World Video | Defence | Foreign Affairs | Natural Events | Trade | NZ in World News | NZ National News Video | NZ Regional News | Search

 


UN Political Chief Arrives In Nepal

UN Political Chief Arrives In Nepal As Appeal For Aid Is Launched

New York, Mar 10 2010 11:10AM The top United Nations political official arrived in Nepal today for a three-day visit to assess the state of the peace process which ended 10 years of fighting between the Government and Maoists.

The visit comes as the peace process that ended the country’s civil war, which claimed some 13,000 lives, remains largely stalled, threatened by tensions and mistrust between Maoists, the Government and the army.

The signing of a peace accord ended the conflict in 2006. After conducting Constituent Assembly elections in May 2008, Nepal abolished its 240-year-old monarchy and declared itself a republic.

B. Lynn Pascoe, Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, held talks today with Nepali Congress President Girija Prasad Koirala and other congressional leaders, as well as with Pushpa Kamal Dahal, chairman of the Unified Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (UCPN-M), and Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal.

During these meetings, Mr. Pascoe underscored the importance of rebuilding trust and pushing ahead with the peace process.

He also conferred with the officials on the continuing contribution made by the UN political mission in Nepal, known as UNMIN, to the process.

UNMIN was set up at the request of the Government in 2007 to support the peace process, as well as to monitor the management of arms and armed personnel of the former Royal Nepal Army and the Maoists. Its current mandate runs until 15 May.

While in the Asian nation, Mr. Pascoe will meet with leaders of other political parties, the Defence Minister and the Army Chief of Staff. He also plans to travel to a Maoist cantonment site in Shatikhor in southern Nepal to witness UNMIN’s work in arms monitoring.

In his latest report on the mission, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the political positions of these groups has “hardened at the opposing ends of the political spectrum, which has seriously eroded the common middle ground that had, from the outset, defined the peace process and remained its driving strength.”

Prior to visiting Nepal, he stopped in India for a one-day meeting with Government officials in that country for discussions on a range of regional and international issues related to the UN.

In a related development, a UN-backed appeal was issued today for more than $120 million to help 3.4 million people across Nepal in need of life-saving food aid.

Nearly half of the country’s districts are short of food and the aid workers estimate that nearly 2.5 million people face extreme food insecurity, mainly in the Mid- and Far-Western Hill and Mountain Regions of western Nepal.

“As a country emerging from conflict, Nepal needs sustained international humanitarian support to see it through this fragile period of transition,” said John Holmes, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs.

With some 28,000 children dying every year from preventable diseases, including from the consequences of severe malnutrition, “most of these problems can be solved with adequate donor support,” he stressed.

Bolstering preparedness and early warning systems to reduce the number of people affected by future natural disasters has also been identified as top priorities by the humanitarian community.

Nepal is highly vulnerable to floods, landslides and earthquakes. Last year alone, some 152,000 people were affected by monsoon floods and landslides. Preparations in the areas of water, sanitation and hygiene are also vital after a severe diarrhoea outbreak hit western Nepal in 2009.

According to a press release issued by the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), over 70 per cent of household budgets are put towards food and dependence on subsistence agriculture remains high, rendering rural households especially vulnerable.

Funding for agriculture last year did not match needs, compounding the effects of the severe winter drought. OCHA said that had there been sufficient investment in this sector, the current food crisis could have been alleviated.

The Office also noted that while economic growth and development will take to take root in the wake of conflict, generalized poverty and the lack of social services have created widespread needs.

Seven UN organizations and three non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are taking part in the appeal launched today. The funds sought – $123.5 million – will be used to improve food security, improve nutrition, strengthen disaster preparedness and assist refugees, including the nearly 90,000 refugees from neighbouring Bhutan.

These refugees had fled ethnic tensions in their home country in the early 1990s and are sheltering in seven camps in eastern Nepal.

ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
World Headlines

 


U.S. Politics: STOCK Act Passes House - 'Political Intelligence' Omission

The U.S. House of Representatives passed its version of the STOCK Act today, which omits disclosure requirements for "political intelligence" workers that were included in the version of the bill passed by the Senate last week ( S 2038). More>>

Exhibition - West Papuan Women of Resistance: Dear Friends Of Art And West Papua

You are invited to what is perhaps a unique exhibition featuring women of West Papua in their living response to the suppression of human rights and freedom under Indonesian occupation and military brutality over the past fifty years. More>>

U.S. Politics: David Swanson: The Election We Should Be Following

For progressives and populists around the country who take an interest in Congressional races there are always a few good challengers we might hope to send to Washington. Incumbents, we assume, can take care of themselves. But in Northern Ohio, redistricting ... More>>

Greenpeace: Industry Figures Confirm GM Food Is European Commercial Flop

Annual industry figures to be released on Tuesday are expected to confirm the commercial failure of genetically modified (GM) food in Europe, said Greenpeace. Only around 0.06% of the EU’s agricultural land was used in 2011 to grow GM food, the report ... More>>

Asia: IFJ Press Freedom In China Campaign Bulletin

1. China’s New Clampdown: Press Freedom in China 2011 2. Senior Newspaper Staff Sacked for Reporting Inflation Concerns in China 3. Journalist Attacked in Taiwan 4. Dissident Writer Yu Jie Flees to the United States 5. Writer Li Tei Sentenced ... More>>


Women’s Rights: 2,000 African Communities Abandon Female Genital Mutilation

New York, Feb 6 2012 1:10PM A new United Nations report shows that almost 2,000 communities across Africa abandoned female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) last year, prompting calls for a renewed global push to end this harmful practice once and for all. More>>

Connie Lawn: Newt Gingrich Wins In South Carolina

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich gives his victory speech in Columbia after winning the South Carolina primary with 40% of the vote. Runner-up Mitt Romney pledges to fight for Republican nomination in 'long race', while third-placed Rick Santorum says of Gingrich: 'He kicked butt. I'm proud of him.' Ron Paul finished fourth ... More >>

ALSO:

Pacific.Scoop: Real Change In Burma No Longer A Pipe Dream – But Don’t Jump The Gun

For a long time, it was easy for us to hold an opinion on Burma. It fitted neatly into the classic dichotomy of good and evil. The regime – made up of cruel, despotic military generals – was bad, and Aung San Suu Kyi and the huddled masses of Burmese people she led were good. More >>

Burma: After Political Prisoner Amnesty, Ethnic Warfare Is Rekindled In North

Even as the Burmese government initiates political reforms in much of the country, it has intensified an ethnic civil war in the resource-rich hills of northern Myanmar, a conflict that at once threatens its warming trend with the United States... More >>

LATEST HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
 
World
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news