In progress at UNHQ

Noon Briefings


In Baghdad today, the Secretary-General noted the Arab League’s Summit is the first since the remarkable events that transformed the Arab region. He said the lessons are eloquent and clear. For decades, the people in the Arab world saw tyrannies topple and democracies emerge elsewhere. Now, they see it as their time.
The Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Guinea-Bissau, Joseph Mutaboba, briefed the Security Council on the challenging political and security environment in Guinea-Bissau. He said restoring full constitutional order is now a crucial priority. Elections were marred by the killing of the former intelligence chief. Observers were unanimous that they were free and fair.
Ahead of the Seoul Nuclear Security Summit, the Secretary-General urged the Democratic People's Republic of Korea to reconsider its declared plans to launch a satellite. He called for its full compliance with Security Council resolutions, notably the one that prohibits any launch using ballistic missile technology.
The Secretary-General arrived in Singapore from Malaysia just a couple of hours ago. Earlier in the day, he visited Kuala Lumpur's Institute of Respiratory Medicine to meet tuberculosis patients and help highlight Saturday's World Tuberculosis Day and this year's campaign to stop TB in our lifetime. He also delivered a speech at the Institute for Diplomacy and Foreign Relations
This morning the Security Council welcomed the appointment of the United Nations-League of Arab States Joint Special Envoy, and expressed its full support for the efforts of the Envoy to bring an immediate end to all violence and human rights violations, secure humanitarian access, and facilitate a Syrian-led political transition to a democratic, plural political system.
Asked today about developments in Syria, the Secretary-General called the issue his top priority. He said it was the international community’s moral and political responsibility to tackle the crisis. We have no time to waste, no time to lose; just one minute, one hour, delay will mean the death of more people, he said.