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Reports and Policy Documents

2019

  • 15 авг 2019

    Mogadishu - Senior representatives of the African Union (AU), the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) and the United Nations (UN) travelled to Kismayo today to engage with...

  • 15 авг 2019

    An attack in the south of Syria’s restive Idlib province that led to the deaths of a paramedic, an ambulance driver and a rescue worker, were added to the grim total on Thursday of more than 500 civilian fatalities documented in the country by the United Nations, over the past three and a half months alone.

  • 15 авг 2019

    To mark next week’s International Day of Remembrance of and Tribute to the Victims of Terrorism, UN News travelled to Chad and the Far North region of Cameroon in West Africa earlier in the year, to interview people who have personal stories to tell about how terrorism has shattered their lives.

  • 15 авг 2019

    Since the beginning of the offensive on Tripoli in early April, more than 37 attacks have been registered against health workers and facilities, including hospitals, field hospitals and civilian and military ambulances. These deplorable attacks which impacted at least 19 ambulances and 19 hospitals, have resulted in 11 deaths, and injuries to more than 33 persons, although the actual number may be significantly higher.

     

    In late July, airstrikes conducted by the...

  • 15 авг 2019

    the United Nations Integrated Office for Peacebuilding in Guinea-Bissau, UNIOGBIS, through its Combatting Drug Trafficking and Organized Crime component (CDTOC), conducted a criminal investigation...

  • 14 авг 2019

    Our main stories today cover: Scaled-up assistance for Venezuelans; Ebola vaccinations for Burundi health workers; reports of civilian deaths following an Afghan-sponsored security operation; agrochemical spray probe urged in Paraguay; Libya violence abates during truce, and disarmament conference’s first woman chief urges Governments to “overcome their differences”.  

  • 14 авг 2019

    A UN call for a humanitarian truce over this week’s Eid al-Adha religious holiday led to a “palpable reduction” of violence around the embattled capital of Tripoli, the UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) said in a statement released on Wednesday.

  • 14 авг 2019

    What is the difference between a migrant and a refugee? What are the reasons that motivate a person to leave his/her country? Journalists and journalism students participated on Tuesday 13 August in a seminar on Media and...

  • 14 авг 2019

    To mark the International Day of Remembrance of and Tribute to the Victims of Terrorism, on 21 August, UN News travelled to Chad and the Far North region of Cameroon in West Africa earlier this year, to interview people who have personal stories to tell, about how terrorism has shattered their lives.

  • 14 авг 2019

     

    In answers to questions asked about the situation in Yemen, the Spokesman said the following:

     

    We are closely following the developments on the ground in Aden. We are particularly concerned by the impact of the...

  • 14 авг 2019

    Tripoli, 14 August 2019 - Following the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) call upon the parties on 8 August to express their commitment to a humanitarian truce on the occasion of Eid al-...

  • 13 авг 2019

    Our main stories today cover: Human rights chief on chaos at Hong Kong airport; Geneva Conventions have been ‘limiting brutality’ for 70 years; breakthrough drug in DR Congo Ebola fight; France pushed to repatriate nationals on death row in Iraq; ‘Race against time” for migrants in Mediterranean

  • 13 авг 2019

    Our main stories today cover: Human rights chief on chaos at Hong Kong airport; Geneva Conventions have been ‘limiting brutality’ for 70 years; breakthrough drug in DR Congo Ebola fight; France pushed to repatriate nationals on death row in Iraq; ‘Race against time” for migrants in Mediterranean

  • 13 авг 2019

    In commemorating the 70th anniversary of the landmark Geneva Conventions, the president of the United Nations Security Council hailed the “significant body of law”, describing it as playing “a vital role in limiting brutality of armed conflicts”.

  • 13 авг 2019

    Voicing great concern over a sharp increase in the killing and maiming of children in Mali due to ongoing fighting and instability, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and partners on Tuesday, called on all warring parties to stop attacks and “keep them out of harm’s way”.

  • 13 авг 2019

    After two consecutive days of chaos at Hong Kong International Airport, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Michelle Bachelet expressed her concern and condemned “any form” of violence or destruction of property and urged the demonstrators to “express their views in a peaceful way”.

  • 13 авг 2019

    After two consecutive days of chaos at Hong Kong International Airport, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Michelle Bachelet expressed her concern and condemned “any form” of violence or destruction of property and urged the demonstrators to “express their views in a peaceful way”.

  • 13 авг 2019

    AYBAK - Participants at a UN-backed event in Afghanistan’s north committed to advocate for the rights of children and to raise awareness to protect them against abuse during the armed conflict.

    More than one...

  • 11 авг 2019

    Mogadishu – The UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Somalia, James Swan, extends his heartfelt greetings to the Somali people as they celebrate Eid al-Adha.

    “Somalis are coming together to...

  • 10 авг 2019

    Secretary-General António Guterres on Saturday condemned a car bomb attack in front of a shopping mall in the Libyan city of Benghazi, which left three UN workers dead, and three others injured, with dozens of civilians also wounded. 

  • 10 авг 2019

    Mr. President, Members of the Council,

    I begin with the tragic news of the car bomb explosion that took place in Benghazi today.  There were a number of casualties, including UN staff working and living in Benghazi.  We are now in a position to confirm that three UN staff members were among the fatalities, and three others were injured and are now being treated.  Scores of Libyans are also among the injured.

    This horrific attack came at a time when people in Benghazi were preparing for the Eid al-Adha holiday, in an area supposedly under full security control of General Haftar’s Libyan National Army forces.  It serves to highlight the continued danger of terrorism across the country, and the limits of effective security control in the absence of one government and one military and police force working across the country. It also confirms that this latest bout of hostilities is creating a vacuum easily exploited by radical elements that strive on chaos and violence. The UN does not intend to evacuate from Libya.  For the foreseeable future our place remains alongside the Libyan people, like our brave colleagues who gave their lives today.  

     

    Mr. President.  

    There are other significant developments today in Libya.  It is a positive development that both Prime Minister Serraj and the General Haftar’s Libyan National Army forces have agreed to the Special Representative of the Secretary-General’s 29 July call for a truce for the period of Eid al Adha to begin this evening.  I can only hope that both sides will genuinely abide, in good faith, to their public commitment. Senseless and absurd violence needs to stop. 

    We have made it clear, on several occasions, in front of this same audience, that no party can emerge as the winner from the current conflict. Today is clear evidence that there are already many losers – the majority of whom are innocent Libyan civilians.  This message has resonated both with Libyans directly party to the conflict and to those international and regional stakeholders in Libya, who have seen that after more than four months of conflict there is no quick military win capable of resolving the complex situation on the ground.  Terrorism cannot be effectively fought under the circumstances on the ground.  The tragedy of illegal migration cannot be adequately addressed.  And Libya’s substantial economic potential cannot be realised for the benefit of the Libyan people, or as a stabilising influence in the region and beyond.  

    In the days leading up to the truce, UNSMIL worked hard to build confidence between the parties. Proposed immediate humanitarian measures including the exchange of prisoners, the exchange of mortal remains and visits to prisoners or phone calls can rebuild contacts and lower tensions to enable the truce to take place.  We urge the parties to seize this opportunity. This is the first step in returning to a political process.  It is essential that this truce is deepened and strengthened through these important confidence-building measures and that the parties move quickly forward to an international meeting to re-commit to a roadmap to transition the country from conflict back to the peaceful, democratic process.  Consistent with the Special Representative’s initiative, such a meeting would then be followed by a meeting of Libyans themselves.  

    This Council’s statement, supporting the call for a truce, was certainly an important element in demonstrating the renewed unity of the international community and its faith in the Special Representative and commitment to his three-point initiative to end the conflict.  The public and private support of key member states has also played a considerable role in building the credibility and necessity for the truce that is now about to start.

     

    Mr. President,

    The situation on the ground necessitates a truce across the country. The continued brutal descent of southern Libya into chaos and inter-communal feuds is a disturbing harbinger of what may ensue should the wider conflict persist. Simmering inter-communal tensions between Tebu and Ahali groups in Murzuq, exacerbated by countrywide political polarization, took a turn for the worse.  On 4 August, three LNA airstrikes against Tebu elements, including a number of civilians, resulted in approximately 45 fatalities.Murzuq suffers from the same environment as much of Libya: an absence of state institutions manifested in an absence of services, an almost total lack of governance, a lack of impartial security forces and an absence of hope. 

    It is a tragedy that so many have died in a town where there are deep-rooted grievances, that in the current circumstances risk taking on a national dimension.  It is essential that the intra-communal violence in Murzuq not spread to other towns in the South.  I therefore ask the Council to express its emphatic support to ensure that the truce takes place not only in areas under the clear control of specific security forces but also in areas where there is no clear security actor.  

    The United Nations family has been active in trying to address the urgent humanitarian priorities in Murzuq, through the provision of safe passage for the injured, and through emergency supplies of food, shelter and medicine.  

     

    Mr. President,

    I would like to conclude by raising an issue that the Special Representative and many member states have been following closely: the fate of abducted lawmaker Siham Sergawa.  Ms. Sergewa was abducted from her home in Benghazi on 17 July and has not been heard from since.  This unacceptable attack on a female lawmaker constitutes a serious crime against women and the prospect for women playing a role in political life in Libya.  We are grateful to those member states that have continued to follow the case closely and reiterate our demand that authorities in Benghazi assume their responsibility and find those responsible for this cowardly abduction of a female parliamentarian in front of her family.

    Thank you, Mr. President.

  • 10 авг 2019

    10 August 2019 - The United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) welcomes the agreement by concerned parties to the principle of humanitarian...

  • 10 авг 2019

    10 August 2019 - The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Libya Ghassan Salame condemns in the strongest possible terms the explosion that took place today, 10 August, in front of a shopping mall in the eastern city of Benghazi, which resulted in a number of civilian casualties, including UN staff.  The Special Representative announces with a heavy heart the death of two UN staff members and several others injured. The...

  • 10 авг 2019

    Following its call for a humanitarian truce on the occasion of Eid al-Adha, the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) received a response from the Government of National Accord declaring its agreement to the truce...

  • 9 авг 2019

    Leaders of the Greek and Turkish parts of the divided island of Cyprus have agreed to meet with the UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, in order to “plan the way forward”, and improve the daily lives of all Cypriots, a statement from the UN Mission in Cyprus, declared on Friday.

  • 9 авг 2019

    Youths from the local community and the FARC collective in Cesar established a cultural training school to reconciliation between ex-combatants and their neighboring community.

    ...
  • 9 авг 2019


     

    3 - 9 August 2019

    This Week in DPPA aims to keep you abreast of developments and events on the agenda of the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, at UN HQ and in the field, and especially those that sometimes "fly under the radar".

    Security Council

    DiCarlo: "Parties must fulfill their obligations under international law, to unilaterally release all arbitrarily detained or abducted"
    Under-Secretary-General Rosemary DiCarlo briefed the UN Security Council on detainees and missing persons in Syria on 7 August. "While the UN is not able to verify, reports suggest that more than 100,000 people have so far been detained, abducted, disappeared or went missing, largely, but not only, by the Syrian Government,” she stated. DiCarlo called on the parties to unilaterally release all arbitrarily detained or abducted persons and reiterated the Secretary-General’s call for the situation in Syria to be referred to the International Criminal Court.
    Read her full statement here
    Read more in UN News


    Security Council hears updates on peace and security in Africa, Georgia and Syria
    Assistant Secretary-General for Africa Bintou Keita briefed the Security Council on 8 August in closed session on peace and security in Africa. Assistant Secretary-General for Peacebuilding Oscar Fernandez-Taranco briefed on Georgia the same day. Syria was on the Council’s agenda on 9 August, in yet another closed session, with a briefing from Mohamed Khaled Khiari, Assistant Secretary-General for Middle East, Asia and the Pacific.

     

    New York

    Indigenous languages and conflict prevention
    The Americas Division of the Departments of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs and Peace Operations (DPPA-DPO) organized a seminar on indigenous languages and conflict prevention on 9 August, International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. Guest speakers Mathura Bikash Tripura, from Bangladesh, and Luis Enrique Lopez, from Peru, told the audience that conflicts involving indigenous communities, the private sector and governments have often resulted from tensions over the management of natural resources and access to land. Even if indigenous communities speak a mainstream language, mediators who speak indigenous languages and translators also trained as cultural mediators have been instrumental in building trust and understanding among parties at odds. There is a need to re-design initiatives preserving indigenous languages to target both indigenous and non-indigenous communities to ensure a holistic approach to multiculturalism, they stressed.
    For more information, please contact DPPA

     

    Afghanistan

    Nangarhar educators strategize on ways to improve women’s rights
    An event organized by UNAMA’s Jalalabad office brought together 35 female educators from girls’ schools in the eastern province of Nangarhar. During the discussion, participants underscored the need for more public awareness on gender equality, the rights of women and the Elimination of Violence Against Women (EVAW) law. Investing in public education on women’s rights is crucial in order to eliminate violence against women and girls, participants said.
    Read the full story on UNAMA’s website

     

    Provincial leaders in Afghanistan’s northeast rally behind national peace efforts
    Participants at a series of UN-backed events in Afghanistan’s northeast say they support national peace efforts but only if they are fully inclusive, representing all segments of Afghan society, female and male alike, to ensure a lasting outcome. At one of the recent events, some 90 leaders from the provinces of Kunduz and Takhar came together to throw their weight behind ongoing peace efforts aimed at finding a political settlement to the Afghan conflict. Participants not only strategized about the best way forward to ensure a sustainable peace but also expressed optimism about the prospects for a breakthrough.
    Read the full story on UNAMA’s website

     

    Central Asia

    Workshop on effective border security and management as a means of countering terrorism in the region
    Senior government officials responsible for border security and management, counter-terrorism and intelligence matters of all Central Asian states, Afghanistan and Mongolia met in Dushanbe, Tajikistan on 6-8 August to enhance understanding and knowledge of good practices for effective border security and management as a means of countering terrorism in the region. The three-day training workshop was jointly organized by the UN Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia and the UN Office of Counter-Terrorism. Experts from a number of UN entities and regional organizations shared their knowledge and experience with the participants.  
    Read the full story on UNRCCA’s website

     

    Iraq

    SRSG visits Sinjar to commemorate atrocities against the Yazidi community
    Special Representative Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert met survivors and local officials in Sinjar on 3-4 August. Her visit, on the fifth anniversary of ISIL’s atrocities against the Yazidis, was to highlight the plight of the stricken community and to call for urgent action to improve their lives and enable those who have fled to return home. “It is high time that the survivors, whose bravery we salute, be given the opportunity to return home and rebuild their lives in safety and dignity,“ she stated.
    Read more on UNAMI’s Facebook page

     

    Guinea-Bissau

    Communication course for Armed Forces
    The Senior Military Adviser of the UN Integrated Peacebuilding Office in Guinea Bissau (UNIOGBIS) organized a two-week training course in crisis communication and social media management for the Guinean Armed Forces at the amura Military Headquarters in Bissau. Around 15 military press officers participated in the exercise, acquiring skills allowing them to interact with the media, give individual and collective interviews, draft statements and manage information in crisis situations as well as how to maintain a presence on social media platforms to broadcast messages in a transparent and ethical manner.
    Read more on UNIOGBIS’ website

     

    First Bissau-Guinean Soap Opera
    Around 50 experts in the fields of health, education, justice, peacebuilding and national reconciliation from the Government, civil society and UN agencies in Guinea-Bissau discussed on 5 August the different aspects of Bissau-Guinean life, culture and traditions to be included in the country’s first soap opera entitled “Sun and Sweat”. The soap opera project, aimed at behavior change and developing educational content for peacebuilding, is funded by the UN Peacebuilding Fund, in the context of the Immediate Response Facility project in support of the media sector, coordinated by UNIOGBIS and managed by the UN Development Programme (UNDP).
    Read more on UNIOGBIS’ website

     

    Libya

    Ambassadors Conference in Turkey
    Special Representative Ghassan Salamé addressed the 11th Ambassadors Conference in Ankara, Turkey on 4 August.  In his address, he spoke about crisis management and conflict resolution. On the sidelines of the conference, he held a number of meetings on Libya, including with Turkey’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu.
    For more information, please contact DPPA

     

    Cyprus

    Meeting between Turkish and Greek Cypriot leaders
    Greek Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiades and Turkish Cypriot leader Mustafa Akinci met on 9 August under the auspices of Special Representative and Deputy Special Adviser on Cyprus Elizabeth Spehar. The two leaders announced their readiness to hold a tripartite meeting with the Secretary-General after the UN General Assembly in September to plan the way forward.
    Read the full statement here.


     

    Colombia

    Coffee for peacebuilding and reconciliation
    The UN Verification Mission in Colombia, on 3 August, accompanied the launch of the «Third Agreement» coffee brand. Representatives of coffee growers, ex-combatants and the Nasa Wes'x indigenous community of Gaitania, Tolima Department, joined in a local pact to produce coffee as part of the peacebuilding process. «Third Agreement» coffee offers an opportunity for development, sustainability and support for the reconciliation process. This project not only aims to strengthen the process of socio-economic reintegration of ex-combatants but will also boost the economy of the local community.
    For more information, please contact DPPA

     

    Candidates for Governor of Arauca sign pact for peace and non-violence
    In the framework of the "World Cocoa Meeting: from Arauca for Peace" held on 5 August in the city of Arauca, three of the four candidates for the Governor seat of the Department signed the "Pact for Peace, Nonviolence, Ethics, and Electoral Transparency". The candidates committed themselves to include these agreements in their government programs. The meeting was supported by Colombia Transforma, the UN Development Programme (UNDP), the World Food Programme (WFP), the Electoral Observation Mission and the Mission to Support the Peace Process in Colombia of the Organization of American States (MAPP-OEA), with the collaboration of the United Nations Verification Mission, the Office of the High Commissioner for Peace and the National University.
    For more information, please contact DPPA

     

    Central Africa

    New Issue of UNOCA Newsletter
    This week, the UN Regional Office for Central Africa (UNOCA) issued the latest issue of its quarterly newsletter “Interface”, which reviews the main activities of the office from April to June 2019.
    Read the magazine here (French).

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Contact DPPA at dppa@un.org 

  • 9 авг 2019

    Life-saving food aid distribution is set to resume to 850,000 people in the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, following guarantees by Houthi opposition forces that the supplies will reach those who need them most, the World Food Programme (WFP) said on Friday.

  • 8 авг 2019

    Thursday’s top stories: food security risk from climate crisis, fresh violence threat for millions of Syrians, UN chief urges “maximum restraint” in Jammu and Kashmir, calls for investigations into “brutal abduction” of Libyan politician.

  • 8 авг 2019

    The League of Arab States (LAS) shares a common mission with the United Nations (UN):  promoting peace, security and stability by preventing conflict, resolving disputes and acting in a spirit of solidarity and unity. In doing so, the two organizations also work together to expand economic opportunity, advance respect for human rights and build political inclusion. 

    The UN and the LAS signed a Memorandum of Understanding in 1989, which was renewed in 2016 by concluding a Protocol of Amendment. In June 2019, the UN opened a Liaison Office to the League of Arab States in Cairo, the first such office to be funded through the regular budget. The UN and LAS secretariats and respective agencies, funds and programmes regularly hold general cooperation and sectoral meetings. as mandated by the General Assembly. The two organizations also continue to invest in building their engagement through capacity-building exercises and staff exchanges. The Security Council also has sought to strengthen interaction with the LAS, including by holding informal informal meetings between its members and the LAS.
     

    Resources

    • The Arab Strategy for Youth, Peace and Securitiy 2023-2028 - AR EN  
  • 8 авг 2019

    A new set of unilateral sanctions imposed by the United States on Venezuela this week prompted the concern of the United Nations’ top rights official on Thursday, who said in a statement that she feared they would have a “potentially severe impact” on the human rights of the South American nation’s “long-suffering” people.

  • 8 авг 2019

    The UN Secretary-General António Guterres appealed for ‘maximum restraint’ over the territory of Jammu and Kashmir on Thursday, which has been disputed by India and Pakistan, since the end of British rule in the late 1940s.

  • 8 авг 2019

    Following the collapse of the latest truce in Idlib at the start of this week, the Senior Humanitarian Adviser to the UN’s Syria Envoy urged Member States on Thursday to increase their support for “critical humanitarian needs” in the country’s last opposition-held enclave.

  • 8 авг 2019

     Amman, 8 Aug 2019 - The UN Special Envoy for Yemen Martin Griffiths extends his heartfelt...

  • 7 авг 2019

    Responding to the mass shootings in Texas and Ohio on Saturday, a group of independent UN experts has called out the “increased use of divisive language”, as well as attempts to marginalise racial, ethnic and religious minorities”, by some politicians and leaders.

  • 7 авг 2019

    Wednesday’s top stories: Syrian detainees “failed by Security Council”; Zimbabwe experiencing “worst-ever hunger crisis”; Guterres welcomes new Mozambique peace accord; deadly Kabul attack; Mexico “responsible for enforced disappearances”; indigenous languages at risk; and how innovation should be used to feed the world.

  • 7 авг 2019

    The Security Council has “utterly failed Syrian detainees and their families”, Amina Khoulani, Co-founder of Families for Freedom, told the Security Council on Wednesday, during a meeting focussed on those who have been jailed or gone missing across Syria, during years of brutal conflict. 

  • 7 авг 2019

    DUSHANBE, Tajikistan

    Senior government officials responsible for border security and management, counter-terrorism, and...

  • 7 авг 2019

    Madame President,

    Members of the Security Council,

     

    Thank you for the opportunity to brief the Council on the crucial issue of detainees, abductees and missing persons in Syria.

    I’d like to welcome Dr. Hala and Ms. Khoulani to today’s briefing.

    In June this year, this Council unanimously adopted resolution 2474 on “Missing persons in armed conflict”. The resolution establishes a clear link between solving the issue of missing persons and resolving conflicts. In conversations with us, many Syrians see resolution 2474 as a glimmer of hope.

    Given the continued lack of access to places of detention and to detainees in Syria, the UN has no official statistics on those detained, abducted or missing. What we know comes from accounts recorded and corroborated by the Commission of Inquiry on Syria, mandated by the Human Rights Council, and human rights organizations since the start of the conflict in 2011. While the UN is not able to verify, reports suggest that more than 100,000 people have so far been detained, abducted, disappeared or went missing, largely, but not only, by the Syrian government.

    Many families have no information on the fate of their loved ones. Detainees, including women and children, are held without due process or access to legal representation or their families. Places of detention are not accessible to the UN or international monitors. Records from hospitals or burial sites are not public. Some families have been forced to pay enormous sums of money in hope of obtaining information—often in vain.

    Deaths in detention have continued to occur, allegedly many as a result of torture, neglect or inhumane conditions. For the families of detainees, their tragedy is compounded by the difficulty of obtaining death certificates or remains. Even if they obtain the certificates, the real causes of death remain hidden.

    Women, besides being direct victims, are also impacted when their husbands or male relatives disappear. Syrian women risk losing legal rights, including their housing, land and property rights. This happens if they cannot explain their husband or male relative’s whereabouts and lack legal documentation or a death certificate.  Many women under these circumstances carry the heavy burden of sustaining their entire families. For refugees or those internally displaced, these challenges are multiplied.

     

    Madame President,

    The Commission of Inquiry has documented since 2011 how the Syrian government has, and I quote, “perpetrated the crimes of extermination, murder, rape or other forms of sexual violence, torture, and imprisonment in the context of its widespread and systematic detentions of dissidents, as well as those perceived to be sympathetic to armed groups”.

    Perhaps the most prominent evidence of torture and ill-treatment of detainees in government detention centers is the more than 50,000 photos smuggled out of Syria by a military defector and made public in 2014. These photos show nearly 7,000 dead bodies bearing marks of torture.

    Following the government’s reassertion of control in some areas previously held by armed groups, the UN has continued to receive reports of civilians arbitrarily detained or disappeared, including in areas subject to so-called “reconciliation agreements”.

    Human rights organizations have reported cases of detention and enforced disappearance of refugees who return to Syria or IDPs who return to their places of origin. Surveys by UNHCR indicate that fear of detention is among the factors preventing refugees from return.

     

    Excellencies,

    These abuses are not limited to Government forces. According to the Commission of Inquiry, ISIL and Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, both designated by the Council as terrorist organizations, have committed heinous abuses.

    Armed groups affiliated with the opposition have also committed serious abuses. They allegedly established makeshift places of detention in different areas of their control where captured government soldiers, suspected collaborators with the government or members of opposing armed groups were held and sometimes executed. Reporting from human rights organizations indicates that armed opposition factions currently controlling Afrin have conducted arbitrary detention, torture and abduction of civilians. The Syrian Democratic Forces have also conducted arbitrary detentions, including the arrest of men attempting to evade forced conscription.

    The Government of Syria claims that the number of those detained by armed groups is estimated at 16,000. However, without access to all detention centers in Syria, the UN cannot verify the accuracy of this information.

    Justice and accountability for these abuses must be ensured, regardless of the perpetrators.

    The UN is also concerned that thousands of foreign nationals—many women and children who are family members of alleged ISIL members—are currently being detained in the Al Hol camp. We call on Member States to ensure that their nationals are repatriated for the purposes of prosecution, rehabilitation or reintegration, as appropriate, and in line with international law and standards.

     

    Madame President,

    Special Envoy Pedersen has prioritized the case of detainees, abductees and the missing. Meaningful action on this file would build confidence and move the political process forward.

    The Special Envoy continues to seek progress within the working group on this issue where the UN is a member, along with the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Russian Federation and the Republic of Turkey. The International Committee of the Red Cross is an observer.

    Since it was established in December 2017, the working group has facilitated four exchange operations, including one last week. The releases of detainees so far, while welcomed, are insufficient in scale – nowhere near commensurate with the magnitude of the problem. Only 109 people in total have been released thus far.  

    We stress the need for the parties to move beyond “one for one” exchanges. All sides should engage in unilateral releases, in the true spirit of resolution 2254. Furthermore, meetings of the working group should occur regularly and with more frequency. I urge the working group to also adopt the procedures on missing persons which have been submitted by the United Nations.

    And I reiterate the invitation by the United Nations to host the next meeting of the working group in Geneva.

     

    Madame President,

    In its resolutions 2139, 2254, and 2165, this Council called for the release of those arbitrarily detained, particularly women and children. These calls must be heeded especially by those with influence on the Syrian parties. The UN stands ready to provide all necessary support.

    The parties must fulfill their obligations under international law, to unilaterally release all arbitrarily detained or abducted, and most urgently, women, children, the sick and elderly. They must collect, protect, and manage all the relevant data and documents on detainees, abductees and missing persons and establish a mechanism with the ICRC to manage this information in coordination with the Office of the Special Envoy. Furthermore, they must provide families with information; identify the dead and return remains, wherever possible, to their relatives. Last, they should provide, without delay and through appropriate channels a list of all places in which persons are being detained and arrange for immediate access to such locations by a neutral third party.

    Accountability for serious violations of international humanitarian law and human rights is central to achieving and maintaining durable peace in Syria. In this regard, all parties to the conflict must cooperate fully with the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism and the Commission of Inquiry.

    Finally, Madame President, I reiterate the Secretary-General’s call for the situation in Syria to be referred to the International Criminal Court.

    Thank you.

  • 7 авг 2019

    The UN Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) has expressed outrage at a Taliban attack in Kabul, that led to  “scores” of civilians casualties on Wednesday. In a Tweet, the Mission said that such “indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks in heavily populated civilian areas must stop”.

  • 7 авг 2019

    Amman, 07 August 2019 – I am alarmed by the military escalations in Aden today, including reports of clashes in the vicinity of the Presidential Palace. I am also deeply concerned by the recent rhetoric encouraging violence against Yemeni institutions.

    Escalations of violence will contribute to instability and suffering in Aden and will deepen Yemen’s political and social divisions.

    ...
  • 7 авг 2019

    UNIOGBIS Senior Military Adviser organized a two-week training course in crisis communication and social media management for the Guinean Armed Forces, from 22 July to 2 August at the amura Military HQ in Bissau.

    ...

  • 7 авг 2019

    “The Israeli authorities approved over the past two days the advancement of some 2,400 housing units in settlements in Area C of the occupied West Bank.

    The expansion of settlements has no legal effect and constitutes a flagrant violation of international law. By advancing the effective annexation of the West Bank, it undermines the chances for establishing a Palestinian state based on relevant UN resolutions, as...

  • 7 авг 2019

    KABUL - The United Nations expresses deep concern at the Taliban’s stated threat to target civilians participating in the 28 September presidential election process.

    According to international...

  • 7 авг 2019

    The United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) is deeply concerned at the...

  • 6 авг 2019

    Armed groups affiliated with the Al Qaeda and ISIL terror groups, appear to have intensified their activities in Yemen, Ravina Shamdasani, a spokesperson for the UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) declared on Tuesday, describing the situation as an example of “deeply worrying developments” that have seriously impacted civilians over the past ten days.

  • 6 авг 2019

    Paying homage to those who perished as the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, as well as the many others whose lives were devastated in the years that followed, UN chief António Guterres on Tuesday underscored their “courage and moral leadership” in reminding the world of “the human cost of nuclear war”.

  • 6 авг 2019

    KUNDUZ - Participants at a series of UN-backed events in Afghanistan’s northeast say they support national peace efforts but only if they are...

  • 5 авг 2019

    Our main stories today: Myanmar companies bankroll ‘brutal operations’ of military; UN chief renounces shootings in the United States; ‘Repeated indiscriminate’ shelling of Libyan airport raises concern; UN voices ‘concern’ over Kashmir; and new UN agriculture chief reaffirms commitment with Italy on development

  • 5 авг 2019

    Our main stories today: Myanmar companies bankroll ‘brutal operations’ of military; UN chief renounces shootings in the United States; ‘Repeated indiscriminate’ shelling of Libyan airport raises concern; UN voices ‘concern’ over Kashmir; and new UN agriculture chief reaffirms commitment with Italy on development