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HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SPOKESMAN'S NOON BRIEFING

BY STEPHANE DUJARRIC
SPOKESMAN FOR THE SECRETARY-GENERAL
UN HEADQUARTERS, 
NEW YORK

Thursday,
January 12, 2006
 

PANEL TO REVIEW
U.N. ADMINISTRATIVE JUSTICE

  • Secretary-General Kofi Annan has appointed a panel of
    external and independent experts to explore ways to redesign the system of
    administration of justice at the United Nations.
     

  • The establishment of the Redesign Panel responds to a
    request by the General Assembly.  It builds on recently announced initiatives
    such as the creation of the ethics office, the promulgation of a whistleblower
    protection policy, and the introduction of more rigorous financial disclosure
    requirements for senior officials, and is a major part of current efforts to
    strengthen accountability, increase transparency and improve management reform
    at the United Nations.
     

  • The Secretary-General has long felt that the current
    system of administrative justice has serious shortcomings, in particularly its
    slowness, and needs to be modernized and professionalized.
     

  • “The reform of the United Nations will be incomplete if
    we do not fix the internal system of justice,” the Secretary-General says.
    “Staff must have recourse to a system that is efficient and fair.”
     

  • The Panel is expected to start work by 1 February 2006
    and submit its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly by the end
    of July 2006.

SECRETARY-GENERAL URGES WORK ON
PREVENTION OF GENOCIDE

  • Fifty-five years
    ago, on this day, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
    of Genocide entered into force. Ever since, it has embodied the United
    Nation’s aspiration to prevent massive and serious violations of human rights
    and humanitarian law.
     

  • Last year, at the
    2005 World Summit, world leaders collectively affirmed the responsibility of
    each individual State to protect its population from genocide, war crimes,
    ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.  Today, as we recall our
    collective failures in places like Rwanda and Srebrenica, it remains my hope
    that we may never again be found wanting where so many lives hang in the
    balance.
     

  • That is why I

    encourage
    Member States and non-governmental organizations to work with
    the United Nations, and with my

    Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide
    , to develop the
    Organizations’ capacity to provide early warning of potential genocidal
    situations. Simultaneously, the international community's capacity for
    preventive action must be strengthened, as should its ability to take timely
    and decisive measures in the face of serious human rights violations that may
    degenerate into genocide.


SECRETARY-GENERAL AND SECURITY COUNCIL DISCUSS DARFUR

  • There are no meetings or consultations of the

    Security Council
    scheduled for today, but members are having their monthly
    lunch with the Secretary-General.
     

  • The Secretary-General is expected to discuss Darfur with
    Council members and briefed
    reporters
    on those discussions following the luncheon.

 ANNAN SPOKE WITH IRANIAN NUCLEAR
NEGOTIATOR

  • The Secretary-General spoke to the Iranian nuclear
    negotiator Ali Larijani for over 40 minutes on the latest developments.
     

  • The Secretary-General will be giving you more details
    when he speaks to you after the Council luncheon.

 U.N. ENVOY TO IRAQ CONDEMNS LATEST
VIOLENCE


  • Ashraf Qazi
    , the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for

    Iraq
    , today condemned the upsurge of violence since last month’s
    elections, notably in the cities of Baghdad and Karbala.
     

  • He said that much of the violence appears to be
    politically motivated and calculated to provoke further inter-communal strife.
    Qazi commended the calls of spiritual and community leaders, as well as of
    ordinary Iraqis, for an end to the violence.
     

  • He added that it is also important that “the formation of
    a new government proceed in an atmosphere free of intimidation.”

 U.N. MISSION
IN HAITI SAYS DEATH OF COMMANDER WAS SUICIDE

  • The

    UN Mission in Haiti
    says that suicide was the official cause of the death
    of
    Lieutenant-General Urano Teixeira Da Matta Bacellar, the late Force
    Commander for UN peacekeepers in the Caribbean nation.
     

  • That was also the conclusion of the Brazilian
    investigation.

 SOUTH AFRICA TO LEAD THE G-77  

  • Later this afternoon, we expect that South Africa will
    assume the chairmanship of the

    Group of 77
    coalition of developing nations for the coming year, replacing
    Jamaica.
     

  • The Secretary-General will speak at that handover, and he
    is to call on the Group of 77 members to redouble their efforts for an early
    agreement on a new Human Rights Council, as well as to move ahead on UN
    management reforms.
     

  • He is to say that tremendous work lies ahead, with the
    disappointing outcome of last month’s trade talks in Hong Kong illustrating
    that agreement on difficult and contentious issues does not come easily.

 MEMBER STATES ‘KICK OFF’ 2006
HUMANITARIAN FUNDING

  • As a follow-up to the Humanitarian Appeal 2006, which the
    Secretary-General launched last November, Member States

    gathered
    in Geneva today to state their humanitarian priorities as well as
    their funding intentions for 2006.
     

  • Called the “Programme Kick-off,” the event marked the
    start of the new funding cycle and highlighted the
    need for donations, so that this year’s humanitarian programmes could get up
    and running as soon as possible.
     

  • High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres, who was
    a key speaker at today’s meeting, said that humanitarian aid should not depend
    on strategic considerations or public opinion. Rather, it should be
    distributed fairly.

 GENERAL ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE PREPARES
SMALL ARMS CONFERENCE

  • A

    General Assembly
    committee meeting has been going on all this week on the
    prevention of the illicit spread of small arms.
     

  • The meeting is in preparation for a conference to be held
    in New York starting June 27th to review progress on small arms
    work, worldwide, over the past five years.
     

  • In the opening session

    Nobuyasu Abe
    , the Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs warned
    delegates that the problem is a long term one.
     

  • He

    said
    while significant progress had been made in combating the illicit
    small arms scourge, those weapons remained a massive problem, killing, maiming
    and threatening individuals daily.

U.N.
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME ISSUES REPORT ON CHINA RIVER POLLUTION

  • Last month, we told you that a
    team from the

    UN Environment Programme
    (UNEP) had gone to China following the chemical
    explosion that led to pollution of the Songhua River. 
     

  • That team’s

    report
    is now available. Among other things, it

    recommends
    that China conduct a risk assessment of a random sample of
    Chinese chemical factories in order to strengthen safety-related procedures,
    minimize the risk of accidents, and improve the handling of accidents if they
    do occur.
     

  • The report also suggests that
    China boost the coordination of local communities to reduce the risk of
    industrial accidents.
     

  • UNEP stands ready to help the
    Chinese authorities to implement the recommendations, and both the Chinese
    Government and UNEP have agreed to share the report with the relevant Russian
    authorities.

URGENT HELP NEEDED IN EAST AFRICA DROUGHT

  • The

    UN Environment Programme


    says
    urgent action is needed to overcome the drought which is spreading
    across parts of East Africa, and threatens misery for millions alongside
    livelihoods and livestock.
     

  • There are many causes of the
    drought and these range from issues of good governance to tensions and
    conflicts in water-scarce regions, but the drought also has strong links with
    ongoing environmental damage to forests, grasslands, wetlands and other
    critical ecosystems as well as global climate change.
     

  • UNEP is urging countries in the
    region to invest in and rehabilitate their “natural or nature capital” in
    order to buffer vulnerable communities against future droughts.

 U.N. DOCUMENTS TO BE PRINTED IN BRAILLE

  • The United Nations will be able
    for the first time to

    print
    material in Braille thanks to the donation of a state-of-the-art
    printer by the non-profit organization Services for the Visually Impaired, in
    collaboration with the World Blind Union.
     

  • The printer was today handed
    over to Ambassador Don MacKay of New Zealand, the Chairman of the Ad-Hoc
    Committee on a convention on the rights of persons with disabilities.
     

  • It will be immediately used at
    the seventh session of the General Assembly Ad Hoc Committee on a
    Comprehensive and Integral International Convention on Protection and
    Promotion of the Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities, which is
    meeting at the United Nations from 16 January to 3 February.

 GENERAL
ASSEMBLY MAKING PROGRESS ON HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

  • According to the

    General Assembly
    , informal consultations on the
    Human Rights Council yesterday produced encouraging results, and they
    concluded on a very positive note.
     

  • Member States -- a considerable
    number of which were represented at the Permanent or Deputy Permanent
    Representative level -- agreed that the basis for further discussions would be
    the 19 December text presented by the Co-Chairs of the consultations, of South
    Africa and Panama.
     

  • It was also agreed that several
    items in the text presented in bold face would be addressed as a priority.
    These items relate to the size and membership of the future Council, as well
    as method of adoption of country-specific resolutions.
     

  • They will now proceed to hold
    consultations with individual member states or small groups of states, and
    informal consultations of the plenary will resume subsequently, at a date to
    be determined.
     


  • General Assembly President Jan Eliasson will take part this afternoon in the
    ceremony to mark the formal handover of the chairmanship of the Group of 77
    from Jamaica to South Africa.
     

  • Asked about several proposals for the reformed Human
    Rights Council, the Spokesman said that the UN Secretariat would not comment
    on the details of those proposals or insert itself into the negotiations
    currently underway among Member States.
     

  • He noted that the
    Secretary-General had put forward his vision of the Human Rights Council in
    his In Larger Freedom report, and that heads of state and government had
    committed themselves to establishing a Council last year, with Member States
    now working on the details.

 OTHER
ANNOUNCEMENTS

MURDER OF INDIAN JOURNALIST
CONDEMNED
: The UN

Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) today

condemned
the murder last week in India of reporter Prahlad Goala. UNESCO
Director General

Koïchiro Matsuura
said, “This killing must be considered a heinous crime
against society as a whole.”  Goala’s murder follows on the publication of a
series of articles in which he linked local forestry officials to timber
smuggling.

UNITED NATIONS COOPERATING WITH INVESTIGATIONS:
Asked about the UN response to the arrest of Tongsun Park, the Spokesman said
that the UN has been cooperating, and continues to cooperate, with the U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, as it has done with a number of
law enforcement officials around the world. He added that the United Nations
would do its utmost to cooperate as requested.

  

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of the Spokesman for the Secretary-General
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