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суббота, 29 июня 2024 г.

UN rights chief calls time on ‘economic violence’ against women and girls

Women attend a community meeting in Cameroon.
UN Women/Ryan Brown
 
Women attend a community meeting in Cameroon.


28 June 2024 

Human Rights

On Friday, at the UN Human Rights Council's (OHCHR) first panel for the annual full-day discussion on women's rights, The UN human rights chief Volker Türk on Friday told a Human Rights Council panel that it’s time to eliminate laws and practices that contribute to “economic violence” against women and girls.

During his opening statement to the all-day panel dedicated to women and human rights, Mr. Türk said there had been “extraordinary progress” thanks to the worldwide women’s movement.

But the very fact that a separate panel needed to be convened on gender-based violence shows that progress has been “hard-won and fragile”, he added.

The meeting’s focus on so-called economic violence as a part of a wider pattern of gender-based violence occurs when a woman or girl is denied access to financial resources as a form of abuse or control.

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Mr. Türk noted that one in three women have been subjected to some form of violence – physical, sexual, psychological or economic – at least once in their life.

If one in three men globally were subject to such devastating and pervasive harm, an emergency summit would be convened,” he said.

Unseen, unregulated

The High Commissioner said economic violence often goes unseen or unregulated but could be just as harmful as physical violence, as it usually includes forms of control, exploitation and sabotage.

“While economic violence most commonly occurred in the home, it could also be enabled and perpetrated by the State through discriminatory legal frameworks which restricted women’s access to credit, employment, social protection, or property and land rights,” he said.

Mr. Türk declared that so far, global efforts to deliver on gender equality have failed, pointing out that 3.9 billion women worldwide faced legal barriers affecting their economic participation and women earn only 77 cents for every dollar paid to men, among other inequities.

Time to start over

Mr. Türk said there needed to be a thorough revision of discriminatory laws and practices to put a stop to economic violence.

“Gender equality needed to be positively fostered through laws governing all areas of life and there needed to be policy measures to ensure these laws were applied,” he said.

Further, he said there needed to be a stronger effort to ensure survivors of economic violence could seek justice and assistance.

There needed to be better complaint mechanisms, economic and social support systems, more widely available psychological assistance, and for perpetrators to be brought to justice,” the High Commissioner said.

He emphasised that violence against women and girls was “abhorrent and inexcusable.”

Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, speaks at the UN Human Rights Council's (OHCHR) discussion on women's rights in Geneva.
UN Human Rights Council/Rajab Safarov
 
Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, speaks at the UN Human Rights Council's (OHCHR) discussion on women's rights in Geneva.

Civil

During the forum, members of civil society also weighed in on the harm caused by economic violence.

Esther Waweru, Senior Legal Advisor at Equality Now, said inequality in the family was one of the main reasons for economic violence, paired with “retrogressive patriarchal gender norms.”

She said that 1.4 billion women globally lived in countries where economic violence was not recognised and where there are no protections; a practice she believes could leave more women and girls vulnerable to exploitation.

Ms. Waweru recommends that Member States enact comprehensive laws to criminalise sexual and gender-based violence and intimate partner violence – along with economic violence.

She called for laws to “repeal and revoke marital power clauses designating husbands as the head of the households” to “ensure equitable sharing of the joint property deriving from marriage” and equal labour rights.


https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/06/1151616


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Haitian capital’s crippled health system ‘on the brink’

People flee the neighbourhood of Solino in Port-au-Prince following gang attacks there in May 2024.
© UNICEF/Ralph Tedy Erol
 
People flee the neighbourhood of Solino in Port-au-Prince following gang attacks there in May 2024.


9 hours 47 minutes ago 

The health system in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince is “on the brink” and “crippled by escalating violence” according to the UN’s Pan American Health Organization’s (PAHO) representative in the Caribbean island nation, Dr. Oscar Barreneche.

The Haitian health ministry estimates that almost 40 per cent of facilities providing beds for treatment, including the country’s main university hospital, have shut down in the last two months alone because of insecurity and looting, mainly perpetrated by gangs.

Haiti, and in particular Port-au-Prince, continues to witness unprecedented levels of lawlessness and brutality as gangs continue to fight for influence and territory.

Meanwhile, some 580,000 people are displaced within the country.

Here are five things you need to know about the current health situation in Haiti and what the United Nations is doing to help.

1. Healthcare access is scarce

The security crisis is having a huge impact on an already fragile healthcare system.

Access to healthcare - as well as essential social services, hygiene facilities and psychological assistance in Haiti - is scarce and capacity, especially in the capital, remains extremely limited.

PAHO's Dr. Oscar Barreneche meets patients at the Hôpital Universitaire de La Paix, in Port-au-Prince.
© WHO/Lorens Mentor
 
PAHO's Dr. Oscar Barreneche meets patients at the Hôpital Universitaire de La Paix, in Port-au-Prince.

Health facilities have closed or have drastically reduced their operations because they are running out of medicine and vital medical supplies, some of which have been looted.

In the Artibonite department just north of the capital, where gangs have recently become dominant, only a quarter of health facilities are functional.

The number of available medical staff, who often cannot get to work because of security concerns, is also decreasing. UNICEF estimates that around 40 per cent of healthcare providers have left the country recently “due to extreme levels of insecurity.”

2. Women and children are suffering

The closure of hospitals and health facilities has left an estimated 3,000 pregnant women struggling to access maternal health services according to the UN sexual and reproductive health agency, UNFPA.

A child in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, learns about the importance to her health of washing hands.
© UNICEF/Ralph Tedy Erol
 
A child in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, learns about the importance to her health of washing hands.

The neonatal, pediatric, and nutritional units that are still functioning are overwhelmed and the few still operating in areas controlled by armed groups lack adequate human resources, equipment, and medicines to provide essential health and nutrition services.

The UN is concerned that a child health and nutrition crisis could cost the lives of countless children. Insecurity in Port-au-Prince has made it virtually impossible for supplies to reach at least 58,000 children suffering from severe wasting in the metropolitan area. 

The UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) has also warned that violence and insecurity is affecting the mental health of displaced people including women, leading to distress and even suicidal behaviour.

3. The healthcare system is still functioning

The UN says that two out of every five Haitians need urgent access to care and despite the many challenges the country faces, the healthcare system is still functioning and some patients are receiving the treatment they need.

The Hôpital Universitaire de La Paix, in Port-au-Prince, which is supported by PAHO is on the frontline of providing services - including treating gun-shot wounds among other emergency care needs.

The Hôpital Universitaire de La Paix, in Port-au-Prince continues to provide healthcare to patients.
© WHO/Lorens Mentor
 
The Hôpital Universitaire de La Paix, in Port-au-Prince continues to provide healthcare to patients.

The hospital director, Dr Paul Junior Fontilus, told PAHO that an emergency plan had been activated “to better manage the influx of seriously injured people. Our priority is to ensure that all victims receive the immediate care they need.”

4. There are some positive developments

The international airport in Port-au-Prince had been closed because of gang activity but it has resumed operations, a positive development according to PAHO’s Dr. Oscar Barreneche: “The reopening of the airport has offered a lifeline, allowing us to restock critical medical supplies and equipment. Yet, the battle is far from over, with humanitarian conditions gradually worsening for an increasing number of Haitians.”

The arrival in Haiti of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) Mission (which although backed by the UN Security Council is not a UN operation), will provide operational support to the Haitian police in countering gangs and boost security around critical infrastructure like hospitals.

The UN Security Council also called on the MSS, through its support to the police, to help ensure unhindered and safe access to humanitarian aid for the people receiving assistance.

5. UN agencies continue to respond

Together with local partners, the United Nations and other humanitarian organisations are providing life-saving assistance on a daily basis.

In places were displaced people have fled, PAHO is providing support along with IOMUNFPA and the World Food Programme (WFP).

Displaced people shelter in a boxing arena in downtown Port-au-Prince after fleeing their homes due to attacks by gangs.
© UNOCHA/Giles Clarke
 
Displaced people shelter in a boxing arena in downtown Port-au-Prince after fleeing their homes due to attacks by gangs.

UNFPA and PAHO are supporting three hospitals in Port-au-Prince to provide maternal health services, including emergency obstetric care. It is also providing medicines and supplies, including for the clinical management of rape survivors, to 13 health facilities in the capital and surrounding region. It has deployed mobile clinics to seven displacement sites to support women’s and girls’ sexual and reproductive health, reaching close to 4,500 people so far.

Thousands of dignity kits containing hygiene and other essential supplies have also been distributed to the most vulnerable.

PAHO’s Dr. Oscar Barreneche said: “We face ongoing challenges that demand unwavering support and action to ensure stable and accessible life-saving healthcare for the people in need."

Read The UN humanitarian office, OCHA’s latest emergency situation report here.


https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/06/1151621


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четверг, 27 июня 2024 г.

Дети, не посещающие школу, и пробелы в образовании обходятся мировой экономике в 10 миллиардов долларов в год

Хотя 250 миллионов девочек и мальчиков в настоящее время лишены доступа к образованию по всему миру, в новом докладе ЮНЕСКО впервые анализируются экономические и социальные последствия недостатков образования. Одри Азуле, генеральный директор ЮНЕСКО, призывает государства-члены организации как можно быстрее разорвать «порочный круг» отсева школьников.
Бездействие в отношении расходов на образование PR 2024 г.
© ЮНЕСКО Исламабад Асад Заиди
17 июня 2024 г.
Последнее обновление: 18 июня 2024 г.

10 000 миллиардов долларов в год – глобальные издержки отсева из школы и отсутствия образования ошеломляют. Помимо этих финансовых соображений, существует значительное социальное воздействие. Идея этого доклада ЮНЕСКО ясна: образование – это стратегическая инвестиция, одна из лучших инвестиций для отдельных людей, экономики и общества в целом. Я призываю наши государства-члены обеспечить, чтобы это универсальное право стало реальностью для каждого человека как можно скорее.

Одри АзулеГенеральный директор ЮНЕСКО

В 1948 году образование было объявлено «всеобщим правом человека». Это право было подтверждено в 2015 году, когда Организация Объединенных Наций определила доступ к качественному образованию для всех в качестве цели устойчивого развития. Тем не менее, несмотря на десятилетия прогресса в доступе к образованию, 250 миллионов детей и молодых людей во всем мире все еще не посещают школу, а 70% 10-летних детей в странах с низким и средним уровнем дохода сегодня не способны понять простой письменный текст. . 

В новом докладе, опубликованном в понедельник и озаглавленном «Цена бездействия: глобальные частные, финансовые и социальные издержки, связанные с отсутствием обучения детей и молодежи» [1] , ЮНЕСКО оценивает стоимость отсева из школы и пробелов в образовании для глобальной экономики. к 2030 году составит 10 000 миллиардов долларов в год, что эквивалентно сумме годового ВВП Франции и Японии.

И наоборот, по оценкам отчета, сокращение доли тех, кто рано бросает школу или тех, кто не имеет базовых навыков, всего на 10%, увеличит годовой рост ВВП на 1-2 процентных пункта. Таким образом, образование представляется одной из лучших инвестиций, которые может сделать страна.

Помимо этих финансовых соображений, в докладе предупреждается о значительном социальном ущербе, причиненном этими недостатками образования. Пробелы в приобретении базовых навыков во всем мире связаны с увеличением на 69% случаев ранней беременности среди молодых девушек, в то время как каждый год среднего образования способствует снижению риска того, что девушки выйдут замуж и заведут ребенка до 18 лет. 

 

10 рекомендаций по качественному образованию для всех

Во время встречи министров образования в понедельник в штаб-квартире ЮНЕСКО в Париже (Франция) – в присутствии Габриэля Борича, президента Чили, который вместе с Генеральным директором является сопредседателем Руководящего комитета высокого уровня по качественному образованию для всех – Одри Азулай призвал 194 государства-члена Организации «уважать свое обязательство превратить образование из привилегии в прерогативу каждого человека во всем мире». Генеральный директор также напомнил, что «образование является важным ресурсом для решения современных задач, от сокращения бедности до борьбы с изменением климата».

Для достижения цели качественного образования для всех в докладе ЮНЕСКО представлены 10 рекомендаций. Первое из них заключается в том, что правительства должны гарантировать бесплатное, финансируемое государством школьное образование для каждой девочки и мальчика в течение как минимум двенадцати лет. Такое школьное обучение должно идти рука об руку с инвестициями в раннее детство, чтобы заложить основы для обучения как можно раньше и бороться с неравенством. Программы «второго шанса» также должны быть созданы для молодых людей, которые не смогли получить качественное образование или чье образование было прервано.

Среда обучения также должна быть безопасной и инклюзивной. ЮНЕСКО призывает к сокращению расстояний между детскими домами и школами, особенно в неблагополучных районах, а также к тому, чтобы все школы имели доступ к воде и канализации. Размеры классов должны быть небольшими, а уроки должны проводиться квалифицированными, мотивированными учителями, которые поддерживают всех учеников на справедливой основе, уделяя особое внимание гендерному равенству.

ЮНЕСКО также призывает государства повышать осведомленность местных сообществ и семей о важности завершения полного цикла образования девочками и мальчиками, а также привлекать родителей к школьной деятельности и управлению.


[1] Опубликовано в сотрудничестве с ОЭСР и Секретариатом Содружества.

О ЮНЕСКО

Организация Объединенных Наций по вопросам образования, науки и культуры, объединяющая 194 государства-члена, вносит вклад в мир и безопасность, возглавляя многостороннее сотрудничество в области образования, науки, культуры, коммуникации и информации. ЮНЕСКО со штаб-квартирой в Париже имеет представительства в 54 странах, в ней работает более 2300 человек. ЮНЕСКО курирует более 2000 объектов всемирного наследия, биосферных заповедников и глобальных геопарков; сети творческих, обучающихся, инклюзивных и устойчивых городов; и более 13 000 ассоциированных школ, университетских кафедр, учебных и исследовательских учреждений. Ее генеральным директором является Одри Азуле.

«Поскольку войны начинаются в сознании людей, именно в сознании людей должна строиться защита мира» – Конституция ЮНЕСКО, 1945 г. 

Дополнительная информация:  www.unesco.org.



https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/out-school-children-and-educational-gaps-cost-global-economy-10000-billion-year

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вторник, 25 июня 2024 г.

Half the world now following doctors’ orders on cutting trans fats: WHO


Industrially produced trans fat is commonly found in packaged foods, baked goods, cooking oils and spreads.
© Unsplash/Viktor Forgacs
 
Industrially produced trans fat is commonly found in packaged foods, baked goods, cooking oils and spreads.


24 June 2024

Health

A total of 53 countries had best practice policies in place for tackling industrial trans fats in food as of last year, vastly improving the food environment for 3.7 billion people, or 46 per cent of the world’s population, according to a milestone report published by the UN World Health Organization on Monday.

This is significant progress compared to the 2018 figure of just six per cent, or less than half a billion people, when the ambitious target to eliminate all trans fat from the global food supply by the end of 2023 was initially set by WHO.

Trans fat elimination is attainable, affordable and life-saving, and WHO remains committed to supporting Member States in their journeys towards this goal,” said Dr. Francesco Branca, Director of the Department of Nutrition and Food Safety at WHO.

Trans fats - or trans-fatty acids - clog arteries, increasing risk of heart attack and death. Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of mortality in the world and more than 278,000 deaths per year can be attributed to intake of industrially produced trans fat, according to the health agency.

Given their negative health effects, the current advancements made could save approximately 183,000 lives per year. However, progress has been unequal, with the highest remaining burden concentrated in the WHO Africa and Western Pacific Regions. The new report summarizes country actions to ban this toxic chemical and make recommendations to achieve global trans fat elimination.

Best practices

Remarkable progress has been made in every region of the world towards the WHO’s goal of total elimination of industrially produced trans fats. The chemicals are fatty acids that can be found in many fried foods, baked goods, vegetable shortening and margarine.

In 2023 alone, new best practice policies became effective in seven countries: Egypt, Mexico, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Philippines, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine.

In January 2024, WHO awarded five countries the Validation Certificate for progress in eliminating industrially produced trans fat: Denmark, Lithuania, Poland, Saudi Arabia and Thailand.

However, despite promising trends, progress has been uneven. More than four billion people around the world remain unprotected from this toxic chemical, mainly in the WHO African and Western Pacific Regions. 

Implementing best practice policies in just eight additional countries would eliminate 90 per cent of the global deaths associated with this harmful ingredient.

“Beyond passing WHO-recommended best practice trans fat policies, ensuring that compliance with these policies is monitored and enforced will be critical to achieve maximized and sustained health benefits of trans fat elimination,” added Dr. Branca.

New WHO commitments

The WHO’s new report helps to further the organization’s efforts towards global trans fat elimination. The report urges all countries to enact best practice policies and to better monitor and enforce these policies so that more countries may become eligible for the WHO Validation Certificate.

The WHO also calls on food manufacturers to eliminate the use of trans fats in product lines and supply chains, even where regulations are not yet in place.


https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/06/1151386


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понедельник, 24 июня 2024 г.

Sudan: WHO appalled by horrific attack on El Fasher’s maternity hospital


A woman who fled her home due to conflict rests at a centre for displaced people in El Fasher, Darfur. (file)
© UNICEF/Mohamed Zakaria
 
A woman who fled her home due to conflict rests at a centre for displaced people in El Fasher, Darfur. (file)


24 June 2024
Peace and Security

Heavy fighting in Sudan hit a new low over the weekend when a maternity hospital in besieged El Fasher city came under attack, killing a pharmacy worker and prompting new calls on Monday from the head of the UN health agency for the violence to stop.

The attack on the only maternity hospital in the town in Sudan’s western state of North Darfur is “shocking and appalling,” the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Sunday, calling on warring parties to “protect mothers and children at all times and allow them safe access to healthcare” in the war-torn African country.

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WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted that the Saudi Maternity Hospital was “the only one that has been providing maternal and child healthcare” in El Fasher.

The development comes after more than 14 months of fighting between rival militaries in Sudan.

Media reports pointed to “a Rapid Support Forces bombing” of the hospital in El Fasher, which is the capital of the Darfur region and home to hundreds of thousands of people displaced by the war.

Killed on the job

UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Sudan Clementine Nkweta-Salami released more details on the death of pharmacist Amna Ahmed Bakhit: “Killed on the job, prescribing and administering medicine to women, men and children in a place that should have been safe,” the top UN official in the country said in a post on X.

“From bullets or bombs, starvation or disease, each soul lost to this senseless war takes Sudan another inexorable step away from what we all want. Peace,” Ms. Nkweta-Salami added, calling for an end to the brutal fighting.

“Mothers and babies must be protected at all times and allowed safe access to healthcare. Healthcare workers must be able to work in safety”, WHO’s Tedros emphasized adding that despite the attack, the hospital continues to function thanks to the dedication of its staff working in dire conditions. 

Since 10 May, the city of El Fasher has been the scene of intense fighting between the former allies who went to war with each other 14 months ago.

Calls from the UN and the international community have grown in recent weeks to prevent Sudan from falling into a humanitarian catastrophe that could push millions into starvation, due to food shortages caused by fighting that has spread to 12 of the country’s 18 states.

WFP steps up aid

People in parts of Khartoum, Darfur and Kordofan states continue to be deprived of food and health assistance, and child malnutrition in Sudan is reaching emergency levels according to UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Around nine million children are facing acute food insecurity.

The World Food Programme’s (WFP) food security analysis has identified 44 hunger hotspots in Sudan – mainly in areas of active fighting such as Khartoum, Kordofan, Darfur and Gezira – where 2.6 million people are at high risk of falling into the extreme phase five of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC 5)

Against this backdrop, the UN emergency food assistance agency is scaling up its operations to stave off famine. WFP is prioritising these areas and has provided food assistance to 22 of the hunger hotspots since January.

The UN agency says it has reached more than three million people and plans to reach an additional five million through general food assistance, nutrition, school meals and resilience activities throughout the year.


https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/06/1151371


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пятница, 21 июня 2024 г.

WHO issues warning on falsified medicines used for diabetes treatment and weight loss



20 June 2024 
News release
 
Reading time: 2 min (572 words)

The World Health Organization (WHO) issued a medical product alert on falsified semaglutides, the type of medicines that are used for treatment of type 2 diabetes and obesity in some countries.

The alert addresses 3 falsified batches of product of semaglutide class of medicines (of specific brand Ozempic), which have been detected in Brazil in October 2023, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in October 2023, and the United States of America in December 2023. WHO Global Surveillance and Monitoring System (GSMS) has been observing increased reports on falsified semaglutide products in all geographical regions since 2022. This is the first official notice issued by WHO after confirmation of some of the reports.

“WHO advises healthcare professionals, regulatory authorities and the public be aware of these falsified batches of medicines,” said Dr Yukiko Nakatani, WHO Assistant Director-General for Essential Medicines and Health Products. “We call on stakeholders to stop any usage of suspicious medicines and report to relevant authorities”.

Shortage of supplies and increased falsification

The semaglutides, including the specific brand product that has been falsified, are prescribed to people with type 2 diabetes in order to lower their blood sugar levels. Semaglutides also reduce the risk of cardiovascular events. Most semaglutide products must be injected under the skin on a weekly basis but they are also available as tablets taken by mouth daily. These medicines are shown to suppress appetite in addition to lowering blood sugar levels, and therefore are being increasingly prescribed for weight loss in some countries.

WHO has been observing increased demand for these medicines as well as reports on falsification. These falsified products could have harmful effects to people’s health; if the products don’t have the necessary raw components, falsified medicines can lead to health complications resulting from unmanaged blood glucose levels or weight. In other cases, another undeclared active ingredient may be contained in the injection device, e.g. insulin, leading to an unpredictable range of health risks or complications.

Semaglutides are not part of WHO-recommended treatments for diabetes management due to their current high cost. The cost barrier makes these products unsuitable for a public health approach, which aims to ensure the widest possible access to medicines at the population level and to strike a balance between the best-established standard of care and what is feasible on a large scale in resource-limited settings. Also, there are more affordable treatments available for diabetes, with similar effects to those of semaglutides on blood sugar and cardiovascular risk.

WHO is currently working on a rapid advice guideline on possible use of GLP-1 RAs, including semaglutides, for treatment of obesity in adults and as part of a more comprehensive model of care. The term GLP-1 RAs stands for glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, which include semaglutides, for a class of medicines used for diabetes treatment to lower blood sugar and support weight loss.

Individual action

To protect themselves from falsified medicines and their harmful effects, patients who are using these products can take actions such as buying medicines with prescriptions from licensed physicians and avoid buying medicines from unfamiliar or unverified sources, such as those that may be found online.

People should always check packaging and expiry dates of medicines when they buy them, and use the products as prescribed. In the case of injectable semaglutides, patients should ensure they are stored in the refrigerator. All notifications on falsified medicines can be sent to WHO via rapidalert@who.int


https://www.who.int/news/item/20-06-2024-who-issues-warning-on-falsified-medicines-used-for-diabetes-treatment-and-weight-loss


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четверг, 20 июня 2024 г.

Global survey reveals ‘truly astonishing’ consensus for stronger climate action



People in polluted places like Hanoi, Viet Nam, are calling for greater action by governments to tackle climate change.
© UNICEF/Pham Ha Duy Linh
 
People in polluted places like Hanoi, Viet Nam, are calling for greater action by governments to tackle climate change.


20 June 2024
Climate and Environment

The overwhelming majority of people around the world want an end to geopolitical differences when it comes to fighting climate change, the results of a landmark public opinion poll conducted by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) has shown.

Peoples’ Climate Vote 2024, the biggest ever standalone public opinion survey on climate change, also showed that 80 per cent of the respondents support more ambitious climate action.

“The Peoples’ Climate Vote is loud and clear,” said UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner.  

“Global citizens want their leaders to transcend their differences, to act now and to act boldly to fight the climate crisis.”

The second edition of the survey polled communities around the world on how nations are tackling climate change that is triggering extreme weather, flooding, and temperature spikes across the planet, affecting countries large and small.

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UNDP

‘Truly astonishing’ consensus

The UNDP chief said the survey results “reveal a level of consensus that is truly astonishing”.

“We urge leaders and policymakers to take note, especially as countries develop their next round of climate action pledges – or ‘nationally determined contributions (NDCs)’ under the Paris Agreement,” Mr. Steiner said.  

“This is an issue that almost everyone, everywhere can agree on.”

Quick transition to clean energy

Conducted with Oxford University and GeoPoll, the survey polled more than 75,000 people speaking 87 different languages across 77 countries with 15 questions on climate change.

The results offer a country-by-country snapshot of where the world’s citizens stand, including on moving towards sustainability.

A majority of people in 62 of the 77 countries surveyed said they supported a quick transition away from fossil fuels to clean energy.

Climate anxiety

People across the world also reported that climate change was on their minds.

Globally, 56 per cent said they were thinking about it daily or weekly, including some 63 per cent of those from least developed countries (LDCs).

More than half of people globally said they were more worried than last year about climate change.  

The corresponding figure was 59 per cent in LDCs, and up to 71 per cent across nine small island developing States (SIDS) expressed the same sentiment.

A total of 69 per cent of people surveyed said their big decisions like where to live or work were being impacted by climate change, with varied results across regions, from 74 per cent in least developed countries to 52 per cent in western and northern Europe and 42 per cent in North America.

The message is clear

At the global launch at UN Headquarters, in New York, Cassie Flynn, UNDP Global Director for Climate Change, said “the message is clear”, explaining what’s to come.

“As we move forward is to bring the voice of the people to the debate [on climate change],” she said.

“The next two years stand as one of the best chances we have as the international community to ensure that warming stays under 1.5°,” she said. “We stand ready to support policymakers in stepping up their efforts as they develop their climate action plans through our Climate Promise initiative.”

The first Peoples’ Climate Vote took place in 2021 and surveyed people across 50 countries through advertisements in popular mobile gaming apps. Click here for the results of that survey.

Launch of the results of UNDP’s Peoples’ Climate Vote 2024

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UN chief warns of ‘cyber mercenaries’ amid spike in weaponising digital tools


UN Secretary-General António Guterres addresses the Security Council on evolving threats in cyberspace.
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
 
UN Secretary-General António Guterres addresses the Security Council on evolving threats in cyberspace.

20 June 2024

Peace and Security

UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Thursday highlighted the dual-edged nature of cyberspace, stressing its potential for both immense benefits and significant risks when misused.

At a Security Council high-level debate on evolving threats in cyberspace, convened by the Republic of Korea, Council President for June, Mr. Guterres underscored the transformative power of digital technologies.

“Breakthroughs in digital technologies are happening at warp speed; digital advances are revolutionising economies and societies,” he said. “They are bringing people together, providing citizens with access to government services and institutions and supercharging economies, trade and financial inclusion.”

However, he cautioned that the seamless and instant connectivity that fuels these benefits also makes people, institutions and countries vulnerable.

“The perils of weaponising digital technologies are growing by the year,” he warned. “Malicious activity in cyberspace is on the rise by both State and non-State actors and by outright criminals.”

Secretary-General Guterres addressing the Security Council.

Cyber mercenaries, hacktivists

The UN chief warned that malicious cyber activities are on the rise, with serious cybersecurity incidents becoming “disturbingly common”.

Essential public services such as healthcare, banking and telecommunications are frequently breached, and criminal organizations and “cyber mercenaries” engage in relentless illicit activities.

Additionally, a “legion of hate merchants” is spreading fear and division online.

“So called civilian ‘hacktivists’ are entering the fray, and in many cases are blurring the line between combatants and civilians,” he said.

New vulnerabilities

The integration of digital tools with weapon systems, including autonomous systems, presents new vulnerabilities, Mr. Guterres said.

The misuse of digital technology is becoming more sophisticated and stealthier, with proliferation of malware software. The threat is further amplified by artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled cyber operations.

“Ransomware is one grievous example,” the UN chief underscored, “a huge threat to public and private institutions and the critical infrastructure people depend on.”

In 2023, total ransomware payments reached $1.1 billion.

Beyond financial costs, malicious cyber activities undermine public institutions, electoral processes and online integrity, eroding trust, fuelling tensions and sowing the seeds of violence and conflict, he added.

Incredible opportunity

Despite the threats, Mr. Guterres emphasised the “incredible opportunity” digital technology offers to create a more just, equal, sustainable and peaceful future.

He called for breakthroughs to be oriented toward the common good, highlighting his proposed New Agenda for Peace that places prevention at the core of all peace efforts.

“It calls for developing strong frameworks in line with international law, human rights and the UN Charter and focused efforts by all States to prevent the extension and escalation of conflicts within and through cyberspace,” he said.

“As reflected in the New Vision for the Rule of Law, the rule of law must exist in the digital sphere as it does in the physical world.”

The UN Security Council meets to discuss the evolving threats in cyberspace.
UN Photo/Manuel Elías
 
The UN Security Council meets to discuss the evolving threats in cyberspace.

Call for better integration

Secretary-General Guterres welcomed the General Assembly’s commitment to action, including its dedicated working group on information and communication technologies (ICT) security.

He also urged the Security Council to integrate cyber-related considerations into its workstreams and resolutions, underscoring that many issues it addresses, such as the protection of civilians, peace operations, counterterrorism and humanitarian operations, are affected by cyberspace.

“Integrating this issue into your deliberations would be a useful way to lay the groundwork for more effective responses to this important question,” he said.

Summit of the Future

In conclusion, Mr. Guterres stressed the importance of the upcoming Summit of the Future, in September.

“The pact that will emerge from the summit represents a pivotal chance to support the maintenance of international peace and security in cyberspace,” he said.

Among other actions, it aims to safeguard critical infrastructure against harmful ICT practices and create enhanced accountability for data-driven technology, including AI.

“I look forward to working with this Council, the General Assembly and all Member States to ensure that technology is focused where it belongs: on the progress and security of all people and the planet we share,” the Secretary-General concluded.



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среда, 19 июня 2024 г.

WFP increases response in West and Central Africa to address rising hunger

In Mauritania, community members are engaged in a soil rehabilitation project.
© WFP/Evelyn Fey
 
In Mauritania, community members are engaged in a soil rehabilitation project.


18 June 2024
Humanitarian Aid

The World Food Programme (WFP) will increase its food and nutrition assistance programme this month in West and Central Africa in hopes of reaching 7.3 million people as the June-August lean season is under way at a time when hunger levels are high and food resources are low.

The programme will aid the response plans of national governments in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Nigeria.

With the right amount of funding, WFP’s initiative can reach 12 million people, but with diminishing resources available, humanitarians working with the programme have reached fewer people than anticipated.

This comes as malnutrition in West and Central Africa is reaching alarming levels along with a projection that 55 million people will face acute hunger during the lean season.

Chris Nikoi, WFP’s Regional Director for Western Africa, said that this crisis exposes the need for “transformative solutions” to assist vulnerable families with food and other needs.

“We need to continue prioritising emergency response for those most in need,” Mr. Nikoi said. “But, we need more investment in sustainable solutions to help strengthen food security, improve agricultural productivity and purchasing power of families at the right time and cushion economic and climate shocks.”

Response aims

Many dealing with acute hunger in West and Central Africa have been left without assistance and risk having their situation worsened since funding for the programme has not kept “apace” with increasing crises in the region.

WFP said this is worrying since the 2024 seasonal forecast reveals weather that could disrupt farming and prolong the next lean season.

“The escalation of humanitarian needs far outstrips available resources,” Mr. Nikoi said. “The only way out of this cycle is to prioritise durable solutions.”

WFP’s current aid

Currently, WFP said it is supporting “long-term transformative hunger solutions” and working on improving government systems that increase communities’ shock resilience via social protection and investments in inclusive food systems.

WFP programmes have helped to, among other things, restore degraded lands to food and fodder production, support children’s education, improve access to food and boost incomes across the Sahel and provide more frequent and diversified meals to civilians in Nigerian villages.

The programme said initiatives including “strengthening poor families’ purchasing power with timely shock-responsive social protection schemes need to be prioritised and expanded as a humanitarian response alone is financially not sustainable and does not address the root causes of hunger and malnutrition.”



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Deadly and growing impact of air pollution laid bare in new UNICEF-backed report

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Air pollution is a major environmental health risk for children.
© UNICEF/E.Osipova
 
Air pollution is a major environmental health risk for children.


18 June 2024
Climate and Environment

The State of Global Air (SoGA) report published in partnership with the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warns on Wednesday that air pollution is increasingly impacting human health - and is now the second leading global risk factor for premature death.

The fifth edition of the report, released by the Health Effects Institute (HEI), revealed that air pollution caused 8.1 million deaths worldwide in 2021 and many millions are dealing with debilitating chronic diseases, leaving healthcare systems, economies, and societies.

Further, it found that children under five are particularly vulnerable to air pollution, leaving over 700,000 in this age group dead in 2021.

‘Accurate predictor’

The SoGA report found that pollutants like outdoor fine particulate matter (PM2.5) - which comes from burning fossil fuels and biomass in sectors like transportation, residential homes, wildfires, and more - caused more than 90 per cent of global air pollution deaths and were found to be the “most consistent and accurate predictor of poor health outcomes around the world.”

Other pollutants like household air pollution, ozone (O3), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) - which can be found in traffic exhaust - also contribute to the global deterioration of human health.

 HEI President Dr. Elena Craft said she hopes the information in the report will inspire change.

 “Air pollution has enormous implications for health. We know that improving air quality and global public health is practical and achievable,” she said.

 In addition to affecting people’s health, pollutants like PM2.5 add to greenhouse gases that are warming the planet. As the earth warms, regions with high levels of NO2 will experience great levels of ozone, which can result in greater health effects.

 Dr. Pallavi Pant, HEI’s Head of Global Health said, “This new report offers a stark reminder of the significant impacts air pollution has on human health, with far too much of the burden borne by young children, older populations, and low- and middle-income countries.”

 She continued, “This points sharply at an opportunity for cities and countries to consider air quality and air pollution as high-risk factors when developing health policies and other noncommunicable disease prevention and control programmes.”

Children ‘uniquely vulnerable’

The report reveals that children are “uniquely vulnerable” to air pollution and effects can begin in the womb. It states that young children’s exposure to air pollution has resulted in one in five deaths globally, pneumonia and asthma and affects children with inequities more than it does those in high-income countries.

Air pollution, primarily from the burning of fossil fuels, is a serious problem in Indian cities.
Unsplash/Hassan Afridhi

UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Kitty van der Heijden said that nearly 2,000 children under five die every day due to the effects of air pollution.

‘The global urgency is undeniable,” she said. “It is imperative governments and businesses consider these estimates and locally available data and use it to inform meaningful, child-focused action to reduce air pollution and protect children’s health.”

Progress made

In addition to sharing details on the negative effects of air pollution on human health, the SoGA report also claims that there has been better awareness about the harms of being exposed to household air pollution and a 53 per cent decrease in the death rate of children under five since 2000 due to increased access to clean energy for cooking.

Also, regions experiencing the highest levels of air pollution have begun to address the issue by installing air pollution monitoring networks, implementing stricter air quality policies and more - particularly in Africa, Latin America and Asia.


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понедельник, 17 июня 2024 г.

INTERVIEW: Sustainable energy offers ‘hope’ in fight against desertification and land loss


The availability of solar energy has enabled farmers in north Sudan to continue farming


UNDP/Muhanad Sameer
 
The availability of solar energy has enabled farmers in north Sudan to continue farming


17 June 2024
Climate and Environment

Sustainable sources of energy, including solar and wind power, can help communities across the world to reverse desertification and land loss, according to Ibrahim Thiaw, the Executive Secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification

Mr. Thiaw spoke to UN News ahead of the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought, marked annually on 17 June

Ibrahim Thiaw: Desertification is happening at the local level as much as it is global. Unless we address this at the local level, we will never be able to actually control it at the global level. Global policies and global decisions are needed. 

The impacts are huge in terms of food security and food sovereignty.

It also drives forced migration. If people can no longer produce food on their land then they will migrate. As we have seen for example in the Sahel or Haiti, there can be severe consequences for global security. When people fight over access to land and water, it leads to more conflicts. We are seeing more of this, and it has consequences on the homogeneity of communities and on national economies.

UNCCD Executive Secretary Ibrahim Thiaw visits the Aral Sea in Uzbekistan, which is suffering the effects of drought.
UNCCD
 
UNCCD Executive Secretary Ibrahim Thiaw visits the Aral Sea in Uzbekistan, which is suffering the effects of drought.

It is estimated that up to 50 per cent of the global GDP might lost by 2050 due to challenges with agriculture and food production unless we address the issue of land loss and desertification. 

UN News: What is the trend right now in terms of land loss?

Ibrahim Thiaw: Land loss is happening all over the world and land degradation is affecting both arid and less arid lands.

But in terms of drylands and desertification, it is estimated that 45 per cent of the land surface is affected by desertification. Maybe it is more striking to say that 3.2 billion people or one third of the world population are affected by that. 

Every year a hundred million hectares of land is being degraded, an area the size of Egypt. We need to halt land degradation, but we also need to restore 1.5 billion hectares of land.

UN News: How are you going to do that? 

Ibrahim Thiaw: By improving the techniques of agriculture, reducing the impact we are having on land in terms of extraction of minerals and other extractive industries. It is also important that we reduce the pressure in terms of people activities in some parts of the world so as to diversify the economy and create more opportunities to create income.

Two men plant trees as part of a reforestation initiative in coastal areas of Bangladesh.
© Global Commission on Adaptation (GCA)
 
Two men plant trees as part of a reforestation initiative in coastal areas of Bangladesh.

Restoring degraded land is not an expensive activity to undertake, but it is absolutely essential to provide more food security and to reduce conflicts. Every single dollar invested in land restoration can generate up to $30 in economic benefits, so investment in restoration activities is quite profitable from the economic point of view.

This is not just the responsibility of local communities but also of governments and crucially of the private sector because the largest driver of land use in the world is big agriculture.

UN News: Are we talking mainly about small developing countries? 

Ibrahim Thiaw: No. It's a global phenomenon that is affecting all countries including the United States, India, China, India or Pakistan.

But the impact is much more severe in small countries, and small economies that do not have reserves, nor the insurance systems to protect their people. And the level of vulnerability is much higher in communities whose revenues are only based on the income they can generate from land. 

UN News Desertification doesn't exist in isolation. How does it relate to climate change?

Ibrahim Thiaw: Desertification is an amplifier of climate change. Climate change is an amplifier of desertification because of course, with extreme events, you also have severe impact on land and on communities and local economies. 

Many migrants, like these ones in Djibouti, are leaving home because they can no longer live off their land.
© IOM/Alexander Bee
 
Many migrants, like these ones in Djibouti, are leaving home because they can no longer live off their land.

So basically, they are mutually interacting and it is therefore important to have a more comprehensive global picture. It is wrong to think that you can protect biodiversity or the land without tackling the climate issue and vice versa. 

UN News: The small-scale interventions at a local level are very important, but it sounds as though it's going to need a huge push from governments, from the private sector to make a real difference?

Ibrahim Thiaw: Yes, we should not discard all of the efforts that are being made by the local communities day in, day out. They need much more support from governments. They also need to see less subsidies for the agriculture industry, that is destroying the environment. Public money that, in some cases, is destroying the environment should be used to actually rebuild economies. 

So, it is not necessarily that we need to inject more money, but we need to better spend the money that we have.

UN News: I guess some would say that's quite an over optimistic view that governments will be changing the way they spend their money? 

Ibrahim Thiaw: Well, no, it makes sense politically. As a taxpayer, I would like to see where my money is going. If it is being invested in activities that are destroying my environment and creating eco-anxiety for my children, destroying the livelihoods of my communities, then as a voter, I would insist that my government invests my money in other areas that would be generating more income for me and creating more sustainability.

UN News: You're from Mauritania in the Sahel. Have you seen this land degradation happen in real time? 

Ibrahim Thiaw: The situation is very sad. I've seen land degradation in my lifetime. But at the same time, I also have a lot of hope because I see positive changes coming. I see the younger generation being conscious of the fact that they need to reverse the trend.

I see more farmers and pastoralists trying to do their bit. I see more interventions from the international community, including from the humanitarian world that are investing in land restoration. So, I see a movement which gives me some hope that if we join our efforts and if we work in a collaborative manner, it would be possible to actually reverse the trend.

And the best hope I have is energy, which was the missing link for development and for small and medium enterprises. Energy is now accessible in remote places thanks to our ability to harness solar and wind energy. 

And the possibility of combining energy and agriculture is very positive, as you can harvest water, store food, reduce the food loss. You can process that food to create chains at the local level.


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суббота, 15 июня 2024 г.

Climate change fuels tensions in Nigeria


Climate change impacts continue to fuel tensions and drive displacement in Nigeria.
IOM/Jorge Galindo
 
Climate change impacts continue to fuel tensions and drive displacement in Nigeria.


14 June 2024
Humanitarian Aid

Despite its huge potential, Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, continues to grapple with a host of challenges which are impacting people’s lives and triggering conflict over key resources, a senior UN official in the country said on Friday.

Speaking to reporters at UN Headquarters in New York, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria Mohamed Malick Fall highlighted the worrying impact of climate change.

The country is witnessing climate-related shocks which are triggering displacement and driving conflict, he said, singling out clashes over dwindling resources between farmers and herdsmen.

This conflict is exacerbated by the climate crisis, which is forcing herding communities to leave their traditional lands in search of better grazing options.

Mohamed Malick Fall, the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
 
Mohamed Malick Fall, the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria

Improvements in the northeast

The Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria’s northeast has been controlled to some extent, Mr. Fall reported, with the situation there showing signs of improvement.

That sentiment is reflected in a recent survey carried out by the UN International Organization for Migration (IOM) looking at the aspirations of people displaced by conflict in the region.

Around 37 per cent taking part expressed a desire to return to their places of origin. Areas once worst affected by Boko Haram, such as Borno state, showed an even higher percentage willing to go back - two in three (67 per cent).

Similarly, about 38 per cent expressed the intention to stay in their current locations and integrate with local communities.

Primary factors influencing both groups include the reconstruction of homes destroyed in places of origin and the favourable security situation in areas where they have been displaced to, according to the IOM survey.

Inflation concerns

Mr. Fall further informed journalists of the Government’s efforts to institute economic reforms, such as through its “Renewed Hope” agenda which was launched last year.

Economists predict that inflation – a concern at present – could turn the corner and start falling by the end of the year.

“But in the meantime, we are seeing prices getting higher. Mainly food prices, which is impacting negatively on the possibility of people to access a decent life,” Mr. Fall said.

Two-track support

The Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator said the UN was aligning its operations with the Government’s priorities, taking a two-track approach.

One is the humanitarian response, helping save and improve lives of regular Nigerians, and reducing vulnerabilities.

The other, he added, is supporting efforts to spur development in pursuit of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).


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пятница, 14 июня 2024 г.

‘Without nuclear, it will be almost impossible to decarbonize by 2050’, UN atomic energy chief

Nuclear power plant.

 Nuclear is already playing a big role in clean energy delivery. It is already part of the solution. 

Unsplash/Lukáš Lehotský
 
Nuclear power plant.

Conflict( the war)

13 June 2024

Although nuclear energy is widely used for electricity production, it has often faced an image problem, particularly in the wake of accidents such as the 1985 Chernobyl disaster, the 2011 Fukushima accident or, more recently, the occupation by Russian forces of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine.

The issue of spent fuel, the highly radioactive waste produced by the process of producing energy in nuclear power plants, has also been periodically raised as a cause for concern.

But the image of nuclear power got a boost at the 2023 UN climate conference in Dubai (COP28), when 198 countries included nuclear energy in the list of low emission technologies that need to be scaled up if we're to end our reliance on fossil fuels.

Ahead of an international conference on the safe management of spent fuel, UN News spoke to Rafael Mariano Grossi, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to discuss the growth of nuclear energy, and the difference the COP28 declaration is likely to make to the way it is perceived. 

Rafael Mariano Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), briefs members of the UN Security Council on protecting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine.

Rafael Grossi It's been very important, in terms of public perception, policies, and understanding.

Nuclear is already playing a big role in clean energy delivery; more than a third of clean, CO2 free energy produced today in the world is nuclear. In Europe, where I live, it’s half. So, it is already part of the solution. 

The problem is that for many years, for a variety of reasons that have to do with Chernobyl or, later, Fukushima, there has been a lot of push back and misinformation about nuclear energy.

This has reverberated in the conferences and meetings and policy gatherings about energy in general; at the UN Climate Conferences, nuclear was resisted, not mentioned, and even rejected. 

The fact the nuclear energy was included alongside renewables at the 2023 Dubai conference was a major step. A number of important countries pledged to triple their own percentage of nuclear in their energy mix.

I don’t think that this a renaissance of nuclear, but a return to realism. The International Panel on Climate Change, which is a gathering of the greatest and the brightest scientists from all over the world studying climate issues, has recognized that, without nuclear energy, it will be almost impossible to decarbonize by 2050.

So, there will be more nuclear power and the IAEA, along with the UN System in general, will make sure this happens in a safe and secure way, and does not lead to the proliferation of nuclear weapons.

IAEA experts depart Unit 4 of TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station on 17 April 2013.
IAEA/Greg Webb
 
IAEA experts depart Unit 4 of TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station on 17 April 2013.

UN News When you say misinformation surrounding nuclear energy, what do you mean?

Rafael Grossi For example, the conventional wisdom is that thousands of people died because of the Fukushima nuclear accident. Whilst it’s true that thousands of people were killed by the tsunami [that hit Japan in March 2011], not a single person died from radiation. 

When you look at the statistics, you will see that in terms of mortality, nuclear is even lower than some renewable energies. Many people die in air accidents, but we don’t stop flying in aircraft. National governments have a responsibility to keep societies well-informed, and set the record straight. 

There has been a certain narrative surrounding nuclear for many decades, but now there are environmental or green parties that are pro-nuclear in places like Scandinavia, which have a strong very strong tradition of protecting the environment. 

This doesn’t mean that we will go 100 per cent nuclear: we believe in intelligent energy mixes, where nuclear is the baseload energy. It’s very stable, it’s available come rain or shine, you can regulate it, and you can integrate it with renewables. 

UN News One of the big issues that comes up at UN climate conferences is financing for developing countries. A lot of upfront money is needed to pay for nuclear power stations. Where is that money going to come from?

Rafael Grossi At the moment there is no international financing for nuclear, partly because of policies that are hostile to the technology. But that is starting to change, and international financial institutions are starting to review these policies.

We are seeing the growth of nuclear energy in the global South, from India and China, to Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Bangladesh, and South Africa. Several African countries are interested, due to the development of small modular reactors, which are more affordable.

IAEA inspectors help ensure safety at Ukrainian nuclear power plants. .
© State Specialized Enterprise
 
IAEA inspectors help ensure safety at Ukrainian nuclear power plants. .

UN News The IAEA talks up the benefits and potential of nuclear energy, but you’re also responsible for nuclear security. How do you reconcile these seemingly contradictory mandates?

Rafael Grossi I would look at it differently. In Ukraine, nuclear infrastructure [the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant] has been occupied. The problem is not with the technology, it lies with the war and what is happening around it. 

We have around 440 nuclear reactors operating around the world without any hiccup or problem. This is why the agency has been so proactive in Ukraine, to avoid an accident. We take it very seriously, but it is an aberration.

Like any important industrial activity, nuclear energy does carry risks. Nuclear waste is a good example: it is well managed, and the amounts of waste are limited. After 70 years of commercial operation, there has never been a problem with waste. Compare that to the waste from fossil fuels, which is killing the planet.

Technological and scientific innovations are revolutionizing the agrifood sector
© FAO/IAEA
 
Technological and scientific innovations are revolutionizing the agrifood sector

UN News The IAEA has its own labs. What are the main areas of scientific and nuclear research you’re involved in?

Rafael Grossi In areas such as oncology and radiotherapy, we provide the capacity building to allow developing countries to use the technology. Nuclear energy is also providing food security through irradiation techniques that prevent harvests from rotting, allow the development of seeds that are drought resistant and sterilize insects, lowering the threat of zika virus, or malaria. And, since the COVID-19 pandemic, we’ve been working on the early detection of pathogens and zoonosis. That is the other side of the IAEA; nuclear technology for development. 


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среда, 12 июня 2024 г.

A. Guterres hails 60 years of UN trade and development action



UN Secretary-General António Guterres addresses the UNCTAD Global Leaders Forum in Geneva.
UNCTAD/Pierre Albouy
 
UN Secretary-General António Guterres addresses the UNCTAD Global Leaders Forum in Geneva.


12 June 2024
Economic Development

The right to development is inextricably linked with trade which the world’s poorest countries - now “mired in debt” through no fault of their own - have every right to pursue on much fairer terms, UN chief António Guterres insisted on Wednesday.

In a speech marking 60 years of UN Trade and Development – the agency previously known by the acronym UNCTAD - the UN Secretary-General highlighted the multiple challenges standing in the way of a more sustainable and inclusive global economy for all.

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“New and protracted conflicts are having a ripple effect across the global economy. Global debt has soared while key development indicators, including poverty and hunger, have regressed,” Mr. Guterres told the UN Trade and Development Global Leaders Forum.

Global system’s flaws exposed

On a flying visit to Switzerland, Mr. Guterres reprised previous warnings that the world’s international financial architecture “has been exposed as outdated, dysfunctional, and unjust”. 

It has “failed to provide a safety net for developing countries mired in debt”, the UN chief insisted, as he issued the worrying assessment that the international trading system faces pressure “on all sides”, to the extent that it is now “teetering on the verge of fragmentation”. 

Taking sides

Against this deeply concerning backdrop, and amid escalating geopolitical tensions, rising inequality and soaring debt, Mr. Guterres insisted that the role of the Geneva-based agency UN Trade and Development was “more relevant than ever” in working for a more sustainable and inclusive global economy, through trade and investment.

The UN agency cannot be neutral on development problems – “just as the World Health Organization could not be neutral on malaria”, the UN chief said, referencing the famous words of Raul Prebisch, UNCTAD’s first Secretary-General. 

 “Trade has become a double-edged sword: a source of both prosperity and inequality; interconnection and dependence; economic innovation and environmental degradation,” Mr. Guterres said, as he urged greater dialogue between nations in the face of a near-tripling of trade barriers since 2019, “many driven by geopolitical rivalry, with no concern for their impact on developing countries”.

He added: “The world cannot afford splits into rival blocs. To implement the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) - and to ensure peace and security – we need one global market and one global economy, in which there is no place for poverty and hunger.”



https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/06/1150951



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вторник, 11 июня 2024 г.

UPDATING LIVE: From AI to war zones, UN hosts largest global meeting on disability issues

UPDATING LIVE: From AI to war zones, UN hosts largest global meeting on disability issues
Human Rights
7 June 2024
Welcome to this first ever guest-edited UN News live page. We’re reporting from the opening day of the 17th session of the Conference of States Parties (COSP17) to the game-changing Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Our blogger-in-chief this morning is Nick Herd, an activist, actor and talk show host with Down syndrome whose mission is to amplify voices and drive change.


https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/06/1150786

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode

воскресенье, 9 июня 2024 г.

Эксклюзив: Строительство железной дороги Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан ускорит экономические и культурные обмены и сотрудничество между Востоком и Западом -- эксперт

2024-06-08 16:14:00

Пекин, 8 июня 

 Строительство железной дороги Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан ускорит экономические и культурные обмены и сотрудничество между Востоком и Западом, обеспечит региональный мир и стабильность, а также поспособствует экономическому процветанию и общественному развитию. Об этом заявила на днях в эксклюзивном интервью Синьхуа профессор Института России, Восточной Европы и Центральной Азии при Шанхайском университете иностранных языков Ян Бо.

В четверг в Пекине состоялась церемония подписания межправительственного соглашения по проекту железной дороги Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан, которая будет идти из Кашгара в Синьцзян-Уйгурском автономном районе /Северо-Западный Китай/ до Узбекистана через Кыргызстан. В будущем она может быть продлена в направлениях Западной и Южной Азии.

По мнению Ян Бо, железная дорога Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан является важной частью Нового евразийского сухопутного моста. Ее строительство не только изменит структуру перевозок в Синьцзян-Уйгурском автономном районе и западном Китае в целом, но и сформирует южную часть Второго евразийского сухопутного моста, образуя удобные транспортные каналы между Восточной и Юго-Восточной Азией с одной стороны и Центральной, Западной Азией, Северной Африкой и Южной Европой с другой.

"Этот "железный Шелковый путь" прорвет географическую блокаду Центральной Азии, которая не имеет выхода к морю и находится далеко от мировых экономических центров, сократит цикл доставки центральноазиатской экспортной продукции на основные мировые рынки и придаст новый импульс интеграции Центральной Азии в глобальные цепочки производства и поставок, содействуя ускорению экономического развития стран региона и повышая его эффективность", -- отметила профессор.

Железная дорога Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан станет для Центральной Азии новым удобным путем к морю, считает Ян Бо. По мнению эксперта, она даст возможность не только осуществлять трансграничные перевозки между Восточной и Юго-Восточной Азией с одной стороны и Центральной, Западной Азией и европейскими странами с другой, но и вести внешнюю торговлю товарами между Китаем и вышеупомянутыми странами и регионами, стимулировать развитие международных мультимодальных перевозок и способствовать движению людей и товаров между Азией и Европой. Это имеет большое значение для международной сети транспортных маршрутов, подчеркнула собеседница агентства.

Назвав Центральную Азию местом, где была впервые озвучена инициатива "Пояс и путь", Ян Бо отметила, что с тех пор прошло больше десяти лет -- Китай и Центральная Азия совместно построили "Экономический пояс Шелкового пути" и добились ряда плодотворных результатов, что произвело сильный демонстрационный эффект.

По ее словам, после завершения строительства железной дороги Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан торгово-экономические отношения КНР и стран Центральной Азии станут еще теснее. "Железнодорожные перевозки обходятся дешевле, чем автомобильные и воздушные. Они позволяют отправлять большие объемы товаров, работают стабильно и не подвержены сезонным ограничениям. Это означает, что стоимость экспортно-импортных операций между Китаем и странами Центральной Азии значительно снизится, соответственно уменьшатся и товарные цены. Объем торговли между Китаем и Центральной Азией продолжит быстро расти", -- заявила эксперт.

Ян Бо отметила, что строительство железной дороги Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан поможет развитию трудовых ресурсов в Кыргызстане и Узбекистане. Оно создаст большое количество рабочих мест в этих странах, эффективно решит проблему занятости молодежи в районах прохождения дороги и воспитает для региона группу высококлассных инженеров, владеющих современными железнодорожными технологиями, что принесет реальную пользу.

Кроме того, по мнению Ян Бо, строительство и развитие железной дороги Китай-Кыргызстан-Узбекистан будет способствовать быстрому формированию экономического пояса. В экономическом плане это может расширить торгово-экономические обмены между Восточной, Западной Азией и Европой, тем самым углубляя политические связи стран прохождения дороги. "Строительство дороги ускорит экономические и культурные обмены и сотрудничество между Востоком и Западом, обеспечит региональный мир и стабильность, а также поспособствует экономическому процветанию и общественному развитию", -- сказала она

http://russian.news.cn/20240608/273c9d475fd645c48e366a3ada641094/c.html


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