person:ban ki-moon

  • L’#Union_africaine fête ses 50 ans.

    Les dirigeants des 54 États membres de l’Union africaine (UA) célèbrent en grande pompe samedi 25 mai à Addis-Abeba le cinquantenaire de la création de l’Organisation de l’Unité africaine (OUA), ancêtre de l’actuelle organisation continentale, oubliant pour un temps les problèmes de l’Afrique pour souligner ses progrès.

    [...]

    La fête terminée, les chefs d’État africains se replongeront, dès dimanche, dans les problèmes africains au cours de leur sommet semestriel de deux jours. A l’ordre du jour, les situations sécuritaires au #Mali ou dans l’est de la République démocratique du Congo (#RDC), et la situation politique à #Madagascar, empêtré dans une crise depuis 2009 et exclu depuis de l’organisation. Car, si la situation en matière de conflits s’est améliorée, l’Afrique reste le théâtre de nombreuses crises, politiques ou militaires.

    Au cours des cinquante dernières années, les indicateurs de #développement en Afrique – #santé, #éducation, #mortalité_infantile, croissance économique, gouvernance – se sont également améliorés. Certains de ses pays connaissent des croissances économiques parmi les plus rapides au monde, selon le #FMI, et le continent a attiré, ces dernières années, d’importants niveaux d’investissements. Reste que, selon l’indice de développement humain (#IDH) des Nations unies, les douze pays les moins développés du monde sont en Afrique, et au sein des 26 pays de la queue du classement, un seul n’est pas africain : l’Afghanistan.

    Durant ses trente-neuf années d’existence, ayant fait de la non-ingérence un principe fondateur, l’OUA apparut souvent comme un organe sans pouvoir. Pour faire oublier ce passé peu glorieux, l’UA, qui lui a succédé en 2002, s’est dotée d’institutions (Commission, Conseil de paix et de sécurité, Parlement panafricain...) et de mécanismes plus ambitieux. Elle a suspendu et sanctionné depuis sa création plusieurs de ses membres, théâtres de coups d’Etat, même si elle fait toujours preuve d’une certaine timidité vis-à-vis de ses plus mauvais élèves en matière de droits démocratiques ou de scrutins à la validité douteuse.

    http://www.lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2013/05/25/l-union-africaine-celebre-ses-cinquante-ans-d-existence_3417318_3212.html


  • Centre d’actualités de l’ONU - Ban se félicite que la sécurité routière soit au cœur de la Journée mondiale des télécommunications

    http://www.un.org/apps/newsFr/storyF.asp?NewsID=30352&Cr=&Cr1=t%C3%A9l%C3%A9communications

    17 mai 2013 – Le Secrétaire général des Nations Unies s’est félicité vendredi que la Journée mondiale des télécommunications et de la société de l’information ait mis cette année l’accent sur la sécurité routière.

    Les accidents de la route causent en effet près de 1,3 million de morts chaque année et font des millions de blessés et de handicapés à vie, entraînant ainsi un lourd fardeau économique pour les familles et les pays, indique Ban Ki-moon dans son message.

    #sécurité_routière #médias #informations #technologie #accidents_de_la_route


  • L’ONU tétanisée par les raids israéliens en Syrie
    http://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2013/05/07/l-onu-tetanisee-par-les-raids-israeliens-en-syrie_3172229_3210.html

    Selon Richard Gowan, directeur associé du Centre sur la coopération internationale à l’université de New York, « ces raids ne pouvaient plus mal tomber pour l’administration Obama, car ils risquent de saper les efforts de John Kerry en faveur d’un consensus diplomatique sur la Syrie ».


  • IPS – U.N. Accused of Playing Down Nuke Disarmament Conference | Inter Press Service
    http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/05/u-n-accused-of-playing-down-nuke-disarmament-conference

    ... the Group of 77, the largest single coalition of 132 developing countries, implicitly accuses the United Nations of falling short in its efforts to publicise a meeting on nuclear disarmament scheduled to take place Sep. 26.

    Ambassador Peter Thomson of Fiji, the G77 chair, last week described the upcoming talks as “the first-ever high level meeting of the General Assembly on nuclear disarmament.”

    He said the meeting is of importance to developing nations, and therefore, all efforts should be made to give it timely and wide publicity.

    A G77 delegate told IPS the conference is not getting the advance publicity it should, probably because three of the big powers, the United States, UK and France, are not supportive of the meeting.

    “We have not seen anything on the high level meeting so far,” he added.

    The lack of coverage stands in contrast to the strong public stand taken by the secretary-general, who has consistently called for the total elimination of nuclear weapons.

    Asked about the significance of the upcoming meeting, Dr. John Burroughs, executive director of the New York-based Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy, told IPS the meeting is a chance for world leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama and others, to give direction to the nuclear disarmament enterprise, “which is now drifting aimlessly despite much rhetoric over the past five years.”


  • Deux articles sur l’usage d’armes chimiques en Syrie.
    Carla Del Ponte, en charge de la Commission des Nations Unies sur la Syrie, indique ne pas détenir de preuve de l’implication du régime d’Assad dans l’usage d’armes chimiques. En revanche, elle fait valoir que de fortes suspicions pèsent sur l’opposition qui pourrait avoir utilisé du gas sarin. Ali Akbar Salehi, Ministre des Affaires étrangères d’Iran, émet la même hypothèse.

    Article 1
    U.N. has testimony that Syrian rebels used sarin gas: investigator
    Sun, May 05 (2013) 18:13 PM EDT

    http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSBRE94409Z20130505?irpc=932

    GENEVA (Reuters) - U.N. human rights investigators have gathered testimony from casualties of Syria’s civil war and medical staff indicating that rebel forces have used the nerve agent sarin, one of the lead investigators said on Sunday.

    The United Nations independent commission of inquiry on Syria has not yet seen evidence of government forces having used chemical weapons, which are banned under international law, said commission member Carla Del Ponte.

    “Our investigators have been in neighboring countries interviewing victims, doctors and field hospitals and, according to their report of last week which I have seen, there are strong, concrete suspicions but not yet incontrovertible proof of the use of sarin gas, from the way the victims were treated,” Del Ponte said in an interview with Swiss-Italian television.

    “This was use on the part of the opposition, the rebels, not by the government authorities,” she added, speaking in Italian.

    Del Ponte, a former Swiss attorney-general who also served as prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, gave no details as to when or where sarin may have been used.

    The Geneva-based inquiry into war crimes and other human rights violations is separate from an investigation of the alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria instigated by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, which has since stalled.

    President Bashar al-Assad’s government and the rebels accuse each another of carrying out three chemical weapon attacks, one near Aleppo and another near Damascus, both in March, and another in Homs in December.

    The civil war began with anti-government protests in March 2011. The conflict has now claimed an estimated 70,000 lives and forced 1.2 million Syrian refugees to flee.

    The United States has said it has “varying degrees of confidence” that sarin has been used by Syria’s government on its people.

    President Barack Obama last year declared that the use or deployment of chemical weapons by Assad would cross a “red line”.

    (Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Tom Pfeiffer)

    Article 2
    Iran’s Salehi says chemical weapons ’red line’ in Syria
    30 avril 2013

    http://tehrantimes.com/politics/107297-irans-salehi-says-chemical-weapons-red-line-in-syria

    TEHRAN – Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi insisted on Tuesday that use of chemical weapons in Syria would also be a “red line” for Tehran, but suggests rebel forces should be investigated.

    According to ISNA news agency, Salehi said the use of chemical weapons “by anybody is our red line.” But he said opposition groups could have used chemical agents and demanded a UN probe.


  • Au #Mali, les populations mobilisées
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2013/05/MARO/49097

    Autosuffisance alimentaire, accès à l’#Eau, alphabétisation des #Femmes : le Secours populaire français mène avec l’Association malienne de solidarité et de coopération internationale pour le développement, son partenaire local, de nombreux projets dans la région de Kayes. / #Afrique, #France, #Agriculture, (...) / Afrique, France, Agriculture, #Aide_au_développement, #Action_humanitaire, Eau, Éducation, Femmes, #ONG, Pauvreté, Santé, Solidarité, Mali, #Afrique_de_l'Ouest - (...)

    #Éducation #Pauvreté #Santé #Solidarité #2013/05



  • U.N. chief scolds envoy for implying U.S. policy sparked Boston attack | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/24/us-usa-explosions-un-idUSBRE93N16D20130424

    Richard Falk, U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, wrote on his blog on Sunday that “the American global domination project is bound to generate all kinds of resistance in the post-colonial world.”


  • Le Conseil de sécurité réfléchit aux moyens de mettre fin aux #viols dans les zones de #conflit
    http://www.un.org/apps/newsFr/storyF.asp?NewsID=30168

    De son côté, la Représentante spéciale chargée de la question des violences sexuelles commises en période de conflit, Zainab Hawa Bangura, a présenté le rapport du Secrétaire général dont le Conseil de sécurité était aujourd’hui saisi, rapport qui couvre 22 zones de conflit, dont pour la première fois le Mali.

    Le document met notamment en évidence le lien entre violence sexuelle et exploitation illégale des ressources, insiste sur les causes de tels crimes dans les déplacements de populations et met l’accent sur les mariages forcés, viols et esclavage sexuel imputables aux groupes armés. Par ailleurs, il dénonce l’utilisation de la violence sexuelle comme tactique d’intimidation dans le contexte des détentions ou des interrogatoires et insiste sur la nécessité de disposer d’informations quant au sort des enfants nés de femmes violées en temps de guerre.

    « Le rapport met l’accent sur l’urgence de veiller à ce que les considérations en matière de #violences_sexuelles soient systématiquement prises en compte dans les processus et les accords de paix, ainsi que dans les réformes du secteur de la sécurité et les processus de démobilisation, désarmement et réintégration (DDR) auxquels les Nations Unies sont parties prenantes.

    repéré par @reka



  • « Séquestration » à Gaza :
    http://www.un.org/News/fr-press/docs/2013/dbf130405.doc.htm

    UNRWA

    Des manifestants ont attaqué, hier, le site du Bureau de Gaza de l’Office de secours et de travaux des Nations Unies pour les réfugiés de Palestine dans le Proche-Orient (UNRWA), en réaction aux coupes opérées au programme que fournit l’Office engendrées par les pénuries budgétaires. Cet incident est le résultat d’une escalade incroyable et choquante après une série de manifestations organisées cette semaine.


  • «Il sera bientôt trop tard» - Reporterre
    http://www.reporterre.net/spip.php?article4065

    Le secrétaire général des Nations unies Ban Ki-moon, pour la première fois en visite à Monaco mercredi, a estimé qu’il serait « bientôt trop tard » pour sauver l’environnement de la planète si on ne mettait pas en place un « instrument contraignant » d’ici à 2015.

    « Les paroles n’ont pas été suivies d’effets. Il sera bientôt trop tard. Nos modes de consommation sont incompatibles avec la santé de la planète. Notre empreinte écologique est démesurée », a asséné Ban Ki-moon, devant un parterre de personnalités.

    « Nous devons agir maintenant si nous voulons qu’en 2050, la planète soit vivable pour ses neuf milliards d’habitants », a-t-il plaidé.



  • Syrie : les soupçons d’armes chimiques se précisent
    http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2013/03/20/01003-20130320ARTFIG00734-syrie-les-soupcons-d-armes-chimiquesse-precisent.

    Bien qu’aucune confirmation indépendante et officielle ne soit intervenue, les suspicions d’usage d’armes non conventionnelles ont été renforcées mercredi. Pas seulement par les témoignages et les photos venus d’Alep. Mais par les déclarations de certains responsables internationaux. Pour Yuval Steinitz, le tout nouveau ministre du Renseignement israélien, il est « apparemment clair » que des armes chimiques ont été utilisées en Syrie. « Nous ne pouvons laisser ces armes tomber aux mains de terroristes », a prévenu le président israélien, Shimon Pérès, à l’issue d’une rencontre avec Barack Obama. Depuis des mois, Israël s’inquiète de ce que l’arsenal chimique syrien - le plus important de la région - puisse tomber dans les mains de groupes qui lui sont hostiles, notamment le Hezbollah libanais, allié de Bachar el-Assad. L’État hébreu est sans nul doute l’un des mieux informés sur la question. Alliée de Bachar, la Russie a repris à son compte les accusations du régime syrien.

    – Comment Isabelle Lasserre peut-elle affirmer sans rire que l’« État hébreu est sans nul doute l’un des mieux informés sur la question » ?

    – Il n’y a pas que « la Russie » qui reprend la version « du régime » ; pour le coup, l’Observatoire syrien d’Abdelrahman annonce lui aussi que ce sont bien des soldats de l’armée qui sont morts à Khan al-Assal :
    http://news.yahoo.com/twenty-six-killed-syrian-attack-monitoring-group-124003651.html

    “Sixteen Syrian regular army soldiers were killed in Khan al-Assal,” Rami Abdelrahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, told Reuters. “Ten more died in hospital but I cannot confirm if they are civilians or soldiers.”

    – La confusion entretenue, ici, par l’expression « aux mains des terroristes » est très impressionnante : les Israéliens désignent explicitement le Hezbollah, et tous les autres désignent les groupes jidahiste en Syrie, qui sont ouvertement des ennemis du Hezbollah. L’annonce « changement de nature » du conflit repose alors tout entier sur cette confusion entretenue par le pays « le mieux informé » (mais qui ment malheureusement de manière pathologique) : ce sont des groupes jihadistes alliés des États-Unis qui sont accusés d’avoir utilisé des armes chimiques, ce qui « prouverait » que des groupes terroristes opposés aux États-Unis risqueraient d’obtenir ces mêmes armes chimiques.


  • Les toilettes, un luxe pour 2,5 milliards d’humains
    http://www.lemonde.fr/planete/article/2012/11/20/les-toilettes-un-luxe-pour-2-5-milliards-d-humains_1793089_3244.html

    Ne pas avoir de WC à disposition, c’est l’assurance d’heures de travail ou d’école perdues dans la cruelle quête d’un endroit convenable, ce sont tout à la fois des problèmes de vie quotidienne, de sécurité pour les femmes surtout, d’environnement et, bien sûr, de santé. Choléra, typhoïde, légionellose et autres maladies hydriques sont directement liés aux lacunes de l’assainissement. La diarrhée tue environ 2,2 millions de personnes par an, des enfants de moins de 5 ans pour l’essentiel, en grande majorité dans les pays pauvres.

    Globalement, les indicateurs de l’OMS et de l’Unicef se redressent. Entre 1990 et 2010, le pourcentage de gens ayant accès à des toilettes améliorées est passé de 49 % à 63 % ; 11 % au lieu de 6 % partagent soit un WC avec plusieurs autres familles, soit des toilettes publiques, tandis que le nombre d’utilisateurs d’installations de fortune sans hygiène s’est réduit de 20 % à 15 %. Enfin, ce sont désormais 15 % et non plus 25 % d’humains qui se soulagent en plein air.

    #toilettes #choléra #pauvreté

    • Ils ne peuvent pas s’en empêcher, hein : « l’assurance d’heures de travail ou d’école perdues ». L’important est donc juste d’employer sa vie et mieux encore de la conserver pour toujours mieux l’employer par accumulation de capital humain.

      Vivement que le méchant marché me propose du kebab hallal d’éditorialiste écologiste

    • @bp314
      On peut voire cette réflexion comme une pression à la rentabilité, le marché qui ne voudrait pas d’improductifs. Je pense que c’est pertinent, mais il y a plus que cela.
      J’avais pris cette mention comme un rappel des déséquilibres que provoquent cette inquiétude de l’accès aux toilettes. Cad que quant vous êtes pauvres vous avez déjà plus de difficulté à obtenir de bons résultats scolaires et un emploi stable et rémunérateur, parceque vous n’avez pas de lieu au calme pour faire vos devoirs, vous n’avez pas dans votre entourage de personnes qui puisse vous aider dans vos devoirs... et en plus vous devez vous occuper de trouver des toilettes ce qui est une perte de temps et de revenu, et physiquement stressant de devoir se retenir car la concentration en est diminué, sans parlé des maladies qu’on attrape à se retenir ou en étant en contacte des excréments, des mouches etc... C’est un obstacle de plus à la sortie de la pauvreté. Ca ne s’oppose pas à ce que tu dit @bp314, c’est juste que l’instruction et l’acces à l’emploi sont tout de même des moyens d’élévation sociale dans le monde tel qu’il est aujourd’hui.


  • XXVI° Congrès du Mouvement fédéraliste mondial (#WFM) - Winnipeg, Canada - Juillet 2012
    http://www.pressefederaliste.eu/XXVIo-Congres-du-Mouvement

    Du 9 au 13 juillet s’est tenu à Winnipeg, caîtale de la province du Manitoba, au Canada, le 26° Congrès du WFM. Les réunions se sont déroulées dans l’austère bâtiment qui est le siège central de l’Université de Winnipeg, fondée il y a 125 ans. Les rencontres ont compris des réunions du Comité exécutif et du Conseil (aussi bien instances sortantes que celles nouvellement élues), sessions plénières du Congrès, réunions de commissions, conférences thématiques et d’autres initiatives. Au Congrès ont participé (...)

    #Numéro_157_—2012/09 #FED'Actualité


  • Erdogan was correct – Zionism is racism
    http://www.bariatwan.com/english/?p=1413

    Frankly I don’t understand the cause of this uproar and the merciless attack Turkey has faced from an ally in the US or United Nations Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon.

    Plenty of UN resolutions have been passed condemning the Zionist movement’s criminal acts against the Palestinian people.

    Yes, Zionism is a crime against humanity. It has stolen land and displaced people from it – the Palestinians. It has committed ethnic cleansing, leaving six million people as refugees in neighbouring countries or as international exiles.

    Zionism is not a sacred cow exempt from criticism. Israel was born out of a systematic policy of ethnic cleansing that it used to gain domination of the Palestinian Territories. This is all documented in a book by Israeli historian Ilan Pappe – The Ethnic Cleansing Of Palestine.

    Turkey’s Prime Minister has not told a single untruth.

    In fact, Erdogan should go further and detail the crimes Zionism has committed in the last 80 years: the Deir Yassin massacre, Sabra and Shatila, dropping white phosphorus on civilians as well as other activities in the Gaza Strip which international legal expert Richard Goldstone described as war crimes.

    Turkey has itself suffered at the hands of this terrorism, when Israeli naval forces attacked the Mavi Marmara humanitarian convoy which was trying to break the blockade on the Gaza Strip and deliver humanitarian aid, medicine and other medical equipment. Nine activists died.

    Strange that the US did not offer its sympathy when Israel attacked the Turkish convoy.

    I respect freedom of expression. I support rational criticism based on historic fact. I also condemn people who are selective about which political movements they criticise – be it Zionism or otherwise.

    But there is a difference between Judaism and Zionism – one is a religion, the other is a political movement founded on and dedicated to the displacement of the Palestinian people.


  • UN decision to claim diplomatic immunity for #cholera outbreak in #Haiti was cold, but correct - Juliette Kayyem - The Boston Globe
    http://bostonglobe.com/opinion/columns/2013/02/28/decision-claim-diplomatic-immunity-for-cholera-outbreak-haiti-was-cold-but-correct/MxeER5UM6aWzZB2WNJtjgI/story.html

    There are two sides to globalization. The bad side, as is evident in Haiti, is that once-isolated microbes can kill victims across the globe, especially in places where sanitation and clean water are lacking. The beneficial side is that when a nation needs the global community to respond after a horrible earthquake, public safety resources and medical expertise are available.

    rare papier en faveur de l’immunité des #Nations_unies


  • Haiti: fight against cholera continues, but claims against UN ‘not receivable’
    http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=44197

    In November 2011, a claim for compensation was brought against the UN on behalf of victims of the cholera outbreak in Haiti.

    “Today, the United Nations advised the claimants’ representatives that the claims are not receivable pursuant to Section 29 of the Convention on the Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations,”

    #choléra #haïti #santé #nations-unies #circulez-y-a-rien-à-voir


  • Renowned US doctor appointed to support UN efforts to eliminate cholera in Haiti
    http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=43853&Cr=haiti&Cr1=cholera

    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has appointed renowned United States physician Paul Farmer to help galvanize support to eliminate cholera in Haiti, where the disease has already claimed over 7,750 lives.

    #nations_unies #un #haiti #cholera #santé


  • UN Gives Journalism Prize to Investigation Exposing UN Responsibility for Cholera – And Still Won’t Accept Responsibility | Relief and Reconstruction Watch
    http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/relief-and-reconstruction-watch/un-gives-journalism-prize-to-investigation-exposing-un-responsibility-for-chol

    Tonight, in a ceremony presided over by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, BBC correspondent Mark Doyle and producer Piers Scholfield will be presented with an award from the U.N. Correspondents Association (UNCA). The award, one of many to be handed out, is described by the UNCA as being for “the best coverage of the United Nations and its agencies.” Certainly by “best” they do not mean the most flattering. The BBC radio documentary that earned Scholfield and Doyle the prize was an investigation into the source of the cholera outbreak in Haiti, which over the past two years has killed over 7,800 and sickened over 625,000. A host of scientific evidence, as well as on the ground reporting, including by Doyle and Scholfield, has pinpointed a U.N. military base as the source of the outbreak.

    (...)  Yet despite the U.N.’s pledge to support this plan, the U.N. has failed to ever accept responsibility for the epidemic.

    #haïti #choléra #nations_unies #UN


  • Mali : le Conseil de sécurité de l’ONU devrait bientôt autoriser l’intervention militaire - Mali / ONU - RFI

    http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20121206-mali-conseil-securite-onu-devrait-autoriser-intervention-militaire?ns_c

    Le Mali a demandé ce mercredi 5 décembre 2012 au Conseil de sécurité des Nations unies une « action rapide » pour autoriser le déploiement d’une force internationale dans le nord du pays, tenu par les islamistes. Et ce malgré les hésitations du secrétaire général Ban Ki-moon, qui adopte une approche prudente. Par ailleurs, l’ONU a placé ce mercredi le Mujao sur sa liste noire.


  • Full text: Abbas speech to UN General Assembly

    November 30, 2012 by occupiedpalestine 0 Comments

    196453_345x230[1]
    Maan News Agency | Nov 30, 2012

    New York
    Nov. 29, 2012

    Mr. President of the General Assembly,
    Your Excellency Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon,
    Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    Palestine comes today to the United Nations General Assembly at a time when it is still tending to its wounds and still burying its beloved martyrs of children, women and men who have fallen victim to the latest Israeli aggression, still searching for remnants of life amid the ruins of homes destroyed by Israeli bombs on the Gaza Strip, wiping out entire families, their men, women and children murdered along with their dreams, their hopes, their future and their longing to live an ordinary life and to live in freedom and peace.

    Palestine comes today to the General Assembly because it believes in peace and because its people, as proven in past days, are in desperate need of it.

    Palestine comes today to this prestigious international forum, representative and protector of international legitimacy, reaffirming our conviction that the international community now stands before the last chance to save the two-State solution.

    Palestine comes to you today at a defining moment regionally and internationally, in order to reaffirm its presence and to try to protect the possibilities and the foundations of a just peace that is deeply hoped for in our region.

    Mr. President,
    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    The Israeli aggression against our people in the Gaza Strip has confirmed once again the urgent and pressing need to end the Israeli occupation and for our people to gain their freedom and independence. This aggression also confirms the Israeli Government’s adherence to the policy of occupation, brute force and war, which in turn obliges the international community to shoulder its responsibilities towards the Palestinian people and towards peace.

    This is why we are here today.

    I say with great pain and sorrow … there was certainly no one in the world that required that tens of Palestinian children lose their lives in order to reaffirm the above-mentioned facts. There was no need for thousands of deadly raids and tons of explosives for the world to be reminded that there is an occupation that must come to an end and that there are a people that must be liberated. And, there was no need for a new, devastating war in order for us to be aware of the absence of peace.

    This is why we are here today.

    Mr. President,
    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    The Palestinian people, who miraculously recovered from the ashes of Al-Nakba of 1948, which was intended to extinguish their being and to expel them in order to uproot and erase their presence, which was rooted in the depths of their land and depths of history. In those dark days, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were torn from their homes and displaced within and outside of their homeland, thrown from their beautiful, embracing, prosperous country to refugee camps in one of the most dreadful campaigns of ethnic cleansing and dispossession in modern history. In those dark days, our people had looked to the United Nations as a beacon of hope and appealed for ending the injustice and for achieving justice and peace, the realization of our rights, and our people still believe in this and continue to wait.

    This is why we are here today.

    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    In the course of our long national struggle, our people have always strived to ensure harmony and conformity between the goals and means of their struggle and international law and spirit of the era in accordance with prevailing realities and changes. And, our people always have strived not to lose their humanity, their highest, deeply-held moral values and their innovative abilities for survival, steadfastness, creativity and hope, despite the horrors that befell them and continue to befall them today as a consequence of Al-Nakba and its horrors.

    Despite the enormity and weight of this task, the Palestine Liberation Organization, the sole, legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and the constant leader of their revolution and struggle, has consistently strived to achieve this harmony and conformity.

    When the Palestine National Council decided in 1988 to pursue the Palestinian peace initiative and adopted the Declaration of Independence, which was based on resolution 181 (II) (29 November 1947), adopted by your august body, it was in fact undertaking, under the leadership of the late President Yasser Arafat, a historic, difficult and courageous decision that defined the requirements for a historic reconciliation that would turn the page on war, aggression and occupation.

    This was not an easy matter. Yet, we had the courage and sense of high responsibility to make the right decision to protect the higher national interests of our people and to confirm our adherence to international legitimacy, and it was a decision which in that same year was welcomed, supported and blessed by this high body that is meeting today.

    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    We have heard and you too have heard specifically over the past months the incessant flood of Israeli threats in response to our peaceful, political and diplomatic endeavor for Palestine to acquire non-member observer status in the United Nations. And, you have surely witnessed how some of these threats have been carried out in a barbaric and horrific manner, just days ago in the Gaza Strip.

    We have not heard one word from any Israeli official expressing any sincere concern to save the peace process. On the contrary, our people have witnessed, and continue to witness, an unprecedented intensification of military assaults, the blockade, settlement activities and ethnic cleansing, particularly in Occupied East Jerusalem, and mass arrests, attacks by settlers and other practices by which this Israeli occupation is becoming synonymous with an apartheid system of colonial occupation, which institutionalizes the plague of racism and entrenches hatred and incitement.

    What permits the Israeli Government to blatantly continue with its aggressive policies and the perpetration of war crimes stems from its conviction that it is above the international law and that it has immunity from accountability and consequences. This belief, unfortunately, is bolstered by the failure by some to condemn and demand the cessation of its violations and crimes and by positions that equate the victim and the executioner.

    The moment has arrived for the world to say clearly: Enough of aggression, settlements and occupation.

    This is why we are here now.

    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    We did not come here seeking to delegitimize a State established years ago, and that is Israel; rather we came to affirm the legitimacy of the State that must now achieve its independence, and that is Palestine. We did not come here to add further complications to the peace process, which Israel’s policies have thrown into the intensive care unit; rather we came to launch a final serious attempt to achieve peace. Our endeavor is not aimed at terminating what remains of the negotiations process, which has lost its objective and credibility, but rather aimed at trying to breathe new life into the negotiations and at setting a solid foundation for it based on the terms of reference of the relevant international resolutions in order for the negotiations to succeed.

    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    On behalf of the Palestine Liberation Organization, I say: We will not give up, we will not tire, and our determination will not wane and we will continue to strive to achieve a just peace.

    However, above all and after all, I affirm that our people will not relinquish their inalienable national rights, as defined by United Nations resolutions. And our people cling to the right to defend themselves against aggression and occupation and they will continue their popular, peaceful resistance and their epic steadfastness, and will continue to build on their land. And, they will end the division and strengthen their national unity. We will accept no less than the independence of the State of Palestine, with East Jerusalem as its capital, on all the Palestinian territory occupied in 1967, to live in peace and security alongside the State of Israel, and a solution for the refugee issue on the basis of resolution 194 (III), as per the operative part of the Arab Peace Initiative. I don’t think that is terrorism that we are pursuing in the United Nations.

    Yet, we must repeat here once again our warning: the window of opportunity is narrowing and time is quickly running out. The rope of patience is shortening and hope is withering. The innocent lives that have been taken by Israeli bombs – more than 168 martyrs, mostly children and women, including 12 members of one family, the Dalou family, in Gaza – are a painful reminder to the world that this racist, colonial occupation is making the two-State solution and the prospect for realizing peace a very difficult choice, if not impossible.

    It is time for action and the moment to move forward.

    This is why we are here today.

    Mr. President,
    Ladies and Gentleman,

    The world is being asked today to answer a specific question that we have offered repeatedly: Is there a surplus people in our region? Tell us. The world must say it. Are we a surplus people, or is there a state which is missing which must be embodied on its land, which is Palestine. The world is being asked to undertake a significant step in the process of rectifying the unprecedented historical injustice inflicted on the Palestinian people since Al-Nakba of 1948.

    Every voice among you supporting our endeavor today is a most valuable voice of courage, and every State that grants support today to Palestine’s request for non-member observer State status is affirming its principled and moral support for freedom and the rights of peoples and international law and peace.

    Your support for our endeavor today will send a promising message – to millions of Palestinians on the land of Palestine, in the refugee camps both in the homeland and the Diaspora, and to the prisoners struggling for freedom in Israel’s prisons – that justice is possible and that there is a reason to be hopeful and that the peoples of the world do not accept the continuation of the occupation.

    This is why we are here today.

    Your support for our endeavor today will give a reason for hope to a people besieged by a racist, colonial occupation. Failure that almost amounts to complicity in Israel’s aggression and in a state of paralysis that some are striving to impose on the international community. Your support, ladies and gentlemen, will confirm to our people that they are not alone and their adherence to international law is never going to be a losing proposition.

    In our endeavor today to acquire non-member State status for Palestine in the United Nations, we reaffirm that Palestine will always adhere to and respect the Charter and resolutions of the United Nations and international humanitarian law, uphold equality, guarantee civil liberties, uphold the rule of law, promote democracy and pluralism, and uphold and protect the rights of women. This is what we are pledging today.

    As we promised our friends and our brothers and sisters, we will continue to consult with them upon the approval of your esteemed body of our request to upgrade Palestine’s status. We will act responsibly and positively in our next steps, and we will to work to strengthen cooperation with the countries and peoples of the world for the sake of a just peace.

    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    Sixty-five years ago on this day, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 181 (II), which partitioned the land of historic Palestine into two States and became the birth certificate for Israel.

    Sixty-five years later and on the same day, which your esteemed body has designated as the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, the General Assembly stands before a moral duty, which it must not hesitate to undertake, and stands before a historic duty, which cannot endure further delay, and before a practical duty to salvage the chances for peace, which is urgent and cannot be postponed.

    Mr. President,
    Ladies and Gentlemen,

    The United Nations General Assembly is called upon today to issue the birth certificate of the reality of the State of Palestine. This is why, in specific, we are here today. It is our hope, ladies and gentlemen, our hope in God and in you.

    Thank you, and peace be upon you.


  • Lire absolument, pour ne pas oublier que les idées à la con qui font beaucoup de bruit sont généralement le fruit d’une petite bande d’escrocs bien organisés. #zionist_hoodlums
    http://antonylerman.com/2012/11/29/another-faulty-pseudo-academic-antisemitism-initiative

    Samuels is the director for international relations at the Simon Wiesenthal Centre Paris and a long-standing promoter of the  notion of the ‘new antisemitism’. In July 2011, after attending a UN meeting in Brussels titled ‘The role of Europe in advancing Palestinian statehood and achieving peace between Israelis and Palestinians’, he wrote to the UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon saying that the experience was akin to a ‘gangbang’. On 2 August 2012 he told the Jerusalem Post that the action of the Swiss Migros supermarket chain to label Israeli products from the West Bank was a boycott measure and must be viewed as ‘a continuation of Nazism’.


  • [Protection Palestine]- Des centaines à protester contre la visite de Clinton à Ramallah
    http://www.protection-palestine.org/spip.php?article12139

    Des centaines de jeunes Palestiniens ont protesté massivement contre la venue de la secrétaire d’État U.S., Hillary Clilnton, dans la ville cisjordanienne de Ramallah, et sa rencontre avec le Président palestinien, Mahmoud Abbas, a rapporté PNN (Réseau d’informations de Palestine).

    Les manifestants brandissaient des photos d’enfants martyrisés par les missiles israéliens à Gaza, tandis qu’un certain nombre de manifestants brûlaient des drapeaux américains et scandaient des slogans contre les États-Unis pour leur soutien à Israël malgré ses crimes contre le peuple palestinien.

    La manifestation a eu lieu près du siège présidentiel à Ramallah ; des militants des réseaux sociaux avaient appelé à manifester en Cisjordanie.

    Un des manifestants a déclaré à PNN que cette manifestation avait lieu « à cause du soutien aveugle américain à Israël malgré ses crimes contre les civils, les enfants et les bébés, à Gaza », et il a ajouté que « les États-Unis étaient le pays qui empêchait la création d’un État palestinien indépendant ».

    Il est à noter que les forces de sécurité palestiniennes se sont opposées à ce que les manifestants s’approchent des bureaux présidentiels, et les ont tenus à au moins 400 mètres de distance.

    Après la rencontre Abbas-Clinton, un membre du Comité exécutif de l’OLP (Organisation pour la libération de la Palestine), le Dr Saeb Erekat, a déclaré qu’Abbas avait mis l’accent sur l’importance d’arrêter l’escalade.

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    Gaza live report: Day 8
    http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=540391

    20:09 Palestinian killed, another injured in Israeli airstrike on Deir al-Balah shortly after ceasefire announced in Cairo.

    19:59 Israel launches airstrikes across Gaza after ceasefire announcement.