Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs B. Lynn Pascoe briefed the Security Council on the Middle East, including the Palestinian question, saying that the United Nations remains deeply concerned at the current stalemate and calls for the resumption of talks on final-status issues, implementation of Road Map commitments, continued efforts to improve economic and security conditions, and a different and more positive approach to Gaza.
In progress at UNHQ
Noon Briefings
The Secretary-General condemns the attack by unidentified armed assailants against a UNAMID police convoy returning to Nyala in South Darfur from a confidence-building patrol to the El Sharif camp for internally displaced persons in South Darfur on 16 February. Seven of the eight formed police unit members escorting the patrol were injured in the exchange of fire.
Ad Melkert, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Iraq, briefing the Security Council on Iraq, discussed the de-Baathification process, and said that the UN Mission in Iraq has consistently emphasized the due-process requirements and refrained from judging the outcomes. What eventually will matter most, he said, is the acceptance by the Iraqi people of the election result.
As you know, today is one month since the Haiti earthquake. And we’re going to start the briefing with a video by David Ohana, who is from the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, who was in Port-au-Prince in the aftermath of the earthquake. And this doesn’t represent an exhaustive account of the relief efforts. It’s David’s rendering of what he saw in Haiti, and it’s our way of marking the day. It’s short, it’s very poignant and we’ll be posting this on the web as well.
Dmitry Titov, the Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, briefed the Security Council this morning in an open meeting on the Secretary-General’s latest report on Sudan, saying Sudan has reached a critical juncture and will face enormous challenges in the coming year. These include the April national elections and next year’s planned referendum on the self-determination of Southern Sudan.
The Secretary-General is calling for a worldwide cessation of hostilities for the duration of the twenty-first Winter Olympic Games, which start in Vancouver this Friday. The truce is in the spirit of what the Games’ founders did in ancient Greece some two-and-half thousand years ago.
Ad Melkert, who is the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Iraq, has strongly condemned the assassination of a female election nominee, Suha Abdullah Jarallah, who was shot dead in Mosul, just before Iraq’s electoral campaign is due to start. And Melkert said that such incidents cannot be tolerated. He said that campaign violence in Iraq must not be allowed to intimidate candidates or interfere with the right of every Iraqi to vote.
Next week, on 12 February, the World Food Programme will host a high-level meeting at its headquarters in Rome on agricultural development, food security and nutrition in Haiti. And that meeting will kick off the agriculture component of the Haiti redevelopment plan.
The number of children affected by humanitarian disasters and crises is increasing significantly around the world, and the critical role of partnerships in assisting them and their families is the focus of UNICEF’s flagship humanitarian action report, “The Partnering for Children in Emergencies”, launched today.
This morning the Secretary-General had a good meeting with President Bill Clinton to talk about Haiti and President Clinton’s role as Special Envoy. He specifically asked President Clinton to assume a leadership role in coordinating international aid efforts, from emergency response to reconstruction of Haiti. The Secretary-General said this would require extraordinary leadership; and he said he couldn’t think of a better-suited leader than President Clinton.