HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING






HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING

BY MARTIN NESIRKY,
SPOKESPERSON FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL BAN KI-MOON

FRIDAY,
8 APRIL 2011




SECRETARY-GENERAL TO CHAIR INTERNATIONAL
MEETING ON LIBYA NEXT WEEK


  • In an effort to coordinate the
    international response on
    , the Secretary-General
    will chair a meeting of concerned
    international and regional
    organizations to be held at the
    League of Arab States Headquarters
    in Cairo on Thursday, 14 April 2011.


  • The Secretary-General thanked the
    Secretary-General of the League of
    Arab States, Mr. Amre Moussa, for
    agreeing to provide the venue for
    the meeting. Apart from Amre Moussa,
    the leaders scheduled to participate
    in the meeting include: Jean Ping,
    Chairman of the Commission of the
    African Union; Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu,
    Secretary-General of the
    Organization of Islamic Conference;
    and Catherine Ashton, High
    Representative of the European Union
    for Foreign Affairs and Security
    Policy.


  • The objective of the meeting will be
    to exchange views and enhance
    coordination among the participating
    organizations in addressing the
    current crisis in Libya.


  • Also, next Tuesday in Doha, the
    Under-Secretary-General for
    , B. Lynn
    Pascoe, and the Secretary-General’s
    Special Envoy for Libya, Abdul Ilah
    Al-Khatib, will represent the United
    Nations at the first meeting of the
    Libya Contact Group. The delegation
    will also include representatives of
    the 山Development Programme and
    Office for the Coordination of
    Humanitarian Affairs.


  • The Libya Contact Group was
    established at the London Conference
    on Libya of 31 March 2011.




SECRETARY-GENERAL MEETS WITH ISRAELI
PRESIDENT IN NEW YORK; CONDEMNS ROCKET
FIRE FROM GAZA


  • The Secretary-General and Israeli
    President Shimon Peres
    the worrying impasse
    in the Middle East peace process and
    the urgent need for a way forward,
    in a meeting this morning.


  • The Secretary-General repeated his
    condemnation of militant rocket fire
    from Gaza, and expressed his serious
    concern about Palestinian civilian
    casualties in Israeli military
    operations. He called for maximum
    restraint.


  • The Spokesperson’s Office on
    Thursday night put out a
    in which the
    Secretary-General condemned the
    recent rocket fire from Palestinian
    militants, which hit a school bus
    and injured two Israeli civilians
    He calls for an immediate end to
    rocket fire.


  • The Secretary-General is also
    concerned at reports of civilian
    casualties from Israeli operations
    in Gaza and calls for maximum
    restraint.


  • The Secretary-General and President
    Peres also discussed the Goldstone
    report and regional developments.


U.N. RIGHTS
INVESTIGATORS FIND MORE BODIES IN
WESTERN COTE D’IVOIRE

  • On
    , the Office for
    the High Commissioner on Human
    Rights (OHCHR) says that the Human
    Rights teams investigating reports
    of killings and other human rights
    violations in the west of the
    country have found more than a
    hundred bodies over the past 24
    hours in three different towns.

  • In Duékoué, they
    saw 15 bodies, in addition to the
    229 already found and buried,
    bringing the total number to 244
    confirmed to have been killed during
    the 28-29 March incident. The human
    rights team also found around 40
    corpses in Blolequin. In Guiglo, the
    team found more than 60 corpses.

  • The Assistant
    Secretary-General for Human Rights,
    Ivan Šimonovic, met on Thursday with
    President Alassane Ouattara and two
    of his ministers and discussed at
    length the issue of the killing of
    civilians. Mr. Šimonovic also spoke
    by phone with a senior aide of
    Laurent Gbagbo.

  • Asked about
    negotiations with Laurent Gbagbo,
    the Spokesperson said that
    discussions have been going on in
    recent days. He added that he did
    not have a recent update.

  • Asked about the
    massacres in the country, Nesirky
    noted that Under-Secretary-General
    for Humanitarian Affairs Valerie
    Amos had said that there were
    differing accounts of who was
    responsible.

  • 山human rights
    teams are looking into the killings
    to determine accountability and to
    ensure that there is no impunity.
    The Secretary-General and Mr.
    Šimonovic have both raised the issue
    with President Ouattara.


CONTINUED FIGHTING
IMPEDES HUMANITARIAN ACCESS IN LIBYA

  • The Office for
    the Coordination of Humanitarian
    Affairs ()
    says that the sustained hostilities
    in Libya continue to impede
    intervention by the humanitarian
    community to deliver life-saving aid
    and evacuate stranded people. The
    United Nations continues to call for
    an immediate temporary cessation of
    hostilities to allow access for
    humanitarian assistance.

  • The
    -chartered
    vessel that was able to dock
    yesterday at the port in Misrata has
    unloaded supplies that will cover
    urgent medical needs for 50,000
    people for a month. More than 600
    metric tons of food – enough to feed
    more than 40,000 people for a month
    – is also on board the ship and will
    be distributed in the coming days.

  • Meanwhile,
    reports indicate an urgent need for
    medical supplies and personnel,
    potable water, food and other
    supplies for the people in Misrata,
    Al-Brega, Az-Zantan and surrounding
    areas.


IRAQ’S STABILITY
REMAINS UNDER PRESSURE

  • Ad Melkert, the
    Secretary-General’s Special
    Representative for
    , told the
    this morning
    that while notable progress had been
    made in Iraq in recent months, many
    challenges remain.

  • While Iraq has
    made strides in its democratic
    transition in recent years, he said,
    the people of Iraq are now demanding
    the dividends that were promised by
    their leaders. He noted the protests
    in Iraq since 25 February, which
    have brought people out onto the
    streets demanding progress in
    employment, basic services and
    accountability. Mr. Melkert said
    that Iraqi officials are taking
    these issues seriously.

  • The Special
    Representative added that Iraq’s
    stability is still under pressure.
    He noted the continued targeting of
    various communities, as well as
    terror attacks, and said that an
    average of 25 security incidents a
    day were reported over the past
    month, although the average number
    of incidents is declining.


BAN KI-MOON
ADDRESSES PLANNING SESSION FOR U.N.
HIGH-LEVEL MEETING ON HIV/AIDS

  • This morning, the
    Secretary-General
    the role that civil
    society can play to boost efforts to
    fight HIV and AIDS.

  • Speaking at a
    civil society hearing on the
    disease, he pledged to take action
    and continue to personally urge
    government officials to bring us
    closer to our ultimate goals: no new
    infections; no stigma or
    discrimination; and no AIDS-related
    deaths.

  • Today’s hearing
    is part of the preparatory process
    for the High-Level
    on HIV/AIDS, which will
    be held this June.

SOMALIA: TENS OF
THOUSANDS HAVE FLED LATEST BOUT OF
VIOLENCE

  • The 山Refugee
    Agency is
    that fighting in south
    and central Somalia has displaced
    33,000 civilians since February,
    about half of them from the capital
    Mogadishu.

  • Many of the newly
    displaced people are in desperate
    need of assistance, with temporary
    shelters in Mogadishu already
    housing another 372,000 people.

  • UNHCR says it is
    monitoring the situation in the
    affected regions, where fighting
    continues intermittently between
    government forces and Al-Shabaab
    militants. Meanwhile, the number of
    Somalis fleeing into Kenya has also
    gone up, with more than 31,000
    registered new arrivals so far this
    year.

OTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS


BAN KI-MOON SPOKE WITH YEMEN PRESIDENT
THIS WEEK:

Asked about
the situation in Yemen, the Spokesperson
noted that the Secretary-General had
with the President
of Yemen earlier this week and had,
among other things, called for maximum
restraint in dealing with demonstrations
there.



LEAKED WESTERN SAHARA
DOCUMENT NOT A FINAL REPORT:

In response to a question, the
Spokesperson reiterated that he was
aware that an internal working document
pertaining to the situation in
was leaked and
published electronically. This document
is not a final report, he said. It has
not been endorsed by the
Secretary-General and therefore has no
status.




NEW ZEALAND’S RUGBY WORLD CUP WINNING
TEAM TO VISIT U.N HEADQUARTERS:

On Monday, 11 April from 9:40 - 11:00
a.m., at the Main Gallery, Visitors’
Lobby, in the
Building, the
Permanent Mission of New Zealand - in
collaboration with the Department of
Public Information -- will have a
ceremony for the Rugby World Cup, also
the Webb Ellis Cup. To mark its trip to
the US, the cup will make stops at
various major New York City landmarks.


** The guest today at
the briefing was Edmond Mulet, Special
Representative of the Secretary-General
for Haiti and Head of the United Nations
Stabilization Mission in Haiti ().


THE WEEK AHEAD AT
THE UNITED NATIONS

9 – 15 APRIL 2011



Saturday, 9 April



There are no major events scheduled for
today.



Sunday, 10 April



Today, the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on the promotion and
protection of the right to freedom of
opinion and expression, Frank La Rue,
will begin his first visit to Algeria.
The visit will end on 17 April.



Monday, 11 April



At 10:00 a.m., the 44th
session of the Commission on Population
and Development will begin in Conference
Room 1 of the North Lawn Building (NLB).
It will run until 15 April.



This morning, the Security Council will
adopt a resolution on piracy in Somalia.
In the afternoon, it will be briefed by
the Department of Political Affairs
(DPA) in consultations.



Today, the 20th session of
the Commission on Crime Prevention and
Criminal Justice of the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) begins
in Vienna. It runs until 15 April.



At 12:00 p.m., in the Dag Hammarskjöld
Library Auditorium, Ivan Simonovic,
Assistant Secretary-General of the
Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in
New York, will be the guest at the Noon
Briefing. He will brief reporters on the
human rights situation in Côte d’Ivoire,
following his mission in the country.



At 1:15 p.m., there will be an event
entitled “Family Planning: Key to Saving
Lives” in Conference Room C of the NLB.
Participants will include Purnima Mane,
Deputy Executive Director of the United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).



Tuesday, 12 April



This morning, the Security Council will
hold a meeting with troop-contributing
countries on the United Nations Mission
for the Referendum in Western Sahara
(MINURSO). It will also hold
consultations on women and peace and
security, and 山Women.



At 1:15 p.m., in Conference Room 1 of
the NLB, there will be an event entitled
“Putting Girls First.” Participants will
include Babatunde Osotimehin, UNFPA
Executive Director.



At 3:00 p.m., the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) and the
Asian Development Bank (ADB) will hold a
panel discussion on “South-South and
Triangular Cooperation.” It will be take
place in Conference Room 6 of NLB.



Wednesday, 13 April



This morning, the Security Council will
hear a briefing on the United Nations
Operation in Côte d’Ivoire (UNOCI).



At 11:00 a.m., in Dag Hammarskjöld
Library Auditorium, there will be a
press conference with Henri Djombo,
Minister of Sustainable Development,
Forestry and Environment of the Republic
of the Congo, on the Summit of Heads of
States and Government of the Amazon,
Congo, and Borneo-Mekong Forest Basins
to be held in Brazzaville, Republic of
the Congo, from 31 May to 3rd June 2011.



At 1:15 p.m., there will be an event
entitled “No woman left behind in the
fight against NCDs: Towards health
services that address breast and
cervical cancer.” Participants will
include Purnima Mane, UNFPA Deputy
Executive Director.



Thursday, 14 April



This morning, the Security Council will
hold a meeting with troop-contributing
countries on the United Nations Mission
in Sudan (UNMIS). It will then be
briefed on and hold consultations on
sexual violence.



Friday, 15 April



This morning, the Security Council will
hold consultations on the United Nations
Mission for the Referendum in Western
Sahara (MINURSO).



Today, the United Nations Independent
Expert in the field of cultural rights,
Farida Saheed, will speak to reporters
in Vienna at the end of her 11-day visit
to Austria.



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