UNA Columbus

Getting the word out to the capital city region and beyond

UNACOL welcomes Gillian Martin Sorensen

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The Columbus Chapter is proud to join with YWCA Columbus and WOSU radio to host United Nations Foundation senior advisor Gillian Martin Sorensen in Columbus in early February. As part of Ms. Sorensen’s time in Columbus, we are delighted to partner with Vino 100 to present Wines of the World, a chapter FUNdraiding event, offering a casual atmosphere of global spirits and light hors d’oeuvres with like-minded young professionals, with Ms. Sorensen as our honored guest. The event will start at 5PM on February 7 at Vino 100′s Columbus location, 789 N. High Street in the Short North. Further information on the Vino 100 event is available by contacting Anamika Lodh. A flyer and registration form on the Wines of the World is available for download here.

COLUMBUS, OH – Gillian Martin Sorensen, former United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for External Relations, now Senior Advisor at the United Nations Foundation, will be the featured guest at many local events in February. Mrs. Sorensen is hosted by the award-winning United Nations Association-USA Columbus Chapter, in partnership with YWCA Columbus, WOSU Public Media, and the International Law Society of The Ohio State University.

The public is invited to tune in to “All Sides with Ann Fisher.” The talk will include Humanitarian Relief, Human Rights in a Post 9-11 World, and Women’s Rights and Empowerment: Gender Equity in the New Millennium.

Mrs. Sorensen will address International Human Rights on Monday, February 7, from 12:10 to 1:30 pm, in a forum for Ohio State law students, faculty, and interested lawyers. The talk will take place in the Moritz School of Law, 55 W. 12th Avenue, Room 246.

The public is invited to a luncheon on Tuesday, February 8 with Mrs. Sorensen in partnership with YWCA Columbus and UNA-USA Columbus Chapter. For further details visit www.ywcacolumbus.org or email info@ywcacolumbus.org

For additional information on Gillian Martin Sorensen or any of the above events visit UNA-USA Columbus Chapter at www.unacol.org to find links to the UNACOL blog, UNA-USA on facebook, the UN Foundation and more.

Referendum on Independence in S. Sudan

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18 January 2011 – The Security Council today welcomed the conclusion of voting in the referendum for the self-determination of Southern Sudan, describing the voting exercise as “largely peaceful and orderly” while urging both parties to Sudan’s peace agreement to respect the outcome of the poll.

The week-long referendum, which ended on 15 January, is part of the process to implement the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended two decades of civil war between the north and the south. Sixty per cent of the nearly four million voters registered to take part in the referendum needed to vote for the outcome to be valid, with results expected in early February.

“The members of the Council underline the need for the CPA parties to promote calm, including by providing immediate and ongoing reassurance to people of all nationalities in Sudan, including southerners in the North and northerners in the South, that their rights, safety and property will continue to be respected,” the Council said in a statement, read out to the press by its president for the month of January, Ambassador Ivan Barbalic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Earlier, the Council had held a meeting on Sudan, at which it was briefed by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Special Representative and head of the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS), Haile Menkerios, and, via video-link, the head of the Secretary-General’s Panel on the Referenda in Sudan, Benjamin Mkapa, a former Tanzanian president. On Sunday, the panel welcomed the end of polling, saying the process was well organized and enabled the people of the region to express their will freely.

In its statement, the Council commended the leadership shown by the parties to the CPA, as well as the work of the Southern Sudan Referendum Commission (SSRC) and the Southern Sudan Referendum Bureau, and congratulated the support provided by UNMIS throughout the referendum. It added that it looked forward to the SSRC’s announcement of the referendum’s results.

“The members of the Council call on all parties to respect the outcome of the referendum, and appreciate, in this regard, the commitments made by President Omar al Bashir and by Vice-President Salva Kiir,” the Council said in its statement.

On the issue of Abyei, an area which straddles northern and southern Sudan and which had its own referendum on whether to join the north or south delayed, the Council voiced concern about violence that occurred there during the referendum period as well as the area’s future.

“The members reiterate their deep concern about the absence of an agreement on Abyei,” the Council said. “They stress the utmost importance of continued implementation of the CPA and urge the parties to reach quickly an agreement on Abyei and other critical issues, including border demarcation, security arrangements, citizenship, debts, assets, currency and natural resource arrangements.”

Throughout the referendum period, UNMIS intensified its peacekeeping patrols in Abyei after reports of clashes between Arab nomadic cattle-herders, known as Misseriya and linked to the North, and the Dinka ethnic group linked to the South.

In its statement, the Council welcomed the decision by the leaders of the Misseriya and Dinka communities in Abyei to work together to reduce tensions and to resolve outstanding issues. Earlier Tuesday, UNMIS welcomed an agreement on security arrangements in Abyei – concluded on 17 January between delegations from Government of Sudan and the Government of Southern Sudan – and said it stands ready to provide all the necessary support.

In his briefing to the Security Council, the Secretary-General’s envoy, Haile Menkerios, said the referendum could turn out be the key to lasting peace and stability in Sudan and the region.

While describing the peaceful conclusion of the referendum as a “testament of the commitment of two parties to the agreement they signed six years ago, and an illustration of their strategic decision to uphold the CPA,” Mr. Menkerios noted that the next few months will provide the basis for a transition to the post-CPA environment.

“As with any transition, it will be marked by a degree of uncertainty, considerable expectations and hopes for some, and fears of the new, the unknown for others,” he said, while urging both the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement in southern Sudan and the National Congress Party in northern Sudan to continue displaying the statesmanship and political courage they have demonstrated over the past few weeks.

“Whatever the referendum’s outcome, both Northern and Southern Sudan will remain multiethnic, multicultural, and multi religious societies – this diversity is always the strength of nations, never their weakness,” Mr. Menkerios said, adding that, “Sudan is on the eve of a new dawn, and it is going to need a heavy dose of encouragement and support from the international community to make sure committed implementation of the CPA signifies a final and definitive break with the past and opens a new era of prosperity and stability for all Sudanese.”

The SSRC will announce preliminary referendum results 2 February. Barring legal challenges, the final results will be declared on 7 February, and in the event of appeals, on 14 February.

In his remarks to the Council meeting, the head of the UN panel tasked with monitoring the referendum, Mr. Mkapa, echoed the panel’s reaction on Sunday, noting that his team is satisfied that the referendum process so far has been conducted in a peaceful and transparent manner that allowed the people of Southern Sudan to express their will freely.

“Both parties have given important and unequivocal public assurances about respecting the outcome of the referendum,” Mr. Mkapa said. “The positive momentum achieved can only be sustained by further demonstration of goodwill and political commitment on both sides.”

UN Calls for Calm in Aftermath of Elections

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With a three-day window opening today for candidates to formally lodge complaints in Haiti’s disputed elections, the United Nations and its partners have called on all concerned to use these legal means and to urge their supporters to avoid further violence.

A communiqué issued in the name of the “international community,” grouping the UN, the Organization of American States (OAS), the European Union (EU) and the ambassadors of Brazil, Canada, Germany, Spain and the United States, appealed “for the use of all legal ways to advance a credible electoral process so as to guarantee that the definitive results fully reflect the will of the Haitian electors.”

Giving candidates until Wednesday to lodge their complaints, the Provisional Electoral Council has proposed setting up a special verification committee, and the communiqué called on all candidates to participate in this process.

It warned that the violence was impeding efforts to fight a cholera epidemic that has already killed well over 2,100 people, with some 50,000 others hospitalized in country that is still struggling to recover from a devastating earthquake in January, which killed over 200,000 people and displaced some 1.3 million others, most of them still living in crowded and unsanitary tent camps.

Thousands of protesters have been rampaging through the streets of Port-au-Prince, the capital, accusing the ruling government coalition of rigging the results, after provisional tallies of the 28 November presidential and legislative elections announced last week put former first lady Mirlande Manigat and outgoing President Rene Préval’s party candidate Jude Celestin in first and second place, thus qualifying for January’s run-off.

Popular musician Michel Martelly was less than one percentage point behind in third place, but thus excluded from the run-off, and his supporters set up burning barricades of timber, boulders and flaming tires. Haiti’s electoral council has said it will recount the ballots.

“The international community deplores the acts of violence which, among others, has paralysed economic activity, prevented school children and students from continuing their studies and, more tragically, impeded the access of cholera victims to medical treatment,” it said.

“The international community urgently calls on all political and state actors to do everything possible to advance reconstruction and allow health personnel and Haitian and international humanitarian workers to continue, in full security, to provide the vital response to the cholera epidemic. Thousands of people need it.”

It exhorted all candidates to call on their supporters to avoid all recourse to violence, “whose sole victim is the entire Haitian people.”

The UN has maintained a stabilization mission in Haiti, known as MINUSTAH, currently with nearly 12,000 military and police personnel, since mid-2004 after then president Jean-Bertrand Aristide went into exile amid violent unrest.

Cellphones: The future of relief aid…

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Nicholas D. Kristof
New York Times

Cash is so 20th century.

I’ve been experimenting with a 21st-century alternative, using money on a cellphone account to buy goods in shops. It’s a bit like using a credit card, but the system can also enable you to use your cellphone account to transfer money to individuals or companies domestically or internationally. And it’s more secure because a thief would have to steal not only your phone but also your PIN to get access to your money.

What’s really astonishing, though, is the site of my experimentation with “mobile money.” Not in the banking capitals of New York City or London, but in this remote Haitian town of St.-Marc.

Mercy Corps, through a United States government-financed program, is providing food for people here in St.-Marc who have taken in earthquake survivors. The standard method would be to hand out bags of rice, or vouchers. Instead, Mercy Corps will be pushing a button once a month, and $40 will automatically go into each person’s cellphone savings account — redeemable at local merchants for rice, corn flour, beans or cooking oil.

I took one of these phones and walked into a humble little grocery shop with no electricity — “Rosie Boutique,” named for the owner’s little daughter — and became the first person to make a cellphone purchase there. I typed the codes into my phone, and then both my phone and the store’s phone received instantaneous text messages saying that the transfer was complete. The food was now mine.

“It doesn’t get any cooler than this,” said Kokoévi Sossouvi, the Mercy Corps program manager. She’s right — and the technology isn’t just cool, but could be a breakthrough in chipping away at global poverty.

You see, the world’s poor face a problem even bigger than being fleeced by bankers. It’s being ignored by bankers.

Most poor people around the world don’t have access to banks. In particular, one of the biggest challenges for the poor is how to save money. The poor often have money coming in just a few times a year — after a harvest, or after a temporary job of picking coffee beans — but each time they have no way to save it.

Banks typically won’t accept tiny deposits. In West Africa, private money dealers accept deposits, but they charge 40 percent annual interest rates on them. So money is more likely to be kept under a mattress, and stolen or squandered.

The poor do establish their own savings accounts in the form of chickens, goats or jewelry that they can buy and later sell. “But what if your goat gets sick and dies?” notes Ms. Sossouvi.

That’s why the most powerful idea in microfinance isn’t microloans, but microsavings — helping the poor safely store their money. And mobile phones offer a low-cost way to make microsavings feasible and extend financial services to the poor. About three-fourths of Haitians have access to a mobile phone, and similar numbers are found in many poor parts of the world.

Kenya has been a leader in mobile money, but many other developing countries in Africa, Asia and the Americas are now jumping on board as well. For the poor, mobile telephones could have as profound an impact on finance — on banking the unbanked — as they have on communications.

One terrific poverty-fighting organization in Haiti, Fonkoze, is also expanding into financial services through mobile phones. It is implementing a system whereby Haitians in America will be able to use cellphones to send unlimited remittances to the phones of relatives back in Haiti. On the Haitian side, the recipient of the money would be able to go into any Fonkoze branch and cash out — or, better yet, use the remittance as the start of a savings account.

Nothing goes as planned in the developing world, and that’s true of mobile banking. Many people in the program here in St.-Marc are illiterate and have trouble mastering the codes, and the first time I tried a transaction I lost a cell signal. Central banks and regulators are sometimes wary of telephone companies engaging in finance.

But Robin Padberg, the chief executive of the Voilà cellphone company that Mercy Corps is working with, says that early in the new year the mobile money system will be expanded so that anyone will be able to make purchases, put money into a mobile phone account or take cash out. That’ll be a milestone in the inclusion of the poor in the world of financial services.

And some day, I’m pretty sure, I’ll engage in as sophisticated a financial transaction as Haitians — say, walking into a deli and buying a pastrami on rye with my BlackBerry — without even leaving Manhattan.

Freestyle Friday, Part 7

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Freestyle Friday is back for our first December entry. This edition, we hand the pen to Kelsey Poole, our chapter intern for the fall quarter. As next Friday, December 10th, is World Human Rights Day, Kelsey gives thanks on all our behalves for the fortune of living in a free society, and points the spotlight on a few brave souls around the world who are fighting for everyone to have those same dignities.

‘Tis the season to be thankful. Thankful for things like friends, family, jobs, pets, and health; but what we should really be thankful for (all year round) are the universal, inalienable human rights that most of us have the pleasure of not worrying about on a daily basis. Most of us go about our business and routines not worrying whether there is a significant human right that we are being denied and we should give thanks for those defenders, past and present, who have fought and continue to fight for the rights that every human deserves.

Next Friday, December 10th, 2010 marks Human Rights Day and this year we recognize the defenders the world over who act to end discrimination of any kind. These courageous people work alone, or in groups, in their own community, and in outside communities to shine light on important issues and strive to make a difference for millions of people. While there are more people out there fighting for human rights than I can even list, I would like to take the time to spotlight just a few amazing individuals who are doing some incredible things.

Courageously combating discrimination against homosexuals: Otgonbaatar Tsedendemberel (Mongolia)

Mr. Tsedendemberel is the Advocacy Programme Manager for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Centre based in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. The LGBT Centre is the first-ever Mongolian non-governmental organization mandated to uphold, protect and ensure the human rights of sexual minorities. The Centre submitted a report on LGBT rights in Mongolia to the UN’s Human Rights Council in 2010, risking their personal safety to do so. When Mongolia was reviewed by the Council’s Universal Periodic Review process in November 2010, Mr. Tsedendemberel traveled to Geneva to conduct advocacy and to “make sure the often suppressed voices of the Mongolian LGBT community were heard at the United Nations.”

Speaking out for indigenous rights: Dora Alonso (Guatemala)

Eighteen-year-old Dora Alonso is from Guatemala’s vast Mayan indigenous community and raises her voice against discrimination towards all indigenous people, in particular women and girls. She is a member of Guatemala’s Children’s Parliament, a national organization for Mayan, Xinca, Garifuna and Ladino children and youth. The Parliament’s work focuses on the promotion of health, education, gender equality, respect for identity and the prevention of sexual exploitation and child abuse. The Parliament also promotes non-discrimination of people living with HIV/AIDS. In her own role, Dora is responsible for the Parliament’s communications arm, providing information about the organization and implementing prevention campaigns.

Documenting human rights violations around the world: Roberto Garretón (Chile)

During the Pinochet dictatorship in Chile, Mr. Garretón was arrested for publishing an article on human rights violations by the regime. He was a member of the Vicaría de la Solidaridad, an organization symbolic of the struggle for human rights, which spoke out against repression under Pinochet, defended the rights of torture victims and prisoners and sought to locate the disappeared. Mr. Garretón’s personal background lends itself to his work as a human rights lawyer and his current role as a member of the UN’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, which considers petitions from individuals or groups concerning cases of arbitrary deprivation of liberty. From 1994 to 2001, Mr. Garretón also served as the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, documenting human rights violations in that country.

Using the law to combat racial and other discrimination: Gay McDougall (USA)

Currently serving as the first United Nations Independent Expert on minority issues, Ms. Gay McDougall is a human rights lawyer with a long history of activism in civil rights. Growing up in segregated Atlanta, Georgia, Ms. McDougall was excluded from many public places as a child. She was the first black student admitted to her college and faced discrimination and racism on a daily basis. She went on to become Executive Director of the US-based international non-governmental organisation Global Rights between 1994 and 2006. Among her many international roles, she has served as an Independent Expert on the UN treaty body that oversees the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and was one of five international members of South Africa’s Independent Electoral Commission, which successfully organized and administered that country’s first non-racial elections.

Human Rights Day and human rights defenders should not be recognized just once a year. Our human rights should be something we give thanks for every day, and those people should be an inspiration for all of us. So, I want to take the time right now to say thank you. Thank you to everyone out there who is unselfishly working to make this world a better place and preserving the rights I know I have taken for granted in the past.

Kelsey Poole is the Columbus Chapter intern for Autumn Quarter, 2010. She is a senior at The Ohio State University, majoring in International Studies. A native of Cincinnati and die hard Celtics fan, she helped at the international festival, providing invaluable assistance with staffing and preplanning.

UNFCCC: December 1 initial briefing.

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Fast Tube by Casper

:::UNFCCC:::

World AIDS Day 2010

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Hilary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State

On World AIDS Day, we take time to remember those who have been lost to this devastating disease, and recommit ourselves to saving as many lives as we can, now and in the future. This December 1, World AIDS Day is also an opportunity to reflect on what we have achieved. We have saved millions of lives from AIDS over the past decade. By investing in what we know works, we can save millions more in the future.

The Obama administration has made the fight against AIDS central to the Global Health Initiative, our commitment to strengthening global health systems and implementing sustainable solutions to improve the health of entire communities. One major focus of the Global Health Initiative is strengthening our partnerships around the world so they reflect and reinforce the global effort needed to defeat AIDS. This year, the United States also made its first multi-year pledge to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria to further support this cooperative approach. Our metric for success is simple: lives saved.

Through the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), we are making smart investments that will ultimately help bring us closer to a world free of HIV/AIDS. We work with dedicated organizations and individuals every day to make this goal a reality. The struggle is far from over, but the United States is committed to remaining a global leader in the fight against HIV/AIDS — today, tomorrow, and every day until the disease is eradicated. That is our obligation and our promise to the millions of souls around the planet living with HIV/AIDS.

World AIDS Day 2010

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More later today, but just to get everyone thinkin’ about it….


Fast Tube by Casper

Haitian elections: protests and allogations of fraud

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Joseph Guyler Delva and Pascal Fletcher for Reuters

PORT-AU-PRINCE – Haiti’s elections ended in confusion on Sunday as 12 of the 18 presidential candidates denounced “massive fraud” and demanded the polls be annulled and street protests erupted over voting delays and problems.

The repudiation of the elections by so many of the presidential candidates dealt a blow to the credibility of the U.N.-supported poll. The international community was hoping the vote could produce a stable, legitimate government in the poor earthquake-ravaged Caribbean country.

Voters’ frustration at not being able to cast their ballots due to organizational problems at many polling stations in the capital Port-au-Prince boiled over into street protests. At least one polling station was trashed by one angry group.

“We denounce a massive fraud that is occurring across the country. … We demand the cancellation pure and simple of these skewed elections,” the 12 presidential candidates said in a statement read to reporters at a Port-au-Prince hotel.

Still, Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) said the elections went “well” at most of the more than 11,000 polling stations across the nation. “The CEP is comfortable with the vote,” council president Gaillot Dorsainvil said.

Counting began after polls closed at 4 p.m. (6 p.m. ET).

After a day of confusion at many polling centers in the capital, some Haitians expressed anger at what they viewed as a wasteful, flawed exercise.

“Look what our government spends its money on,” said Abellar Sony, brandishing a fistful of unused ballot papers at a polling station near the Cite Soleil slum. Children played with unmarked ballot papers, scattering them in the air.

The CEP acknowledged “some problems” and said it was trying to resolve them after the turbulent presidential and legislative elections went ahead amid a raging cholera epidemic and political tensions.

The 12 candidates denouncing the poll included all main opposition candidates. They accused outgoing President Rene Preval’s Inite (Unity) coalition and its candidate, Jules Celestin, of trying to steal the elections.

Among them were prominent front-runners like former First Lady Mirlande Manigat, popular musician and entertainer Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly, and lawyer Jean-Henry Ceant.

The U.N. mission in Haiti and the Organization of American States/Caribbean Community elections observer mission said they were still gathering information on how the vote went.

Demonstrations flared in several parts of the sprawling capital, which still bears the scars of Haiti’s devastating January 12 earthquake. Local radio also reported protests against the electoral process in Gonaives and Les Cayes.

A protest of several thousand people in the capital’s Petionville district was led by Martelly, joined by Haitian-American hip-hop star Wyclef Jean, who was barred from standing as a candidate by electoral officials in August.

Haitian radio stations reported two people killed in electoral violence in the south of the country, and one person injured in a shooting in the northeast.

More than 12,000 U.N. troops and police assisted local police in protecting polling stations.

POLLING STATION WRECKED

Many voters spent hours under a hot sun desperately searching for the voting centers where their names were registered. Many polling stations opened late, mired in confusion and arguments over materials and observers.

In the Tabarre neighborhood, a group of voters who did not find their names on the electoral list wrecked a polling station set up in a school, strewing ballot boxes and ballots across the courtyard. Haitian policemen on duty there fled.

With political tensions flaring, and rebuilding after the January earthquake seemingly paralyzed by the advancing cholera epidemic, many feared a contentious election could drive Haiti deeper into turmoil.

At one polling center at the Delmas neighborhood in Port-au-Prince, which had still not begun operating hours after the official 6 a.m. (1100 GMT) opening time, several hundred protesting voters ran in the streets clamoring to be able to cast their ballots as armed U.N. police in riot gear stood by.

Some voters did not have the national identity cards they needed to vote, others had their IDs but did not find their names on voter lists in the centers set up in schools, wooden huts and even in tents in crowded earthquake survivors’ camps.

“Haitians are upset because they know a fraudulent election when they see one and they think the international community is going to give their blessing to this,” said University of San Francisco law professor Nicole Phillips.

Phillips, a staff attorney with the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, said the disorganization would further undermine the credibility of the elections, whose preparations were marked by sporadic violence and widespread skepticism.

“I think you’re going to have a Haitian people who will not respect their new government,” she told Reuters.

RUN-OFF LIKELY

Manigat, Martelly, and Celestin, a government technocrat and protege of outgoing President Preval, had led the field of 18 presidential candidates, according to opinion polls.

But, even before Sunday’s fraud denunciation, the lack of a clear favorite had increased the likelihood of the contest going to a January 16 runoff between the two top vote-winners.

Calling 2010 the “worst year in Haiti’s history,” Preval, who cannot run again after serving two terms, had called on Haitians to vote in peace and shun violence.

Violence, including ambushes of campaign caravans, random gunfire and attacks by rioters against Nepalese U.N. peacekeepers, whom some Haitians accuse of bringing in the cholera, killed several people in the run-up to the vote.

The United Nations says there is no conclusive evidence the Nepalese troops are the source of the disease outbreak.

UN Secretariat Building: Rennovation

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Windows are removed from the facade as the Secretariat building of UN Headquarters undergoes a total renovation under the Capital Master Plan (CMP). (UN Photo 456931)