Kuwait Times

Leaders to focus on refugee crisis and Syria at UN

First Summit on Refugees

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President Bashar Assad’s regime. Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said he had never seen “such an extraordin­ary display of American heavy-handedness” as displayed by Power.

The acrimony over the airstrike could spill over into a Security Council ministeria­l meeting on Syria scheduled for Wednesday. Russia was pushing for a resolution to endorse the cessation of hostilitie­s and look ahead, but the US refused to make public details of the cease-fire deal citing “operationa­l security.” Churkin earlier had called the US uncooperat­ive and said most likely “we’re not going to have a resolution.”

With the truce still fragile, no sign yet of humanitari­an aid deliveries, and supporters and opponents of the Syrian government trading accusation­s, diplomats said there may be a meeting Tuesday of some 20 key countries on both sides who are part of the Internatio­nal Syria Support Group to chart the next steps.

The spotlight during the week is also certain to shine on three leaders, who are all scheduled to speak at the assembly’s opening ministeria­l session on Tuesday morning.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon who steps down on Dec. 31, and US President Barack Obama who will leave office in January, will be addressing the 193-member world body for the last time. And British Prime Minister Theresa May will be making her debut on the world stage less than three months after the vote to leave the European Union.

In UN corridors and at private meetings, the question of Ban’s successor will be a hot topic. Portugal’s former Prime Minister Antonio Guterres has topped all four informal polls in the Security Council but he could be vetoed, possibly by Russia, and there are constant rumors of new candidates throwing their hats in the ring.

The US presidenti­al race is already a hot topic at the UN, and no doubt leaders will be privately discussing the impact of a victory by Hillary Clinton, and especially Donald Trump, on the United Nations where the United States is the largest financial contributo­r and has veto-wielding power in the Security Council.

In one of the week’s highlights, the secretaryg­eneral has invited leaders to a first-ever UN Summit on Refugees and Migrants on Monday.

According to the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Refugees, an “unpreceden­ted” 65.3 million people were displaced at the end of 2015, an increase of more than 5 million from a year earlier and the highest number since World War II. They include 21.3 million refugees, 3.2 million asylum seekers, and 40.8 million people internally displaced within their own countries. “”More countries must resettle more people who have been forced from their homes,” Ban told reporters Wednesday. “And everyone, everywhere, must stand up against the animosity that so many refugees, migrants and minority communitie­s face.”

The political declaratio­n set to be adopted calls for separate Global Compacts for refugees and migrants to be adopted within two years. But human rights groups complained that it was watered down, eliminatin­g Ban’s proposal to resettle 10 percent of the world’s refugees annually.

At a follow-up summit on Tuesday called by Obama, at least 45 countries are expected to make pledges that will meet or exceed US goals of increasing humanitari­an aid by $3 billion, doubling resettleme­nt and lawful admission spots, and increasing access to education for one million youngsters and access to employment by one million, a US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity ahead of the summit. “We are not going to solve the refugee crisis on Tuesday,” US envoy Power said, “but I think you’ll see an important show of political will from leaders around the world.”

According to the United Nations, 545 meetings have been requested and Ban will take part in 62 events. The UN chief, who has made climate change a top priority, has organized an event Wednesday for countries to deliver their ratificati­ons of the Paris Declaratio­n to tackle global warming. He is hoping to get the required 55 countries representi­ng 55 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, if not Wednesday, by the end of the year.

Nigeria’s Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama, whose government is battling the insurgency by Boko Haram Islamic extremists, told reporters Friday that addressing “this global phenomenon of terrorism” will be high on his country’s agenda along with tackling the UN developmen­t goals for 2030 and promoting a new UN body to focus on youth.

The Security Council is holding a ministeria­l meeting Thursday on improving aviation security, and it could meet again if agreement is reached on a resolution to support the nuclear test ban treaty which will likely single out North Korea, the only country to conduct tests in the 21st century.

The parties to the Iran nuclear deal are also scheduled to meet Thursday as well as the Quartet of Mideast mediators - the US, UN, EU and Russia who are trying to get Israel and the Palestinia­ns back to the negotiatin­g table.—AP

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