UN Geneva Press Briefing - 26 November 2024
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Press Conferences | UNECE , ITU , OHCHR , WHO , IFRC , WFP

UN Geneva Press Briefing - 26 November 2024

ANNOUNCEMENTS

- UNECE Thomas Croll-Knigt : Industrial safety in the energy transition: Conference of the Parties to the Industrial Accidents Convention (27-29 Nov.)

- ITU David Hirsch: 

· Facts and Figures 2024 (27 November)
· World Radio communication Seminar plenary sessions (2-3 December)

TOPICS

- OHCHR Jeremy Laurence: 
· Lebanon: Calls for a ceasefire
· Afghanistan: UN urges de facto authorities to protect media freedom

- WHO Christian Lindmeier with Dr Rick Brennan, WHO Regional Emergencies Director for Eastern Mediterranean Region (From Cairo): Attacks and lack of access - The relentless increase in health needs across the Eastern Mediterranean

- IFRC Jaime Wah, IFRC Programme and Operations Manager for Ukraine (From Kyiv): Current needs in Ukraine and Red Cross activities for the winter period

- WFP Leni Kinzli, Communications Officer for Sudan (From Nairobi): Surge in WFP operations across Sudan

UN GENEVA PRESS BRIEFING

26 November 2024

Michele Zaccheo, Chief, UNTV, Radio and Webcast Section, United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, chaired the hybrid briefing, which was attended by spokespersons and representatives from the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe, International Telecommunication Union, World Health Organization, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and the World Food Programme.

Further Calls for a Ceasefire in Lebanon

Jeremy Laurence for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) said the United Nations human rights chief Volker Türk said today he was gravely concerned by the escalation in Lebanon in recent days, reiterating his call for an immediate ceasefire to put an end to the loss of life and destruction.

Dozens were reportedly killed in Israeli airstrikes between 22 and 24 November, including eight children and 19 women. On 22 and 23 November, at least seven paramedics were reportedly killed in three separate Israeli strikes on the south of Lebanon. This added to the 226 healthcare workers killed as a result of the conflict in Lebanon between 7 October 2023 and 18 November 2024.

These were further indications of just how brutal this war had been on civilians. The High Commissioner repeated his call for an immediate ceasefire to put an end to the killings and the destruction.

Israeli military action in Lebanon had caused widescale loss of civilian life, including the killing of entire families, widespread displacement and the destruction of civilian infrastructure, raising serious concerns about respect for the principles of proportionality, distinction and necessity.

The Lebanese armed group Hezbollah had also continued to fire rockets on the north of Israel, which has resulted in civilian casualties. Most of these rockets were indiscriminate by nature, prolonging the displacement of many Israeli civilians, which was unacceptable.

The only way to end the suffering of people on all sides was a permanent and immediate cease fire on all fronts in Lebanon, in Israel and in Gaza.

UN Urges De Facto Authorities in Afghanistan to Protect Media Freedom

Jeremy Laurence for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) said a joint report issued this morning by the United Nations Human Rights Office and the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) painted a disturbing picture of the media landscape in the country since the Taliban takeover. United Nations human rights chief Volker Türk said measures introduced by the de facto authorities flew in the face of international human rights treaties to which Afghanistan was party.

The report, which covered the period from 15 August 2021 to 30 September 2024, detailed a range of human rights violations, as well as worrying trends for media freedom in Afghanistan. Journalists, media workers and media outlets were operating under a worsening environment of censorship and restrictions in accessing information. Women journalists and media workers faced particular restrictive and discriminatory measures profoundly limiting their ability to do their work.

Media workers deemed to have crossed so-called “red lines” imposed by the de facto authorities had been arbitrarily detained for periods ranging from several hours to multiple months, without due process, and in certain cases were convicted and imprisoned.

The report stated that since August 2021, many media outlets had been forced to cease their operations, whether as a result of direct pressure on them or the country’s general economic decline and the withdrawal of much donor funding. Furthermore, many media professionals had sought futures outside, creating an increasing dearth of experience in the media sector.

On 19 September 2021, the de facto authorities issued an “11-Point Guidance” to media, forbidding, among other things, the publication of content deemed contrary to their own assessment of Islam and Afghan culture, or more broadly deemed to be against vague notions of “national interest”. Other restrictions included a prohibition on broadcasting music or movies deemed against Sharia religious law, including those showing women. At offices of media outlets, men and women needed work in segregated workspaces, and men and women broadcasters could not appear in a programme together. In some provinces, women were not even allowed to call into radio programmes, the only exceptions being for those on health or religious issues concerning women.

Some representatives of the de facto authorities had reportedly refused to be interviewed or speak to women. They had favoured the attendance of male journalists at press conferences, while female journalists were either not invited, barred from entering the events upon arrival, or, if present, asked to move to the back of the room. On 3 May 2023, in Nili city in Daikundi province, the de facto authorities commemorated World Press Freedom Day with an event to which women journalists were reportedly not invited. On 19 March 2024, the de facto ministry of education invited journalists to attend an event marking the start of the new academic school year. No women were invited, due to alleged lack of space.

The High Commissioner said such all-encompassing control of the public space – or what was left of it – was suffocating, not just for the journalists who try to do their essential work at great risk, but for all the people of Afghanistan.

He stressed that the Taliban de facto authorities needed to uphold Afghanistan’s State obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to ensure the right to freedom of expression without distinction of any kind, including gender. Central to this was respecting the vital role of journalists and media workers, including women, and facilitating the exercise, in safety, of their essential profession.

Read the full press release here.

Relentless Increase in Health Needs Across the Eastern Mediterranean

Dr. Rick Brennan, Regional Emergencies Director for Eastern Mediterranean Region, World Health Organization (WHO), said it was hard to imagine a more difficult time for the Eastern Mediterranean region than the present. There had been many deaths in Gaza and Sudan, levels in violence in Lebanon and Syria that had not been seen in decades, and there were reports of an uptick in violence in Somalia. In almost none of these settings was there political progress, with no warring parties showing willingness to compromise. The decision makers had put policies and power ahead of serving basic humanity. The parties to the conflict were being aided by international backers. Vulnerable civilian families, including children, continued to be killed, maimed and held in horrendous conditions.

These were political crises that needed political solutions. Humanitarians could not stop the crises, but they were there on the ground to pick up the pieces. WHO was calling for more support and resources, as it had continued to show that if it had resources, it could make a remarkable difference.

Earlier this month in Doha at the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH) 2024, WHO presented a report on attacks on healthcare. The report showed that since 2018, there had been over three attacks on healthcare every day, with an average of one death a day as a result of those deaths.

The impact on healthcare of these attacks was enormous. Only 47 per cent of hospitals in Gaza were functioning, and those hospitals were only partly functioning. In Khartoum, only 12 per cent of over 900 facilities were functioning to some level, and most of them were only partially functioning. The reason why polio had not been eradicated in Afghanistan, in Pakistan and globally, was because of attacks on healthcare.

None of the mechanisms to prevent attacks on healthcare were working. Impunity was rife and neglect of international humanitarian law in conflicts today beggared belief. Not one person had been held accountable for the attacks on healthcare that had been documented by WHO.

WHO was calling for a global alliance and a Special Rapporteur on protection of health in conflict and had made seven other related recommendations.

Communities were tired of being called resilient, but that’s what they were. They wanted an end to the fighting. What continues to inspire WHO was the communities the organization served and their irrepressible human spirit. Humanitarian workers continued to serve these communities under unimaginable conditions. It was the people in power who were preventing an end to attacks on healthcare.

Michele Zaccheo, Chief, UNTV, Radio and Webcast Section, United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, said the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres had spoken today at the Tenth United Nations Alliance of Civilizations Global Forum. He stressed that these were very difficult times where we were seeing the social fabric under serious strain. Everywhere, tensions were mounting and human rights were under attack. He specifically called for peace in Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine, and said that we needed to uphold the values of the United Nations Charter and international law, including the principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of all States.

In response to questions, Dr. Brennan said a study done in Khartoum by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine demonstrated that the level of mortality was 50 per cent higher compared to before the conflict.

WHO started a surveillance system on attacks on healthcare in 2018. It included a verification system. It had documented almost 7,400 attacks, and over 2,000 deaths associated with those attacks. Parties to the conflict could be governments, and there had been a reluctance to bring perpetrators to justice.

WHO’s role was documentation and advocacy. It was not mandated to investigate and identify perpetrators. It was documenting the impact on healthcare of attacks. It was up to others to identify perpetrators and bring them to justice.

WHO did not have good historical data on attacks on healthcare prior to 2018. Since 2018, the highest level of attacks had occurred in the past two years, most of which in Gaza, Ukraine, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, Syria and Afghanistan. Recent reinterpretations of international humanitarian law by people in power were very concerning.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) needed to be sustained. There was no Plan B for filling the role that they played at this stage.

Current Needs in Ukraine

Jaime Wah, Programme and Operations Manager for Ukraine, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), said she lived in Kyiv. Due to electricity cuts, after 4 p.m., her team worked in complete darkness in the office. When she left, she walked home through streets with no lights and no working traffic signals. At night, she woke up repeatedly from the sound of air alerts and explosions that had become an all-too-familiar part of life.

Temperatures were falling below zero, but millions of displaced people in Ukraine did not have heating. They had lost their homes and basic security. For these families, survival was now a daily struggle.

The armed conflict in Ukraine had been ongoing for almost three years, turning into a long-lasting and protracted humanitarian crisis. Missile strikes continued to hit urban areas, claiming lives, leaving people with life-changing injuries, and destroying infrastructure.

In the last few months, Ukraine’s energy crisis had worsened dramatically: two-thirds of the country’s energy capacity had been destroyed, as electricity points and powerplants were targeted in airstrikes. Even Kyiv faced widespread power outages, following aerial assaults on 17 November, where substations essential for operating the country’s three remaining nuclear power plants—Rivne, Khmelnytskyi, and South Ukraine—were hit, further destabilising the energy grid. Electricity and energy costs for consumers had more than doubled, and heating shortages could trigger a new wave of displacement, with people fleeing both from hard-hit regions to other parts of the country and migrating abroad.

Since the escalation of the conflict, the IFRC and the Ukrainian Red Cross Society had been working tirelessly to meet the growing needs of people in Ukraine. As winter set in, these organisations had ramped up their efforts. They were delivering over 500 generators to power hospitals, shelters and other critical services. Solar panels, power banks and flashlights were being sent to communities left without electricity. Thousands of displaced families would also receive emergency housing materials, blankets and hygiene kits to help them survive these winter months.

Despite these ongoing efforts, the Red Cross could solve all the problems alone. Along with other humanitarian organisations operating in Ukraine, it had managed to provide assistance to seven million people. Unfortunately, over a third of the people receiving IFRC support through cash assistance said that they relied on this as their main source of income. This was not enough, nor a long term, sustainable solution. The scale of the needs was overwhelming, and with each passing day, those needs continued to grow.

As international support declined, the most vulnerable were at risk—particularly older people, those with disabilities, and families in frontline areas. These were the people who needed our help the most.

As the harsh winter approached, where temperatures could drop as low as -20 °C, our actions would determine how bearable this season would be for families in need. We needed to continue to support people affected by the conflict. The IFRC was calling for significant new investment to address the immediate needs and commit to long-term recovery goals. Now was not the time to turn a blind eye - global attention and resources were waning for the IFRC emergency appeal, but the humanitarian needs remained.

Together, we could ensure that no one was left behind, in the dark or in the cold.

Surge in WFP Operations across Sudan

Leni Kinzli, Communications Officer for Sudan, World Food Programme (WFP), said WFP food trucks arrived in North Darfur’s Zamzam camp last Friday, where famine was confirmed earlier this year. These were the first WFP food items that it had been able to transport into the camp in many months, carrying emergency food aid for 12,500 people.

Getting WFP trucks into Zamzam camp on the edge of El Fasher, which had been embattled since April, was a critical step. WFP had been pushing to reach all isolated conflict zones across Sudan. These were the areas where hunger was the highest and access the hardest.

In Zamzam camp, people lined up on the road cheering as the WFP convoy arrived. People in the camp were resorting to extreme measures to survive because food was so scarce. To survive, families were eating crushed peanut shells, which was typically used to feed animals. Across the camp there were parents who were mourning the deaths of their children who passed away from malnutrition.

While the amount of aid on this convoy was just a drop in the ocean compared to the need, these trucks were delivering hope to people in Zamzam who had been battling famine on their own, cut off from aid for many months.

WFP and partners had been providing locally sourced food to around 100,000 people in Zamzam camp over recent months, while it had been pushing to get access for trucks to reach North Darfur from other routes. The routes from Chad via the Tine and Adre border crossings and from Port Sudan via Al Dabbah and onwards were the main corridors to transport aid into the Darfur region.

More than 700 trucks carrying WFP food aid were currently on route to communities across Sudan. This included to 14 areas that either faced famine or were at risk of famine, and was part of a scale-up effort to reach millions of people in the country’s most needy and isolated conflict areas. In total, the trucks would carry about 17,500 tons of food assistance, enough to feed 1.5 million people for one month.

Currently, another convoy was on the way to Zamzam. It had been on the road from Port Sudan for two weeks, having already travelled 1,400 kilometres across rough terrain, dozens of armed checkpoints and conflict lines. It was now 300 kilometres away from Zamzam. The last part of this dangerous and long journey was the most risky and unsafe.

Another convoy had been on its way to Kadugli and Dilling in South Kordofan from Port Sudan for two weeks. It would be departing Kosti in White Nile in the coming days for the final leg of its journey to locations in South Kordofan that had received little or no assistance since the start of the war 19 months ago.

All parties to the conflict, militias, and armed groups or tribes needed to allow these convoys to pass safely. Safe passage and unfettered access were critical for WFP to be able to halt famine in Zamzam and prevent it from spreading to other areas.

Since September, WFP had delivered food assistance to an average of two million people each month across Sudan – a number that would grow with this latest surge effort. In total this year, WFP had reached over seven million people in Sudan and aimed to support over eight million of the most acutely hungry by the end of 2024.

Michele Zaccheo, Chief, UNTV, Radio and Webcast Section, United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, said that without sustained support, we would see a spike in mortality in Sudan. Humanitarian access was key.

In response to questions, Ms. Kinzli said it was now the dry season in Sudan. Between July and September, it was extremely difficult to deliver aid due to wet weather conditions and route blockages. Authorities had granted over 700 clearances since September. Communities were desperate and armed to protect themselves, so intensive negotiations were needed to create humanitarian corridors. WFP was working to ensure that all actors on the ground were aware that the conveys were delivering humanitarian assistance that was sorely needed by vulnerable communities affected by the conflict.

Announcements

Thomas Croll-Knight for the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) said that fresh from COP29, countries needed to accelerate decarbonisation of economies. However, the increasing scale and scope of industrial activities needed to meet the demands of the energy transition was bringing rising risks of accidents, potentially catastrophic ones.

Governments from across the pan-European region would come together this week – starting tomorrow – for the 13th session of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on the Transboundary Effects of Industrial Accidents, known as the “Industrial Accidents Convention.” At the meeting, which would take place from Wednesday until Friday in Room VII of the Palais des Nations, parties would decide on the establishment of an expert body to address these risks.

A dedicated report and seminar tomorrow would highlight risks linked to the massive scaling-up in production, storage, use and distribution of renewables, ammonia, hydrogen and battery energy storage systems. The huge quantities of critical minerals needed for the energy transition brought further risks, but other technologies such as Carbon Capture, Use and Storage would also require increased safety measures, as would new technologies with unknown hazards and risks that needed to be duly considered.

This was backed up by a UNECE survey of 22 countries from across the region, in which 68 per cent of countries surveyed said that they were moderately prepared and four per cent unprepared for accidents in this field. Less than one quarter of responses rated their country’s industrial safety infrastructure and current knowledge in dealing with energy transition challenges as advanced or state-of-the-art.

The Conference of the Parties would also address a range of other topics, including satellite monitoring technologies for mine tailings safety, and disaster risk reduction and natural hazard-triggered technological disasters.

The Convention was signed in 1992 and was negotiated in response to the 1986 Sandoz chemical spill. The spill released a 70km-long toxic red plume in the river Rhine, which travelled to France, Germany and even the Netherlands, highlighting the need for cooperation to address these risks.

David Hirsch for the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) said ITU was inviting reporters to the plenary sessions for the upcoming World Radio Communication Seminar, being held next week on Monday, 2 December and Tuesday, 3 December. The sessions would address topics ranging from how satellite and terrestrial operators file for radio frequencies, to global rules on harmful interference and the inner workings of the international treaty governing radio communication. The sessions could be viewed online in real time or via recordings.

On Wednesday, 27 November at 3 p.m., ITU would hold a press conference at the Palais des Nations to launch Facts & Figures 2024, which provided estimates of the number of individuals that were connected to the internet, and information on a variety of related indicators. The report would be under embargo until 3 p.m. tomorrow.

Michele Zaccheo, Chief, UNTV, Radio and Webcast Section, United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, said that on Tuesday, 26 November at 2 p.m., the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) would hold a press conference at the Palais des Nations to launch the World AIDS Day Report 2024—Take The Rights Path. Speaking would be Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director of UNAIDS, among other speakers.

On Wednesday, 27 November at 11 a.m., the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) would hold a press conference to launch the FAO State of Agricultural Commodity Markets (SOCO) 2024: Trade and Nutrition: Policy Coherence for Healthy Diets report. The report was under embargo until 29 November 2024 at 1.30 p.m. Speaking were George Rapsomanikis, FAO Senior Economist and lead author of SOCO 2024; Nancy Aburto, FAO Deputy Director of the Food and Nutrition Division; and Andrea Zimmermann, FAO Economist.

The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (114th session, 25 November – 13 December, Palais Wilson) would begin this afternoon the review of the report of Ecuador. This session, the Committee would review Ecuador, Saudi Arabia, Monaco, Armenia, Greece and Kenya.

On 29 November, a special meeting would be held at the Palais des Nations to mark the annual observance of the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People. The Director-General of the United Nations in Geneva, Tatiana Valovaya, would provide introductory remarks and read out a statement by Secretary-General António Guterres.

Also speaking would be representatives of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories, the League of Arab States, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the Non-Aligned Movement, the African Union, and the State of Palestine. It would be held at 11 a.m. in room XIX of the Palais, concluding at 12:30 p.m. The special meeting was being organized in observance of General Assembly resolution 32/40 B of 2 December 1977.

In response to questions, Mr. Zaccheo said the International Atomic Energy Agency was not a party to nuclear talks related to Iran and talks were not being convened by the United Nations, nor did the United Nations have any information on the premises for the talks at this time. Information on the talks would be shared if it became available.



Teleprompter
Bonjour, Mia Venezuela when the press sue Maddie le Vanceis novante Demi Vankart.
Thank you for being with us here in Geneva and those of you who are connecting from elsewhere.
I have a I'm going to give the floor.
It's a, it's a fairly crowded briefing with a lot of different topics.
And I know that, you know, there are a lot of lot of questions on different issues.
There's one that just came in on, on nuclear talks that are reported to be happening in Geneva.
And on that, at this point, what I will say is what we've been saying all along, which is any questions on these need to be put to the parties who are participating.
You know who they are and you need to talk to them.
So wouldn't no further ado.
I'm going to give the floor to Jeremy Lawrence.
The the floor is yours.
Go ahead.
You have two items.
Yes.
Thanks, Michaela and good morning, everyone.
UN human rights chief Volka Turk is gravely concerned by the escalation in Lebanon, with at least 97 people reportedly killed in Israeli air strikes between the 22nd and 24th of November, including eight children and 19 women.
On the 22nd and 23rd of November, at least 7 paramedics were reportedly killed in three separate Israeli strikes on the South of Lebanon, adding to the 226 healthcare workers reported killed between the 7th of October 2023 and the 18th of November this year.
These are further indications of just how brutal this war has been on civilians.
The **** Commissioner reiterates his call for an immediate ceasefire to put an end to the killings and the destruction.
Israeli military action in Lebanon has caused wide scale loss of civilian life, including the killing of entire families, widespread displacement and the destruction of civilian infrastructure, raising serious concerns about respect for the principles of proportionality, distinction and necessity.
The Lebanese armed group Hezbollah has also continued to fire rockets on the north of Israel, which has resulted in civilian casualties.
Most of these rockets are indiscriminate by nature, prolonging the displacement of many Israeli civilians, which is unacceptable.
The only way to end the suffering of people on all sides is a permanent and immediate ceasefire on all fronts in Lebanon, in Israel and in Gaza.
Thank you very much, Jeremy.
Any questions for him on this?
I don't see anything.
Perhaps you want to go ahead and with your other announcement?
A joint report issued this morning by the UN Human Rights Office and the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan paints A disturbing picture of the media landscape in the country since the Taliban takeover.
UN human rights chief Volcker Turk says measures introduced by the de facto authorities fly in the face of international human rights treaties to which Afghanistan is party.
The report, which covers the period from the 15th of August 2021 to 30th of September this year, details a range of human rights violations as well as worrying trends for media freedom in Afghanistan.
Journalists, media workers and media outlets are operating under a worsening environment of censorship and restrictions in accessing information.
Women journalists and media workers face particular restrictive and discriminatory measures profoundly limiting their ability to do their work.
Media workers deemed to have crossed so-called red lines imposed by the de facto authorities have been arbitrarily detained for periods ranging from several hours to multiple months without due process, and in certain cases were convicted and imprisoned.
The report states that since August 2021, many media outlets have been forced to cease their operations, whether as a result of direct pressure on them or the country's general economic decline and the withdrawal of much donor funding.
Furthermore, many media professionals have sought futures outside, creating an increasing dearth of experience in the media sector.
On the 19th of September 2021, the de facto authorities issued an 11 point guidance to media forbidding, among other things, the publication of content deemed contrary to their own assessment of Islam and Afghan culture, or more broadly, to be against vague notions of national interest.
Other restrictions include a prohibition on broadcasting music or movies deemed against Sharia religious law, including those showing women at offices of media outlets.
Men and women must work in segregated workspaces and men and women broadcasters cannot appear in a programme together.
In some provinces, women are not even allowed to call into radio programmes, the only exceptions been for those on health or religious issues.
Some representatives of the de facto authorities have reportedly refused to be interviewed or speak to women.
They have found the attendance of male journalists at press conferences.
Sorry if I read that again.
They have favoured the attendance of male journalists at press conferences, while female journalists are either not invited, barred from entering the events upon arrival, or, if present, asked to move to the back of the room.
On the 3rd of May 2023, in Nelli city in Daikundi province, the de facto authorities commemorated the World Press Freedom Day with an event to which women journalists were reportedly not invited.
On the 19th of March 2024, the de facto Ministry of Education invited journalists to attend an event marking the start of the new academic school year.
No women were invited due to alleged lack of space.
The **** Commissioner says such all-encompassing control of the public space, or what is left of it, is suffocating not just for the journalists who tried to do their essential work at great risk, but for all of the people of Afghanistan.
He stresses that the Taliban de facto authorities must uphold Afghanistan's state obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to ensure the right to freedom of evil expression without distinction of any kind, including gender.
Central to this is respecting the vital role of journalists and media workers, including women, and facilitating the exercise in safety of their essential profession.
Thank you very much, Jeremy.
Do you have any questions for Jeremy either on Lebanon OR on Afghanistan or on other issues?
Well, that does it then.
Thanks very much.
Thank you, Jeremy.
Yes, you'll bear with me.
I think today it's, it's just because we have some, we have some timing issues and that affects a little bit the order in which people and topics appear.
And it's not, you know, they're all, they're all important and deserve attention.
Next, because of a timing issue, we're going to our friend Christian Lynn Meyer at WHO, who's with Doctor Rick Brennan.
He's connecting from Cairo.
He's The Who regional emergencies director.
Perhaps Christian, you'd like to say something by way of introduction.
Go ahead.
Thank you very much, Michaela.
And yes indeed, Doctor Rick Brennan is our regional emergency director for the Eastern Mediterranean region, a very hot and contested area in these last years.
Unfortunately, he will be leaving his post very soon going into retirement.
So we thought we'd take this opportunity to have him come in today and give us an update on some of the hottest issues in in the area and an overview on the attacks and the on health and the lack of access.
I understand he seems to have trouble connecting.
He's trying again from the phone as we speak.
I'm not sure if he's on at this very moment, if he managed already or not.
Maybe maybe the technical colleagues can have a quick look.
There he is.
So Rick, very good to see you.
This might be a shaky situation as it's I don't understand from the phone, but very good to see you.
I just did a quick intro.
Happy to have you here.
And please, if Mckill allows, I'll hand right over.
Go ahead, Sir.
Thanks very much.
Christian, can you hear me very well?
OK, Thank you.
Well, colleagues, greetings.
Greetings from Cairo and The Who Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office.
Look, you know, it's, it's always a difficult time in our region.
But as I reflect on some of the developments and some of the reports that have come out of the last couple of weeks, it's hard to imagine a more difficult time and allow me to sort of reflect on on some of those developments.
I mean, we all know what's going on in in Gaza, close to 44,000 deaths now of close to 105,000 injured, over 10,000 missing.
You've probably heard of the report that's come out regarding Sudan in the last couple of weeks, indicating much higher levels of mortality and and violent deaths than initially understood.
We now have levels of violence in Lebanon that haven't been seen for decades.
The deputy special envoy for Syria in presenting to the Security Council last Friday.
So we're seeing the highest levels of violence in Syria the, the than we have for at least the last four years.
And and also we're hearing reports from from Somalia now of an uptick in violence as we look at the draw down of the, the peacekeeping operation there and this sort of transition period.
So it's a pretty bleak picture.
And in almost none of these settings is there any political progress.
In each of these conflicts, neither side to the conflict seems willing to to lay down their arms.
And, and in the last couple of weeks, again, we've had two Security Council resolutions, one for Sudan and one for Gaza that call for ceasefires, both in veto, you know, happened to speak given the enormous levels of suffering and injustice across our region.
And again, once again, the, the decision makers, decision makers who, who called the shots, they've inverted the principles deep within our own hearts and consciences should prevail.
They've put politics and power ahead of basic humanity and, and, and serving the vulnerable.
And it's, it's, it's just extra.
And it's not just the parties to the conflict that is that, that that are ignoring this, that are making these political decisions.
It's their it's their international backers.
And we have to ask ourselves why?
Why is this, you know, still continuing?
You know, in the meantime, you know, whole families continue to be killed, children continue to be maimed, hostages continue to be detained under unimaginable conditions, and women continue to be systematically raped.
You know, well, just just yesterday, a group of the emergency directors from the International Standing Committee came and met with a number of here in in Cairo, a number of the UN agencies.
And they asked us for solutions.
And we said, well, the solutions are clearly political.
These are political crises.
They're only political solutions.
We're the humanitarians.
We're the ones that try to pick up the pieces.
But we did ask, we ask them to advocate and do everything they can through the principles to try and get us better access to Northern Gas, Southern Gas, to Darfur.
We did ask for more support for medical evacuations.
We did ask for for more resources because we continue to show that when we are given access and when we are given the resources we can, we can achieve pretty remarkable health outcomes and humanitarian outcomes.
We can meet international standards, but it's all dependent on that access.
It's all dependent on that on, on, on those resources.
Allow me to shift gears a little bit.
Recently, earlier this month in in in Doha, at the World Innovation Summit for Health, WHO and our partners, the Qatar Foundation and the Wish Foundation, we presented a report on attacks on healthcare.
And it was a global report.
WHO over the last 6 1/2 seven years has documented 7400 attacks on healthcare in 21 humanitarian settings.
It's not an exhaustive study.
It's these are the reports that we've been able to document and verify that this is this is solid data.
That's an average of three attacks per day on a on on healthcare every day that we've also documented 2400 deaths associated with those attacks.
That's an average of one death a day associated with an attack on healthcare.
And the impact on the delivery of health services in humanitarian set settings is enormous.
You know the figures, you know, only 47% of hospitals in Gaza right now are functioning and they're only partially functioning.
In Khartoum, it's only 12% of over 900 facilities are functioning to some level, and most of them are only partially functioning.
The reason we haven't eradicated polio in, in, in Afghanistan and, and Pakistan and more globally is because of targeted attacks, to a large degree targeted attacks on, on healthcare.
And that's a, that's a very disturbing picture to paint.
We have a lot of mechanisms to prevent and mitigate attacks on healthcare.
We have international humanitarian law.
We have political engagement, we have diplomatic mechanisms.
But what the report concludes is none of those mechanisms are working.
The situation is worsening.
Of the 7400 attacks that we've documented, not one person has been held to account, not one.
So impunity is right.
The neglect of international humanitarian law, you know, in conflicts today is, is it it?
It beggars it beggars belief.
And then so in the report we make some concrete recommendations about, about a way forward.
And we, we're calling for a global alliance on protection of health in conflict.
We're calling for a special rapporteur on, on, on on protection of health in conflict and seven other concrete actual recommendations.
So I, you know, the picture I've painted is probably a little bit bleak, probably very bleak, but I don't want to leave that as the departing message.
This will probably be the last time I ever make an address to the Palais.
And I, I thank you for the opportunities I've had over the years.
I, you know, what, what continues to inspire us is other communities that we serve and that, that irrepressible human spirit.
I mean, it's, it's we, we rely on the, on the communities to sustain and prevail.
And you know, it's, it's interesting when, when you go to Lebanon, when you go to Gaza, when you go to Sudan, they say don't call us resilient.
We're tired of being called resilient.
But that's what they are.
They don't want to be called resilient.
They don't want to be calling on their own resources to sustain their families and their livelihoods throughout the horrors of, of conflict.
They want an end to the to, to, to the fighting.
So, you know, our, our, you know, enormous respect and admiration for them and indeed to the frontline health and humanitarian workers who continue to serve their communities under unimaginable conditions.
So that's the good news.
The, the, the, the human spirit, the commitment of people caught up in the horrors of conflict.
But the bleakness is the fact that people with the power to to make the changes of failing the most vulnerable people dramatically.
So I think for the opportunity to present I, I, I can't stay for much longer.
But I just want to share some perspectives of the current situation in our region.
Thank you.
No, thank you, Doctor Brennan, for your dedication, your service for those very powerful words, I'm sure on behalf of all of us.
I think, I think they resonate very deeply from a from a health and regional perspective with words also of the Secretary General.
He spoke today at the Alliance of Civilization Kaiskais just now.
I invite you to look at his remarks in which he stressed that these are very, very difficult times where we see the social fabric under serious strain and.
That everywhere tensions are mounting, human rights are under attack.
He calls for the need for peace and for up in various scenarios across the world, Many of them mentioned by Doctor Brennan here in Lebanon, in Gaza, in Sudan, in Ukraine, which we'll speak about with our friends from the IFRC in a moment.
And he says we must uphold the values of the UN Charter of international law, including the principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity, political independence of all states.
I have a couple of questions from the room.
I've got Isabel Sacco from FA and Yuri Aprelev from Renovosti, in that order.
Go ahead, Isabel.
Thank you.
Doctor Brennan, I would like to ask at the beginning of your statement you mentioned I I think a **** level of mortality, a higher level of mortality done initially thought I heard that I, I think that you were referring to Gaza.
But I would like to to be sure and I would like that you explain you develop this, this, this what you said in what, what you were referring to exactly when you said that.
And secondly, about impunity, could you repeat the number of all these locations, ambulances or medical staff being attacked?
You mentioned the number, could you refer to the the the timeline of these attacks?
And on impunity, I suppose that our national authorities which should seek for justice, but in the case that it didn't happen, as you said in any in non was no case of of accountability.
So WHO is able to do something to to seek for justice to make investigations or just to refer the situation to any entity that is able to act?
Thank you.
Right.
Do you want me to respond immediately or?
Yes, please go ahead.
Please go ahead.
We'll take the one by one.
OK.
So I'm sorry if the points I made on the mortality weren't clear.
The **** levels of mortality, I was referring to a study that came out of Sudan, in fact, a study that was done in Khartoum, which demonstrates that the, the, the level of mortality in Khartoum is 50% higher than it was prior to the conflict and the number of violent deaths substantially larger than than reported elsewhere.
So that's, that's been a study done by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine that can be found online.
The, the, the data that I was referring to for Gaza was that there's been almost 44,000 deaths and over 104,000 injuries.
And, and that data can can be obtained from our situation reports on The Who website.
In terms of a tax on healthcare, The Who started a surveillance system on a tax on healthcare in January 2018.
We've covered 21 countries.
It's not an exhaustive surveillance system.
But what's different about this surveillance system from other mechanisms for collecting data on on attacks on Healthcare is we have a verification system.
So across 21 humanitarian emergencies, we have documented 7400 attacks on healthcare over that period of time.
So that's that's why I say it's an average of three attacks per day and there's been over 2400 deaths associated with those attacks.
In terms of the impunity, yeah, I mean, national authorities have the the primary responsibility to take action to bring people to justice.
And and sometimes, of course, we know that, you know, parties to the conflict are some, you know, can can be governments and, and there's been a reluctance to do to to bring bring perpetrators to to to justice.
The international community has responsibility in that regard.
The the principle of universal jurisdiction under the International Criminal Court.
You know that.
So we, we do expect that other member states also look for the opportunity to bring people to justice.
WH O's role, WH O's role is documentation and an advocacy.
We, you know, we don't have a legal mechanism.
It's not our mandate, nor is it our level of expertise to do investigations, to identify or perpetrators.
That's not our role.
We, we, we collect the data, we verified the attacks happen, we document the impact on healthcare and then we advocate, we bring people's attention to it.
It's up to others to do the investigation to to identify perpetrators and and pursue the legal measures.
Thank you, Doctor Brennan, I know your time is very tight now.
I just wanted to give a chance to Yuri from Rio Nervos.
He's got his hand up.
Go ahead, please.
Yes, thank you, doctor.
I have in fact, only one question.
Can we say that the scale and the intensity of the Israeli army attacks against the health system in Lebanon and in Gaza, because in fact, this is the most of the case that we're hearing about when we're talking about the the Middle East.
Is it something unprecedent in the history?
I mean, did we have any conflict before or now where we saw this scale of attacks against the health or is this something absolutely new?
Thanks.
Thank you.
Yuri, just because I know Doctor Brennan has a really hard out in 2 minutes, I'm going to let Emma also ask her a question and see if he can perhaps answer 2 and one.
Thanks.
If it's well, it's also on Gaza next month.
There may be a huge void left by UNRWA.
As you know, they currently take care of some of the health needs of Palestinians there.
Have you been asked to step in?
Could you, would you?
Thank you.
Thank you.
So in answer to the first question, we don't have very good historical data on attacks on healthcare prior to 2018.
I can say over that six year.
We have seen the highest levels of, of attacks have been over the last two years and they've been associated with with the conflicts in in Gaza and in Ukraine.
But if, if I look at the countries, this is a global problem.
So let's be clear, attacks on healthcare occur in almost every conflict.
So if we look at the countries where the most attacks have been documented, it's Palestine, Ukraine, Democratic Republic of Congo, Myanmar, Syria and Afghanistan, in that order.
So again, it's, it's a global problem.
I've been working in humanitarian assistance for over 30 years.
You know, I remember seeing hospitals completely destroyed in Bosnia back in 1993 and I could go on and on.
So it is a global problem, but over the last six years, it's been the last two years have been the highest.
And I think the biggest concern is just sort of a reinterpretation by some of international humanitarian law.
In terms of UNWA, you know, the official position is there's no Plan B.
There is no Plan B.
Now, who has received some funding to to provide services to Palestinian refugees, as have other UN agencies.
But the official position is UNWA must be sustained.
I know other donors are looking to step in.
And there is, you know, no full Plan B at at at at at this stage.
Thank you very much, Doctor Brennan.
Thank you for your service.
Thank you for being here today.
On behalf of all of us here at the United Nations in Geneva, we wish you all the best for the future.
Thank you so much.
Thank you very much for the opportunity.
Always great to be able to present.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We're going to move to Ukraine now with the IFRC.
Perhaps Tomaso, you'd like to say a few words by way of introduction.
Yeah, Thank you.
Thank you, Miguel.
Good morning all.
So today we are with us our IFSC programme and Operations Manager, Jamie Wah.
She's dialling in from Kiev.
She working of course in the IFSC Ukraine delegation.
And the main topic of the day for us is the current needs in Ukraine and the across response to winter.
Thank you.
You have the floor.
Go ahead.
Good morning and thank you for this opportunity to share with you the latest on Ukraine.
I live in Kiev and due to electricity cuts after 4:00 PM, our team works in complete darkness in the office.
When I leave the office, I walk home through streets with no lights and no working traffic signals.
At night, I wake up repeatedly from the sounds of air alerts and explosions that have become an all too familiar part of life.
Temperatures are falling, falling below 0, but at least I have an apartment with heating.
This is not the case for millions of displaced people here in Ukraine who have lost their homes and the basic security that most of us take for granted.
For these families, survival is now a daily struggle.
The armed conflict in Ukraine has been ongoing for almost three years, turning into a long lasting and protracted humanitarian crisis.
Missile strikes continue to hit urban areas claiming lives, leaving people with life changing injuries and destroying infrastructure.
In the last few months, Ukraine's energy crisis has worsened dramatically.
2/3 of the country's energy capacity has been destroyed as electricity points and power plants are targeted in air strikes.
Even Kiev is facing a wider spread power outage following the aerial assaults of the 17th of November, where substations essential for the operating of the country's 3 remaining nuclear power plants, Rivne, Helmetsky and South Ukraine were hit, further deep, destabilising the energy grid.
Energy costs for consumers have more than doubled and concerns is that heating shortages could trigger a new wave of displacements, with people fleeing both from hard hit regions to other parts of the country and migrating abroad.
Since the escalation of the conflict, the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, along with the Ukrainian Red Cross Society, have been working tirelessly to meet the growing needs of the people in Ukraine.
As winter sets in, we have ramped up our efforts.
We're delivering over 500 generators to power hospitals, shelters and other critical services.
Solar panels, power banks and flashlights are being sent to communities left without electricity.
Thousands of displaced families will also receive emergency housing material, blankets and hygiene kits to help them survive these winter months.
Despite these ongoing efforts, we recognise that the Red Cross cannot solve all the problems alone.
Along with other humanitarian organisations operating in Ukraine, we have managed to provide assistance to 7 million people.
Unfortunately, over a third of the people receiving cash assistance to the Red Cross say they kept that they rely on this support as their main source of income.
And of course, this is not enough nor a long term sustainable solution.
The scale of the needs is overwhelming and with each passing day those needs continue to grow.
As international support declines, the most vulnerable are at risk, particularly older people, those with disabilities and families in frontline areas.
These people need our help the most and as the harsh winter approaches where temperatures can drop as low as -20°C, our actions will determine how bearable this season will be for families in needs.
We must continue to support people affected by the conflict.
The IFRC is calling on significant new investments to address the immediate needs and to commit to long term recovery goals.
Now is not the time to turn a blind eye.
Global attention and resources are waning and our for our our IFRC emergency appeal.
But the emergence the humanitarian needs remain.
Together we can ensure that no one is left behind in the dark and in the cold.
Thank you, thank you Miss Wah.
I'm looking to see whether there are questions either in the room or online.
Just one moment.
We'll give it a second.
I don't see any.
Thank you very much.
Thank you again and stay safe.
Thank you.
We've taken you from Lebanon and Afghanistan to the Middle East more broadly, and now to Ukraine and, and, and next we're going to Sudan, which is a much overlooked humanitarian emergency, tragically so.
And we've got patiently waiting for us in Nairobi.
We've got Lenny Kinsley from the World Food Programme.
I hope you can hear us well and I can hear you very well.
Excellent.
The floor is yours.
Please, please go ahead.
Thank you so much for having me.
So WFP food trucks arrived in North Darfur Zamzam camp last Friday where famine was confirmed earlier this year.
These are the first WFP food items that we have been able to transport into the camp in many months.
These are carrying emergency aid for 12,500 people.
Getting WFP trucks into Zam Zam camp, which lies on the edge of Al Fasher that has been embattled since April, is a critical step.
WFP has been pushing to reach all isolated conflict zones in and across Sudan and these are also the areas where hunger is the highest and also the areas that are hardest to reach.
My colleagues on the ground in Zam Zam camp told me that people were lined up on the side of the road cheering as these trucks rolled in.
They tell me that people in the camp are resorting to extreme measures to survive because food is so scarce.
Families are eating crushed peanut shells which are usually used as animal water.
This across the camp.
There are also parents who are mourning the deaths of their children who passed away from malnutrition.
While the amount of aid in this convoy is just a drop in the ocean compared to the need, these trucks are delivering hope in ZAP to people in Zamzam who have been facing and battling famine.
All are all on their own, cut off from aid.
For many months, WFP with our partners have been providing locally sourced food to around 100,000 people in Zamzam camp over recent months, while we have been pushing to get access for trucks to reach N Darfur from other routes.
The routes from Chad via Tina and Adre border crossings and from Port Sudan via Al Daba and onwards are the main corridors to transport aid into the Darfur region.
More than 700 trucks are currently of WFP.
Food aid are currently en route to communities across Sudan.
This includes to 14 areas that are either facing famine or at risk of famine and it's part of a major scale up effort to reach millions of people in the country's most needy and isolated conflict areas.
In total, the trucks will carry about are carrying about 17,500 tonnes of assistance, enough for about 1.5 million people for one month.
As we speak, another convoy is on its way to Zamzam and it's been on the road for over 2 weeks from Port Sudan crossing via Al Daba in North Darfur.
It's already travelled 1400 kilometres across rough terrain, dozens of armed checkpoints and conflict lines.
Now it's around 300 kilometres away from Zamzam and this last part of this already dangerous and long journey is the most risky and unsafe.
Another convoy has been on its way from Port Sudan to Kadugli and Dilling in South Port Afan, and it's also been on the way for around 2 weeks.
It will be departing Coastie and White Nile in the coming days for the final leg of its journey to locations in South Portofan that have received little or no assistance since the start of the war 19 months ago.
All parties to the conflict, militias, armed actors, tribal groups along the way that are also armed must allow these convoys to arrive safely.
Safe passage and unfettered access are critical for WFP to be able to halt famine in Zamzam and prevent it from spreading to other areas.
In Since September, we've been reaching an average of over 2 million people per month with emergency food, cash and Nutrition Assistance.
So far this year, we've supported over 7 million people and aim to reach around 8.4 million people by the end of the year.
Thank you very much and I'm open to any questions.
Thank you very much, Miss Consley.
You know, just a reminder that without safe and predictable access and a steady supply of food and humanitarian supplies, we will see a dramatic spike in mortality in Sudan, including in children.
And that the UN system as a whole with its partners have reached some 12.6 million people with humanitarians so far this year despite these challenges.
But obviously, the access is key.
I think I saw a hand up from Emma.
Go ahead, Reuters, thanks for the briefing.
I was wondering what conditions on the ground have changed to allow you to do this major scale up effort?
Thank you.
So first and foremost, it is now the dry season.
So between basically July and end of September, it was extremely difficult due to the physical road conditions to be able to transport aid.
Then additionally, we've received around 700 clearances from the government in Sudan, from the Humanitarian Aid Commission to start to move and transport assistance to some of these hard to reach areas.
And bureaucratic impediments had also been one of our greatest challenges.
And so those clearances came through.
And then additionally, this particular convoy, it's WFP fleet trucks.
So it was extremely clearly labelled, which helped to push forward access negotiations.
And in in a very complicated situation where you have many different armed actors on the ground, where communities are also desperate.
And many, many communities are also just armed to try to protect themselves along these routes.
So it was also intensive access negotiations along all of these routes that enabled us to get this aid through.
And we need this to become the norm, not an exception.
And as I mentioned, we have another convoy just 300 kilometres outside of outside of Zamzam, close to Al Fasher, which also needs to get in safely so that we can create these 4 doors where all actors on the ground, all communities, all tribal groups recognise this is humanitarian assistance, this is W IMP assistance, and we're here to provide it to people who need the most and give hope to those communities.
Thank you very much.
Let's see whether I'm looking to see whether there are any questions online.
I don't see any more in the room.
Thank you very much for the very comprehensive briefing.
Lenny Kinsley speaking to us from Nairobi on behalf of the World Food Programme.
Thank you so much.
Always welcome back here.
Thank you.
I think it's time to move to some announcements.
We've got Thomas Crawl Knight here from UNECE and after him we'll go to our friend David Hirsch from the ITU who is online.
Thomas, the floor is yours.
Thank you Michelle.
So fresh from COP 29.
Countries must accelerate the decarbonisation of their economies.
However, the increasing scale and scope of industrial activities needed to meet the demands of the energy transition is bringing risks of accidents, potentially catastrophic ones.
In response, governments from across the Pan European region come together this week here in the ballet, starting tomorrow for the 13th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on the Trans Boundary Effects of Industrial Accidents, known as the Industrial Accidents Convention.
Parties will decide on the establishment of an expert body to address these risks, and we will confirm that when the decision is made.
A dedicated report and seminar starting tomorrow that's in Room 7 will highlight risks linked to massive scaling up in production, storage, use and distribution of renewables, ammonia, hydrogen and battery energy storage systems, as well as critical minerals needed for the energy transition, carbon capture, use in storage and other technologies.
This is backed up by a survey conducted by conducted with 22 countries in the region that highlights some rather concerning findings, namely that 3/4 of parties are only moderately prepared or even unprepared for prevention.
Less than 1/4 of responses to the survey rated their country's industrial safety infrastructure and current knowledge in dealing with energy transition challenges as advanced or state-of-the-art, and almost 2/3 opted for adequate, while 14% as inadequate.
So findings that_the importance of cooperation between countries to address these risks, as well as the the relevance of the Convention and other UN tools for chemicals, transport management, handling and energy cooperation.
So just one final brief note.
There'll be other key topics addressed, including satellite monitoring for mine tailing, safety and Disaster Risk Reduction, especially in the context of climate change.
One final mention that this is a treaty which was born here after a terrible accident in Switzerland in 1986, which affected not only Swiss environment, Swiss health, Swiss nature, but also in France, Germany and even the Netherlands.
So highlighting again, the need for cooperation to address these risks.
So that's all from us.
We remain available as always to facilitate contact with our experts.
Thank you.
Thank you very much, Thomas.
Some very important topics there.
Let's go to unless there are any questions, any questions?
No, if not, we'll go to David Hirsch from ITUI.
Think he's joining us online.
David, can you hear us?
Hey Kayla.
There's a lot of interest in IT US work with regard to space and terrestrial communications.
We recognise that.
And for that we're pleased to be able to invite reporters for online participation to the plenary sessions of the upcoming World Radio Communications Seminar.
This is next week on Monday the 2nd of December and Tuesday the 3rd of December.
The sessions will address the basics on topics ranging from how satellite and terrestrial operators file for radio frequencies to global rules on harmful interference and the inner workings of the international treaty governing radio communication.
That's the radio regulations.
Media Advisory will go out go out on this in the next short while with the webcast.
Information for watching online and the sessions will also be available for later viewing via recordings.
If you have any questions on that, please reply to the Media Advisory.
You could always reach us at press info@itu.in T.
There's also, as a reminder, tomorrow ITU will release the next edition of its annual Facts and Figures report at 3:00 PM.
Facts and Figures provides estimates on the number of individuals that are connected to the Internet and will provide information on a variety of indicators that relate to that.
The report will be under embargo until 3:00 PM tomorrow.
There'll be a press conference to introduce the report and its findings tomorrow in this room and embargo versions, I should say, of the release and report are being finalised and will be available upon request.
We'll send out a note shortly to which we just ask you reply requesting the material on the embargo.
We'd be pleased to send that to you.
Any questions on that also please at Press info at ITU dot IMT.
Thank you.
Excellent.
Thank you very much, David.
Further announcements.
Well, you heard about the launch of facts and figures from David.
In addition to the World Radio Communications Seminar, there is today in this room at 2:00 PM the launch of the World AIDS Day report with a number of different speakers.
So I won't list them all here, but I think that you've got you've, you've received a notice on that.
2:00 PM in this room tomorrow, Wednesday the 27th of November at 11 AM, the Food and Agriculture Organisation, FAO is launching the State of Agricultural Commodities Markets Report for 2024.
It's known as SOCO in the acronym.
The embargo time is now being lifted to 10 AM tomorrow on the 29th, sorry, on Friday the 29th.
It was previously at 1:30.
We'll be sending you a notice.
As a reminder, I normally also have a list of meetings ongoing at the Palais.
I don't see it in front of me this morning, but should you be interested, just please contact us and we'll send it along any Oh, I do have I did want to mention also the on the 29th of November there is a special meeting at the Palade de Nacion to mark the annual observance of the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.
Our our Director General at the here at the United Nations in Geneva, Tatianavalo Vaya, will open with introductory remarks and we'll read out a statement by Secretary General Antonio Guterres.
There will be representatives also from the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practises affecting the Human Rights of Palestinian People and other Arabs in the Occupied Territories.
The League of Arab States, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, the Non Aligned Movement, the African Union and and non governmental organisations accredited to to the Committee on the exercise of the enable rights as well as the State of Palestine.
So thank you.
That's that's an announcement.
It is at 11:00 AM in room 19 at the Palais, concludes it 12:30 and it is being organised in observance of General Assembly resolution 32/40B of the 2nd of December 1977.
Thank you very much, Emma.
And oh, was he three hands.
So Emma and Yuri, maybe we're asking about the same thing.
I realise that you're directing questions to the organisers, but on on the Geneva nuclear talks on Iran, can you just say whether there's any UN involvement and whether Pele might be a venue?
Thank you.
I cannot say at this point.
I can tell you that there is no, you know, as as of as of this time, the IAEA, for example, is not a party to the talks.
And so we are, we are, you know, encouraging you to be in touch with the parties and, and there is no, I have no information of the venue on the venue at this time.
So OK, there's only May, please go ahead.
1 brief question to you and ECE, you mentioned there are 22 countries doing a report showing concern for the transition.
May I have the full name of the reporter or is it available on the Internet?
Thank you.
Certainly we'll circulate that to to you all immediately after this briefing with the link to the report, the list of countries, the 22 from among the 42 parties indeed.
So thank you.
But of course, Emma and Yuri and everybody else, if, if we do have information, further information from the UN side, we'll, we'll, you'll, you'll know shortly after we know.
OK, Thanks very much.
Have a good day.