Implementation

The Implementation theme focuses on the way UN system, Member States and other parties at all levels work to uphold their commitments to implementing the Women, Peace and Security Agenda.

Within the UN, there are a variety of implementation mechanisms. For one, the Security Council has requested that the Secretary-General release an annual report on Women, Peace and Security and the achievements, gaps, and challenges of the implementation process. The establishment of the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, also known as UN Women, now also provides an integrated institutional framework to assist Member States with implementing equality standards and the UN will be held accountable for its own commitments on gender equality.

Among Member States, National Action Plans (NAPs) are a key mechanism through which governments identify their inclusion and equality priorities and commit to action. Local and Regional Action Plans provide additional and complementary implementation mechanisms.

It is critical for the engagement of women and gender equality to be integrated into all aspects of development, diplomacy, peacekeeping and protection throughout local, national, and international systems.

For more resources on this Critical Issue, visit PeaceWomen Resource Center >>
 

STATEMENT OF EGYPT AT UNGA72

Extract: 

Disarmament: “We are still unable to prevent armed conflict, confront terrorism, realize nuclear disarmament and address the major structural imbalances in the international economic order, which have widened the gap between the developed and developing worlds”

 

Statement of Egypt at UNGA72

Statement of Monaco at the UNGA72

Statement of Liberia at the UNGA72

Extract: 

Nuclear weapons: “Today, we face the threat of climate change, the violence of terrorism, the risk and indignation of migration, and a nuclear escalation on the Korean peninsula.”

Arms control: “We have reshaped the Armed Forces of Liberia and the Liberia National Police, professionalized our customs and immigration services and small Liberian Coast Guard.”

Statement of Liberia at the UNGA72

Statement of France at the UNGA72

Extract: 

Chemical weapons(Syria): France will be absolutely intransigent on the use of chemical weapons.

 

Statement of France at the UNGA72

Statement of Guinea at the UNGA72

Statement of the UN Secretary-General at the UNGA72

Extract: 

Disarmament: “More broadly, all countries must show greater commitment to the universal goal of a world without nuclear weapons. The nuclear-weapon states have a special responsibility to lead. Today proliferation is creating unimaginable danger, and disarmament is paralyzed. There is an urgent need to prevent proliferation, to promote disarmament and to preserve gains made in these directions.”

Statement of the UN Secretary-General at the UNGA72

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