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United Nations Daily Highlights, 97-01-09United Nations Daily Highlights Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The United Nations Home Page at <http://www.un.org> - email: unnews@un.orgDAILY HIGHLIGHTSThursday, 9 January 1997This document is prepared by the Central News Section of the Department of Public Information and is updated every week-day at approximately 6:00 PM. HEADLINES
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan today addressed UN staff at Headquarters in New York. He repeated the pledge he had made in the General Assembly that the next five years must be a time for resurgence, for healing the financial crisis, which at the bottom was a political one - a crisis of faith in the Organisation. Mr. Annan pointed out that relations between the Secretariat and the Member States must also be healed. The Secretary-General said that carrying the United Nations into the 21st century will need reform, adding that this was not an end in itself, but a tool to create a more relevant and a more effective Organisation. "I do not believe the disjointed incrementalism of the past, with its baggage of duplications and overlaps, was a positive evolution. Equally, I have never believed that disjointed downsizing, with arbitrary staff cuts that weaken essential capabilities, can bring real improvement," the Secretary-General stated. Mr. Annan said he expected staff members to be flexible and mobile, and willing to serve wherever they could best contribute to the Organisation's tasks. "As we reshape and rebuild for the future, it is quite possible that some units, functions or occupations in the Secretariat will be lost. Our task is to see this not as some unforeseen disaster but as a normal development in a constantly evolving Organisation," he noted. He pledged to the staff to develop a new management culture in the Organisation, adding that UN senior managers across the world must understand their obligation to properly manage the staff entrusted to their care. Managing people is about enabling staff members to "make a difference, " he pointed out. "I appeal today to every staff member in every duty station to work with me to make our impossible job possible -- to fulfill the enormous expectations the world has of us. There is no alternative to the United Nations. It is still the last best hope of humanity," Mr. Annan concluded. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan is disturbed by press reports of mismanagement within the Registry of the Arusha Tribunal on Genocide in Rwanda, Acting Spokesman for the Secretary-General Fred Eckhard said today. The weight of the work of this body is enormous, and those responsible for carrying out that work must meet the highest ethical and professional standards, he noted. A detailed investigation of the failures of the Registry of the Tribunal has been conducted by Under-Secretary-General For Internal Oversight Services Karl Theodore Pashke and it is now being circulated within the Secretariat for comment, according to the Spokesman. The Secretary-General, he added, will take decisive action once this report has been completed and he has had a chance to review it carefully. Mr. Eckhard noted that, even before this process is complete, changes had been and will be made in the administrative area of the Tribunal. In this regard, he referred to the sending of an Acting Chief of Administration in December and a Chief of Personnel, who was about to be sent. The UN Convention to Combat Desertification is the first international treaty to address poverty and environmental degradation, which are the two most urgent issues facing the world today, Shigeaki Tomita, a representative of the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) told the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on the Convention, as it continued its tenth session. He said the Convention was as much about rural development, agricultural growth, and poverty alleviation, as it was about combating desertification. Therefore, it was crucial to include a broad cross- section of actors in the implementation process. Speaking on behalf of the Group of 77 developing countries and China, the representative of the United Republic of Tanzania, Daudi N. Mwakawago said desertification was a global phenomenon, like climate change. Thus, the Convention should be placed on an equal footing with similar instruments and its financial mechanism must be accorded the same attention and priority, he added. Addressing the Committee, the Under-Secretary-General for Policy Coordination and Sustainable Development, Nitin Desai, called for adequate support for the Convention in terms of resources, including finance. UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Director- General Federico Mayor praised "the exceptional commitment by Jean-Bertrand Aristide to bring human rights and democracy to Haiti" in awarding the former President of Haiti with the 1996 UNESCO Prize for Human Rights Education. "From the liberation theology you advocated as a candidate for President of the Republic in 1990 to your founding of the Aristide Foundation, we find a continuing concern with participation, sharing and dialogue," Mr. Mayor said. "Without education in human rights and democracy, there can be no lasting and conscious adherence to principles of freedom, dignity and respect for humankind." The former President of Haiti responded that he accepted the prize "in the name of all who fight in order that there may be peace and justice on a global scale," stressing that "far from an act of charity, education is an inalienable right. To have the will to change the lives of oppressed people and build a better world requires education. Education in human rights above all." Mr. Aristide noted that the prize fund, US$10,000, would be used to construct a building for Radyo Timoun, a radio station for children directed by children. Disabled adults in the United Arab Emirates are becoming active members of society through a UN Development Programme (UNDP)-supported effort that helped create an agricultural centre on a pilot basis two years ago and establish it on a permanent basis recently. Through the project, the government is helping the disabled get jobs and learn skills to produce and sell food. During the pilot phase, participants produced more than 30 tonnes of vegetables, resulting in earnings totalling about US$160,000. Because of this success, the government will soon expand the Zayed Agricultural Center for Rehabilitation to allow more people to participate and to enable production of a wider range of agricultural goods, including poultry, honey and flowers. For information purposes only - - not an official record From the United Nations home page at <http://www.un.org> - email: unnews@un.orgUnited Nations Daily Highlights Directory - Previous Article - Next Article |