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Reports and Policy Documents

2021

  • 8 déc 2021

    Abuja, 8 December, 2021 - The United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS) in collaboration with the Economic Commission of West African States (ECOWAS), and with the...

  • 8 déc 2021

    The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) on Wednesday expressed outrage over an attack on a convoy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) in which one of its vehicles was hit, wounding three staff members

  • 8 déc 2021

    A meeting to boost support for UN Peacekeeping ended on Wednesday with 62 countries making new pledges, and advancing existing commitments, to help enhance the performance and impact of these operations worldwide. 

  • 8 déc 2021

    The 55th round of the Geneva International Discussions (GID) took place in the Palais des Nations on 7 and 8 December 2021, with requisite COVID-19 pandemic mitigation measures in place. As mandated by the six-point agreement of 2008, the GID process continues to serve as the primary venue in which the consequences of conflict are addressed and other important issues are discussed.

    The 55th round began with meetings to address issues of importance to conflict affected populations, including freedom of movement and related issues, as well as an expert exchange between medical professionals focused on the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Over the course of two days, participants met in the GID’s two parallel working groups focused on security and humanitarian issues, respectively. The overall security situation on the ground was assessed as relatively stable. Discussions once again addressed the GID’s core agenda item of non-use of force and international security arrangements. Participants engaged in frank exchanges on outstanding issues such as freedom of movement, documentation, and travel abroad, detentions, unresolved missing persons cases, and specific security concerns in localised areas.

    However, despite constructive engagement on a variety of humanitarian issues, a discussion on the core issue of internally displaced persons and refugees could not take place due to a walkout by some participants.

    The Co-Chairs welcomed the continued function of the Incident Prevention and Response Mechanism (IPRM) in Ergneti, and took note of positive signals on the potential resumption of the Gali IPRM.

    The Co-Chairs again called on all participants to increase efforts to build trust and confidence and to address all elements of comprehensive and human security, including by engaging constructively in technical-level discussions, as well as with international humanitarian and human rights organisations.

    The participants agreed to hold their next meeting in Geneva on 29 and 30 March 2022.

  • 8 déc 2021

    © UNSMIL/ M ALASAADI

    Dear Libyans, dear UN colleagues,

    As the last day of my tenure as the...

  • 8 déc 2021

    TRIPOLI, December 8, 2021 – Officials from Libya with representatives from the European Union, the United Nations and the World Bank today launched a Recovery and...

  • 8 déc 2021

    Eleventh Annual Meeting of Deputy Foreign Ministers of Central Asian States (Dushanbe, 8 December 2021)

    ...

  • 7 déc 2021

    With the world now facing the highest number of violent conflicts since 1945, Secretary-General António Guterres on Tuesday urged countries to step up support for UN peacekeeping operations across the globe, and the thousands who serve within them. 

  • 7 déc 2021

    New York, 07 December 2021

    On International Civil Aviation Day, we recognize the many contributions of air travel to our world – from connecting societies and delivering vital goods to supporting millions of livelihoods and contributing billions to the global economy.

    COVID-19 continues to put deep stresses on international aviation, even as...

  • 6 déc 2021

    The Special Representative of the Secretary-General in the Democratic Republic of the Congo told the Security Council on Monday that “a lasting solution” to the violence “requires a broader political commitment to address the root causes of conflict.” 

  • 6 déc 2021

    Millions of people in Ethiopia could be pushed deeper into hunger as the World Food Programme (WFP) faces a major funding shortfall that threatens its operations there over the coming six months, the UN agency warned on Monday. 

  • 6 déc 2021

    Out now! Season 2 | Episode 17 | She Stands For Peace | Click here: https://unoau.unmissions.org/podcast-series-she-stands-peace

  • 6 déc 2021

    Mogadishu - Mr. Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdullahi was born in the rural area of the Mudug region, Puntland, in Somalia, in 1992, with...

  • 4 déc 2021

    The Special Representative for West Africa and the Sahel, Mahamat Saleh ANNADIF, congratulates the Gambian people on the successful holding of...

  • 4 déc 2021

    New York, 05 December 2021

    On International Volunteer Day, we recognize the contribution of volunteers to peace and development worldwide.

    This year’s theme – ‘Volunteer now for our common future’ – highlights the myriad ways in which volunteers are helping to get us back on track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals....

  • 3 déc 2021
    This Week in DPPA is a brief roundup of political and peacebuilding events and developments at UNHQ and around the world. 
     
    “We need to ensure adequate, predictable, and sustained financing for peacebuilding”

    Addressing the Peacebuilding Commission on 29 November, Under-Secretary-General Rosemary DiCarlo stressed that scaled-up preventive action could prevent loss of human life and incalculable suffering. Pointing to the Secretary-General’s Our Common Agenda report, she reiterated the importance of building on the current momentum to ensure adequate, predictable, and sustained financing for peacebuilding. Participants, including the President of the General Assembly and representatives of the African Development Bank, the World Bank and the private sector, engaged in an interactive dialogue and agreed that it was time to abandon business as usual and to turn Our Common Agenda into action by putting financial, political and human resources to work for a more stable and environmentally sound future. 

    Security Council

    Wronecka: “Commitments must translate into actions if Lebanon’s leadership intends to overcome the country’s deep crisis”

    Joanna Wronecka, Special Coordinator of the Secretary-General for Lebanon, briefed on 29 November on the implementation of Security Council Resolution 1701 (2006) and the situation in Lebanon. Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations Jean-Pierre Lacroix and UNIFIL Force Commander Major General Stefano del Col also provided briefings. Special Coordinator Wronecka recognized the recent formation of a Government as a positive development while regretting that it had not resulted in progress in the implementation of a reform agenda since her last briefing to the Security Council in July. Noting the deteriorating socio-economic conditions in Lebanon and their acute impact on people’s daily lives, she hoped the Lebanese Cabinet would resume its meetings, suspended since 12 October, and take urgent measures in the interest of the country and the people.  

    Read more here

    Middle East Special Coordinator warns risk of 'deadly escalation' in violence 

    Tor Wennesland, Special Coordinator of the Secretary-General for the Middle East Peace Process, briefed the Security Council on 30 November. He said that settler violence against Palestinians is alarmingly high. While he welcomed the recent decision to allow plans for thousands of new homes for Palestinians, he also criticized Israeli settlement expansion and demolitions, saying they lead the sides further away from peace talks. “It is essential that the parties avoid unilateral steps, reduce flashpoints and violence across the Occupied Palestine Territory, solidify the cessation of hostilities,”  the Special Coordinator ,said, noting the need for concerted efforts towards meaningful negotiations to resolve the conflict. 

    Full remarks at the Security Council here

    Press briefing here

    Central Asia

    UNRCCA co-organizes training course on cross-border cooperation

    The United Nations Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA) and the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Office (UNOCT) conducted from 30 November to 3 December a training course focused on good practices to expand cross-border cooperation and information sharing to counter terrorism. Held in partnership with the Regional Anti-Terrorist Structure (RATS) of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) in Istanbul with more than 70 officials from all Central Asian states participating, the discussion included legal and operational issues, challenges related to foreign terrorist fighters, responsive use and sharing of biometric data, institutional integrity and anti-corruption as well as human rights issues. Participants also raised the challenges related to the recent developments in Afghanistan and how they affect security and operational issues at the border with Central Asia. 

    Read more here

    Special Representative Gherman inaugurates Discussion Club of Women Entrepreneurs

    Natalia Gherman, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of UNRCCA addressed on 3 December the Inaugural Meeting of the Discussion Club of Women Entrepreneurs of Central Asia. The meeting, “Enhancing the Contribution of Women Entrepreneurs to the Economic Growth and Prosperity in Central Asia”, was organized under the aegis of the Central Asia Women Leaders’ Caucus, a platform launched in December 2020 with the support of UNRCCA and UNDP to enhance the political, economic and social participation of women in the region. In her remarks, the Special Representative noted the importance of the continuous efforts of the Caucus towards supporting women's economic potential and economic initiatives in Central Asia. She also stressed the need to explore creative ways of engaging with Afghan women in the work of both the Discussion Club and the Caucus. 

    Read more here

    Iraq

    UNAMI organizes a strategy discussion on gender-based violence

    As part of the global campaign of 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence, the Human Rights Office of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) facilitated a strategy discussion in Basra on improving response to gender-based violence in the southern governorates of Iraq. Participants emphasized that the adoption of the draft anti-domestic violence law by Parliament was a crucial and a long-awaited step to support survivors of domestic violence and must be part of the process of recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. 

    Read more here

    Head of UNAMI Erbil office discusses political developments in the Kurdistan region 

    On 29 November, Head of the UNAMI Regional Office in Erbil Ricardo Rodriguez met with President of the Kurdistan Region's Parliament Rewaz Faiq. The discussion focused on the current political developments in the Kurdistan Region. 

    Libya

    Special Envoy hears about progress achieved on preparations for upcoming elections

    Ján Kubiš, Special Envoy of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), met on 1 December with Chairman Imad al-Sayeh of Libya’s High National Elections Commission. The Special Envoy was briefed about the progress made so far by the Elections Commission in the preparation for holding parliamentary and presidential elections on 24 December. He praised the High National Elections Commission’s extraordinary efforts to implement the election, despite technical challenges in a short timeframe, amid a heavily polarized political climate. He echoed the Security Council’s call on all stakeholders and candidates to respect their commitments towards the holding of elections.

    Read more here

    Great Lakes region

    Launch of the Great Lakes Women Entrepreneurs’ Network

    On 2 December, the Great Lakes Women Entrepreneurs’ Network was launched in Nairobi, officiated by Special Envoy for the Great Lakes region Huang Xia and President of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) Private Sector Forum Richard Ngatia. This initiative is a follow-up to the regional workshop for women business leaders held in December 2019 in Nairobi. The Network is in line with the UN Strategy for Peace Consolidation, Conflict Prevention and Conflict Resolution for the region, as it places a strong emphasis on gender equality and women’s empowerment. Women entrepreneurs in the Great Lakes region account for about 70% of cross-border traders, and their role as catalysts for the region’s economic growth is recognized as contributing to the consolidation of peace and security in the Great Lakes region. 

    Read more here

    African Union

    "The partnership between our organizations is stronger than ever"

    The fifth United Nations-African Union Annual Conference was held on 1 December in New York. The meeting discussed several areas of UN cooperation with the African Union, including the pandemic’s impact on the African continent, climate, the situation in the Horn of Africa, Libya, the Sahel and other areas of concern, including the COVID pandemic and the issues of vaccines. Secretary-General António Guterres and Chairperson of the African Union Commission Moussa Faki Mahamat held a joint press conference after the annual meeting. A joint Communiqué was issued, welcoming the continued‑ strong cooperation between the two organizations. 

    Read the Joint Communiqué 

    West Africa and the Sahel

    High-level visit to The Gambia ahead of elections

    Mahamat Saleh Annadif, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), began on 3 December a three-day visit to The Gambia. The Special Representative is accompanied by Assistant Secretary-General Martha Ama Akyaa Pobee, who is on a familiarization visit after taking office as Assistant Secretary-General for Africa of the Departments of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs and Peace Operations. During the visit, they will meet with election observation missions deployed to The Gambia, civil society organizations and the UN country team to support the Gambia in its efforts to organize a peaceful, inclusive and transparent presidential election, scheduled for 4 December 2021.

    Read more here

    Somalia

    UN in Somalia and government launches a new joint programme on women empowerment

    Somalia now benefits from a new Women, Peace and Protection Joint Programme launched on 30 November and funded by the Peacebuilding Fund and the Somalia Multi Partner Trust Fund. The Programme is the result of inclusive consultations, collective planning, and prioritization in the area of women, peace and security. It will be implemented by UNDP and UN Women, in partnership with the Ministry of Women and Human Rights Development and the United Nations Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM). The programme aims to promote women’s meaningful participation in peacebuilding processes in Somalia, particularly in decision-making and leadership roles, and to sustain peace at national and community levels. “If sustained peace and stability were to be achieved, we need to address the rise in incidents of violence and misogyny; the exclusion of Somali women from decision-making; and a myriad of challenges they are facing,” said Adam Abdelmoula, Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, opening the event.

    Read more here

    Colombia

    Childcare center opens in Tolima for children of former combatants 

    On 30 November, the childcare center “Huellitas Marquetalianas” was inaugurated in El Oso, a small village in Gaitania, south of the department of Tolima. The center will host about 25 children of former combatants and of surrounding communities, serving as a safe play space for learning. During half a century of armed conflict, the FARC prohibited female fighters from becoming pregnant. Since the FARC laid down their weapons, there has been a baby boom, and childcare needs have ballooned. The United Nations Verification Mission supported this initiative by taking part in the painting of the façade of the Centre.

    Youth, Peace, and Security

    Assistant Secretary-General Khiari reaffirms UN’s support to ASEAN’s efforts on YPS Agenda

    The first ASEAN Regional Forum Workshop on Youth, Peace, and Security (YPS) was held on 1-2 December, co-hosted by ASEAN Chair Brunei Darussalam and the United States. In his address, Assistant Secretary-General for Middle East, Asia and the Pacific Khaled Khiari stressed that YPS is premised on the voices and active involvement of youth being integral to all our efforts in building long-lasting peace and reaffirmed the UN’s support to ASEAN's efforts on promoting the YPS Agenda. 

    UNSMIL Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator amplifies youth role in peace processes 

    Georgette Gagnon, Assistant Secretary-General and Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), participated in the National Youth Conference held on 27 November in Tripoli. In her remarks, she recalled Security Council resolution 2250 (2015) on Youth, Peace, and Security and stressed the critical importance of young peoples’ participation and leadership in peace and security efforts. “Your engagement in political life as a critical catalyst and force of change can transform the political environment and culture and contribute to putting Libya further on the path of democracy, stability, unity, and prosperity,” she said. 

    Read her full remarks

     

    Peacebuilding

    Chad’s transition roadmap presented to the Peacebuilding Commission

    The Peacebuilding Commission convened on 2 December to receive a high-level Chadian delegation, led by Prime Minister Albert Pahimi Padacké, to discuss the transitional roadmap and challenges in mobilizing international assistance for Chad. Speaking on behalf of Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Regional Office for Central Africa François Louncény Fall on 2 December, DPPA Regional Director Michael Kingsley emphasized the urgency of the international community to come together to support Chad, and ensured full and integrated support by the UN system during the delicate transition process. The meeting featured high-level representatives of the Peacebuilding Commission and other partners, including the Lake Chad Basin Commission. The participants highlighted the multidimensional regional security challenges affecting Chad during its national transition process and expressed willingness to accompany the Chadian authorities in promoting an inclusive implementation of the transition process. A joint statement was issued after the meeting. 

    Innovation Cell supports first digital citizen dialogue in Bolivia

    The Resident Coordinator's Office in Bolivia, in partnership with the Vice-Presidency of the Plurinational State, conducted on 2 December two digital dialogues to explore trust-building and reconciliation and discuss the 2019 and 2020 events as well as the hopes for the country’s future. DPPA’s Innovation Cell supported the dialogues, which saw the participation online of over 200 women and men from various parts of the country. Part of the Innovation Cell’s Artificial Intelligence-enabled digital dialogues portfolio, the Bolivia Dialogues were designed in collaboration with DPPA’s regional and mediation experts. 

    New episode of “She Stands for Peace”

    This week’s episode of UNOAU's podcast series on women in peace and political processes features Candice Mama, an author and activist from South Africa whose work has centered on trauma, reconciliation, and forgiveness. In this episode, she talks about her experience meeting and forgiving the man who murdered her father during Apartheid. Candice shares her thoughts on how we might approach reconciliation differently, how to support survivors of trauma, and the importance of accurate historical education for peacebuilding.

    Listen to the episode

    For more information on the podcast series, click here

    Next Week

    Under Niger's presidency, the Security Council will hold an open debate on the maintenance of international peace and security: Security in the context of terrorism and climate change, on 9 December. Special Representative Volker Perthes will brief on the situation in Sudan on 10 December. 

     

    The Peacebuilding Commission will host Virtual Ambassadorial-level meetings on Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration/Security Sector Reform on 7 December, and on Sierra Leone on 9 December.

    Global Call for Nominations 

    Secretary-General’s Global Call for Nominations to identify Heads and Deputy Heads for United Nations Field Missions will close on 10 December. The Global Call aims to expand the pool of candidates for the leadership positions of Special Representative and Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General. 

    For more information

     

    Subscribe to This Week in DPPA

    Contact DPPA at dppa@un.org

  • 3 déc 2021

    The UN Security Council on Friday adopted a resolution to combat the continuing threat of piracy off the coast of Somalia, as shipping and protection measures to keep vessels safe, have returned to levels not seen since before the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • 3 déc 2021

    Realizing the rights, agency, and leadership of persons with disabilities will advance our common future.We need everyone, including persons with disabilities, on board to achieve the Sustainable...

  • 3 déc 2021

    Mogadishu – On the occasion of the International Day of Persons with Disabilities, the United Nations Secretary-General's Special Representative for Somalia, James...

  • 3 déc 2021

    TASHKENT, Uzbekistan

    On 3 December 2021, SRSG Natalia Gherman addressed the...

  • 3 déc 2021

    ISTANBUL, Turkey

    UNRCCA and UNOCT in partnership with the Regional Anti-Terrorist Structure (RATS) of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (...

  • 3 déc 2021

    Dakar, 03 November 2021 - The Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (...

  • 3 déc 2021

    New York,  03 December 2021

    Realizing the rights, agency, and leadership of persons with disabilities will advance our common future.  

    We need everyone, including persons with disabilities, on board to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Around the world, persons with disabilities and their representative organizations are taking action to realize the call: ‘Nothing about us...

  • 2 déc 2021

    The international community has reached a “turning point” in pursuing justice for atrocities committed by the ISIL terrorist group in Iraq, the new head of a special UN investigative team told the Security Council in New York on Thursday. 

  • 2 déc 2021

    Participants at the launch of the Great Lakes Women Entrepreneurs’ Network. Seated in the front row, Huang Xia, UN Special Envoy for the Great Lakes and Richard Ngatia, President of the ICGLR Private Sector Forum. UN Photo/...

  • 2 déc 2021

    TRIPOLI, 02 December 2021 - Special Envoy of the UN Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) Jan Kubis yesterday met with the Chairman...

  • 2 déc 2021

    A total of 274 million people worldwide will need emergency aid and protection in 2022, a 17 per cent increase compared with this year, UN humanitarians said on Thursday. 

  • 1 déc 2021

    With millions in Afghanistan facing starvation as winter arrives, the World Food Programme (WFP) on Thursday urged countries to put politics aside and step up support to avert a potential catastrophe. 

  • 1 déc 2021

    Concluding a four-day to visit Burkina Faso, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said on Wednesday that the country faces “a multitude of challenges with severe impacts on a wide range of human rights of its people”.

  • 1 déc 2021
     

    United Nations (UN) Secretary-General António Guterres and African Union (AU) Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat today welcomed the continuing strong cooperation between the two organizations...

  • 1 déc 2021

    For two decades, the African Union (AU) has been “a gold standard of regional co-operation”, Secretary-General António Guterres told the fifth UN-AU Annual Conference on Wednesday in New York.

  • 1 déc 2021

    Mogadishu – A new two-year US$ 6.2 million joint programme on Women, Peace and Protection (WPP) was launched in Mogadishu on Tuesday by the Government of Somalia and the United Nations....

  • 1 déc 2021
     

    Humanitarian | OCHA facilitates joint statement on worsening...

  • 1 déc 2021

    Mogadishu - The United Nations in Somalia recently partnered with a leading Somali non-governmental...

  • 30 nov 2021

    With violence continuing daily throughout the Occupied Palestinian Territory, the Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process urged the Security Council on Tuesday to adopt a more coordinated approach to the region.  

  • 30 nov 2021

    Mogadishu - UN Officials, Federal and State Government officials, members of the civil society and donor partners gathered today to mark the launch of a new Women, Peace...

  • 30 nov 2021

    The UN refugee Agency, UNHCR, is “appalled by a series of deadly attacks” on displaced people in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the agency’s spokesperson told journalists on Tuesday in Geneva.

  • 29 nov 2021

    TRIPOLI, 29 November 2021 - The United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) is following with great concern the continued closure of Sebha Court of...

  • 29 nov 2021

    The UN Secretary-General on Monday called on all Middle East States to transform the vision of a region with no nuclear weapons, or other weapons of mass destruction, into a working reality.   

  • 29 nov 2021

    UN Photo

    UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Joanna Wronecka, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations Jean-Pierre Lacroix and UNIFIL Force...

  • 29 nov 2021

    Out now! Season 2 | Episode 16 | She Stands For Peace | Click here: https://unoau.unmissions.org/podcast-series-she-stands-peace

  • 29 nov 2021

    Thank you, Mr. Chair.

     

    It is a pleasure to participate in the annual session of the Peacebuilding Commission. Today’s debate on financing for peacebuilding is of crucial importance. 

     

    A month ago, the Secretary-General presented to the PBC his report Our Common Agenda, his vision for the future of global cooperation through an inclusive, networked, and effective multilateralism.  Our Common Agenda. That vision includes a new agenda for peace calling for investment in prevention and peacebuilding, including through the Peacebuilding Commission.

     

    Smart, preventive investments to tackle the underlying drivers that sustain conflict have never been as important. The COVID-19 pandemic is stretching our resources and capacities, disproportionately affecting people and places hit by conflict. And the climate crisis not only compounds the challenges we face in peace and security, it poses an existential threat to humanity.

     

    As ambitious as Our Common Agenda is, we really have no choice but to put substantial resources – financial, political and human – to work to build a more peaceful, environmentally sound, stable and sustainable future.

     

    We need to build on the current momentum and ensure adequate, predictable, and sustained financing for peacebuilding.

     

    This idea is at the core of the twin General Assembly and Security Council resolutions adopted at the conclusion of the 2015 and 2020 Peacebuilding Architecture Reviews. The Peacebuilding Commission plays a key role in our concerted effort to help achieve this important objective ahead of the High-Level Meeting on Financing for Peacebuilding.

     

    I would like to point to four key areas that are particularly relevant to consider in this context.

     

    First, sustained financing for peacebuilding is instrumental for our ongoing work on strengthening coherence across the peace and security continuum, including the work conducted by special political missions in close cooperation with development actors, regional partners and civil society organizations.

     

    Special political missions play a critical role, supporting Member States to prevent, manage and resolve conflicts. Our regional office for West Africa, for example, continues to respond to high demand for preventive diplomacy in the region. Working side-by-side with ECOWAS and the African Union, UNOWAS has engaged with authorities and other actors to help build consensus regarding the way forward in political and security processes.

     

    If we are to effectively support Member States on trust, inclusion, social cohesion, and human rights – elements that are at the heart of Our Common Agenda and our collective work on peacebuilding – we need to continue to insist on improving coherence. Adequate, predictable, and sustained financing will allow for better incentives and can foster further collaboration across the UN system.

     

     

    Second, the strong linkages among peacemaking, peacekeeping, peacebuilding and development are mutually reinforcing. Financing for peacebuilding is key, for example, in safeguarding peacekeeping gains. This ensures effective transitions and averts a “financial cliff” after a mission leaves. Peacebuilding has helped prevent relapses into conflict in Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia and Sierra Leone notably.

     

    The dedicated Peacebuilding Fund window is a welcome contribution in this respect, with a total of $35 million invested in 2020. The transition in Darfur, for example, shows the importance of complementing resources of peacekeeping operations with the PBF investment. It enabled the UN Country Team to continue catalytic peacebuilding programmes after UNAMID’s closure. It also contributed to supporting the new integrated mandate of our special political mission, UNITAMS.

     

    We expect that the largest share of PBF investments during the 2020-2024 strategic period will be directed to support countries undergoing complex transitions when UN configurations on the ground change.

     

    Third, we continue to strengthen our partnerships with international financial institutions and regional development banks, which in recent years have resulted in more in-depth analysis of fragility factors and better understanding of conflict drivers.

    This shift towards prevention, conflict sensitivity and peacebuilding in the International Financial Institutions and the resources they bring to bear towards those objectives are potential game changers.

     

    We should not lose sight of the urgent need to make these partnerships more systematic through regular joint analysis and assessments. The creation of a Humanitarian-Development-Peacebuilding and Partnership Facility (HDPP) is contributing in a significant way to this effort, enabling the UN’s field presences to better interact with the World Bank.

     

    Examples of good partnership also include:

    • the establishment of joint information management platforms in the North/Northeast region of Kenya and in Niger;
    • joint analysis increasing coherence in responses, for instance, in Burkina Faso and Mozambique;
    • strategic, technical and operational contributions to prevention and transition action plans supported through the World Bank’s new financing instruments.

     

    We also look forward to deepening our engagement with the International Monetary Fund, in the context of its upcoming Fragility and Conflict-affected States Strategy, and regional development banks, such as the African Development Bank. There is also scope for synergy on climate risk mitigation, since climate change is a risk multiplier in many conflict settings, such as in the Sahel and Horn of Africa.

     

    We should also continue to explore stronger partnerships with the private sector. An initiative with a blended finance facility in Colombia that leveraged close to seven times the funding capital from the private sector is a powerful example that innovative financing solutions can fill the gap in peacebuilding contexts.

     

    Fourth, as Our Common Agenda acknowledges, demand for support from the Peacebuilding Fund significantly outpaces available resources. As the UN’s instrument of first resort to support peacebuilding, the Fund needs additional resources.

     

    The recourse to voluntary, extrabudgetary contributions obscures the fact that prevention and peacebuilding are structural and central objectives of the UN and the Charter obligations.

     

    Voluntary contributions are insufficient: the PBF is currently $90 million below its target for 2021. The Secretary-General’s recommendation to allocate a dedicated amount ($100 million) to the PBF from assessed contributions would indeed have a strong symbolic value.

     

    Additional and more predictable funding would enable the UN to, for example, increase its support for women-led and women-focused peacebuilding initiatives, as urged by many women peacebuilders who have briefed the PBC in the past.  More resources for peacebuilding activities would also strengthen the work special political missions are playing in promoting women’s and youth participation in peace and political processes.

     

    Excellencies,

     

    As Peacebuilding Commission Members know best of all, scaled-up preventive action could prevent loss of human life and incalculable suffering.

     

    Adequate, predictable and sustained financing, including through assessed contributions, will allow the UN, through its Peacebuilding Fund, to grow its investments in support of Our Common Agenda.

     

    I look forward to hearing from you on how we can collectively achieve this ambitious objective.

     

    Thank you.

     

  • 29 nov 2021

    The situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, continues to pose a significant challenge to international peace and security, United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, said on Monday. 

  • 27 nov 2021

    © PC Media

    Excellency President of the Presidency Council, Dr. Mohamed Almenfi...

  • 26 nov 2021
    This Week in DPPA is a brief roundup of political and peacebuilding events and developments at UNHQ and around the world. 

     

    Security Council

    Hennis-Plasschaert: “Iraq cannot afford its national interest to be neglected” 

    Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), briefed the Security Council on 23 November regarding last month’s elections. She noted that the polls had been assessed as generally peaceful, well run, and featuring significant technical and procedural improvements. But, she observed, there was a severe lack of trust: between parties, between parties and institutions, and between parties and authorities, in addition to the longstanding lack of public trust in both politicians and institutions. “Iraq cannot afford its national interest to be neglected,” she urged. The Special Representative repeated the UN’s consistent call for political dialogue to prevail, adding that outstanding electoral concerns must only be dealt with through established legal channels. "The importance of a sound and inclusive government formation process cannot be overstated", she stressed. 

    Full remarks at the Security Council here 

     

     
    Kubiš urges Libyan actors to ensure inclusive, free, fair parliamentary and presidential elections 

    Ján Kubiš, Special Envoy of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), briefed the Security Council on 24 November from Tripoli on the process leading up to the 24 December elections. He warned that the political climate in Libya remained heavily polarized, noting that vocal opposition to the holding of elections on the basis of the existing legal framework persists. He called on all those that challenge the process or the candidates to channel them through the existing judicial mechanisms and to fully respect the verdict of the judicial authority. He said that the presence of foreign fighters and mercenaries continues to be of concern, although the ceasefire has continued to hold. He also noted that he had tendered his resignation on 17 November 2021, which the Secretary-General had accepted, effective as of 10 December 2021. 

    Full remarks at the Security Council here 

     

    Afghanistan

     

    UNAMA Head meets with UK, European Commission officials 

    Deborah Lyons, Special Representative and Head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) met on 23 November with Lord Tariq Ahmad, British Minister for South Asia, the United Nations and the Commonwealth, to discuss the humanitarian situation, human rights and girls' education in Afghanistan. In Brussels, on 24 November, the Special Representative discussed health care, food and lifesaving assistance with European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO) Director General Paraskevi Michou.

     

    Deputy Special Representative visits Kandahar 

    In Kandahar on 25 November, Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan Mette Knudsen met with senior Taliban representatives, the business community and women leaders. The latter shared their concerns about restrictions on freedom of movement and access to education and work. Ms. Knudsen reiterated the UN’s support for the rights of all Afghans and that these issues were being raised by the UN “day-in day-out" with the Taliban.   

     

    Central Asia

    Central Asian water-energy and environment experts discuss regional strategy 

    The United Nations Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA) organized an online meeting on 26 November of water-energy and environment experts of the Central Asian states Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. The attendants discussed the draft text of the updated UNRCCA strategy in support of water, energy and environmental cooperation among the states of Central Asia for 2022-2025. The experts agreed that the review process will continue under the auspices of UNRCCA at the next meeting in December. 

    Read more here 

     

    Iraq

    Special Representative Hennis-Plasschaert discusses post elections 

    On 25 November, Special Representative Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert met in Baghdad with Fateh Coalition Chairman Hadi Al-Ameri. She expressed hope that the Iraqi Independent High Electoral Commission and Electoral Judicial Panel would give full consideration to all appeals independently. She also urged all parties to find serious political solutions and form an inclusive government that meets the expectations of the Iraqi people.

     

    Yemen

    Special Envoy Grundberg visits Egypt and Russia 

    Hans Grundberg, Special Envoy for Yemen, concluded his visit to Egypt on 24 November. He told his interlocutors, including the Egyptian Foreign Minister, the head of the League of Arab States (LAS) and a diverse group of Yemeni men and women who are in Egypt, that piecemeal approaches would not result in a sustainable solution. Discussions in Cairo also included recent military developments in Yemen, including in Hudaydah, and the worsening humanitarian situation. He then travelled to Moscow where he met with Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Vershinin Sergey Vasilievich and Deputy Foreign Minister and Special Presidential Representative for the Middle East and Africa Mikhail Bogdanov. The Special Envoy thanked Russia for its sustained support to the UN’s peacemaking efforts in Yemen.  

    Read more here 

     

    Great Lakes Region

    Technical Support Committee of the Peace, Security and Cooperation Framework discusses developments in the Great Lakes Region 
     
    Huang Xia, Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for the Great Lakes region, opened the 29th meeting of the Technical Support Committee (TSC) of the Peace, Security and Cooperation Framework for the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and the region, held virtually on 23 November. Participants discussed key political and security developments, and reviewed initiatives in support of the implementation of the Framework. 

    West Africa and the Sahel

    Open Day on Women, Peace and Security in Guinea-Bissau

    In Guinea-Bissau on 23 November, Special Representative and Head of the UN Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), Mahamet Saleh Annadif, together with the President of Guinea-Bissau, Umaro Sissoco Embaló, chaired the Regional Open Day on the implementation of Security Council Resolutions 1325 and subsequent resolutions on women, peace and security. The Open Day brought together nearly a hundred women and young leaders from West Africa and the Sahel, as well as government representatives from the region. They spoke about new initiatives to be put in place to prevent conflicts and consolidate peace, and ways to accelerate the implementation of the Women, Peace and Security agenda in West Africa and the Sahel.  

    Read more here

     

    Special Representative takes part in Mano River Union meeting on Guinea 

    At the Extraordinary Session of Foreign Ministers of the Mano River Union on Guinea in Monrovia, Liberia on 22 November, Special Representative Annadif said that the meeting was the expression of an active solidarity of the geographical neighbors. He added that the “coordination and complementarity of our various initiatives, in particular from the neighbors of Guinea, will be the guarantee of our success in helping an inclusive and peaceful transition in the country”. 

     

     
    33rd Session of the Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission concludes in Yaoundé 

    Special Representative and Chairman of the Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission (CNMC) Annadif, chaired the 33rd session of the CNMC in Yaoundé, Cameroon on 19 and 20 November. Amadou Ali, Vice-Prime Minister and Abubakar Malami, the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, led the delegations of Cameroon and Nigeria, respectively. During the meeting, the Mixed Commission expressed its readiness to work closely with the Parties in order to identify and to recommend the implementation of trans-border infrastructural projects to enhance the economic cooperation and the integration of the two countries and the region. 

    Full Communiqué here 

     
     

    Colombia

    Guterres: “Peace does not occur overnight. It is hard to build, take care of, and sustain” 

    Secretary-General António Guterres travelled to Colombia on 22 November to participate in celebrations of the Fifth Anniversary of the signing of the 2016 Final Peace Agreement between the Government of Colombia and the former FARC-EP. On 23 November, together with the President of Colombia, Iván Duque Márquez, Guterres was in Llano Grande, in the province of Antioquia, visiting a Training and Reintegration area. While there, he said that he appreciated having the opportunity to listen to community members, indigenous and Government authorities. The Secretary-General pointed out that they know better than anyone that peace does not occur overnight. It is hard to build, take care of, and sustain, he emphasized. Guterres then travelled on to Apartadó to learn about the progress of the Territorial Development Programme in the region. Back in Bogotá, on 24 November, the Secretary-General participated in the commemoration of the Fifth Anniversary of the signing of the Final Peace Agreement. He said the anniversary provided an opportunity to celebrate the achievements of the Final Peace Agreement, acknowledge the challenges it faces, and “renew our collective commitment to fulfill its promise to build a stable and lasting peace”. 

    Read more here 

     

    Virtual Reality experience on Colombia peace process 

    To bring the Colombian peace process closer to decision-makers in New York and have Colombian public voices heard more broadly, the UN Verification Mission in Colombia and DPPA produced the Virtual Reality (VR) experience “Pathways Colombia”. As the country commemorates the fifth anniversary of the signing of the 2016 Final Peace Agreement, the film focuses on the challenges and opportunities of peace consolidation in Colombia, including reintegration, security, and reconciliation efforts. “Pathways Colombia” comprises three immersive episodes focusing on the reintegration of former combatants, security challenges and reconciliation efforts. The launch event of the VR experience was hosted by the Permanent Mission of the United Kingdom and attended by Security Council members and the Colombian Permanent Mission to the UN.  

    Watch “Pathways Colombia” 

     

    Peacebuilding

    Thematic Review on Gender-Responsive Peacebuilding 

    The UN Peacebuilding Support Office (PBSO) just published the Thematic Review on Gender-Responsive Peacebuilding, commissioned by PBSO in partnership with the German Federal Foreign Office (GFFO) and UN Women. The review maps good practices, gaps, challenges, emerging trends and priorities for action in gender-responsive peacebuilding and draws on consultations with women’s organizations in Guatemala, Mali, Niger, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sri Lanka. 

    Read the full report here  

     
    Global Call for Nominations  

    The Secretary-General’s Global Call for Nominations campaign to identify Heads and Deputy Heads for United Nations Field Missions has been extended until 10 December. The Global Call aims to expand the pool of candidates for the USG/ASG level positions of Special Representative of the Secretary-General and their deputies.

    For more information

     

    16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence 

    UN in Lebanon urges action to end and prevent gender-based violence 

    From 25 November, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, to 10 December, International Human Rights Day, the United Nations System in Lebanon, the Sexual and Gender-based Violence Taskforce (SGBV TF) and the National Commission for Lebanese Women (NCLW) are joining forces, for the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence (GBV), to urge actions to end and prevent gender-based violence in the country. The campaign calls for the commitment of state institutions in the adoption of specialized and comprehensive laws and policies that prevent and protect women and girls from GBV. Increasing collective efforts are needed in ending gender-based violence including from national institutions and policy makers, the humanitarian and the development system, the donors, the community leaders, all women, men, girls. 

    Read more here 

     

    Next Week

    Special Coordinator Tor Wennesland will brief on the Middle East Peace Process on 29 November.  

    Launch event: Thematic Review on Gender-Responsive Peacebuilding  

    Join a virtual launch event on 1 December, 9-10 am EST to hear from a panel of policymakers and practitioners on what some of the Review findings and recommendations mean in practice.  

    RSVP here 

    Subscribe to This Week in DPPA

    Contact DPPA at dppa@un.org

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