In progress at UNHQ

Noon Briefings


The Secretary-General addressed the Security Council’s open debate on post-conflict peacebuilding this morning. He said that we must seize the crucial opportunity after the end of a major conflict. We must respond early and robustly, he said, adding that we must then stay engaged over the long term. Peacebuilding was a complex and multifaceted undertaking -- requiring significant amounts of human, financial and institutional resources, he said.
The Commission of Inquiry that was formed to determine the facts in the 2007 assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto will formally present the report on its work to the Secretary-General at 4:30 p.m. The Secretary-General will then transmit it to the Government of Pakistan, and he will also share it, for information purposes, with the members of the Security Council.
The Secretary-General is in Washington for the Nuclear Security Summit, where he will deliver remarks this afternoon laying out his priorities in dealing with the safety of nuclear stockpiles. Those priorities are preventing nuclear terrorism; securing nuclear fissile materials; strengthening the role of the International Atomic Energy Agency; increasing the engagement of the Security Council; and achieving tandem progress on both nuclear disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation.
The Secretary-General is on his way to Washington, where he will attend the nuclear security summit chaired by President Barack Obama. He told reporters this morning that we can see new momentum towards our ultimate ambition: a world free of nuclear weapons. Nuclear terrorism is one of the greatest threats we face today and in Washington, he will call on all world leaders to come together, perhaps at the United Nations in September, to further advance this essential cause.
Jan Kubis is on his way to Kyrgyzstan as the Secretary-General's special envoy. Once there, he will meet constitutional authorities and representatives of relevant political groups. He will then fly to New York to brief the Secretary-General on his fact-finding mission. He is liaising closely with the special envoys from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and the European Union.
The Secretary-General takes note of the release of a Nuclear Posture Review by the United States of America, and he welcomes President Obama's reaffirmation of his commitment towards a nuclear-weapon-free world. Following the recent successful conclusion of negotiations between the Russian Federation and the United States for a successor agreement to the Treaty on the Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms, the release of this new Review is a timely initiative in that direction.
The Secretary-General arrived in Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, earlier today on the latest leg of his week-long visit to Central Asia. He has been holding talks with President Rahmon and other Tajik officials on topics including Afghanistan, human rights, climate change and the question of tensions over water resources in Central Asia.