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29th
December 2009
Year in Review 2009
The United Nations takes on a
range of tough global challenges
*2009*
was the year in which the world absorbed the
full impact of the worst global economic setback
since the Great Depression, was startled by
the arrival of a novel influenza virus that
quickly reached pandemic scale, and was shocked
by a crisis in Gaza, which dealt another setback
to prospects for peace in the Middle East. It
also witnessed the most tangible evidence yet
that a changing climate is refashioning the
face of the planet.
But with the end of 2009 only days away, and
at the conclusion of a grueling conference on
climate change in Copenhagen, the outlines of
a global deal emerged. Breaking a virtual deadlock
that had prevailed for years, the Copenhagen
Accord – in the words of UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon – “marks a significant
step forward in negotiations for the first truly
global agreement that can limit and reduce greenhouse
gas emissions, support adaptation for the most
vulnerable and help to establish a new era of
environmentally sustainable growth.”
The meeting of some 120 Heads of State and Government
led to agreement that climate change adaptation
projects and prevention of deforestation and
forest degradation will be supported through
ramped-up funding: $30 billion for immediate
implementation over the next three years, and
$100 billion a year by 2020. The funding would
go through a newly established Copenhagen Green
Climate Fund. Many developing countries, including
Brazil, China, India and South Africa, have
adopted new climate strategies with proposed
emission reductions, and the accord would provide
a way to record those efforts. And for the first
time, countries agreed to limit global temperature
rise to below 2ºC.
While falling short of a new, binding international
convention, the historic meeting responded to
the challenge the UN Secretary-General set when
he hosted a climate change summit in New York
in September. It also sets the stage for further
negotiations toward binding international agreement
in Mexico in 2010.
*Protecting the poor, moving toward economic
recovery*
The year started off with the devastating economic
downturn gathering force and continued turmoil
in financial sectors, especially in the developed
world. In contrast to the beggar-thy-neighbour
policies that followed the crash of 1929, however,
the global community responded swiftly and with
an unprecedented level of cooperation:
• The UN Secretary-General was among the
first to advocate behind closed doors for a
massive effort to re-start economic growth and
avert deeper economic damage and impoverishment.
The G20 – itself a hastily contrived response
to the crisis – agreed to a package of
$1.1 trillion at its London meeting in April.
• Under the pressure of crisis, reform
measures advocated by the UN began falling into
place. Developing economies received incrementally
larger voting rights within the Bretton Woods
Institutions. A new allocation of $250 billion
in “Special Drawing Rights” provides
a tentative first step toward global capacity
to move away from reliance on a single national
currency for settling debts and holding reserves,
toward a more stable global basket.
• A feared pullback of *official development
assistance* (ODA) did not materialize. Although
still short of the targets agreed at the 2005
Gleneagles G8 meeting, aid rose to an all-time
high in 2008. Backed by the Secretary-General’s
assertion that the poor must be protected during
the crisis and by concerns that progress towards
achievement of the Millennium Development Goals
would be reversed, projections indicate that
ODA will increase further in 2009-2010.
• Secretary-General Ban led the UN’s
continued focus on the plight of the poor in
launching a new *Global Impact and Vulnerability
Alert System* to provide real-time data on how
the most vulnerable are affected by economic
crisis, and called for a summit in September
2010 to review progress and gaps in attaining
the MDGs.
A particularly painful result of reduced purchasing
power in the wake of the economic crisis has
been the resurgence in malnourishment. After
years of steady decrease, the number of hungry
in the world rose in 2008 and again in 2009,
to exceed one billion. In this regard, the Secretary-General’s
creation in 2008 of an *anti-hunger task force*
has proven prescient.
The High-Level Task Force is working with Governments,
business and civil society in food-deficit poor
countries to shore up their agricultural base.
Taking advantage of the multifaceted resources
of UN member agencies, it supports small-scale
farmers whom the Secretary-General calls “the
heart and soul of food security and poverty
reduction.” Liaising with donor countries,
the Task Force obtained commitments in 2009
to double the amount of aid devoted to agriculture.
Facing the wildfire spread of the H1N1 influenza
virus, the world benefited from spadework already
carried out in response to the avian influenza
(H5N1) threat. Protocols and practice exercises
developed in countries around the world under
the guidance of the Secretary-General’s
*UN System Influenza Coordinator* helped to
manage the crisis, and a decisive World Health
Organization response helped to calm nervous
publics around the world.
The Secretary-General and the WHO Director-General
issued calls for global solidarity in the face
of the pandemic, and successfully negotiated
for pharmaceutical companies to donate 10 per
cent of their H1N1 vaccine production to the
90 countries judged the most vulnerable to pandemic
influenza. While the doses that are being contributed
will cover only two per cent of the population
of these countries, experts judge it sufficient
to vaccinate key groups such as pregnant women
and medical workers.
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*Making
women safer*
Reflecting the priority placed by Secretary-General
Ban on ending violence against women and girls,
the UN strengthened its work on *violence
against women* in 2009, under the umbrella
of the Secretary-General’s UNiTE to
End Violence against Women campaign. As part
of the growing effort to include men as part
of the solution, the Secretary-General launched
his Network of Men Leaders in November to
inspire men and boys everywhere to speak out
against violence. His visit to the HEAL Africa
Hospital for victims of sexual violence in
the Democratic Republic of the Congo brought
attention to the use of rape as a tactic of
war. In September, the Security Council adopted
landmark resolution 1888 on women and peace
and security, demanding that all parties to
armed conflict take immediate action to protect
civilians, including women and children, from
all forms of sexual violence. Reflecting a
recommendation of the Secretary-General, the
Council also requested that he appoint a Special
Representative to address the crime of *sexual
violence in conflict*. The new office will
be established in 2010.
*A new
gender architecture*
In late 2009, the General Assembly took a
major step towards addressing the fragmentation
of the Organization’s work on women’s
issues, when Member States voted to approve
a new gender architecture for the UN system.
As a result, four currently separate offices
will be merged: the Office of the Special
Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement of
Women (OSAGI); the Division for the Advancement
of Women in the Department for Economic and
Social Affairs (DAW/DESA); the United Nations
Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM); and the
United Nations International Research and
Training Institute for the Advancement of
Women (INSTRAW).
Intensive work is currently under way to develop
a proposal for an authoritative entity that
will be comparable to other major UN funds
and programmes, and which will be equipped
to tackle women’s issues head-on through
effective programmes. In the coming year,
Secretary-General Ban is expected to appoint
an Under-Secretary-General to head the new
entity and lead the UN’s efforts in
this field.
*Peace and security *
UN peacekeeping saw the largest deployment
of peacekeepers on the ground ever in 2009,
with some 115,000 deployed in 17 peace operations.
Faced with overstretch and other challenges,
the Departments of Peacekeeping Operations
and Field Support embarked on a major dialogue
with their peacekeeping partners - the Security
Council, troop and finance-contributing countries
and within the Secretariat itself - on what
the new generation of peacekeeping should
look like, in the *“New Horizon”
*project.
On the ground, peacekeeping faced major challenges
in the eastern* Democratic Republic of the
Congo*.* *Government armed forces - which
the peacekeeping mission was mandated to support
- reportedly engaged in attacks on civilians.
In addition to protecting civilians, the mission
was charged with consolidating and supporting
the government army, the FARDC. On a more
positive note, some degree of “protection
of civilians” was achieved on the ground
in *Haiti*, in large part because MINUSTAH
peacekeepers took on urban gangs. Moving forward,
the Secretary-General appointed former US
President Bill Clinton to take the lead on
the next step - jobs and development.
The African Union - United Nations Hybrid
Operation in *Darfur* continued to grow in
numbers and effectiveness throughout 2009.
By December, UNAMID had nearly 15,000 troops
and 4,600 police on the ground, reaching 75
per cent of its authorized strength. Despite
the positive impact of the peacekeepers, however,
parties to the conflict have failed to commit
to a comprehensive negotiated settlement to
the crisis.
In other
key developments:
• The Secretary-General used several
opportunities during the year to put *nuclear
disarmament* and non-proliferation back on
the international agenda, reiterating his
five-point plan to “drop the bomb,”
as he termed it. He opened the annual Conference
on Disarmament in Geneva in May, helping to
break a 10-year deadlock over its programme
of work. Meanwhile, United States President
Obama and Russian Federation President Medvedev
announced commitments to begin reducing their
sizable nuclear arsenals. The culmination
of the year for nuclear disarmament came with
the first Security Council meeting on the
issue in September.
• Responding to the crisis in *Gaza,*
the Secretary-General launched a $613 million
appeal to help provide water, sanitation,
health care and food for the following six
to nine months. He continued during the year
to call upon the Government of Israel to allow
unimpeded access for humanitarian aid and
goods needed for reconstruction and to immediately
address the water, sanitation and environmental
crisis in Gaza.
• The *Goldstone Commission*, appointed
by the UN Human Rights Council, presented
its 500-page report on human rights violations
during the Gaza conflict to the General Assembly
in October. The Assembly voted to adopt a
non-binding resolution calling for Israelis
and Palestinians to undertake credible, independent
investigations of alleged war crimes committed
during the Gaza conflict last December and
January.
• Throughout the year, the Secretary-General
remained actively engaged on *Myanmar*, including
efforts to attain the release of Nobel laureate
and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi and
all other political prisoners, and to call
for legitimate elections.
• The Secretary-General also visited
*Sri Lanka* in May to press for better treatment
of hundreds of thousands of IDPs from the
rebel-held areas, who remained in camps after
the government’s rout of the Tamil Tiger
rebels after a 25-year conflict. In November,
he was able to welcome Sri Lanka’s decision
to grant more freedom of movement to internally
displaced persons (IDPs) and to release more
than half of the IDPs from the camps.
Tragically, the year included *deadly assaults
on UN personnel*. Shortly after five World
Food Programme employees died in a suicide
bomber attack in October in Islamabad, Pakistan,
an assault on a UN guest house in Kabul, Afghanistan,
killed another five UN staff. These were among
the hardest news items to bear in a year that
included many difficult challenges, but also
resilient and determined responses on the
part of the United Nations and the world community.
Discuss
Story
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