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Fighting
poverty, UN reform to top General Assembly agenda, says new president
Assembly President Sheika Haya
September 12, 2006 – (UN
News Centre) As the General Assembly opened its 61st session today,
the body’s new president promised to focus on alleviating
extreme poverty and advancing the process of UN reform undertaken
during the previous session.
“The General Assembly has
to continue to evolve and strive to deliver sustainable solutions
to the major challenges of our time,” Sheikha Haya Rashid
Al Khalifa told delegates this morning. “Reform is a process
rather than an event.”
She noted that several recommendations
of the 2005 World Summit Outcome Document have yet to be fully realized,
such as disarmament and non-proliferation, Security Council reform,
mandate review and system-wide coherence. The UN also had a crucial
role in promoting peace and security, she said. “Today, man-made
conflicts are destroying lives and displacing people on a scale
that sometimes exceeds the destructive effects of nature –
floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, and tsunamis.”
A pressing issue was combating international
terrorism, which required the adoption of both preventive and defensive
measures, she said. Later briefing reporters, she expressed the
hope that after last week’s adoption of a resolution on a
global counter-terrorism strategy, the current Assembly session
would reach agreement on a comprehensive definition of terrorism.
She also said that it was important
to consolidate the reforms that had been achieved in the past year,
notably by ensuring that the new Peacebuilding Commission and Human
Rights Council have a real impact on large numbers of people.
Improving the situation of women
is also one of her top goals. The fact that half the world’s
population typically have less access to health care, employment,
decision-making and property ownership needed to be addressed, she
told Assembly delegates.
Sheikha Haya is the first female
General Assembly President since 1969 and the first Muslim woman
to hold the post. “It does not matter that I am a Muslim or
a Christian or Jewish,” she told reporters. “We are
human beings and we have the same worries and we have the same problems.
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=19809&Cr=general&Cr1=assembly
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