Nuclear conference adopts disarmament measures

New York, May 29 (DPA) The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference adopted Friday a declaration upholding principles of disarmament and calling for an international conference in 2012 with the aim to establish a nuclear-weapon-free Middle East.

The 189 NPT parties also decided to address North Korea in its final declaration, calling on that country to return to negotiations to settle the dispute over its nuclear activities.

The 28-page declaration was adopted by consensus, closing a month of debate that began May 3. It contains a 22-point action plan.

Nuclear-weapons-free zones around the world and talks on nuclear disarmament are part of the NPT, which entered into force in 1970, but has so far failed to get the world’s five nuclear powers to agree on a legal timetable for a total elimination of nuclear weapons.

Those powers – the United States, Russia, France, China and Britain – still resist pressure by other NPT parties to impose such a timeline.

The NPT conference chairman, Philippine Ambassador Libran Cabactulan, has said that the revised draft declaration was ‘carefully balanced’ to reflect demands by all parties. He said adoption of the declaration would allow ‘all the seeds of hope planted throughout the conference would bear fruit’.

The declaration called on the UN secretary general, the US, Russia and Britain to designate a facilitator to organise the conference in 2012 to be attended by ‘all’ Middle East nations. Those three countries co-sponsored a resolution calling for a nuclear-weapons-free Middle East when the NPT met in 1995.

It said that resolution must be implemented in order to help the peace process in the Middle East region. It called on Israel to sign the NPT and to place ‘all its nuclear facilities under comprehensive safeguards of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)’.

Israel has never admitted it possesses nuclear weapons, as alleged by Arab governments.

The document called for the total elimination of nuclear weapons, weapons of mass destruction, and chemical and biological weapons in the Middle East.

For the first time, the NPT also includes in its declaration a call for North Korea to return ‘at an early date’ to talks and to carry out obligations under the six-party talks, which involve China, the US, Russia, Japan, North and South Korea. Those obligations include the ‘complete and verifiable abandonment of all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programmes’.

The document called for ‘the need’ of the nuclear-weapon states to reduce and eliminate their nuclear arsenals, but drops language that called it an ‘urgent’ need in the earlier draft.

‘In implementing the unequivocal undertaking by the nuclear-weapon states to accomplish the total elimination of their nuclear arsenals, the nuclear-weapon states commit to undertake further efforts to reduce and ultimately eliminate all types of nuclear weapons, deployed and non-deployed’ through various agreements, it said.

There are an estimated 23,000 nuclear warheads around the world, most of them in arsenals of the five nuclear powers. Other countries known for having test-fired nuclear devices are India, Pakistan and North Korea.

About 40 countries have nuclear technology, from nuclear power plants for civilian energy uses to heavy water, which could be a component in the design for a nuclear reactor.

UN renews call for restraint in Thailand’s deadly demonstrations

New York, May 18 (DPA) UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon Monday repeated his call for both sides in Thailand’s deadly street demonstrations to show restraint as the toll rose to at least 36.

UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said UN mediation is possible only if the Thai government and the demonstrators both agree to seek it, which has not occurred, he said.

Thai demonstrators last week apparently called for UN mediation, which the government in Bangkok rejected.

The UN said that Ban has been in touch with Thai authorities regarding the situation, and he expressed concern about the ongoing crisis and urged restraint, stressing the need for a peaceful resolution through dialogue.

‘Regarding UN mediation, the UN always stands ready to help, however, both sides must be in agreement to the UN’s involvement,’ a UN official said.

Ban said last week that he was concerned by the mounting violence as anti-government Red Shirt demonstrators battled armed troops.

On Monday, demonstrators ignored a deadline to disperse from a central Bangkok protest site following the confirmed death of renegade army Major General Khattiya Sawasdipol, 58, who was shot by a sniper last week.

The death toll in the four days of street battles stood at 36, including journalists.

International conflict prevention group calls for probe into Sri Lanka�s �war-crimes�

Toronto, May 18 (ANI): Sri Lanka�s bloody campaign to crush LTTE�s insurgency is under the scanner for reportedly wide-spread human rights violations, and there is a possibility that conflict prevention group �International Crisis Group� (ICG) will be carrying out the inquest.

Former UN High Commissioner on Human Rights and current ICG chief, Canadian Louise Arbour, will helm the inquiry.

In a report released on Monday, a year after the war�s end, the International Crisis Group cited �reasonable grounds to believe the Sri Lankan security forces committed war crimes�. There have been accusations of security forces targeting civilians and shelling hospitals to mount pressure on the separatist group.

The LTTE also exacerbated the situation by reportedly shooting fleeing civilians and taking them hostage to raise international pressure and secure a cease-fire.

The plight of hapless innocents and the huge loss of life and property in the besieged LTTE infested region has drawn concern from various quarters, with Arbour demanding that Sri Lanka should co-operate in the investigation and calling for UN sanctions to be slapped on the country if it fails to do so.

According to The Globe and Mail, the Brussels-based group, funded by donors and governments including Canada�s to study armed conflict and how to avert it, called for a United Nations-backed inquiry to account for a Sri Lankan government victory over the Tigers that came �at the cost of immense civilian suffering and an acute challenge to the laws of war.�

Canada has one of the highest immigrant populations of Sri Lankans, mostly of Tamil descent, with their population in the vicinity of 200000.

�I would like to see Canada encourage the [UN] Secretary-General to launch an international investigation,� Arbour told the Globe and Mail.

Arbour said that Canada �should not hesitate to exercise its universal jurisdiction� to prosecute Sri Lankan war crimes and human-rights abuses if suspects surface here.

�We really believe that unless there�s accountability for what happened, there is no chance � no chance � of a lasting peace in Sri Lanka,� she added.

Canada, the United States, India and other countries with significant Sri Lankan populations should insist on such a probe, the Group said, and sought to impose sanctions on Sri Lanka, which is not a member of the International Criminal Court, unless it complies, the paper reports.

Chitranganee Wagiswara, Sri Lanka�s High Commissioner to Canada in Ottawa, reserved comment on the report until she heard from her government in Colombo she maintained that the Group�s assertions will be treated as allegations until conclusive evidence of the same is produced.

Meanwhile David Poopalapillai, spokesman for the Canadian Tamil Congress, said he was �very happy� the report called for an independent inquiry, as Tamils have demanded since before the war ended. �Our cries have been vindicated,� he said. (ANI)

Bangkok tense after clashes, 16 dead

Thailand’s capital was tense on Saturday after a night of fighting that killed 16 people and wounded 141 as troops struggle to isolate a sprawling encampment of protesters seeking to topple the government.

Thundering grenade explosions and sporadic gunfire echoed across central Bangkok until nearly dawn as the army battled to set up a perimeter around a 3.5 sq-km (1.2 sq-mile) protest site defiant red-shirted demonstrators refuse to leave.

The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon expressed concern over “the rapidly mounting tensions and violence”.

“He strongly encourages them to urgently return to dialogue in order to de-escalate the situation and resolve matters peacefully,” his spokesman said in a written statement.

The Canadian government urged a return to talks following the violence after a Bangkok-based Canadian journalist was shot three times, one of three journalists wounded in fighting on Friday that spiralled into chaotic urban warfare.

The government said on Friday it would restore order “in the next few days” as the city of 15 million people braced for a crackdown to end a six-week protest by thousands of “red shirts” packed into an area of high-end department stores, luxury hotels, embassies and expensive residential apartments.

The crisis has paralysed parts of Bangkok, squeezed Southeast Asia’s second-biggest economy and scared off tourists.

Troops fired tear gas, rubber bullets and live rounds at defiant protesters who fought back with petrol bombs, stones and home-made rockets. They set vehicles on fire and rolled burning tyres into checkpoints of troops.

The army said the protesters were firing handguns and M-79 grenades. Army spokesmen Sansern Kaewkamnerd said there were an estimated 500 armed “terrorists” among the thousands of protesters in the city.

A source close to army chief Anupong Paochinda said more troop reinforcements would be deployed, fearing more protesters would arrive to surround and attack soldiers.

“It’s unlikely to end quickly. There will be several skirmishes in the coming days but we are still confident we will get the numbers down and seal the area,” the source said.

PROTESTERS REMAIN DEFIANT

The protesters are showing no sign of leaving. The number of casualties is expected to keep rising, deepening a crisis that began with festive rallies on March 12 and descended into Thailand’s deadlist political violence in 18 years.

Before fighting began on Thursday with the shooting of a renegade general allied with the protesters, the two-month crisis had already killed 29 people and wounded about 1,400 — most of whom died during an April 10 gun battle in Bangkok’s old quarter.

The protesters are barricaded behind walls of kerosene-soaked tyres, sharpened bamboo staves, concrete blocks and razor wire.

The fighting is the latest flare-up in a polarising five-year crisis between a royalist urban elite establishment, who back Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, and the rural and urban poor who accuse conservative elites and the military’s top brass of colluding to bring down two elected governments.

Those governments were led or backed by exiled former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, a graft-convicted populist billionaire ousted in a 2006 coup who is a figurehead of the protest movement.

The red shirts and their supporters say the politically powerful military influenced a 2008 parliamentary vote, which took place after a pro-Thaksin party was dissolved, to ensure the British-born, Oxford-educated Abhisit rose to power.

They have repeated their demand for Abhisit to call an immediate election and say he should take responsibility for violence that is also rattling investors.

Five-year Thai credit default swaps, used to hedge against debt default, widened by more than 30 basis points on Friday – the biggest jump in 15 months – to 142 basis points.

“With gun battles and grenades going off, investors will look elsewhere,” said Danny Richards, an analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

“I don’t think many see the end of this protest as the end of the crisis. When there’s an election, either side will reject the legitimacy of the other and we’ll be back to square one.”

Sri Lanka trying to deflect probe into war crimes: rights group

New York, May 8 (IANS) Sri Lanka’s suggestion that a newly announced commission will provide accountability for laws-of-war violations during the armed conflict with the Tamil Tigers is another attempt to deflect an independent international probe, Human Rights Watch said Saturday.

Human Rights Watch urged UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to take steps to ensure accountability through an independent international investigation into the alleged laws-of-war violations.

The announcement of a commission on ‘lessons learnt and reconciliation’ came after a months-long campaign by Colombo to prevent Ban from setting up a panel of experts to advise him on accountability in Sri Lanka.

In May 2009, after the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was crushed, President Mahinda Rajapaksa signed a joint communique with Ban promising that ‘the government will take measures to address allegations related to violations of international humanitarian and human-rights law’. But no substantive steps have been taken.

‘Every time the international community raises the issue of accountability, Sri Lanka establishes a commission that takes a long time to achieve nothing,’ said Brad Adams, the Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

‘Ban should put an end to this game of smoke and mirrors and begin a process that would ensure justice for all the victims of Sri Lanka’s war,’ Adams said.

The government has yet to publish the findings from a committee established in November 2009 to examine allegations of laws-of-war violations despite an April 2010 deadline.

When the committee was announced, Human Rights Watch warned that it was just a smokescreen to avoid accountability.

According to conservative UN estimates, 7,000 civilians were killed and more than 13,000 injured from January to May 2009. Other estimates suggest that as many as 20,000 were killed.

Government officials, including the president, have repeatedly insisted that no violations by government forces took place.

On Thursday, the Sri Lankan government announced it will establish a commission to report on the lessons learned from the conflict and reconciliation efforts.

According to the government statement, the committee will consist of seven Sri Lankans, located in Sri Lanka and abroad, but will have no international involvement.

850,000 people die every year from malaria: UNICEF

New York, April 24 — About 850,000 people die each year from a mosquito bite – with nearly 90 per cent of all malaria deaths in sub-Saharan Africa, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said Friday. Ahead of World Malaria Day Sunday, Unicef Executive Director Ann Veneman said there were only 250 days left to meet the challenge set by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for all endemic countries to ensure universal coverage of malaria control interventions. Unicef said there has been a significant increase in insecticide-treated bed net coverage in several African countries, with distribution campaigns reaching those most in danger of contracting malaria – the poor and rural populations.

“The fight against malaria can be won and now the world must unite to ensure that no one dies from a mosquito bite,” Veneman said.

Thailand’s Red Shirts seek UN peace-keepers to keep protests alive

Bangkok, Apr 22(ANI): Thailand’s opposition United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), also known as the “Red Shirts”, will petition the United Nations to send a peace-keeping force to the trouble-torn country.

UDD co-leader Weng Tojirakarn said about 2000 supporters of the group will go visit the UN office on Ratchadamnoen Avenue to submit a letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

“The UDD will ask the UN to send a peace-keeping force to oversee the anti-government demonstration at Ratchaprasong intersection rally site to prevent the government from using force to disperse the protesters,” The Bangkok Post quoted Tojirakarn, as saying.

He further said that there would be no peace talks with the government at this stage, as Thai soldiers were pointing guns at the Red-Shirts’.

“Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva must dissolve House of Representatives to show responsibility for the April 10 bloodshed, then the Red-Shirts will immediately disperse,” Tojirakarn said.

Earlier, Thai troops had said that they would follow seven steps to counter the Red Shirts.

They would begin with soft measures and then get gradually harsher, to deal with protesters. If all else fails, troops would use real weapons.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban warned that the troops deployed in the financial district are equipped with weapons and live ammunition and are authorised to fire in self-defence. (ANI)

Media Advisory: Minister Oda to Attend the UN Secretary-General’s High Level Roundtable on Maternal and Children’s

NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, Apr 14 (MARKET WIRE) —
The Honourable Beverley J. Oda, Canada’s Minister of International
Cooperation, will attend the UN Secretary-General’s high level roundtable
on maternal and children’s health and will deliver a brief statement at
the closing press conference at 3:00pm.

Date: April 14, 2010
Time: 3:00 pm
Location: Dag Hammarskjold Library
United Nations Headquarters
New York

Contacts:
Office of the Minister of International Cooperation
Jessica Fletcher
Press Secretary
819-953-6238

Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
Media Relations Office
819-953-6534
media@acdi-cida.gc.ca

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

UN commission probing Benazir’s assassination delays report on Zardari’s behest

Islamabad, Mar.31 (ANI): The United Nations (UN) has delayed publishing the report of its commission, which was set up to probe former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, on President Asif Ali Zardari’s request.

The report, which was scheduled to be published on Tuesday (March 30), is now likely to be made public on April 15.

Confirming the delay, a statement issued by the UN said Zardari had sent an urgent request to the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to delay the publication of the report, which was accepted.

“The Secretary-General has accepted an urgent request by the President of Pakistan to delay the presentation of the report of the Commission of Inquiry into the facts and circumstances of the assassination of the former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto until 15 April 2010. The Commission has informed the Secretary-General that, as of today, all relevant facts and circumstances have been explored, and the report is now complete and ready to be delivered,” the statement said.

When asked about the issue, Presidential spokesperson Farhatullah Babar said the report from two countries who had warned Benazir about security threats upon her return to Pakistan is still pending, and this was the prime reason why the UN was requested to postpone the publication of the inquiry report.

“There were three countries that had cautioned Mohtarma soon after her return to Pakistan. The inquiry report of one of these countries is completed but those of the other two are pending. We believe that the UN Commission’s report would be incomplete without incorporating the viewpoints of all of these three states,” Babar said and declined to comment further.

Top UN officials have expressed surprise over the sudden move by Zardari.

“This is extremely strange, its highly politically motivated,” The Nation quoted a top UN official in New York, as saying.

Earlier, the UN had announced closure of its offices across Pakistan for three days from Wednesday to Friday, as the UN Commission probing Benazir Bhutto’s assassination was to submit its report to the United Nations Secretary General. (ANI)

Nepal’s former leader Koirala dies

Former Nepalese prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala has died aged 86.

Mr Koirala served four terms as prime minister and brokered a peace deal which ended a 10-year civil war.

In 2006 he sided with Maoist rebels to force King Gyanendra to relinquish his sweeping powers.

The Maoists abolished the Hindu monarchy after winning elections two years later, turning Nepal into a secular republic.

Mr Koirala, who had been suffering from respiratory disease for many years, died surrounded by family members at his daughter’s home in Kathmandu.

Thousands of people gathered outside to pay their respects to the elder statesman of Nepalese politics.

“Mr Koirala was a mass leader and a statesman, whose knowledge and wisdom guided the polity of Nepal in the right direction at critical junctures in the country’s history,” said India’s prime minister Manmohan Singh.

UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon said Mr Koirala “fought fearlessly and at considerable personal sacrifice for justice and democratic rights in his country”.

Mr Koirala began his political career as a union organiser and was imprisoned for seven years in 1960 after a failed uprising against the monarchy.

Upon his release he went into exile in India, where he masterminded the 1973 hijacking of a Royal Nepal Airlines plane known to be carrying hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash to fund his banned Nepali Congress Party.

As prime minister, he led the Himalayan nation through some of its biggest upheavals, including its most notorious incident when 10 members of the royal family were shot dead by the crown prince in a drunken rampage.

He was seen as a stabilising force in a country that has seen 18 governments in the last 20 years – although like many politicians in Nepal he faced frequent allegations of corruption.

His oft-repeated ambition was to see the peace process through before he died, and he remained heavily involved in politics until his death, playing a crucial role as broker between the Maoists and other parties.

“He will be much missed, especially now that the country is nearing the end of the peace process that he facilitated,” said Maoist leader Baburam Bhattarai.

- ABC/AFP

Doctors say teenager killed in West Bank clash

Palestinian doctors in the West Bank say the Israeli army has shot dead a teenager and critically wounded another near the city of Nablus.

Palestinian medics say the boy died after clashes close to Nablus.

The Israeli military says its forces were responding to “a violent riot by Palestinian youths” who were throwing stones at Israeli settlers.

But it says no live bullets were fired, only teargas and rubber bullets.

There has been increased tension in the region recently after Israel announced plans to build over 1,000 new homes for settlers, and after Israel named two tombs on the West Bank as Israeli heritage sites.

The United States’ Middle East envoy George Mitchell will meet Israeli and Palestinian leaders over the next two days.

Mr Mitchell says he will meet Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu tonight and the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas tomorrow.

Last week, he postponed a visit to Jerusalem amid the row over settler housing in East Jerusalem.

UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon is already in the region and has met the Palestinian prime minister ahead of talks with Israeli officials.

- ABC/BBC

Israel told to cease settlement activity

The Middle East Quartet has urged Israel to stop building settlements and set a bold target for a final peace deal with the Palestinians by 2012.

“The Quartet urges the government of Israel to freeze all settlement activity,” UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon said after the meeting comprising representatives of the United States, the United Nations, European Union and Russia.

But the Israeli government, which angered the international community by announcing last week the construction of 1,600 new settler homes in east Jerusalem, swiftly condemned the statement as counterproductive.

Foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman has been quoted as saying in an address to the Jewish community in Brussels that “peace cannot be imposed artificially and with an unrealistic calendar”.

“This type of statement only harms the possibilities of reaching an accord,” he said.

East Jerusalem is the mainly Arab half of the Holy City which was captured and then annexed by Israel after the 1967 Six Day War.

Condemning the new settlement plan, the Quartet noted that Israel’s annexation of east Jerusalem was not recognised by the international community and the city’s status had to be resolved through negotiations.

Mr Ban said at the meeting hosted by Russia that Israel should also halt natural settlement growth, dismantle outposts erected since March 2001 and refrain from demolitions and evictions in east Jerusalem.

Diplomatic crisis

The timing of Israel’s settlement announcement had infuriated Washington, Israel’s chief ally, coming as US vice-president Joe Biden visited the region.

It is considered the worst crisis in US-Israeli relations in years.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu called US secretary of state Hilary Clinton late Thursday (local time) following a tense call last week when she had asked him to order a halt to the settler plans.

Ms Clinton on Friday described the relationship between Israel and the United States as “deep and broad, strong and enduring”, but she stood behind the call for a freeze on all settlement activity.

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat has welcomed the Quartet’s call, but says there also needs to be a mechanism to “make sure that Israel does effectively halt completely all settlement activity in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.”

Attending the meeting with Ms Clinton and Mr Ban were Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, along with former British prime minister Tony Blair, who is the Quartet’s representative.

Ms Ashton’s visit to Moscow came a day after she made a rare trip by a top foreign official to the Gaza Strip that was overshadowed by fresh violence.

A rocket fired from the Gaza Strip on Thursday killed a Thai agricultural worker a few kilometres inside Israel.

A few hours later Israeli aircraft hit several targets across the Palestinian territory.

Mr Ban said the quartet was “deeply concerned” about the situation in Gaza, “including the humanitarian and human rights situation of the civilian population.”

Amid an intense flurry of diplomatic activity, Mr Ban will also visit the Middle East – including Gaza, the West Bank and Israel – this weekend.

A senior Palestinian official says the US special-Middle East envoy George Mitchell will arrive in the region on Sunday for a visit that had been delayed by the row with Israel.

- AFP

Copenhagen climate summit undone by rich countries ”arrogance”: Stern

London, Mar.17 (ANI): British economist and I G Patel Professor of Economics and Government, Chair of the Grantham Institute for Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics (LSE), Lord Nicholas Stern of Brentford has said that the “disappointing” outcome of December”s climate summit was largely down to “arrogance” on the part of rich countries.

The economist told BBC News that the US and EU nations had not understood well enough the concerns of poorer nations.

Lord Stern said the failure of the Copenhagen talks was largely down to rich nations” failure to understand developing world positions and concerns.

“[There was] less arrogance than in previous years – we have, I think, moved beyond the G8 world to the G20 world where more countries are involved – but [there was] still arrogance and it could have been much better handled by the rich countries,” he said.

Seventy-three countries have now signed up to the non-binding Copenhagen Accord, the summit”s outcome document.

The weak nature of the document led many to condemn the summit as a failure; but Lord Stern said that view was mistaken.

“The fact of Copenhagen and the setting of the deadline two years previously at Bali did concentrate minds, and it did lead… to quite specific plans from countries that hadn”t set them out before,” he said.

“So this process has itself been a key part of countries stating what their intentions on emissions reductions are – countries that had not stated them before, including China and the US.

“So that was a product of the UNFCCC (UN climate convention) process that we should respect.”

Lord Stern said that the rich countries could have handled it better.

Lord Stern is a member of the group set up by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to advise on how to raise 100 billion dollars per year by 2020 using various “innovative mechanisms” that could include taxes on international aviation and banking transactions.

But the immediate objective, he suggested, was to enact the short-term promise of providing 30 billion dollar over the period 2010-12 from the public purses of western nations. (ANI)

Obama to co-host FoDP summit with Brown, Zardari in New York

Washington, Sep.17 (ANI): US President Barack Obama would be co-hosting the first summit-level meeting of the Friends of Democratic Pakistan (FoDP) scheduled to be held in New York on September 24.

According to an official statement released here, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will also participate in the summit.

The statement highlighted Pakistan’s effort towards combating terrorism and said that the country needs support from its allies to help it counter the numerous problems it is facing.

“While Pakistan remains committed to eliminating the menace of terrorism and is determined to become an anchor of peace and stability, it needs the moral, material and political support of its friends and allies,” The Dawn quoted the statement, as saying.

“Only an economically, politically and militarily strong and stable Pakistan can combat the menace of terrorism and extremism in an effective manner,” it added.

Meanwhile, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has appealed the international community to help Pakistan tackle terrorist threats and the issues regarding the displacement of thousands of people due to the Swat military offensive.

Addressing a press conference on the eve of the beginning of the 64th session of the General Assembly, Ban Ki-moon said Pakistan was in the forefront of war against terrorism and its government needed the international community’s assistance to overcome the crises. (ANI)

UN strongly warns Lanka over continued holding of civilians in refugee camps

London, Sep 12 (ANI): The United Nations has strongly warned Sri Lanka that the world body cannot continue funding indefinitely the huge refugee camps in the north of the country, and asked the authorities to allow the hundreds of Tamil civilians to leave.

The senior UN official in the country hardened their stand when they said the camps should be a last resort for civilians with nowhere else to go.

Sri Lanka faces increasing international criticism over its treatment of the estimated 300,000 civilians held in camps, with the EU poised to cancel a trade concession worth one billion dollars to the government, The Independent reports.

Humanitarian aid groups have complained that conditions in the vast Menik Farms camp, where most people remain behind razor wire are still inadequate four months after the decades-long civil war ended.

“Nothing has changed over the past three months for the people in the camps. They are overcrowded, with poor sanitary conditions and inadequate health care. There are concerns about what may happen when the monsoon rains arrive in the next couple of months,” the UK-based Catholic Fund for Overseas Development said on Friday.

The UN’s senior official in Sri Lanka, Neil Buhne, told the BBC: “The best solution is, obviously, that as many people leave as soon as possible; and, for the people who have no place else to go, that the site can become an open one.”

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has also said that he intends to speak directly to Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa to protest against the decision to expel the spokesman for Unicef, accused by the government of acting as “propagandist” for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

He will also raise the issue of two UN workers in the Tamil-dominated north arrested in June. (ANI)

Sri Lanka’s expulsion of top UN official condemned

New Delhi, Sep.6 (ANI): Asian Centre for Human Rights today condemned the expulsion of James Elder, the Communications Chief of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) by the Sri Lankan Government over his remarks about the Internally Displaced People (IDPs), in particular, the conditions of children in camps.

Elder was told on Saturday to leave within two weeks.

“This is an obnoxious attempt to turn the IDP camps into closed door slaughter houses where children are being killed as a result of manufactured starvation and where thousands of ethnic Tamils have been disappearing at the hands of the Sri Lankan army,” said Suhas Chakma, Director of the ACHR.

Over 13,000 Tamil IDPs have disappeared according to various UN reports and only about 2,000 detainees are subject to visits by the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The Asian Centre for Human Rights urged the UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon and international donors, including India, which sanctioned Rs 500 crores for the Sri Lankan Tamil refugees, to demand revocation of expulsion of Elder, full and unrestricted access to the IDP camps by the United Nations and international agencies, and respect for human rights and humanitarian law standards by the Sri Lankan government.

“Unless international donors ensure respect for full and unrestricted access, they shall be condoning and contributing to continued flagrant violations of international human rights and humanitarian law standards by the Sri Lankan government,” Chakma added. (ANI)

UN appoints first Special Envoy for humanitarian affairs for Pakistan

United Nations, Aug.25 (ANI): UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has appointed French UN ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert as the first Special Envoy in charge of humanitarian affairs for Pakistan.

Ban’s spokeswoman, Michele Montas, said Ripert would assist the Pakistan Government and the international community to respond to the current humanitarian crisis in the country.

“Ripert is to assist the government of Pakistan and the international community in responding to the present humanitarian recovery and reconstruction needs related to the country’s displacement crisis,” The Dawn quoted Montas, as saying.

Ripert, who will step down as UN ambassador at the end of this month, would be on the post for an initial period of six months.

Ripert, 56, has addressed humanitarian issues concerning several countries such as Myanmar, Darfur and Sri Lanka in the Security Council in the past.

According to an estimate more than 1.9 million people have been displaced in Pakistan following the military’s massive offensive against the Taliban and other extremist groups since mid April.

However, the UN has said that about two-third of the internally displaced people (IDP) have been able to return home after the offensive. (ANI)

UN officials inspect Benazir Bhutto’s assassination spot

Rawalpindi, July 14 (ANI): Two officials of the United Nations technical assessment team paid a surprise visit to the spot in Liaquat Bagh where former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated in a gun and bomb attack on December 27, 2007.

A senior police official on Monday said that the UN officials visited Liaquat Bagh to assess the security arrangements in the area and its surroundings, in order to ensure foolproof arrangements for members of the UN Commission due to arrive in Pakistan to probe Benazir’s murder.

More than 15 anti-terrorist squad vans, Capital City Police and other security agencies were guarding the officials, the Daily Times quoted the police, as saying.

The United Nations (UN) has started its probe into the assassination of the former Prime Minister from July 1.

The UN spokeswoman Michele Montas had said, earlier, that a UN commission would start its six-month investigation in the month of July.

Montas said that the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has told Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto’s husband, that the UN is committed to help Islamabad to bring the perpetrators to justice as soon as possible.

“Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon informed Bhutto’s husband that the United Nations is committed to assisting Pakistan by determining the facts and circumstances of her death,” Montas said.

Chile’s UN Ambassador, Heraldo Munoz, would head the three-member UN commission.

The other two members of the commission are the former Indonesian attorney general Marzuki Darusman, and Ireland’s former deputy police commissioner Peter Fitzgerald.

Montas said that the commission would only enquire into the facts and circumstances of Bhutto’s death, and that the Pakistan government would only take further action against the perpetrators. (ANI)

India for continuing international focus on Afghanistan’s rehabilitation: Krishna

New Delhi, July 1 (ANI): India favours greater and continuing international focus and attention on developmental and security issues concerning Afghanistan and its neighbours, saying this is necessary and would be helpful in the long term.

Revealing this stance during an interaction with the media on Wednesday, External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna said: “We view greater international cooperation in Afghanistan as a key factor in restoring stability there. Afghanistan is going through a sensitive phase in the context of its forthcoming Presidential election.

We view the elections as an internal matter of Afghanistan and believe that the role of the international community should be no more than supportive in this regard.”

He said that he had attended the G-8 Outreach Ministerial Meeting on Afghanistan at Trieste on June 26-27, and the major topics of focus included narcotics production, border control and security, refugee issue and the development of Afghanistan’s economy and infrastructure.

In conclusion, it was felt that there was a need for improved coordination and cooperation on border issues, trade and transit.

Krishna said that India has a direct interest in the success of the international efforts in stabilizing Asia, and has stood ready to play a constructive role in defeating extremism.

“We have welcomed the recent international efforts with regard to Afghanistan, which are in line with our thinking,” Krishna said, adding that India “is playing a substantial reconstruction and assistance program role in Afghanistan that stretches across different sectors.”

He said that in Trieste he underlined that strengthening Afghan capacity and resources would be a critical factor for its future.
He also revealed that he had had useful bilateral discussions with his counterparts from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Russia, Great Britain, Italy, and Canada, besides Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, EC Commissioner for External Relations and UN Secretary General.

He said that his discussions with the Afghan Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta included bilateral issues, including on the progress of Indian assistance projects.

He also said that India’s interactions with the EU leadership, have intensified and diversified to cover all areas of bilateral engagement and regional and international issues. (ANI)

6 out of 10 people globally think Obama is most trusted world leader: Poll

Washington, June 30 (ANI): A remarkable 61 percent of people from across the world think that US President Barack Obama is the most trustworthy leader in the world, a survey conducted across 20 nations has found.

The latest poll of WorldPublicOpinion.org reveals immense confidence in the current American President as against that of his predecessor George W Bush, who was found in the survey to be one of the world’s least trusted leaders.

“At this moment, Obama occupies a unique position in the eyes of the world. His communication skills and the change he represents create an open door for him to engage people around the world,” The Nation quoted Stephen J Weber of WorldPublicOpinion.org, as saying.

However, just 30 percent Pakistanis expressed confidence in Obama, while 62 percent had no trust.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon ranked second in the current poll. The survey said Ban’s evaluations across all countries polled were positive.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin registered the most negative confidence ratings among all world leaders.

Public confidence in Chinese President Hu Jintao presented a mixed picture around the globe.

WorldPublicOpinion.org – a research project utilising research centres around the world and managed by the Programme on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland – surveyed 19,224 respondents in nations that account for 62 per cent of the global population, including China, India, the United States, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan and Russia.

The poll was also conducted in Mexico, Germany, Great Britain, France, Egypt, Turkey, Iraq and South Korea.

Margins of error range from three to four percentage points. (ANI)