Group presented its latest report, Nicaragua announced its withdrawal from the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

    The independent experts maintain that 54 government, military and party officials played key roles in rights violations including arbitrary detention, torture, extrajudicial executions and persecution of civil society and the media.

    The investigators have previously accused the Nicaraguan authorities of “widespread and systematic” repression and “weaponizing” every branch of government to strengthen their grip on power.

    These are not random or isolated incidents – they are part of a deliberate and well-orchestrated State policy carried out by identifiable actors through defined chains of command,” said Ariela Peralta, one of the three experts. 

    The list of names has been shared with the Nicaraguan government, which has previously rejected allegations of rights abuses and refuses to cooperate with the experts.

    South Sudan talks aim to avert further escalation

    High-level talks are underway in South Sudan to try and prevent further escalation between forces aligned with the two main parties to the 2018 peace deal, the UN reported on Thursday.

    Meetings are being held in the capital, Juba, between South Sudan’s political leaders and regional Heads of States as well as the African Union Panel of the Wise, comprising highly respected personalities who have contributed to peace, security and development on the continent.

    During a discussion with the Panel, the Head of the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), Nicholas Haysom, stressed the importance of urgent collective engagement by regional and international partners to help end the hostilities, prevent a relapse into widespread violence and secure a return to the peace agreement.

    He also highlighted the need for political detainees to be released and for new measures to build trust and confidence between the parties.

    South Sudan is the world’s youngest country, having gained independence from neighbouring Sudan in July 2011. Conflict broke out in December 2013 between troops loyal to President Salva Kiir and opposition forces led by his rival Riek Machar, leaving hundreds of thousands dead.

    The 2018 peace agreement ended the fighting, but the current crisis threatens to tip the country back into civil war.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Gaza: UN rights chief calls for probe into killings of medical workers

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Peace and Security

    The recent killings of 15 medical personnel and humanitarian aid workers in Gaza raise further concerns over the commission of war crimes by the Israeli military, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights told the Security Council on Thursday. 

    Volker Türk said he was pained to brief the Council once again on the “catastrophic suffering” of people in the enclave, noting that “the temporary relief of the ceasefire, which gave Palestinians a moment to breathe, has been shattered.” 

    He reported that since 1 March, Israeli military operations have killed more than 1,200 Palestinians, including at least 320 children, according to the Gaza health authorities.

    Call for investigation

    Mr. Türk said he was appalled by the killing of the medical and humanitarian personnel. 

    “There must be an independent, prompt and thorough investigation into the killings, and those responsible for any violation of international law must be held to account,” he said.

    He highlighted that there is nowhere safe to go in Gaza amid ongoing bombardment. Furthermore, half of the territory is now under mandatory evacuation orders or has been declared a no-go zone.

    At the same time, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups continue to launch indiscriminate rockets from Gaza into Israel, in breach of international humanitarian law. 

    “I am also deeply concerned about the fate and well-being of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza,” he said.

    Humanitarian aid blockade

    Meanwhile, a month has passed since Israel imposed a complete blockade on vital humanitarian aid and supplies entering Gaza, including food, water, electricity, fuel and medicines. 

    “The blockade and siege imposed on Gaza amount to collective punishment and may also amount to the use of starvation as a method of war,” he said.

    The UN rights chief was alarmed by the inflammatory rhetoric by senior Israeli officials around seizing, annexing and dividing territory, and about transferring Palestinians outside Gaza.

    “This raises grave concerns about the commission of international crimes and runs counter to the fundamental principle of international law against the acquisition of territory by force,” he said.

    West Bank violence

    Mr. Türk also addressed the “extremely alarming” situation in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, where Israeli operations have killed hundreds, destroyed entire refugee camps and displaced over 40,000 Palestinians.

    “Illegal settlement expansion continues unabated as some Israeli ministers advocate for Israeli sovereignty in the occupied territory,” he added.

    The High Commissioner urged the immediate restoration of the ceasefire and unimpeded humanitarian access throughout Gaza.

    He stressed that “nothing can justify the horrific attacks committed against Israeli communities on 7 October 2023. And nothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”

    More to follow on this story… 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: After Winning an Oscar for No Other Land, Palestinian Filmmakers Returned Home to ‘Same Reality’ of Occupation, Violence, Palestinian Rights Committee Hears

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Speakers Discuss Growing Collusion Between Israeli Settlers, State Apparatus

    After winning the Oscar for No Other Land, the film’s Palestinian co-directors returned to occupation and violence, the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People heard today in a meeting where several speakers drew attention to the increasing collusion between Israeli settlers and the State apparatus.

    Basel Adra, one of the three co-directors of No Other Land, said he grew up seeing bulldozers entering Palestinian communities and destroying homes.  But this was so routine that journalists were not interested in covering it.  So, as a teenager, he started carrying a camera and filming because he wanted the world to see what it was like to live under brutal occupation. 

    Five years ago, he started working on the documentary with friends, he said, adding that the movie succeeded beyond expectations.  “But even after winning the Oscar, we went back to the same reality,” he observed.  He detailed many harrowing stories of violence, destruction and arbitrary detention.  Three weeks after the Oscars, settlers attacked a mosque in the village of one of his co-directors, Hamdan Ballal.  About 20 settlers started vandalizing the village.  Hamdan tried to protect his family by locking the door of his house and standing outside, but two soldiers started beating him, and then abducted him and two other Palestinians to a military base.  He spent 20 hours in the base, handcuffed and blindfolded while soldiers mistreated him — when he was brought to interrogation, he was accused of attacking the settler and only after he paid a fine was he able to leave and get medical treatment.

    Detailing several such stories of violence, destruction and detention, Mr. Adra said it is Israeli State policy to enable radical right-wing terrorist settlers.  The soldiers and police provide not only impunity but also support to settlers attacking communities in the West Bank.  He also highlighted an Israeli court decision to designate the area of Masafer Yatta, which contains several Palestinian villages, as a “firing zone” for the Israeli military to do military exercises.  The struggle against the occupation is something he inherited from his father and grandfather, he said, hoping that his daughter will be able to live without the weight of occupation.

    Events in Masafer Yatta Village in West Bank Part of Larger Policy to Create Settler Regime

    What is happening in Masafer Yatta is part of a larger policy of creating a “settler regime”, Netta Amar-Shiff, human rights lawyer, speaking via video, said.  The village of Jinba in Masaffer Yatta that was attacked repeatedly last week was long a vital economic and cultural centre, she said.  She also detailed a court case in which Palestinians presented the history of Masafer Yatta and requested that its designation as a “firing zone” be overturned.  Sharing some of the historical evidence presented to the court, she showed an 1879 Palestine Exploration Fund Map as well as pages from a book about the Hebron Hill cave dwellers.  The book details an archaeological study of the region, including the discovery of ancient grain containers called ”suma’a” — the author concludes that their presence is a signal of historic permanent residency.  Regardless, the court dismissed all these findings. 

    Masafer Yatta has been a target of extensive settlement activities since 7 October 2023, she said.  But “this is not the same military we know from before 7 October,” she said, adding that while settler violence has long been linked with Israel’s expansion, now armed settlers have been formally incorporated into the regular military forces — they receive drones, vehicles, arms and technology.  Human rights lawyers such as her are fast running out of solutions as judicial remedies disappear, she said, adding that an immediate international intervention is crucial.  From her Mizrahi Jewish perspective, she said, “it is not just a necessity to end the conflict, it is an honour and a blessing.”

    Humanitarian Workers, More Aid Cannot Resolve Conflict; Solution Is Political

    The Committee also heard from Younis Khatib, President of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, who recalled how his organization used to have a training centre in Masafer Yatta to train young Palestinians until six years ago when the Israeli army prevented the Red Crescent from reaching that area.  Recently, the Israeli Defence Minister, Israel Katz, said that the West Bank is the heart of Israel, he said, adding that what is happening right now in Masafer Yatta is part of the larger Israeli plan for the West Bank.  Most Palestinian cities in the West Bank are totally controlled by Israel.

    “There will be more and more evictions if the international community allows it,” he said, asking how the two-State solution can be implemented if one side does not believe that the other side should be able to exercise their rights as human beings.  He also highlighted the dehumanization of Palestinians, noting that pre-fab building materials for temporary housing in Gaza had to be negotiated in the recent ceasefire agreement.  Denying Palestinians a dignified life is intentional — from day one, the objective was to push the Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip.  “This is a continuation of 1948,” he said. 

    This cannot be solved with more humanitarian aid to the West Bank and Gaza, he said, stressing that the resolution is political.  “Don’t expect that humanitarians will do your job,” he stressed.  It is the responsibility of the United Nations and the international community to stop the killing of aid workers.  Referring to the aid workers — including the eight staff from his organization — who were killed and buried in a mass grave in Rafah, the bodies discovered a few days ago, he said:  “We don’t train our paramedics to risk their lives; we train them to save lives.”  The war in Gaza has been the conflict with the largest number of killed aid workers.  “Khalas, stop counting for God’s sake,” he said, underscoring that these are not numbers, but lives.  These are colleagues, friends and sons, he said, adding:  “The souls of our colleagues ask for justice.”

    No Other Land Brings to Life How Land Is at Heart of Illegal Occupation 

    James Turpin, Chief of the Prevention and Sustaining Peace Section of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, said the documentary film, No Other Land, brings to life, in a compelling and accessible way, what the UN has documented in countless reports.  Land is at the heart of the occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, he said, detailing how Israel’s settlement policy is eroding Palestinian rights.  Israel continues to transfer its civilian population to East Jerusalem — there are now around 737,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank, and almost a third of them are in East Jerusalem alone.  Steps are regularly taken to accelerate construction of additional housing units.  “This is accompanied by demolition of Palestinian properties and structures — mostly under the pretext of lacking building permits, which are almost impossible for Palestinians to obtain,” he pointed out. 

    Israel also undertakes the illegal appropriation of occupied land for Israeli settlements through declarations of “State land”, and the establishment of military zones (as seen in No Other Land), nature reserves, and cultural and archaeological sites.  Livelihoods centred around olive production are particularly targeted by Israeli State and settler violence, he said, adding that “many Palestinian farmers are unable to harvest their trees due to violence and movement restrictions”.  Israel’s provision of services for settlers in settlements and outposts institutionalizes control of the Occupied Palestinian Territory.  “The line between settler and State violence has blurred to a vanishing point, further enabling violence and impunity,” he said.

    But “while there may be obfuscation on the ground”, international law is very clear, he said, stressing that Israel’s unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory must end, as affirmed by the International Court of Justice. 

    Return to Ceasefire Key for Implementing Arab Plan for Gaza’s Reconstruction 

    Riyad Mansour, Permanent Observer of the State of Palestine, also briefed the Committee, noting that he just came from a meeting with the Group of Friends of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), stressed the indispensable role of that Agency.  The group was formed when the Israeli Government started unleashing its campaign against UNRWA.  There is tremendous frustration in the international community, from the Arab Group to European countries, that the Israeli authorities broke the ceasefire, he said.  Highlighting the Arab plan for reconstruction of Gaza, he said that the first stage of the plan is to build temporary housing in the Gaza Strip.  In order to make that happen, “we need this ceasefire to be put back in place,” he underscored.

    Early next month, a meeting will take place in Egypt to move the Plan forward, he said, also noting the conference to be held in New York in June, co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France, towards creating conditions conducive to the implementation of a two-State solution.  Ending the illegal Israeli occupation is crucial for that, he said.  His delegation will continue its “political offensive” in the General Assembly in order to take actions on the decisions that will be taken in Cairo and New York.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: New Permanent Representative of Angola Presents Credentials to the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    Ana Maria de Oliveira, the new Permanent Representative of Angola to the United Nations Office at Geneva, today presented her credentials to Tatiana Valovaya, the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    Prior to her appointment to Geneva, Ms. de Oliveira had been serving as Permanent Delegate of Angola to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization since 2020.  Before that, she held a variety of posts, including as Consultant to the President (2018 to 2020); Deputy in the National Assembly (1992 to 2012); Minister of Culture (1994 to 1999); General Commissioner at Expo98 in Lisbon (1998); and Vice Minister of Culture (1993 to 1994).

    Ms. de Oliveira has represented Angola in numerous United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization conferences and various international initiatives.

    She holds a degree in anthropology from the Nova University in Lisbon, Portugal, and a diploma in African religions from the Catholic University of Lisbon.  She is in the process of obtaining a doctorate from Western Cape University in South Africa and has trained as a social educator at the Institute of Education and Social Services in Pio XII Luanda.  Ms. de Oliveira has also published several anthropological and cultural works and is a member of a number of anthropological associations.

     

    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the media; 
    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

     

    CR25.015E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: New Permanent Representative of Ukraine Presents Credentials to the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva

    Source: United Nations – Geneva

    Yevhenii Tsymbaliuk, the new Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations Office at Geneva, today presented his credentials to Tatiana Valovaya, the Director-General of the United Nations Office at Geneva.

    Prior to his appointment to Geneva, Mr. Tsymbaliuk served as Special Envoy of Ukraine to the International Atomic Energy Agency since August 2024, and as Ambassador-at-Large on Human Rights, Gender Equality and Diversity for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine since January 2024.

    Mr. Tsymbaliuk served as Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the International Organizations in Vienna from July 2019 to December 2023.  From April 2015 to June 2018, he served as Ambassador of Ukraine to Kenya, concurrently serving as non-resident Ambassador to the Union of the Comoros, and as Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations Environment Programme and to the United Nations Human Settlements Programme from October 2015 to June 2018.  He also served as non-resident Ambassador to Rwanda from December 2015 to June 2018, and Tanzania from June 2015 to June 2018.

    He has also held high-level domestic roles within the Ukrainian Government, including as Deputy Director-General of the Department for International Organizations of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (2019); First Deputy Head of the Directorate of Strategic Planning and Operational Support of the Administration of the President (2018-2019); and Deputy Director-General of the Secretariat of the Minister for Foreign Affairs (2012-2015).

    Mr. Tsymbaliuk obtained a master’s degree in history at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, where he also completed studies in English and German, and gained a second master’s degree in German language education at the Kyiv National Linguistic University.  Born on 30 May 1972 in Magdeburg, Germany, he is fluent in English and German, and is married and has one daughter.

    _______________

    Produced by the United Nations Information Service in Geneva for use of the media; 
    not an official record. English and French versions of our releases are different as they are the product of two separate coverage teams that work independently.

     

    CR25.014E

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Efforts to Address Root Causes of Conflict, Mitigate Impact of Climate Change’ in West Africa, Sahel Must Be Supported, Senior Official Tells Security Council

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Preserving a regional framework for cooperation on peace and security remains critical in West Africa and the Sahel, where military takeovers, undemocratic governance, terrorism, poverty and climate change continue to pose serious challenges, speakers told the Security Council today.

    “Eighty years after its creation, the United Nations remains more critical than ever,” said Leonardo Santos Simão, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and Sahel (UNOWAS), highlighting the need for collective efforts to address the region’s persistent and multifaceted challenges.

    Today’s meeting, during which the Special Representative provided an overview of the situation in the region and the activities of his Office (document S/2025/187), comes as Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger — following military takeovers — withdraw from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and establish the Alliance of Sahel States as a collective defence mechanism.

    Mr. Simão reported that their separation took effect on 29 January with a transition period set by ECOWAS until the end of July.  While the Alliance of Sahel States is deepening internal cooperation, he said he was encouraged to see both sides aiming to maintain the benefits of regional integration, especially freedom of movement.  “As ECOWAS celebrates its 50-year anniversary, it remains a key model for political and economic regional integration,” he emphasized.

    Turning to other pressing issues, he said that Côte d’Ivoire’s presidential election in October 2025 raises concerns about inclusivity, given the memories of the 2010/11 electoral crisis and the violence encountered in the 2020 polls.  In Guinea-Bissau, profound disagreements over the end of the current presidential term, the timing of the 2025 elections and the legitimacy of State institutions pose serious risks for a peaceful process.

    Also concerning is the continued decline in resources for humanitarian assistance to populations affected by terrorism and climate change, with no signs of stabilizing or reversing. “Efforts to address the root causes of conflict and mitigate the impact of climate change should be supported,” he insisted.

    Today’s meeting also focused on the rights of women amid those challenges.  Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi, Founding Director of the Women Advocates Research and Documentation Center, said that West Africa, which accounts for 5.67 per cent of the world’s population, “has suffered military rule, undemocratic Governments, wars and conflicts, putting the enjoyment of rights and women in contestation”.

    She said that women and girls in West Africa have a 58 per cent chance of not being enrolled in secondary school, a 20 per cent chance of starting childbearing as a teenager and can expect to earn less than their male counterparts, regardless of the sector in which they work.  “Gender equality remains unfinished business,” she pointed out, noting that many African traditional communities still conceive the duty of a woman to be primarily that of childbearing and rearing.

    She therefore recommended, among other measures, that States amend or repeal discriminatory laws, particularly in areas of nationality, marriage and inheritance and implement programmes that address barriers to girls’ education, such as child marriage and teenage pregnancy. States should also develop policies that enhance women’s access to financial services, land ownership and employment opportunities, ensuring equal pay and safe working conditions.

    She noted that all West African countries are signatories of the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa, the African Youth Charter and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child.  These commitments provide more opportunities for women to participate in decision-making, peacebuilding and politics.  “The time is now,” she stressed.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: ‘Together, We Can Demonstrate That Multilateralism Can Deliver’, Secretary-General Underlines, in Message to Club de Madrid

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    Following is the text of UN Secretary‑General António Guterres’ video message to the Club de Madrid Annual Policy Dialogue, in Nairobi today:

    Excellencies, dear friends, the resolve to advance a better world won’t get very far without resources.  And so, I applaud the Club de Madrid for focussing this policy dialogue on the crucial issue of financing for sustainable development.

    Our world groans with injustices.  Gaping inequalities, developing countries locked-out of the energy revolution, and the Sustainable Development Goals woefully off track.

    These problems erode trust and foment frustration.  And finance is at their heart.

    Debt crises, painful repayment schedules and soaring capital costs are enormous obstacles to investing in people.

    But last year, countries took a critical step forward.  They agreed to the Pact for the Future.

    This calls for reforms of the multilateral development banks to make them bigger and bolder so they can facilitate greater investment and leverage far more private finance.

    It demands steps to improve access to concessional finance for developing countries.  It urges action to assist countries drowning in debt service and an overhaul of the debt architecture.  And it calls for greater voice and representation of developing countries in the institutions of global governance.

    The Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Sevilla in June will be a critical opportunity to turn ambitions into action.  I urge you to help make that a reality.

    Yes, the international landscape is undeniably tough. But together, we can demonstrate that multilateralism can deliver.

    We can create a more just and effective financial architecture. And we can make sure our resolve for sustainable development is matched by resources.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UN envoy urges international support for West Africa and the Sahel

    Source: United Nations 4

    Peace and Security

    In a briefing to the Security Council on Thursday, the UN Special Representative for West Africa and the Sahel painted a mixed picture of the region, which is facing a growing terrorist threat but also political progress and encouraging initiatives. 

    Leonardo Santos Simão highlighted the scale of the crisis affecting parts of the Sahel, where terrorist groups continue to wreak havoc, particularly in the Lake Chad Basin comprising Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.

    Mr. Simão, who heads the UN Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), witnessed the impact during a recent visit to the town of Bama in northeast Nigeria, home to some 300,000 people.

    “Today, Bama has been devastated by Boko Haram, and it hosts vast camps of IDPs (internally displaced persons), including a school complex with some 100,000 displaced people,” he said, speaking via videoconference from Dakar, Senegal. 

    Security the top concern

    He told ambassadors that stakeholders have stressed the need for continued diplomatic efforts and financial support to maintain the Joint Multinational Force (JMF), the only fully operational security entity in the region.

    The force comprises five nations – Chad, Cameroon, Nigeria, Niger, and Benin – however, Niger recently announced its withdrawal. 

    “This announcement comes at a time when security is the main concern for the region, even though significant investments in military resources and cross border cooperation have been able to strengthen state authority in some parts of the central Sahel,” he said.

    The envoy welcomed the emergence of new structures such as the anti-jihadist Joint Force, created last year by the Alliance of Sahel States, formed by Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. 

    The force “contributes to stability and offers a context that is suitable to strengthening the state’s presence,” he said. 

    Fragile political progress

    Amid a context marked by tensions, some countries are taking steps to return to a semblance of normalcy. 

    “Mali has launched a disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) process, aiming to demobilize 3,000 former combatants, with 2,000 joining the Armed Forces,” he said.

    Other nations, such as Guinea, where elections are expected by the end of the year, as well as Burkina Faso, where authorities said they control more than 70 per cent of the country, are attempting to restore stable governance through national consultations. 

    Mauritania’s President also has started a national dialogue with opposition parties. Meanwhile in The Gambia, a recent meeting between President Adama Barrow and opposition leader Ousainou Darboe, raised hopes that the country is heading towards the adoption of a new Constitution, consistent with its commitment to democratic reform. 

    Mr. Simão also focused on other pressing issues.

    He said Côte d’Ivoire’s presidential election in October raises concerns about inclusivity, given the memories of previous electoral crises. Furthermore, in Guinea-Bissau “profound disagreements over the end of the current presidential term, the timing of 2025 elections, and legitimacy of state institutions pose serious risks for a peaceful process. “

    Civilians on the front line

    Meanwhile, civilians continue to bear the brunt of ongoing conflicts. 

    “I am concerned by reports of unarmed civilians being targeted in the fight against terrorism, which undermines the rule of law and counteracts efforts to combat violent extremism,” he said. 

    “Reports of human rights violations, including the silencing of activists, journalists and political leaders, persist,” he added.

    Mr. Simão noted that thousands of schools remain closed due to insecurity, thus hindering development for young people. In this regard, he said UNOWAS will continue to advocate for the implementation of Security Council resolution 2601 (2021) on the protection of education in conflict.

    Economic pressures are only exacerbating the situation in the region, with high inflation, increased debt and climate shocks reducing governments’ ability to invest in services and essential infrastructure. 

    “To beef up long-term resilience, comprehensive approaches are required and partnerships that prioritize macroeconomic stability and inclusive growth, as well as more robust economic governance,” he said.

    Supporting women and youth 

    Mr. Simão also updated on efforts toward empowerment of women and young people. 

    “An increasing number of countries have also adopted laws to promote women’s participation in politics and decision-making,” he said, citing Senegal and Ghana as examples. 

    He acknowledged, however, that implementation of national action plans “remains quite slow in many countries.”

    Reasons for hope

    While the situation in the region remains fragile, signs of calm are emerging. For example, he said Cameroon and Nigeria have reaffirmed commitment to resolving the remaining points of disagreement over their shared border.

    Mr. Simão reiterated the importance of collective commitment to address the crises affecting West Africa and the Sahel. 

    “Eighty years after its creation, the United Nations remains more vital than ever,” he said, calling on the international community to unite to serve the people of the region. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: World Must ‘Act to Stem Tide of Hate Speech, Stop Disunity, Discontent Mutating into Violence’, Says Secretary-General, in Rwanda Genocide Observance Message

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Following is UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ message for the International Day of Reflection on the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, observed on 7 April:

    Today, we mourn the 1 million children, women and men slaughtered in the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda.

    This appalling chapter in human history was not a spontaneous frenzy of horrendous violence.  It was intentional, premeditated and planned — including through hate speech that inflamed division, and spread lies and dehumanization.  The overwhelming majority of victims were Tutsi, but also Hutu and others who opposed the genocide.

    As we recall how these crimes came about, we must also reflect on resonance with our own times.

    These are days of division.  The narrative of “us” versus “them” is ascendant, polarizing societies.  Digital technologies are being weaponized to further inflame hate, stoke division and spread lies.

    We must learn from the terrible history of the genocide in Rwanda, and act to stem the tide of hate speech, stop disunity and discontent mutating into violence, uphold human rights and ensure accountability.

    I urge all States to deliver on commitments made in the Global Digital Compact to tackle online falsehoods and hate, to comply with their obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law and to become parties to the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide without delay.

    On this day of remembrance, let’s commit to be vigilant and to work together to build a world of justice and dignity for all — in honour of all the victims and survivors of the genocide in Rwanda.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Myanmar: UN chief calls for urgent access as quake toll mounts

    Source: United Nations 2

    By Vibhu Mishra

    Humanitarian Aid

    The UN chief on Thursday called for immediate and unrestricted humanitarian access to Myanmar, where last week’s devastating earthquakes claimed over 3,000 lives and left millions in urgent need of aid.

    Speaking to reporters at UN Headquarters in New York, Secretary-General António Guterres warned that the earthquake has “supercharged the suffering”.

    Myanmar today is the scene of utter devastation and desperation,” he said.

    He emphasised that even before the disaster, the country was grappling with political turmoil, human rights abuses and a worsening humanitarian situation.

    “We need rapid action on several fronts,” he said.

    Millions in desperate need

    According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), more than 17 million people have been affected by the earthquakes, with nearly nine million experiencing the highest level of devastation.

    Over 370 people remain missing, while thousands of others are injured. Telecommunications, power, and water supply systems have collapsed in the hardest-hit regions, leaving survivors without basic necessities and humanitarians struggling to reach them.

    Road access between Yangon and central Myanmar requires detours, delaying aid deliveries, while commercial flights to Mandalay remain suspended.  

    The hardest-hit areas remain without electricity and water, while telecommunications and internet access are severely disrupted, cutting off affected communities from essential services,” OCHA said in a flash update.

    Meanwhile, entire families, including children, are sleeping in the open due to fears of aftershocks or because their homes have been destroyed.

    Makeshift shelters are overcrowded and lack security and privacy, increasing the risk of sexual- and gender-based violence, UN agencies warn, calling for urgent measures to ensure safety and dignity of women and girls.

    UN mobilizing support

    Mr. Guterres announced that he is dispatching UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher to Myanmar to oversee relief operations.

    “He will be on the ground tomorrow,” Mr. Guterres said, adding that Special Envoy Julie Bishop will visit Myanmar in the coming days to reinforce the UN’s commitment to peace and dialogue.

    The UN has also allocated $5 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) for immediate aid, while the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS) has mobilized $12 million for food, shelter, water, sanitation, debris removal and healthcare.

    However, these funds fall far short of what is needed.

    I appeal to the international community to immediately step up vitally needed funding to match the scale of this crisis,” Mr. Guterres said.

    © UNICEF/Nyan Zay Hte

    A boy, with his sister beside him, sits on a piece of a collapsed wall of community hall in Mandalay. Thousands of families have lost their homes in the city in the aftermath of the earthquakes.

    Call for unhindered access

    One of the biggest obstacles to relief efforts is the ongoing conflict in Myanmar. The country has been in turmoil since the military overthrew the democratically elected government in 2021, leading to widespread violence and displacement.

    While Myanmar’s military and armed opposition groups have announced temporary ceasefires to facilitate aid deliveries, Mr. Guterres stressed that these must translate into lasting peace.

    “I appeal for rapid, safe, sustained and unimpeded humanitarian access to reach those most in need across the country,” he said, calling on all parties to uphold their obligations to protect civilians.

    Monsoon risks

    As humanitarian operations scale up, UN agencies have warned that time is running out. Initial assessments indicate that more than 76 per cent of those surveyed have yet to receive any assistance.

    With the monsoon season approaching, the risk of disease outbreaks and further displacement looms large.

    Return to democracy

    Beyond immediate relief efforts, Mr. Guterres called for the earthquake response to serve as a turning point for Myanmar.

    He called for the current tragic moment to become an opportunity for the people of Myanmar, appealing for a political process that includes an end to violence, the release of political prisoners and a pathway to democracy.

    As communities across Myanmar unite in grief, it is also time to unite behind a political solution to end the brutal conflict,” Mr. Guterres said.

    In addition to restoring democracy, he stressed the need for a comprehensive solution that includes the safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainable return of Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh.

    The United Nations will keep pushing for peace and lifesaving support for the people of Myanmar in their hour of need.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s press encounter – on Myanmar Earthquake

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Last week’s earthquake in Southeast Asia hit the region hard – in places like Thailand and elsewhere. 

    But especially in the epicentre of Myanmar. 

    Myanmar today is the scene of utter devastation and desperation. 

    The death toll is now 3,000 and climbing – with thousands injured, and many trapped under the rubble.

    This disaster has laid bare the deeper vulnerabilities facing people throughout the country. 

    Even before the earthquake, Myanmar was beset by political, human rights and humanitarian crises – hurting people, spilling over to neighbouring countries and the wider region, and opening the door to transnational crime.

    Nearly 20 million people — or one in every three in Myanmar — required already humanitarian aid. 

    Millions had already fled their homes from conflict and violence.

    The earthquake has supercharged the suffering – with the monsoon season just around the corner.

    We need rapid action on several fronts.

    I am announcing today that I am sending our Emergency Relief Coordinator, Tom Fletcher, to Myanmar.  He will be on the ground tomorrow.

    I am also sending my Special Envoy, Julie Bishop, to visit the country in the coming days to reinforce our commitment to peace and dialogue. 

    I appeal, in particular, to the international community to immediately step up vitally needed funding to match the scale of this crisis. 

    I appeal for rapid, safe, sustained and unimpeded humanitarian access to reach those most in need across the country.

    And I appeal for every effort to transform this tragic moment into an opportunity for the people of Myanmar.

    I welcome the announcements of temporary ceasefires. 

    This is essential to help aid flow and let rescuers do their jobs.

    But an end of fighting must quickly lead to a beginning of a serious political dialogue and the release of political prisoners.

    Specifically, an inclusive political process where all the people of Myanmar feel represented.

    As communities across Myanmar unite in grief, it’s also time to unite behind a political solution to end the brutal conflict.

    This solution must include a pathway for the safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainable return of the Rohingya from Bangladesh, whom I had the honour of visiting last month in Cox’s Bazar.

    It must include an end to the violence and human rights violations across the country and a pathway for democracy to take root.

    Now is the time to stand in solidarity with the long-suffering people of Myanmar. 

    The United Nations will keep pushing for peace and lifesaving support for the people of Myanmar in their hour of need. 

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: KOICA and WFP partner to strengthen communities and tackle hunger in Guinea

    Source: World Food Programme

    CONAKRY, Guinea – The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) welcomes a US$4 million contribution from the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) to develop a rice value chain, enabling communities to access nutritious food, become self-sufficient and resilient to weather-related shocks in Guinea.

    KOICA’s funds will strengthen livelihoods of smallholder farmers through agricultural support, access to markets, and creation of community assets for food production and social cohesion. The funds will also support locally sourced school meals, provide nutritional support to malnourished children and pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers, while strengthening the capacity of national actors in the rice value chain. 

    “This partnership with KOICA is a game-changer for communities in Guinea” said Hyoung-Joon Lim, WFP Country Director for Guinea. “More children are enrolling in schools to get nutritious school meals, vulnerable communities have improved access to nutrition services, and households are building sustainable livelihoods through increased rice production and income-generating activities.”

    With a population of 14 million, the Republic of Guinea faces significant challenges despite its abundant agricultural potential and mineral wealth. Nearly one in three households – 35.8 per cent of the population – faces moderate food insecurity, while about 4.8 million people (34 percent) have limited access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food. Although agriculture is a major source of income for rural communities, the country remains heavily dependent on food imports.

    Since 2023, KOICA funds have enabled WFP to scale up the Zero Hunger Village (ZHV) project, an integrated initiative that aims to make local communities self-sufficient in Guinea. In each Zero Hunger Village, WFP supports school feeding, nutrition, capacity building, and market access using an innovative and sustainable approach that fosters community self-reliance even after WFP’s exit. One of the key successes of the project is the introduction of the high-yielding, and short-cycle rice variety “Tong-il G”, with high yield and adaptability to the local climate compared to local rice varieties. 

    “We are very pleased to see that the use of Korean Tong-il G rice seeds is contributing to increased agricultural productivity, improved children’s nutrition through school meal programmes, and enhanced educational outcomes, ultimately supporting Zero Hunger. We will continue to collaborate with WFP to achieve the project’s goal of establishing more than 500 Zero Hunger villages”, said Deputy Representative of KOICA Senegal, Yoojin Hwang, following a recent field visit in three Zero Hunger Villages sites (Farabana, Bananko, Gbodou) in Kankan region to witness the activities included in the comprehensive Zero Hunger Initiative.

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    About WFP
    The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: AI’s $4.8 trillion future: UN warns of widening digital divide without urgent action

    Source: United Nations 4

    Economic Development

    Artificial Intelligence (AI) is on course to become a $4.8 trillion global market by 2033 – roughly the size of Germany’s economy – but unless urgent action is taken, its benefits may remain in the hands of a privileged few, a new UN report warns.  

    The Technology and Innovation Report 2025, released on Thursday by the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), sounds the alarm on growing inequality in the AI landscape and lays out a roadmap for countries to harness AI’s potential. 

    The report shows that just 100 companies, mostly in the United States and China, are behind 40 per cent of the world’s private investment in research and development, highlighting a sharp concentration of power.

    At the same time, 118 countries – mostly from the Global South – are missing from global AI governance discussions altogether.

    UNCTAD Secretary-General Rebeca Grynspan underlined the importance of stronger international cooperation to shift the focus “from technology to people,” and enable countries to co-create a global artificial intelligence framework”.

    A jobs revolution

    The report estimates that up to 40 percent of global jobs could be affected by AI.  

    While the technology brings new opportunities, especially through productivity gains and new industries, it also raises serious concerns about automation and job displacement – especially in economies where low-cost labour has been a competitive advantage.

    But it’s not all bad news. UNCTAD’s experts argue that AI is not just about replacing jobs – it can also create new industries and empower workers.

    If governments invest in reskilling, upskilling and workforce adaptation, they can ensure AI enhances employment opportunities rather than eliminate them.

    © ADB/Narendra Shrestha

    Students attend a computer class at a secondary school in Kailali, Nepal.

    How to prepare?

    To avoid being left behind, developing countries need to strengthen what UNCTAD calls the “three key leverage points”: infrastructure, data and skills.

    That means investing in fast, reliable internet connections and the computing power needed to store and process vast amounts of information.

    It also means ensuring access to diverse, high-quality datasets to train AI systems in ways that are effective and fair.  

    And crucially, it requires building education systems that equip people with the digital and problem-solving skills needed to thrive in an AI-driven world.

    Not just national: A global effort

    Beyond national policies, UNCTAD calls for stronger international collaboration to guide the development of artificial intelligence.

    The report proposes establishing a shared global facility to give all countries equitable access to computing power and AI tools.

    It also recommends creating a public disclosure framework for AI, similar to existing environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards, to boost transparency and accountability.  

    “History has shown that while technological progress drives economic growth, it does not on its own ensure equitable income distribution or promote inclusive human development,” noted Ms. Grynspan, calling for people to be at the centre of the AI revolution.  

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 3 April 2025 Departmental update WHO unveils bold commitments at Nutrition for Growth Summit

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Paris, France – The World Health Organization (WHO) has announced 13 ambitious commitments across 8 key areas at the Nutrition for Growth (N4G) Summit, hosted by the Government of France. The Summit raised US$ 28 billion in global funding for nutrition – an increase from the previous milestone of US$ 27 billion in 2021. This represents positive and hopeful moment for global solidarity amidst major funding crises faced in the development aid sector. It also showcases growing commitments from countries to improve health and well-being for all through nutrition.

    Malnutrition remains a global crisis, affecting every country. In 2022, approximately 390 million adults 18 years and older worldwide were underweight, while 2.5 billion were overweight, including 890 million living with obesity. Additionally, 148 million children under 5 years suffered from stunting, and 37 million were overweight or obese. Nearly half of all deaths among children under 5 are linked to undernutrition, predominantly in low- and middle-income countries.

    WHO commitments aim to accelerate progress towards ending all forms of malnutrition and achieving the Global Nutrition Targets and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

    “Malnutrition in all its forms is one of the greatest global health challenges of our time. WHO is answering the N4G call for bold action with concrete, time-bound commitments that will drive measurable impact and accelerate progress,” said Dr Luz María De Regil, Director of the Department of Nutrition and Food Safety at WHO.

    WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus gave closing remarks, expressing gratitude to the Government of France for their leadership in organizing the summit and emphasizing that “nutrition is the foundation of health, and therefore of thriving individuals, families, communities, societies and economies … by contrast, where there is malnutrition of any form, disease follows close behind.” Dr Tedros also underscored WHO’s commitment to ensuring global access to essential nutrition services and safe, healthy and sustainable diets.

    Key WHO commitments:

    Anaemia: WHO will enhance the prevention, diagnosis and management of anaemia, building off the 2023 Accelerating anaemia reduction: a comprehensive framework for action and collaborating with UNICEF and partners of the Anaemia Action Alliance. This will include updated guidance on anaemia management in pregnancy and postpartum patients along with updated estimates on the global prevalence of anaemia in high-risk groups.

    Healthy diets: By 2027, WHO will release comprehensive guidance on optimal animal-source foods tailored to specific age, gender and country contexts. WHO will also address ultra-processed food (UPF) consumption with updated definitions and recommendations.

    Monitoring: Annual updates on country scorecards for transfatty acids, sodium and sugars will be provided through the Global database on the Implementation of Food and Nutrition Action (GIFNA). These scorecards shows country progress towards recommended policies as outlined in the WHO Best buys for preventing NCDs as well as technical packages including REPLACE and SHAKE. In addition, by 2026 WHO will develop a dashboard illustrating country progress towards SDG2.2 and the 2030 Nutrition Targets, including operational targets. 

    School nutrition: By 2030, WHO will support 10 countries in adapting the WHO Guideline on School food and nutrition policies and work with partners to ensure school food and nutrition policies are in line with existing nutrition standards.

    Sodium reduction: WHO will assist at least 10 countries in adopting global or regional sodium benchmarks and support 20 countries in implementing priority interventions for salt reduction in line with the SHAKE technical package and country scorecard indicators.

    Obesity: By 2026, WHO will publish normative guidelines on the clinical management of obesity in children, adolescents and adults and support 34 frontrunner countries of the WHO acceleration plan to stop obesity in reducing obesity prevalence by 5% by 2030. This will include developing an accountability framework to track progress towards national obesity roadmaps across health systems and food and activity environments.

    Wasting: Based on the Global Action Plan on Child Wasting: A framework for action to accelerate progress in preventing and managing child wasting (GAP) and the  WHO guideline on the prevention and management of wasting and nutritional oedema (‎acute malnutrition)‎ in infants and children under 5 years, WHO will aim to improve the prevention and treatment of wasting and nutritional oedema by developing implementation tools and supporting 25 frontrunner countries to scale up actions in collaboration with UNICEF and GAP partners.

    Climate change: By 2030, WHO will assist 40 countries to integrate nutrition and health into their climate action plans, aligning with global efforts to achieve SDG 2 (zero hunger), SDG 3 (good health and well-being), and SDG 13 (climate action). In addition, WHO will publish new guidance on sustainable procurement standards for nutritious and sustainable food in health settings with dedicated support to 20 countries. This will be accomplished through the Alliance for Transformative Action on Climate Action and Health (ATACH) in partnership with the Initiative on climate action and nutrition (I-CAN).

    These commitments reflect WHO’s dedication to tackling malnutrition and promoting health and well-being worldwide. A replay of Nutrition for Growth Summit sessions can be found here

    MIL OSI United Nations News