In progress at UNHQ

Noon Briefings


The UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process said today that, without a credible political path forward, accompanied by more far-reaching steps on the ground, the viability of the Palestinian Authority and its state-building agenda — and of the two-State solution itself — cannot be taken for granted.
An international meeting organized by the Food and Agriculture Organization, involving Member States and the United Nations, will be held on Monday in Rome to look at the response to the crisis in the Horn of Africa. The World Food Programme now has a revised appeal for $340 million for its response to this drought.
The World Food Programme’s Chief, Josette Sheeran, in Somalia today said the situation was a life and death one. The Programme is preparing to open up several new routes — by land and air — into the core of the famine zone. It would start airlifts into Mogadishu within days to bring vital foods to malnourished children.
The United Nations has declared a state of famine in two regions of southern Somalia. Across the country, nearly half the population is now in crisis. Some 2.8 million are in the south. The Secretary-General said if funding is not made available for humanitarian interventions now, the famine will likely spread.
The Secretary-General, addressing the third Global Review of Aid for Trade at the World Trade Organization in Geneva today, said that, at a time of tight budgets, the annual rate of increase for Aid for Trade has slowed sharply. He urged the donor community not to fall short of the present level of Aid for Trade.
In a message to the meeting of the International Contact Group on Libya, the Secretary-General appealed to the international community to support the efforts of the Special Envoy and send a unified message urging the parties to engage in direct talks through the Secretary-General’s good offices to break the impasse.