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  • Ghana repeat FIFA plea to change venue

    Ghana repeat FIFA plea to change venue

    {With a 6-1 advantage the Black Stars have little to worry about on the pitch but they are concerned about safety off it.}

    Ghana contacted FIFA for a second time on Wednesday to request next month’s World Cup play-off against Egypt in Cairo be moved to a neutral venue.

    The Black Stars are concerned at the volatile security situation in the Egyptian capital.

    “My strong conviction is that the match must be moved from Cairo because of the incidents of insecurity each day over there,” explained Kwesi Nyantaki, president of the Ghana Football Federation.

    Nyantakyi said: “We can’t put in danger the lives of our players, officials and fans by bringing them to Cairo, you can’t replace a life.

    “It would be better for FIFA to choose another venue rather than Egypt for this game.”

    Ghana romped to a 6-1 win over Egypt in the first leg of the two-legged play-off in Kumasi last week. The return leg is scheduled for November 19.

    Ghana’s original demand for a venue switch, submitted on October 8, urged world football’s governing body to find “a safe and secure venue”.

    “Much as we sympathise with our brothers at the Egyptian Football Association, we are highly concerned about the security and safety of our players, officials and supporters and would like FIFA to take the necessary steps to protect lives and from both Ghana and Egypt during the second-leg game,” the GFA wrote then.

    Egypt have until Monday to provide FIFA with a written guarantee from the Egyptian authorities on the security situation for next month’s tie.

    AFP

  • Katy Perry reveals how John Mayer (and Africa!) inspired her emotional new single ‘Unconditionally

    Katy Perry reveals how John Mayer (and Africa!) inspired her emotional new single ‘Unconditionally

    {{Pop superstar Katy Perry’s new album Prism comes out on Tuesday, Oct. 22. But the singer has now officially released the second single, “Unconditionally.”}}

    An emotional, soaring ballad, the song is Perry’s favorite on the album and was actually inspired by Perry’s current love, John Mayer, and a recent trip she took. “‘Unconditionally’ was influenced by my boyfriend and also really influenced by Africa,” Perry reveals to EW. “I went to Madagascar and did a UNICEF trip that changed my life and gave me this song. It’s just a simple message about loving someone and accepting them and kind of driving at you don’t have to be so self-conscious, you don’t have to fear, because essentially, everybody has their stuff. Nobody comes stuff-free. Everybody has their things and you’re never going to be perfect, and accepting that and understanding that, especially in a relationship, it makes room for a real, genuine kind of love.”

    music-mix.ew.com

  • AEC 2013 to debate the continent’s development effectiveness through Regional Integration in Africa

    AEC 2013 to debate the continent’s development effectiveness through Regional Integration in Africa

    {“Regional Integration in Africa”, is the theme of the {{African Economic Conference (AEC) 2013}} which will be jointly organized by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the Economic Commission for Africa and the United Nations Development Program in Johannesburg, South Africa, from October 28 to 30, 2013. }

    The annual AEC series are designed to promote knowledge product and management as an important driver of development. It is rightly assumed that through these series, Africa today is fast responding to performance-driven development programs, predicated on a culture of exchange of ideas, innovative thinking,policy dialogue, governance, planning and capacity building.

    Within the AfDB, this year’s AEC is jointly coordinated by the Chief Economist’s Complex, that brokers knowledge products in the Bank,and NEPAD, Trade and Regional Integration Department, which on the other hand spearheads economic development and policy issues that relate Africa’s integration, national, regional and sub-regional.

    From the joint involvement of the above-mentioned complexes arisesthe question of how the conference will promote the continent’s development effectiveness through regional integration. It will be recalled that development effectiveness review process was introduced over the last few years as a framework that measures corporate operational and organizational effectiveness and highlight areas requiring further improvement.

    Based on the core issue of capacity building, Victor Murinde, Director of African Development Institute (EADI) explained the Bank’s efforts in the complex link between “development effectiveness,” and “regional integration”. They are all about propagating operations resultsculture and development impact not only in the Bank but also across the region, Murinde said.

    Below are the highlights of strategic direction of Murinde’s reasoning on the linkage between the above-mentioned issues.

    First, the Bank’s Ten Year Strategy identifies regional integration as one of the core focal areas of the Bank. The African Development Institute recognizes the need for the appropriate capacity development to support operations of the Bank. To ensure success the Office of the Chief Economist, the co-organizer of the African Economic Conference, has to work in tandem with the operations department of the Bank to create the most appropriate knowledge products and capacity development activities that can enable the Bank staff and Regional Member Countries’ officials to deliver on regional integration agenda of the continent.

    Secondly, it is worthwhile to note that emphasis shifted from “aid effectiveness” to “development effectiveness,”following the Busan conference in 2010. The central objective of the shift in emphasis is to enhance the degree of development targets the Bank is pursuing. The Bank has a result-based monitoring and evaluation framework which spells out the targets. Development effectiveness hinges on how the Bank will be able to enhance the percentage development it can achieve. It is no longer a debate that integration would be politically and economically beneficial for Africa in the global economy. African countries and regional institutions are strengthening their regional economic programs, streamlining their mandates and orientations. The aim of the African Economic Conference 2013, taking place in Johannesburg, South Africa, will be to identify and address challenges and suggest solutions. If we do well today, we want to do better still tomorrow; this is the role of capacity building of which the Bank envisions to be a leader in Africa.

    Thirdly, how do the Bank capacity building efforts cope with changing demands of development effectiveness? We must make sure we design the Bank’s knowledge and capacity development activities on annual basis taking into consideration the following three or four major things in the exercise ensuring quality at entry:

    {{The lessons learnt from the activities of the previous year. This situational review is very crucial for a way forward.

    The demand and aspirations of the Bank’s own Field Offices as well as those of Regional Member Countries. In other words our capacity building efforts are situational and demand driven.

    Generally, responding to new challenges in capacity building is dictated by the volatile and rapidly changing continent vis à vis the rest of the world. For example if the rest of the world is exploring Islamic financing instruments, the Bank should respond in that domain otherwise the continent will be left behind. It is not a question of value judgment but economic necessity.}}

    AfDB

  • Militants reportedly attack US-flagged cargo ship off Nigeria coast

    Militants reportedly attack US-flagged cargo ship off Nigeria coast

    {Nigerian militants have reportedly attacked US-flagged platform supply vessel off the coast of Brass, Nigeria.}

    Maritime industry news website gCaptain reports that militants attacked the ship after a separate, unrelated attack on a Nigerian security boat that killed members of the Nigerian military’s Joint Task Force.

    The website, citing an unidentified source, said the American captain and chief engineer of the supply ship C-Retriever were kidnapped, but the report has not been confirmed. The ship is owned by Louisiana-based Edison Chouest Offshore.

    Edison Chouest did not immediately return a request for comment from gCaptain Wednesday.

  • DRC: Kabila to repatriate remains of former President Mobutu Sese Seko

    DRC: Kabila to repatriate remains of former President Mobutu Sese Seko

    {President Joseph Kabila of the Democratic Republic of Congo on Wednesday said he would create a government of national unity including members of the opposition and civil society to push for peace in the central African giant.}

    In a surprise move, Kabila also announced the repatriation of the remains of former President Mobutu Sese Seko – who Kabila’s father toppled from power in 1997.

    Moreover, according to the head of state, “the provisions will be taken to the repatriation of mortal remains of the former President of the Republic, Mobutu Sese Seko, and former Prime Minister, Moses TSHOMBE in accordance with their respective families.”

    Kabila, presenting the findings of a national dialogue to resolve years of crisis in Democratic Republic of Congo, also ruled out a blanket amnesty for rebels operating in the mineral-rich east and called for the insurgents to lay down their arms.

    In a wide-ranging speech, Kabila pledged to act on the more than 600 recommendations drafted by representatives of the government, opposition and civil society during three weeks of talks which concluded this month.

    “A government of national unity will be soon put in place,” Kabila said in a rare public speech. “Its priority mission will be the restoration of peace and the authority of the state, reconstruction, decentralisation, organisation of elections and the improvement of living conditions of the population.”

    Congo ranks bottom of the United Nations Human Development Index. Millions of people have died in eastern Congo from violence, disease and hunger since the 1990s as foreign-backed insurgent groups have waged a series of rebellions, often for control of the region’s rich deposits of gold, diamonds and tin.

    Among the recommendations of the national dialogue were specific reforms to the national electoral commission ahead of presidential elections due in 2016.

    Some members of the opposition – who dispute the validity of Kabila’s 2011 election victory – accuse the president of wanting to change the constitution to seek a third term.

    According to Reuters, Kabila announced the appointment of a special representative to combat against sexual violence and the recruitment of child soldiers in lawless eastern Congo.

    He voiced frustration that peace talks between the government and the M23 rebel group hosted by neighbouring Uganda were stalled and he warned that his government was not prepared to wait indefinitely for a solution.

  • Samantha Power Faces A Moral Decision On Rwanda

    Samantha Power Faces A Moral Decision On Rwanda

    {Following their visit earlier this month to Africa’s Great Lakes region, which includes the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda and Uganda, members of the United Nations Security Council met to consider what they learned during their visit. They also heard reports from two high level appointees of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who urged more progress in regional peace efforts in the wake of an apparent deadlock on certain key issues in the so-called Kampala talks between the DRC government and the armed M23 rebel group fighting against the government.}

    One of the Security Council members reporting on the Africa visit was the United States. The U.S. report focused on the Rwanda portion of the trip, a country whose suffering during the 1994 genocide helped inspire U.S. Ambassador to the UN SamanthaPower to write movingly about the horrors of that colossal crime against humanity and to speak out against the indifference of the United States and the international community as the genocide unfolded.

    Among her accomplishments before assuming her current position in the Obama administration, she was the author of A Problem from Hell, a book on America’s responses to the major genocides of the 20th century, including the Rwandan genocide, for which Power won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction. During an interview in December of 2003, she said that even the mildest of measures to help stop the genocide “would have required high-level ownership of the genocide and of the U.S. response. It would have required somebody above a kind of State Department assistant secretary level, preferably somebody of a Cabinet-level post, who simply made it their business to put the issue in front of the president, to put the issue and even the moral stakes in front of his or her colleagues in Cabinet-level meetings, in principals’ committee meetings.”

    A decade later, Samantha Power became the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, now with a Cabinet-level post and a global platform to make sure that we do not let the people of Rwanda down again. What has she done to take “high-level ownership” of this moral imperative in the face of a decision by the Obama administration to cut off military aid to Rwanda that increases its risks of instability?

    After Ambassador Power and the other Security Council delegates toured the children’s wing of the Gisozi Genocide Memorial in Rwanda, the site where some 250,000 victims of the 1994 genocide lie buried, she could barely hold back her tears. Here is what she said in front of the Security Council’s Rwandan hosts:

    “We just want to express our thanks to the people of Rwanda for opening their hearts, sharing their photos, their stories of their family members. Nobody who comes to this memorial site is ever the same when they leave. People who come through this site dedicate themselves with new passion and new commitment to the Rwandan people, to the cause of reconciliation and peace in the region, and to the broader cause of preventing genocide forevermore.”

    One would think that Ambassador Power would have wanted to address the Security Council herself about her personal experience amongst the Rwandan people whom she had felt were abandoned nearly twenty years ago by the U.S. government and the UN system. But she left that awkward task up to her deputy Jeffrey De Laurentis. She entered the Security Council chamber well after De Laurentis had concluded his remarks. Hours later she tweeted tidbits from his speech and a link to a video of her own remarks at the genocide memorial site.

    Ambassador Power’s deputy mentioned the Security Council’s tour of the children’s wing of the Gisozi Genocide Memorial at which Ambassador Power had spoken. He described the memorial as “a permanent warning for the world community.” He said that the “warning has special meaning for our Council, which failed dismally in responding to the slaughter of nineteen years ago.”

    De Laurentis praised the “relatively calm and stable environment in Rwanda” today, but said that “the waves created by the genocide continue to disrupt and claim lives.” In addition to the M23 rebel group, he mentioned the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), which is a dangerous Hutu rebel group infiltrating Rwanda from bases in the east of the of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The FDLR includes among its number the original members of the Interahamwe that carried out the 1994 Rwandan genocide. He noted that during the Security Council members’ visit to Rwanda, they met with former FDLR combatants who have voluntarily returned and, with the help of the UN peacekeeping force in the DRC (MONUSCO) and the Rwandan government, were trying to reintegrate into society.

    “In many cases, the FDLR has threatened to retaliate against them and members of their families,” De Laurentis added. “We were pleased to hear of the key role that MONUSCO continues to play in collaboration with Rwandan authorities to ensure that these former fighters can successfully resume their lives.”

    In short, Ambassador Power promised a “new commitment to the Rwandan people” on the very site where 250,000 victims of the 1994 genocide were buried, while her deputy told the Security Council that the United States was pleased with the support that Rwandan authorities were giving to help former fighters against the current regime “successfully resume their lives.” And he pointed to the “relatively calm and stable environment” that exists in Rwanda today.

    Reconciliation and stability should be held up as model behavior for all of Africa to emulate. But not in Obama land. Instead of rewarding the Rwandans for trying to move on with their lives past the devastation wrought by the 1994 genocide and build a more peaceful, stable society, the Obama administration has done the opposite. It decided to punish Rwanda for allegedly providing help to the M23 rebels fighting in the DRC who, among other things, are using child soldiers. Earlier this month, the Obama administration announced that the United States intended to cut off International Military Education and Training funds for Rwanda, which supports the training of foreign militaries. Rwanda will also not receive U.S. Foreign Military Financing, which provides money for U.S. army services and arms.

    When I asked Rwanda’s UN Ambassador Eugène-Richard Gasana to comment on the aid cut-off by the U.S. government, he diplomatically replied that “It’s their money. They can use their money as they want.” However, he noted that nobody ever bothered to discuss the Obama administration’s allegations directly with Rwandan authorities to learn if they were true.

    The fact is that a United Nations report issued last June concluded that any continuing Rwandan assistance to M23 was “limited,” and noted Rwanda’s cooperation in helping to accomplish the smooth surrender of a key M23 leader to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to answer charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    The Obama administration has a habit of making bad foreign policy decisions based on incomplete facts and fallacious assumptions. Throwing allies under the bus, such as the Obama administration has done in Egypt, has become its modus operandi. Its destructive decision to apply punitive measures against its African ally Rwanda simply continues this counter-productive pattern.

    In cutting off military assistance to Rwanda, the Obama administration is weakening Rwanda’s ability to repel FDLR assaults on targets inside Rwanda launched from nearby bases in the DRC, with some assistance from the DRC army whose troops the United States has helped to train. The UN report described previous attacks by FDLR rebels who managed to infiltrate inside Rwanda. There have also reportedly been over 34 bomb attacks resulting in shells landing on Rwandan soil since November 2012. Just like nineteen years ago, the United States government and the international community has neglected this situation and kept a blind eye, while focusing virtually all of its attention on the M23 rebel forces.

    Rwanda remains vulnerable to the same murderers who participated in the 1994 genocide and their successors. The United States owes Rwanda the benefit of the doubt and must remain a reliable ally, not a fair weather friend who is willing to cut off vital assistance on the basis of unsubstantiated allegations.

    Samantha Power has the opportunity to make the Obama administration’s wrong-headed decision an issue of conscience for her to directly address with her superiors, including the president himself if necessary. Her talk at the Rwandan genocide memorial of a “new commitment to the Rwandan people” will just be empty rhetoric if this decision is not reversed. Does Ambassador Power agree with the decision, or is she too afraid to voice her concerns? Is she trying to push for a change of policy in private? If so, is she willing to resign her post if she is not successful and go public?

    In her 2003 interview, Samantha Power said that standing up for what was right in Rwanda “would have required personal risk, putting your career on the line.” Is Ambassador Power willing to put her own career on the line for the sake of the Rwandan people today?

  • Huye: Two babies dumped in two different places

    Huye: Two babies dumped in two different places

    { {{Butare/Huye}} : Two babies were found dumped in two different places (Bisi Bya Huye and Taba) in Huye District in the Southern province of Rwanda. They were rushed to nearby hospital for treatment.}

    ‘We often receive abandoned babies. We take necessary care of them before entrusting the administrative authority that seeks their host families, “Said Dr. Saleh Niyonzima of Kabutare Hospital.

    Many cases of abandoned babies were recorded in the area. The area is populated with a big number of people most of them being youth and even students of the University of Rwanda/Butare campus

    The Vice Mayor of Huye in charge of Social Affairs, Christine Niwemugeni, confirmed that this crime is repetitive in Huye: “This is a problem for which we seek a lasting solution. Meanwhile these abandoned babies will be given to families willing to adopt”

    She said that this year six babies were abandoned by their mothers and some women and girls were caught in the act of abortion.

  • As Stern preps exit, NBA Finals format changed

    As Stern preps exit, NBA Finals format changed

    {David Stern’s NBA owners gathered one last time, toasting the outgoing commissioner before he leaves after 30 years on the job.}

    They also changed back one of the earliest changes Stern made.

    Leaving with Stern is the NBA Finals format he implemented in his first full year on the job, one that alleviated travel concerns but critics felt also gave an advantage to the lower-seeded team.

    Beginning with the 2014 finals, the higher-seeded team will host Games 1, 2, 5 and 7. The lower seed gets Games 3, 4 and 6, following the same format the NBA uses in all other rounds.

    The NBA for the previous 29 years has used what’s referred to as the 2-3-2 format, in which the higher seed hosts the first two games, then goes on the road for three straight.

    The 2-3-2 format was instituted in 1985 in part to ease the amount of cross-country travel with the Celtics and Lakers frequently meeting for the championship. But some felt it also worked against the team that should have the advantage.

    ”There certainly was a perception … it was unfair to the team that had the better record, that it was then playing the pivotal Game 5 on the road. So this obviously moves that game back to giving home-court advantage to the team with the better record if it’s a 2-2 series,” Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said.

    The unanimous vote to approve the 2-2-1-1-1 format came Wednesday during Stern’s final preseason meeting with his board of governors. Owners also voted to add an extra day between Games 6 and 7.

    The league’s competition committee had recommended the change last month back to 2-2-1-1-1, which was used in all but one finals from 1957 to 1984.

    Stern has often said he was acting on advice – or complaints – about the travel from former Celtics boss Red Auerbach when the finals format was switched. But with commercial flights long since replaced by charters, teams didn’t have the same difficulties now with the number of trips.

    Instead, the ones who had the higher seed found it more inconvenient, Stern said, to be on the road for as many as eight days in a row when the opponent hosted the middle three games.

    Silver, who will become commissioner after Stern retires Feb. 1, is a proponent of the 2-2-1-1-1 format, though he said Stern and other league executives all thought it was time for the change.

    ”It reached a crescendo where basketball people thought it was important and the business people stood down and said it was no longer necessary for the convenience of transportation or the media,” Silver said.

    Beyond the re-election of Spurs owner Peter Holt as chairman, there was little other business for the owners, who toasted Stern during dinner Tuesday night. Stern said there was a video tribute voiced by Bill Russell, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Larry Bird, Tim Duncan, Kobe Bryant and LeBron James, along with ”some speechifying” and ”a series of totally embarrassing photos of me over the last 36 years.”

    ”I got the opportunity to thank my colleagues at the NBA for their incredible work and saying how pleased I was that the league was in such good hands under those colleagues and Adam’s stewardship,” Stern said.

    The owners were also presented with a Stern bobblehead doll. The commissioner said Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert joked that unlike most bobbleheads whose heads nod up and down, Stern’s only moves side to side as if shaking its head no.

    ”It’s been a great opportunity,” Stern said. ”Believe it or not, even including my interaction with the media and the burns that come from being a lightning rod, it’s been a great run, and I’m grateful to the owners for giving me the opportunity.”

    AP

  • EU to hold Brussels summit amid US spying row

    EU to hold Brussels summit amid US spying row

    {An EU summit is due to begin in Brussels with fresh allegations of US spying threatening to overshadow talks.}

    It comes a day after German Chancellor Angela Merkel called President Barack Obama over claims that the US had monitored her mobile phone.

    France’s President Francois Hollande is pressing for the issue to be put on the agenda following reports that millions of French calls had been monitored.

    EU leaders will also discuss Europe’s economic recovery and immigration

    BBC Europe Editor Gavin Hewitt says some leaders are likely to want to use the summit to demand further clarification from Washington over the activities of its National Security Agency (NSA) in Europe.

    The US is being called to account by its allies over allegations of spying based on material said to originate from fugitive American leaker Edward Snowden.

    Mrs Merkel says she wants US officials to clarify the extent of their surveillance in Germany.

    Her spokesman said the German leader “views such practices… as completely unacceptable”.

    The White House said President Obama had told Mrs Merkel that the US was not monitoring her calls and would not in the future.

    However, it left open the question of whether calls had been listened to in the past.

    BBC

  • Speech of UN Resident Coordinator to mark the United Nations Day

    Speech of UN Resident Coordinator to mark the United Nations Day

    {As in other parts of the world, the UN Day will be celebrated today in Rwanda. The UN Day marks the anniversary of the founding of the United Nations since the UN Charter was signed on 24 October 1945 in San Francisco, USA. Over the years, the UN day has also provided the opportunity to recognize the immense contributions the United Nations has made to world peace, security and development.}

    The UN’s integrated approach to peace-building, to security and sustainable development has made it a veritable partner for nations and people throughout the world striving for better living conditions, stable environments and protection from all forms of disasters.

    The UN provides valuable support to countries to put in place policies and programmes for guaranteeing shared growth and prosperity, protection of basic human rights, including gender equality, evacuation and health promotion of sound environmental management as well as stable political and social conditions through reinforcement of participatory processes and mechanisms for human security. A practical expression of all this over the past twelve years has been the Millennium Development Goals.

    In many parts of the world, numerous UN workers risk their lives to protect innocent people from the horrors of war and natural disasters and in many of them make the ultimate sacrifice. Currently, millions of people depend on UN humanitarian personnel for life-saving assistance. By the end of 2012, over 45.2 million people (including 28.8 million internally displaced persons) were forcibly displaced worldwide as a result of persecution, conflict, generalized violence and human rights violations.

    The fighting in Syria is one of the biggest security challenges facing the global community today. In the Great Lakes Region, the war in Eastern DRC has resulted in hundreds of thousands of internally displaced individuals and refugee outflows into the neighbouring countries in the region, notably Rwanda. Similar situations obtain in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa regions.

    Looking forward, the UN has made the elimination of poverty, particularly in its extreme forms, and sustainability high development priorities. There has been important progress on many fronts. The Millennium Development Goals have cut poverty in half in many parts of the world, including in Africa. But to paraphrase President Paul Kagame’s words, the UN also recognizes “the MDGs as a floor and not the ceiling”.

    MDGs have provided the foundation for accelerated development and transformation. It is for this reason that the UN, under the leadership of Secretary-General Ban Ki – moon, is facilitating the shaping of an even more inspiring and ambitious post-2015 development agenda to maintain the momentum and is actively working towards reaching a global deal on climate change.

    In Rwanda, the UN contributed significantly to the positive development results the country has realized over the last two decades. The UN’s contribution to Rwanda’s immediate post-genocide recovery, reconstruction and high levels of economic and social development as well as political stability has been substantial. All of this has facilitated the remarkable progress the country has made towards achieving virtually all the MDGs ahead of the 2015 deadline. The UN also provides measurable support to the country in reinforcing its capacity to respond to natural disasters, pandemics and high refugee inflows as well as for environmental protection.

    In return, Rwanda has provided fertile ground for nurturing measures aimed at enhancing the effectiveness, efficiency and impact of UN’s development and humanitarian work at the country level. There is also broad appreciation for the immense contribution President Kagame has made to UN reforms at the global level.

    Importantly also, Rwanda’s immense contribution to UN’s Peace Keeping missions around the world is broadly recognized. As one of the initial pilot countries for delivering as one, Rwanda has amply demonstrated over the past five years the rationale for reforming the UN system’s operations at the country level and the very positive results that could be realized therefrom in terms of improved use of UN’s varied resources and assets. For the coming five years, the UN aims at building on the positive results of the pilot phase of delivering as one and has developed a new programme of support, the United Nations Development Assistance Programme, which responds directly to the key priorities articulated in the newly developed Economic Development and Poverty Reduction Strategy (EDPRS) II 2013-2018 and is highly results – oriented.

    The UN Country Team in Rwanda has demonstrated what a better coordinated UN system can achieve at the country level. And together, under strong but supportive Government leadership, we are striving to consolidate these efforts and build upon the gains realized so far.

    In the words of the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, “let us pledge to live up to the United Nations founding ideals by working together for peace, development and human rights”.