UNITED NATIONS: The General Assembly admitted South Sudan on Thursday as the 193rd member of the United Nations.
The assembly
vote, by acclamation, followed the African country's achievement of independence on Saturday, breaking away from Sudan.
Silver Scorpio - International News | Spot News | Top News | Flash News | Live News
UNITED NATIONS: The General Assembly admitted South Sudan on Thursday as the 193rd member of the United Nations.
The assembly
vote, by acclamation, followed the African country's achievement of independence on Saturday, breaking away from Sudan.
This tool, created by Deloitte in partnership with the United Nations, lays out six steps that any organization can follow to start and maintain a path toward social and environmental responsibility.
The Model was released on the 10th anniversary of the Global Compact, and offers guidance for any company, regardless of its size, location or relative experience with environmental and social issues.
The six steps are as follow:
Commit: Leadership commitment to mainstream the Global Compact principles into strategies and operations and to take action in support of broader UN goals, in a transparent way.
Assess:Assess risks, opportunities, and impacts across Global Compact issue areas.
Define: Define goals, strategies, and policies.
Implement: Implement strategies and policies through the company and across the company’s value chain.
Measure: Measure and monitor impacts and progress toward goals.
Communicate: Communicate progress and strategies and engage with stakeholders for continuous improvement.
More information about the Global Compact is online at UNGlobalCompact.org, and for more information about Deloitte’s history with the Compact, see Deloitte.com/globalcompact.
Tel Aviv, June 6 (ANI): United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon has called for a New-Zealand committee led investigation into Israel’s Gaza flotilla raid.
He said that the committee should be led by New Zealand Prime Minister Geofferey Palmer and must include Israeli and Turkish deputies in an advisory role.
The UN has handed over the proposal to Israel over the weekend and is yet to receive an official response from the country.
According to the Jerusalem Post, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said on Saturday that he supports the formation of an inquiry committee on the IDF raid of the Mavi Marmara ship, as long as the soldiers who participated in the mission would not be investigated.
Sources in Barak”s office said that the defense minister backs an Israeli-led probe of the event, and if necessary, would support an international probe, the paper said.
The Isreali defense establishment is now open to the idea of ships sailing through Gaza strip provided that they dock at (ANI)
June 4 (Reuters) – South Korean President Lee Myung-bak said on Friday that Seoul had complaind to the United Nations Security Council about the sinking of its naval ship by the North in March.
“Today, the Republic of Korea government referred the matter of North Korea’s attack against the Cheonan to the U.N. Security Council,” said Lee, speaking at a security conference in Singapore.
“North Korea must admit its wrongdoing, it must pledge to never again engage in such reprehensible action. This is in the interest of peace. This is in the interest of North Korea.” (Reporting by Nopporn Wong-Anan; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
OTTAWA, ONTARIO, May 31 (MARKET WIRE) —
The Honourable Beverley J. Oda, Minister of International Cooperation,
will make an announcement on funding for the United Nations Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM), which promotes women’s and girls’ rights in
developing countries. Minister Oda will be joined by UNIFEM Canada’s
President Ms. Almas Jiwani.
Date: June 1st, 2010
Time: 3:45pm
Location: Charles Lynch Room
Centre Block
House of Commons
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.
New Delhi, May 11 (ANI): Srilanka”s leader of opposition Ranil Wickramasinghe met External Affairs Minister S M Krishna in New Delhi on Tuesday.
The two leaders discussed several bilateral issues, including the issue of Sri Lankan Tamils.
Wickramasinghe, who is the leader of the United National Party, arrived here on Monday on a four-day visit to India.
India had earlier offered Sri Lanka 100 million dollars to help war refugees return home and rebuild the country”s ravaged north, as New Delhi is keen to be engaged in the island nation”s post-war reconstruction and retain influence.
Some 260,000 Tamil refugees who fled fighting in the waning months of the war are now being held in military-run camps in Sri Lanka.
Western countries, India and the United Nations are pressing the Srilanka government to send them home. (ANI)
United Nations, May 7 (IANS) Belgium has called on India, Pakistan and Israel to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and to bring their nuclear posture ‘fully in line’ with the treaty.
Werner Bauwens, head of the Belgian delegation to the NPT Review Conference being held here, also called on other countries Thursday to ‘remain indefinitely committed’ to the treaty.
‘We call on India, Pakistan and Israel to join the NPT and to bring their nuclear posture fully in line with this treaty which has a truly universal vocation,’ Bauwens was quoted as saying by Xinhua.
‘We also call on all state parties to remain indefinitely committed to the treaty,’ he said.
Bauwens said Belgium’s strategy is an ‘effective multilateral approach to security’, that includes disarmament and non-proliferation, which provides the best way to maintain international peace and security.
Calling on Iran and North Korea to comply with the provisions of the NPT, Bauwens said their failure to do so threatens to undermine the international non-proliferation regime.
A senior United Nations official says she has been reassured the world heritage values of the Great Barrier Reef were not damaged by last month’s grounding of the Chinese coal ship, the Shen Neng 1.
UNESCO director-general Irina Bokova visited the reef this week and was told there was only surface damage.
Mrs Bokova says UNESCO sent an expert team to the reef after the incident and has made strong representations about protecting world heritage values.
“Protection of the world heritage sites pose incredible challenges for all countries,” she said.
“This is not only the case for Australia – how to balance the protection of a site and economic activity and all this try for more growth.
“For the time being I don’t have any reasons not to trust the authorities in their commitment to protect the site.”
New Delhi, May 5 (ANI): United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) President Ali Abdussalam Treki met Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh on Wednesday and reportedly discussed a wide range of issues, including peace and security, United Nations (UN) reforms and other international and regional issues.
“We discussed the way to make the United Nations very strong, reform of the UN, Security Council and UNGA. We also discussed certain problems that the United Nations is facing like climate change, Middle-East Problem and other issues,” said Treki.
National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon and Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao were also present at the meeting.
Treki arrived here on Monday on a three-day visit after holding parleys with China.
He is expected to leave for Pakistan today. (ANI)
Herzogenaurach (Germany), April 22 (DPA) Like a field marshal mustering his troops, Carlos Alberto Parreira stands on the pitch in the Adi-Dassler-Stadium in Herzogenaurach, Germany.
With arms folded across his chest, the Brazilian is watching the training session of Bafana-Bafana, as the national team of the 2010 World Cup host South Africa is called.
For two and a half weeks, Parreira and his team will be staying in Herzogenaurach, hoping that the team can find an identity.
‘That is something that we are still lacking,’ Parreira says. ‘If you think of Brazil or Germany, then you know exactly how they play. Other countries like Spain or the Netherlands have their own style, but we do not.’
One of the reasons for that, says the 67-year-old, is the fact that each team in the South African top flight has a different style, partly because their coaches come from all corners of the world.
The national team is no different. Since rejoining the international fold in the early 1990s, the nationality of South Africa’s national team coaches reads like the United Nations: England, Peru, France, Portugal, South Africa and Brazil.
‘Under those circumstances, it was impossible that the team could develop its own style,’ says Parreira, who in October started his second stint in charge of the team.
Parreira, who will be coaching of his fifth team at the World Cup finals later this year, believes he has found a system for his side.
‘I think it is best that we keep the ball on the ground. If you look at our players, you will notice that they are not physical and tall. But they have their strengths – they are technically very good, and they are fast.’
Watching the training, it is apparent that Parreira has a point. Apart from the 1.98-metre-tall Matthew Booth, who incidentally is the only white player in the provisional squad, the other players are generally small.
They are, however, incredibly motivated, and one can see that they enjoy the training sessions. There is obviously no problem with team spirit, and the bronze statue of adidas founder Adi Dassler standing at the entrance of the stadium is wrapped in a Bafana jersey at the start of each training session.
‘We are not yet ready for the World Cup, but the team is coming along nicely,’ Parreira said.
The Brazilian generally seems much more relaxed a few days into the training camp after originally fuming at the inability of the South African Football Association to organize strong opponents for friendly matches. Instead, they had arranged games against amateur teams from the region.
After being slammed by Parreira and the technical staff, officials managed to secure games against World Cup finalist North Korea Thursday in Wiesbaden and against China April 28 in Offenbach.
‘It is very important that we play against strong teams,’ Parreira said. ‘After all, expectations are very high.’
Whenever Parreira, who won the world title with Brazil in 1994, meets fans, he is told: ‘Make us proud.’
Even though he will be the most experienced coach at the finals, he feels the pressure. ‘As coach of the hosts it will be a special World Cup.
‘We have to take it one step at the time. The most important thing for us is to advance from the group stage.’
Having been grouped with Mexico, Uruguay and France, Parreira knows that it will be anything but easy. To avoid becoming the first host in the history of the competition to be eliminated in the first round, Parreira needs to build a strong team – and a strong identity.
London, Apr 22(ANI): Pledges made at last December’s United Nations climate change summit in Copenhagen are unlikely to keep global warming below the two degree Celsius mark, a new study has claimed.
According to an analysis done by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, a rise of at least three degree Celsius by 2100 is likely.
The team also emphasised that many countries, including the European Union (EU) members and China, have pledged slower carbon curbs than they have been achieving anyway, and said a new global deal is needed if deeper cuts are to materialise.
“There’s a big mismatch between the ambitious goal, which is two degree Celsius.. and the emissions reductions. It is like racing towards the cliff and hoping you stop just before it,” BBC quoted Potsdam’s Malte Meinshausen, as saying.
According to their calculation, global emissions are likely to rise by 10 percent to 20 percent between now and 2020, and the chances of passing three degree Celsius by 2100 are greater than 50 percent.
During the summit, some 120-odd countries said that they were prepared to constrain their greenhouse gas emissions, and had pledged cuts by 2020.
The Potsdam team, however, concludes that many of the detailed pledges are nowhere near the ambitious claims.
“The pledged emissions reductions are in most cases very unambitious,” Meinshausen said.
The EU, for example, had pledged to cut emissions by 20 percent from 1990 levels by 2020, while China promises to improve carbon intensity by 40 to 45 percent by 2020 compared against 2005. (ANI)
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)
The United States called on Sri Lanka’s new government on Thursday to use its mandate to pursue a “healing process” as the island recovers from decades of war.
Sri Lanka’s new parliament is set to convene tomorrow after Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse’s allies won just short of a sweeping two-thirds majority.
US State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said the government appeared to enjoy a “significant mandate” from the election.
“The government should use that mandate to help continue the healing process within Sri Lankan society, to bring all elements to help Sri Lanka get past the recent conflict and move forward together,” Crowley told reporters.
Sri Lanka’s military last year killed the leadership of the Tamil Tiger rebels, ending decades of ethnic bloodshed that according to the United Nations claimed up to 100,000 lives.
Political opponents and international human rights groups have accused Rajapakse of violating human rights during the final military campaign and of suppressing dissent since his resounding re-election.
The new parliament’s opposition leader, former army chief Sarath Fonseka, was placed under military arrest after losing the presidential election to Rajapakse. He is expected to be returned to detention after each parliament session.
Brasilia (Brazil), Apr.16 (ANI): Accepting and acknowledging the serious threat posed by climate change, leaders of Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) on Thursday said: “We commit ourselves to promote the 16th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Sixth Conference of the Parties (COP) serving as the Meeting of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol, in Mexico, to
hieve a comprehensive, balanced and binding result to strengthen the implementation of the Convention and the Protocol.”
“We believe that the Convention and the Protocol provide the framework for international negotiations on climate change. The negotiations in Mexico should be more inclusive, transparent, and should result in outcomes that are fair and effective in addressing the challenge of climate change, while reflecting the principles of the Convention, especially the principle of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities,” they said. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)
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.
TEYYIT, Kyrgyzstan, April 12 (Reuters) – Ousted Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Monday said he had asked the United Nations to send peacekeepers to the Central Asian country after he was forced to flee the capital Bishkek last week.
Bakiyev told reporters from a town in the south of the country that he wants the U.N. to establish an independent commission into the events of April 7.
At least 81 people were killed on April 7 when riot police and troops shot into crowds of protesters in the capital. (Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Writing by Conor Sweeney; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge)
JALALABAD REGION, Kyrgyzstan, April 11 (Reuters) – Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev told Reuters on Sunday he would not resign and that any attempt to kill him would “drown Kyrgyzstan in blood”.
Bakiyev, speaking inside a tent in an undisclosed location in his home region of Jalalabad, said he was prepared to talk to the new, self-proclaimed government of Kyrgyzstan but did not recognise its legitimacy.
He called for United Nations peacekeeping forces to guarantee peace in the Central Asian republic after his government was overthrown, and denied that he had ordered troops to fire on protesters in the capital Bishkek on April 7. (Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov, writing by Robin Paxton)
Somali militant Islamist group Al Shabaab has forcibly taken over a United Nations compound in the south of the country.
They disarmed UN staff at the compound near Baidoa and seized food supplies from the World Food Program (WFP) and other equipment.
They also took control of the airstrip.
In February, Al Shabaab ordered WFP to halt all operations and leave the country, saying Somalis should buy food from local farmers.
Islamabad, Apr.7 (ANI): The United Nations (UN) has rejected reports in the Pakistani media that the government has sought a further delay in the publication of the investigation report of the UN commission probing the former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s assassination.
“We have received no new request,” UN spokesperson Marie Okabe said, adding that the report would be released next week.
The Pakistani media had flashed reports that the government has requested the UN to further delay the publication of the report until June or even beyond, The Daily Times reports.
It may be noted that the report was due to be published last month, but the UN delayed the process following President Asif Ali Zardari’s request.
The three-member UN commission, headed by Chilean Ambassador Heraldo Munoz, was set up following a request by the Pakistani government to probe the December 2007 attack on Bhutto, and began its work in July 2009. (ANI)
China will join talks with the United States, Britain, Russia, France and Germany in New York on Thursday over possible sanctions against Iran, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said on Wednesday.
“The news is the announcement that China will participate in a meeting tomorrow in New York … whether they will talk about the text, whether it’s just to respect formalities, I don’t know,” Kouchner told reporters in Paris, adding he hoped the talks would be of substance.
U.S. President Barack Obama said last week he wanted the 15-nation United Nations Security Council to adopt a new sanctions resolution against Iran over its nuclear programme within weeks, not months.
“We (the Western parties) basically agree, and the Russians have already participated (in the talks),” Kouchner said.
“Negotiations will be long, will they be over by the end of April? I hope so.”
(Reporting by Sophie Hardach, editing by Tim Pearce)
Copyright © 2013 · eleven40 theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in