In progress at UNHQ

Noon Briefings


Said Djinnit, sent to Nigeria as a High-Level Representative, concluded his four-day visit, where he reiterated the Secretary-General’s strong condemnation of the abduction last month of innocent girls in Chibok. The United Nations has begun preparations of an initiative that includes immediate support to the affected families, the population and the girls after their release.
The Secretary-General is in Sweden today for the Global Forum on Migration and Development. At the opening ceremony, he said more than 1 in 30 people on earth is a migrant. He said he remained seriously concerned about the crises unfolding in the Mediterranean and elsewhere, adding that the loss of life is unacceptable.

Said Djinnit, the Secretary-General’s high-level representative tasked to discuss the fate of the abducted girls, met with UN officials and members of the diplomatic community yesterday upon his arrival in Abuja. Discussions focused on ways in which the United Nations can support efforts to safely return the girls to their families and facilitate their reintegration.

The Security Council adopted a resolution deciding to create “the Captain Mbaye Diagne Medal for Exceptional Courage”, to be awarded to military, police, civilian United Nations personnel and associated personnel who demonstrate exceptional courage, in the face of extreme danger, while fulfilling their missions or functions, in the service of humanity and the United Nations.
The Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict says she is deeply concerned over the fate of the more than 200 girls abducted from their school in Nigeria’s Borno State last month. Leila Zerrougui said that reports of additional abductions of girls in the country’s north-east are extremely worrying.