Добро пожаловать в ООН

Reports and Policy Documents

2023

  • 11 окт 2023

    The death toll in Israel from attacks by Palestinian armed groups, and in Gaza due to Israeli bombardments, has continued to rise, with mass displacement soaring across the enclave, the UN humanitarian affairs coordination office, OCHA, said on Wednesday.

  • 11 окт 2023

    Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed has wrapped up a three-day visit to Iceland, where she stressed the UN’s dual objective for peace – for the world and with nature – and noted the country’s role enhancing global cooperation on peace as well as climate action.

  • 11 окт 2023

    As Colombia prepares to mark the seventh anniversary of the peace agreement that ended the decades-long conflict there, the Government has increased its efforts to realize the accord’s goals, the UN envoy for the country said on Wednesday.

  • 11 окт 2023

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Wednesday voiced grave concern over the escalating conflict in Israel and Gaza and stressed the need to prevent the violence from spreading into the wider region.

  • 11 окт 2023

    MOSCOW, Russian Federation

    On 10 October 2023, the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General, Head of UNRCCA Kaha Imnadze, during his working visit to Moscow, the Russian Federation,  held meetings with officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, namely with Deputy Minister Sergey Vershinin, Deputy Minister Mikhail Galuzin, Deputy Minister...

  • 10 окт 2023

    From 9 to 11 October 2023, UNOAU participated in the Consultative Session on the Case Management Process for AU PSOs in Addis...

  • 10 окт 2023

    SRSG KAHA IMNADZE MEETS WITH CIS SECRETARY GENERAL SERGEY LEBEDEV (Moscow, October 2023)

    Photo taken by CIS Press Centre

    MOSCOW, Russian...

  • 10 окт 2023

    SRSG KAHA IMNADZE MEETS WITH CSTO DEPUTY SECRETARY GENERAL SAMAT ORDABAEV (Moscow, October 2023)

    Photo taken by CSTO Press Centre

    MOSCOW...

  • 10 окт 2023

    Following reports of continued fighting between government troops and local militias in Ethiopia, the UN Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide is sounding the alarm about the heightened risk of genocide and related atrocity crimes in the Tigray, Amhara, Afar and Oromi regions.

  • 10 окт 2023

    The top UN humanitarian official on Tuesday called for an end to the escalating violence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel, warning that “the whole region is at a tipping point.” 

  • 10 окт 2023

    The United Nations has been working in the Middle East region around the clock to de-escalate the Israeli-Palestinian crisis by engaging key actors and providing emergency assistance to civilians on the ground.

  • 10 окт 2023

    The Government of Iraq has made “several important steps and promising initiatives” one year since its formation, but more efforts are required to address the populations needs, the Head of the UN Mission in the country, UNAMI, told the Security Council on Tuesday.

  • 10 окт 2023

    Despite closed borders and the escalating Israel-Palestine crisis, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) was rapidly expanding its new emergency operation to provide critical aid to over 800,000 people facing dire circumstances and lacking access to essential supplies.

  • 10 окт 2023

    ASHGABAT, Turkmenistan

    On October 5, a training session entitled “Effective Communication” was held within the...

  • 9 окт 2023

    UNDER-SECRETARY-GENERAL ROSEMARY A. DICARLO’S

    REMARKS TO THE SECURITY COUNCIL ON

    UKRAINE

    New York, 9 OCTOBER 2023

    Mr. President,

    On Thursday, 5 October, the small village of Hroza in the Kupiansk district of Ukraine’s Kharkiv region suffered one of the deadliest attacks on civilians since the beginning of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February of last year.

    At least 52 people were reportedly killed when a missile hit a shop and café.  Several others were injured. The attack wiped out a sixth of Hroza’s population. No family in this small community was left untouched.

    Among the victims were mourners gathered at a memorial service for a local man killed during Russia’s occupation of the area.

    UN human rights experts on the ground have been able to collect the names of 35 people who were killed – 19 women, 15 men, and an 8-year-old boy. The accounts they received indicated that the location where the attack occurred was of civilian character.

    I reiterate the Secretary-General’s strong condemnation of this heinous attack.

    Shockingly, less than 24 hours later, civilians in the Kharkiv region were hit again. This time, missiles struck buildings in the centre of the city of Kharkiv – Ukraine’s second largest city - reportedly killing a 10-year-old boy and his 67-year-old grandmother.

    Thirty people were reportedly wounded, including an 11-month-old infant. These attacks took place in an area surrounded by restaurants, apartment buildings and other civilian infrastructure.

    The recent attacks in Kharkiv add to an already unbearable toll of civilian casualties resulting from Russia’s invasion – a war launched in violation of the UN Charter and international law.

    As of 5 October, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) verified that 9,806 civilians, including 560 children, have been killed as a result of the war.

    The number of civilians OHCHR has verified as injured stands at 17,962, including 1,196 children. The actual figures are very likely considerably higher and, tragically, will continue to rise if current patterns continue.

    Indeed, in recent weeks, civilians and civilian infrastructure across Ukraine have remained under nearly constant fire. Residents of Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Dnipro, Lviv, Sumy, Donetsk, Odesa, Kyiv and other regions continued to face unrelenting and often indiscriminate attacks.

    On Friday, a Russian drone attack damaged a grain silo in the Izmail district of the Odesa region. This was the latest in a series of strikes on Ukrainian grain infrastructure.

    Combined with Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea Initiative, such attacks not only destroy the livelihoods of Ukrainian farmers, but also risk impacting the lives of millions of food insecure people around the world.

    We are also concerned about the renewed attacks against Ukrainian energy infrastructure in recent weeks. The Assistant Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Deputy Emergency Relief Coordinator will provide more details about the UN response to the affected population.

    The immediate impact of such attacks is clear. Just as clear is the fact that international humanitarian law obligates parties to armed conflict to protect non-combatants.

    It unambiguously prohibits attacks targeting civilians or civilian infrastructure. We will not tire of condemning such attacks. And we will not waver in calling for accountability for anyone responsible for harming civilians during hostilities.

    Mr. President,

    OHCHR’s latest report on the situation in Ukraine paints a grim picture of serious human rights violations across the country, most of them attributed to the Russian armed forces.  

    These include acts of conflict-related sexual violence reportedly committed by members of the Russian armed forces and Russian penitentiary services.

    The report, covering the period between 1 February and 31 July 2023, indicates that those cases are consistent with previously documented patterns of sexual violence by Russian forces and services.

    OHCHR reports that arbitrary detention and incommunicado detention of civilians continued in Russian-occupied territory. It documented that 996 civilians were subjected to arbitrary detention since February 2022. 

    Eighty of them died in detention or were found dead with signs of violence on their bodies, and 468 remain in arbitrary or incommunicado detention.

    OHCHR also documented cases of arbitrary detention by Ukrainian forces, mainly of law enforcement authorities, that took place during the reporting period. 

    OHCHR interviewed 26 Russian PoWs (all men).  Twelve of them said they were subjected to torture or ill-treatment during interrogation at unofficial places of internment and evacuation before they were brought to official internment locations. 

    OHCHR is also concerned over recent legislation in the Russian Federation that would effectively grant amnesty to Russian servicepersons for an overly broad range of crimes, potentially including gross violations of international human rights law or serious violations of international humanitarian law.

    Under international law, the Russian Federation has an obligation to investigate and prosecute potential war crimes and gross human rights violations committed by its forces in Ukraine.

    The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine, in its latest update, also found continued systematic and widespread use of torture and reiterated its deep concern at the scale and gravity of violations that have been committed in Ukraine by Russian armed forces.

    The Commission emphasized the need for accountability.

    Mr. President,

             From the beginning of this senseless war, we have warned about the grave risks it poses to Ukraine, the region and the world.

    In recent weeks, the impact of the war has expanded in the Black Sea, with reports of the wide-spread use of sea mines that could threaten civilian navigation.

    A military incident in the Black Sea, whether intentional or by accident, could further destabilize the region.

    We, therefore, reiterate our call for restraint in order to avoid any action that could worsen the already volatile situation.

    Mr. President,

    In his remarks to the Security Council last month, the Secretary-General not only recounted the suffering that the war has inflicted on the people of Ukraine, but also once again sounded the alarm about how the invasion is aggravating geopolitical tensions and divisions and threatening regional stability.

    As predictable, and predicted, this conflict is doing visible, serious damage to global peace and security.

    Before 24 February 2022, the world was already facing an extremely challenging “conflict landscape”, to use a clinical euphemism.

    But since then, the risks have grown exponentially, and the cost is measured in lives and destruction. In Ukraine most of all, but also beyond.

    Is the damage irreversible? We have no choice but to continue to try to stop the slide towards more devastation and suffering.

    During this year’s General Assembly, we heard a clear recommitment, across the UN membership, to the principles of the Charter, including respect for the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of all Member States.

    A just solution to the war lies in adhering to that basic obligation, with deeds, not just with words.

    We know the dangers of abandoning our founding principles and disregarding the norms that bind us. It is not too late to restore the integrity of our Charter and international law. We fail to do so at the world’s peril.

    Thank you.

  • 9 окт 2023

    The UN Secretary-General on Monday said that he recognized the legitimate grievances of the Palestinian people and the legitimate security concerns of Israel, but underlined his rejection of terrorist acts and upheld the need to protect civilians.

  • 9 окт 2023

    The escalating conflict between Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups has displaced hundreds of thousands of people, the UN reported on Monday.

  • 9 окт 2023

    Senior UN officials on Monday strongly condemned recent Russian attacks on Ukrainian towns and civilian infrastructure, emphasizing the need for accountability for those harming civilians during hostilities.

  • 9 окт 2023

    Senior UN officials on Monday strongly condemned recent Russian attacks on Ukrainian towns and civilian infrastructure, emphasizing the need for accountability for those harming civilians during hostilities.

  • 9 окт 2023

    The UN Secretary-General on Monday said that he recognized the legitimate grievances of the Palestinian people and the legitimate security concerns of Israel, but underlined his rejection of terrorist acts and upheld the need to protect civilians.

  • 8 окт 2023

    From 3 to 9 Oct, UNOAU in collaboration with the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC), provided...

  • 8 окт 2023

    Millions of Ukrainians have fled the country since Russia’s full-scale invasion in early 2022, and now the authorities in Ukraine with the support of the United Nations are planning ahead for their eventual return.

  • 8 окт 2023

    Top UN officials engaged key actors amid the spiraling Israeli-Palestinian conflict while UN peacekeepers detected rocket and artillery fire exchanged across the Israel-Lebanon border ahead of Sunday’s Security Council emergency closed-door meeting on the unfolding crisis.

  • 7 окт 2023

    UN officials were “in close contact with all concerned to urge maximum restraint” following “horrific scenes of violence” that left dozens dead and hundreds wounded in Israeli cities near the Gaza Strip amid rocket attacks by armed Palestinian militants early Saturday morning, with the UN Security Council announcing it would hold a Sunday afternoon private meeting to discuss the matter.

  • 7 окт 2023

    “I vehemently condemn this morning’s multi-front assault against Israeli towns and cities near the Gaza Strip, and barrage of rockets reaching across central Israel by Hamas militants.

    These events have resulted in horrific scenes of violence and many Israeli fatalities and injuries, with many believed to be kidnapped inside the Strip. These are...

  • 6 окт 2023
    This Week in DPPA is a brief roundup of political and peacebuilding events and developments at UNHQ and around the world. 

    Security Council

    Security Council gives green lightw to “Multinational Security Support” mission for Haiti

    On 2 October, the Security Council voted to authorize Member States that have notified the Secretary-General of their participation to form and deploy a “Multinational Security Support” mission to Haiti, to bolster national police efforts to restore security to the violence-plagued nation. The resolution passed by a vote of 13 in favour, with two abstentions. By the terms of the resolution, the Mission will be led by one country, in close cooperation and coordination with the Government of Haiti, for an initial period of twelve months. The text builds on the sanctions regime established by resolution 2653 (2022). It highlights that the nation’s root causes of instability require political solutions and recognizes the need for a Haitian-owned and led political process, with the support of the United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH). After the vote, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Haiti, Maria Salvador, issued a statement, calling it a positive and decisive step to bring peace to the violence-torn nation.

    Read more here

    Read statement from SRSG Salvador here

    General Assembly

    Fourth Committee commences discussions on decolonization 

    On 2 October, the Decolonization segment of the Special Political and Decolonization Committee (Fourth Committee) opened. The session included introductory statements and joint general debate on decolonization items.

    Watch here

    Special Political Missions at 75

    Diplomacy requires “risk-taking, persistence and creativity,” says USG DiCarlo as UN marks 75 Years of Special Political Missions

    On 5 October, DPPA, in partnership with the Permanent Missions of Finland and Mexico, marked 75 years since the establishment of the first United Nations special political mission. The event, “Diplomacy for Peace”, took place at UN Headquarters in New York and explored the role and contribution of special political missions (SPMs) in conflict prevention, mediation and peacebuilding. Under-Secretary-General Rosemary DiCarlo underlined that each of the over 40 SPMs operating around the globe is tailored to its specific context. They also work to identify new entry points, opportunities and partnerships for peacemaking and peacebuilding. “Diplomacy and the work of good offices require risk-taking, persistence and creativity,” said DiCarlo. “They require mechanisms to keep channels open, quietly defuse tensions, build trust, and bring opponents together. They require talking to those with whom one disagrees.”

    Read more here

    African Union

    17th Annual Joint Consultative Meeting between the AUPSC and Members of the UNSC

    From 3 to 6 October, members from the United Nations Security Council and the African Union Peace and Security Council met in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, for the 17th Annual Joint Consultative Meeting and 8th Annual Informal Seminar. The members discussed issues of common concern on strengthening the African Union and the United Nations Peace Support Operations in Africa, the situation in Sudan, the situation in the Sahel region, the situation in Somalia and the activities of the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia (ATMIS), as well as the situation in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    Read the Joint Communiqué here

    Mozambique

    In Mozambique, first DDR beneficiaries receive pension

    This week in Mozambique, the first group of disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR) beneficiaries began receiving a state pension, following the passing of a decree extending pension rights to eligible women and men demobilized as part of the implementation of the Maputo Accord. The topic is fundamental to the reintegration of DDR beneficiaries, as well as to wider work on national reconciliation to build an inclusive, definitive peace. The news was shared during Peace and Reconciliation Day on 4 October and was welcomed by the Personal Envoy of the Secretary-General, Mirko Manzoni, who played a central role in negotiations on the issue. He noted that “it represents an important step towards the long-term sustainability of the process.” Over the coming months all eligible DDR beneficiaries will be registered for pensions.

    Read full statement here

    Colombia

    To mark Peace Day, Verification Mission screens virtual reality film “Pathways Colombia”

    On September 30, the UN Verification Mission in Colombia, in partnership with UNDP, screened the Virtual Reality film “Pathways Colombia”, to commemorate the International Day of Peace. Among the audience were young people from Agua de Dios, a town in Cundinamarca near Bogotá. A variety of cultural activities were held with the participation of community representatives, victims, public officials and former combatants.

    Former combatants repair community centre, as part of pledge to victims 

    On October 4, a group of 37 former combatants affirmed their commitment to contribute to reparations to victims and restoration of the community in San Adolfo, in Acevedo, Huila. The Former combatants are renovating a local infrastructure that serves as a community centre in the city. This has been possible thanks to the joint efforts of the Catholic Church through Pastoral Social, the Ombudsman's Office, the Organization of Ibero-American States (OEI in Spanish) and XB funding from the UN Verification Mission in Colombia. The Special Jurisdiction for Peace also supports the initiative.

    Central Asia

    UNRCCA participates in international youth forum for peace in Turkmenistan

    On 2 October, the United Nations Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA) took part as a partner in the “Guarantee of Peace International Youth Forum” organized by the Ministry of Education, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Central Council of the Youth Organization of Turkmenistan, in Arkadag, Turkmenistan. The purpose of the Forum was to promote peaceful dialogue as the most important means of resolving conflicts and overcoming differences between young people around the world. Special Representative Kaha Imnadze, speaking at the official opening ceremony of the Forum, noted that the International Year of Dialogue, is an important step towards strengthening a culture of peace and trust in international relations.

    Read more here

    Iraq

    Special Representative Hennis-Plasschaert meets with Prime Minister Al-Sudani

    On 4 October, Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, met with Prime Minister Mohammed S. Al-Sudani. 

    Special Representative meets with Prime Minister of Kurdistan region

    On 30 September, Special Representative Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert met in Erbil with the Prime Minister of the Kurdistan region, Mr. Masrour Barzani. They discussed the political situation, underscoring the need to hold Kurdistan Region parliamentary elections on time. 

    UNAMI holds training on digital security and rights in Baghdad

    On 30 September, the Human Rights Office of UNAMI and the INSM Network for digital rights in Iraq completed a joint two-day training on Digital Security and Digital Rights held at the Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights (IHCHR) headquarters in Baghdad. The training brought together participants from civil society, human rights defenders, journalists, bloggers, lawyers, and staff members of the IHCHR. They received guidance on how to maneuver safely through cyberspace, with a focus on improving digital security for human rights defenders and enhancing their knowledge on digital rights, as well as the practical tools to strengthen their safety in the digital environment, including ethics of

    Learn more here  

    UNAMI Human Rights Office trains women journalists on inclusion of human rights principles in reporting

    On 29 and 30 September, the UNAMI Human Rights Office and the Iraqi Women Journalists Forum trained 20 journalists on the inclusion of human rights principles and norms in journalistic reporting. This is the fourth training held in Iraq this year under the Global Drive for Media Freedom and the Safety of Journalists initiative, which is funded by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). 

    Lebanon

    Special Coordinator meets Lebanese officials and stakeholders, discusses need to end political impasse

    This week, the UN Special Coordinator Joanna Wronecka met Lebanese officials as well as academics and other stakeholders. In these meetings, the Special Coordinator underlined the importance of ending the political impasse in Lebanon and implementation of urgent reforms. The meetings also addressed Lebanese concerns over the Syrian refugee crisis in country. With caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati, the Special Coordinator discussed his meetings on the margins of the General Assembly. She exchanged views with former Prime Minister Tamam Salam on the importance of strengthening state institutions to preserve the stability of the country including on the economic and security fronts. She also discussed other of Lebanon’s economic challenges with caretaker Minister of Economy Amin Salam and sustainable solutions to the education sector with caretaker Minister of Education Abbas Halabi. 

    Special Coordinator Wronecka meets Quintet for Lebanon ambassadors, discusses international support

    On 5 October, Special Coordinator Wronecka met with the new ambassador of Qatar to Lebanon, Sheikh Saud bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani to discuss his country’s ongoing efforts to discuss the political stalemate in Lebanon and how the international community can best support Lebanon during this crisis. The Special Coordinator also met other ambassadors of the Quintet for Lebanon, which comprises the United States, France, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Egypt, to discuss the latest developments.

    Special Coordinator visits FAO projects promoting sustainable agriculture development

    On 4 October, Special Coordinator Wronecka and the Food and Agriculture Organization's (FAO) representative in Lebanon, Nora Haddad, visited three FAO projects in Tannourine, north Lebanon. The initiatives promote sustainable agriculture development in Lebanon, as well as cooperation within municipalities. They met with Lebanese farmers and women cooperatives members who shared their contributions and challenges for achieving food security and the support received from FAO, including related to water reservoirs, cooperative development and organic farming. Wronecka underlined that community growth and livelihoods are possible when investments are made in people and the knowledge they possess, and that this goes hand-in-hand with sustainable peace and stability for Lebanon as a whole.

    North Macedonia

    North Macedonia adopts new National Youth Strategy 2023-2027

    The Government of North Macedonia has adopted a new National Youth Strategy 2023-2027. The strategic document proposes actions to encourage youth participation and increase youth well-being. The Strategy was drafted following consultations involving over 1000 youth and institutions. UNDP and UNFPA supported the process within the framework of the Secretary-General’s Peacebuilding Fund’s regional project “Youth 4 Inclusion, Equality & Trust”. 

    Next Week

    On 9 October, the Security Council will meet on Ukraine; on 10 October, it will be briefed on UNAMI; on 11 October, it will meet on Colombia; on 12 October, it will vote on Libya sanctions; on 13 October, it will be briefed on Yemen.

    

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Subscribe to 'This Week in DPPA' here

    Contact DPPA at dppa@un.org

     

     

  • 6 окт 2023

    Dakar, 06 October 2023 - The Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United...

  • 6 окт 2023

    “I condemn today’s attack by Israeli settlers against Palestinians and their property in the town of Huwwara in occupied West Bank.

    I'm outraged by the continued incitement, provocations, and lack of accountability for these violent crimes.

    One Palestinian was shot dead during clashes between Palestinians and Israeli settlers and...

  • 6 окт 2023

    TRIPOLI- The United Nations Support Mission in Libya received yesterday evening an official memorandum from the office of Speaker of the House of Representatives Agila Saleh that...

  • 5 окт 2023

    Joint Communiqué of the 17th annual joint consultative meeting between the African Union Peace and Security Council (PSC) and the members of the United Nations Security...

  • 5 окт 2023

    On 6 October, the AUC convened the First Quadripartite Meeting of the Chiefs of Defence (CDFs) of the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS),...

  • 5 окт 2023

    From 5 to 6 October, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the AU Peace and Security Council (AUPSC) along with Members of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), held the...

  • 5 окт 2023

    The African Union Peace and Security Council (AU PSC) and the Members of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) held their seventeenth (17th) Annual Joint...

  • 5 окт 2023

    UNDER-SECRETARY-GENERAL ROSEMARY DICARLO’S REMARKS

    AT THE COMMEMORATIVE EVENT ON

    “DIPLOMACY FOR PEACE: 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF SPECIAL POLITICAL MISSIONS”

     

    New York, 5 October 2023

     

    Excellencies,

    Dear colleagues,

    I am pleased to welcome you today to commemorate the 75th anniversary of special political missions.

    UN civilian missions with political functions have been at the heart of the Organization's work since its early days. They have steadfastly served the cause of peace.

    The first special political mission was established on 14 May 1948, when the General Assembly mandated a UN Mediator in Palestine. A week later, Swedish diplomat Folke Bernadotte was appointed to the role.  

    Over the following two decades, the UN set up numerous special political missions. Several played a pivotal role in decolonisation and the birth of proud and independent states in Africa and Asia.

    From the late 1960s until the late 1980s, however, special political missions were deployed less frequently. Lack of trust between the two dominant geopolitical blocs hampered decision-making in the Security Council and the General Assembly. One of the few missions created in this period was that of the Special Representative to the Middle East.

    Following the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s and the 1990s, the demand for special political missions increased again.

    New operations were deployed to support peace and reconciliation efforts in Afghanistan, Guatemala, Haiti, Nepal, Nicaragua and Somalia, among others.

    Today, there are over 40 special political missions (SPMs) around the globe.

    SPMs:

    • engage in conflict prevention and preventive diplomacy
    • address transboundary threats in Western, Central and Eastern Africa as well as Central Asia.
    • accompany political transitions, as in Libya and Somalia.
    • provide electoral assistance, as in Iraq and, a few years ago, Burundi.
    • support peace negotiations, as in Syria and Yemen, and the implementation of peace agreements, as in Colombia.
    • seek to encourage more inclusive societies through their peacebuilding work, inlucidng supporting the full participation of women in political and peace processes, and advocating for deeper engagement with youth.
    • And, assist the UN Security Council in monitoring compliance with its sanction regimes, including those imposed on Da'esh and Al-Qaida.

    Special political missions have varied mandates tailored to each context. Since 1948, they have taken on new roles and tasks, adjusting to an ever-evolving peace and security environment.

    In recent years, special political missions have had to understand and adapt to new risks, including the effects of the climate crisis and advancing technology. 

    In a shifting peace and security context, they also work to identify new entry points, opportunities and partnerships for peacemaking and peacebuilding.

    Our three panellists today – my colleagues Hanna, Carlos and Hans – will tell us what this means for the missions they lead.

    Colleagues,

    Over 75 years we have learned much – from our successes but also from our missteps.

    We are also painfully aware that we are undergoing a most difficult period in global relations. Our experience and a sober assessment of the moment we are living helped inform the Secretary-General’s policy brief on A New Agenda for Peace, which makes the case for boosting diplomatic engagement.

    Special political missions will play an essential role in making this vision a reality.

    Diplomacy and the work of good offices require risk-taking, persistence and creativity. They require mechanisms to keep channels open, quietly defuse tensions, build trust, and bring opponents together. They require talking to those with whom one disagrees.

    As we commemorate 75 years of special political missions, I pay tribute to the memory of Folke Bernadotte, who was assassinated in the pursuit of peace in September 1948.

    I also join the Chef de Cabinet in honouring the thousands of dedicated UN personnel who serve, or have served, in our missions, often in dangerous environments and away from their loved ones.

    Let me conclude by thanking Finland and Mexico, the co-facilitators of the General Assembly resolution on special political missions, for their steadfast engagement to bring visibility to the critical role these missions play.

    And thank you, Member States for your support. Without it, our work would not be possible.

    Thank you.

  • 5 окт 2023

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the United Nations...

  • 5 окт 2023

    THE SECRETARY GENERAL ACKNOWLEDGES PROGRESS TOWARDS THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FINAL PEACE AGREEMENT AND THE SET IN MOTION OF INITIATIVES TO CONSOLIDATE PEACE IN COLOMBIA...

  • 5 окт 2023

    UN Special Envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen on Thursday appealed for restraint following a deadly drone attack on a military graduation ceremony in Homs, and amid rising violence in the war-ravaged country.

  • 5 окт 2023

    The top UN humanitarian official in Ukraine has condemned a Russian strike on Thursday that ripped apart the small rural village of Hroza in the Kharkiv region, killing dozens of civilians.

  • 5 окт 2023

    As heavy fighting continues in Sudan, the UN’s top aid official in the country warned on Thursday that the conflict has created “the world’s fastest-growing displacement crisis” which threatens to outstrip the Organization’s best efforts to help those most in need. 

  • 5 окт 2023

    ASHGABAT, Turkmenistan

    On September 28, 2023, an online session “Climate...

  • 4 окт 2023

    Click on the link below for opening remarks by SRSG Parfait Onanga-Anyanga

  • 4 окт 2023

    On 5 October, 2023, the UN Security Council (UNSC) members held their eighth informal joint seminar with the African Union Peace and Security Council (AUPSC). The informal seminars have been...

  • 4 окт 2023

    This year marks the beginning of the implementation of the new Strategic Plan of the Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (DPPA). The Multi-Year Appeal (MYA) is critical to these efforts, allowing us to do more, more quickly and with more impact. In the first half of 2023, MYA funding supported the breadth of DPPA’s activities at Headquarters and in the field – demonstrating its effectiveness and flexibility. Thanks to the generous support of our donors, DPPA was able to make a difference by meeting mid-year targets in its current 2023-2026 Strategic Plan. The MYA calls for $170 million over the next four years, including 41 million in 2023. 

  • 4 окт 2023

    The spread of violence from Port-au-Prince to Artibonite, Haiti’s main rice-growing region, is exacerbating an already critical humanitarian emergency, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said on Wednesday.

  • 4 окт 2023

    Civilians continue to pay a horrendous price in the war in Ukraine, with nearly 10,000 dead and tens of thousands injured since conflict began in February 2022, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in the country said in a report published on Wednesday. 

  • 4 окт 2023

    A senior UN human rights official on Wednesday called on authorities in Liberia to take all necessary measures to ensure that the upcoming elections can take place in a fully inclusive manner.

  • 4 окт 2023

    The top UN political official in Afghanistan remains hopeful that Taliban leaders will reverse their stance on women’s rights, urging the international community not to give up on the country. 

  • 4 окт 2023

    The UN Regional Office for Central Africa is hiring a Consultant for political economy analysis on either A) illicit financial flow and/or B) other illicit activities at sea...

  • 3 окт 2023
  • 3 окт 2023

    SRSG Parfait Onanga-Anyanga participated in a High-Level side event in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Youth, Peace and Security (...