UN General Assembly Appropriates Extra Funding of $14.59 Million to Maintain Peacekeeping Missions in Abyei, Golan, South Sudan
(72ND (RESUMED) AND 73RD MEETINGS (AM) (GA/12503) 31 MAY 2023)
Speakers Outline Plans to Protect Future
Generations as Delegates Resume Review of Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk
Reduction 2015-2030
Stressing
the urgency of managing the risks of natural and man-made disasters to protect
future generations, the General Assembly today resumed its review of the Sendai
Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 after adopting three
resolutions that will deliver nearly $15 million to the special accounts
of three peacekeeping missions.
The
three consensus resolutions, approved by the Fifth Committee (Administrative
and Budgetary) at its 24 May meeting, will help keep two peacekeeping
missions in Africa and one in the Middle East running smoothly until the end of
June. Together, the texts provide $14.59 million in additional
funding for the missions’ 2022/23 fiscal year.
By
the terms of the text “Financing of the United Nations Interim Security Force
for Abyei” (document A/77/890), the Assembly decided to appropriate an
additional $8.51 million for the Force’s maintenance until the end of
June, on top of the $259.66 million already allocated for that fiscal year
through its resolution 76/281. By the text “Financing of the United
Nations peacekeeping forces in the Middle East: United Nations
Disengagement Observer Force” (document A/77/891),
it decided to appropriate an extra $1.03 million for that Force’s
maintenance through June, on top of the $64.54 million it previously
allocated for 2022/23 by its resolution 76/289. Similarly, through the
terms of “Financing of the United Nations Mission in South Sudan”
(document A/77/892), the Assembly appropriated
$5.05 million for that Mission’s maintenance until June’s end, on top of
the $1.12 billion it already allocated under its resolution 76/291.
After
a two-day, high-level meeting held at United Nations Headquarters earlier this
month, delegates took to the General Assembly Hall again and renewed their
commitment for collective action to curb the loss of lives and property from
floods, earthquakes, pandemics and other disasters by the Framework’s
2030 target date. Delegates agreed the need for action at the
global, national and local levels is only accelerating as many vulnerable,
developing countries struggle to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by
2030.
At
the meeting’s opening day on 18 May, delegates had adopted by consensus a
political declaration reiterating the Framework’s call to substantially limit
risk and loss while acknowledging that conventional approaches are no longer
sufficient. (For background, see Press Release GA/15202).
Amery
Browne, Minister for Foreign and Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Affairs of
Trinidad and Tobago, said that since the adoption of the Sendai Framework in
2015, the Caribbean region has been pummelled with greater frequency by natural
disasters of increased severity. The outcome has produced severe economic
and development setbacks for people, particularly women and girls. Yet
financing remains elusive as the slew of natural disasters, along with the
pandemic, has reduced Government revenue. At the same time, many
developing countries, particularly small island developing States, face rising
debt levels and are frequently denied access to international financing that
can help them recover and create resilience.
He
said the international community cannot continue business as usual if it is
serious about not leaving anyone behind. The lessons learned from this
midterm review must be transferred into urgent and concrete actions.
“Resilience is not the absence of risk, but the ability to make progress
every day in spite of it,” he said.
Echoing
that concern, Colombia’s delegate stressed that until the international
community takes transformative action to mitigate the climate crisis, it will
not meet the Sendai Framework’s goals. “Most disasters have a female
face,” she said, adding that women and girls are more likely to die in
disasters than men and are more vulnerable during post-disaster situations and
humanitarian emergencies. In addition, Indigenous peoples’ adaption and
resilience should be grounded in a holistic approach that preserves harmony
with nature.
Namibia’s
delegate also drew attention to the socioeconomic consequences of disasters.
Climate change will amplify the uneven distribution of disaster risk,
further exacerbating poverty, he said, cautioning that this can spark migration
swells that could affect peace and security over the long term.
Stand-alone approaches to reducing climate and weather hazards are
unlikely to be effective if they don’t consider underlying factors.
Haiti’s
delegate — whose country is also vulnerable to disasters and has the
unfortunate distinction of having the grimmest record of deaths in the wake of
a disaster over the past 20 years — pointed out that natural disasters strike
the poorest the hardest. In that regard, strengthening resilience is
essential to protect people, their livelihoods and their meagre assets.
To that end, Member States have a collective duty to strengthen governance,
reduce disaster risk and build resilience.
To
help thwart disasters before they can occur and mitigate the consequences of
unavoidable events, many Governments are intent on developing national and
local plans, programmes and agencies.
Papua
New Guinea, for example, has created a Vision 2050 development road map
and successive medium-term development plans that make disaster risk reduction
a key priority, said the Pacific Ocean delegate. He said his country’s
high vulnerability to natural disasters, including earthquakes, tsunamis,
volcanic activity, cyclones and droughts, is just compounded by the adverse
impact of climate change and rising sea-levels. The country’s National
Disaster and Risk Reduction Framework 2017-2030 also lays down the basis for
the country’s disaster risk reduction work, led by its National Disaster Centre.
He underscored the importance of local communities and faith-based
organizations’ participation, with special attention paid to the role of women
and youth in disaster risk reduction activities.
Along
similar lines, Nauru’s delegate highlighted his country’s substantive progress
since the signing of the Sendai Framework, especially in terms of strengthening
disaster risk governance. The risk to Nauru’s existence due to sea level
rise, the increased intensity and frequency of storm surges and increased
incidence of prolonged periods of drought are a stark reality. “Our
ability to access sustainable financing thus determines our ability to deliver
on the priorities articulated in the Sendai Framework,” she stressed, calling
on the international community to create tailored financing solutions for small
island developing States.
The
representative of Chile said the South American nation in 2020 formalized a
2020-2030 national strategic plan that incorporates elements of sustainable
development, climate action and humanitarian action into its risk management
policy. In 2021, a national disaster prevention and response system was
created that aims to manage all stages of disaster from the local to national
level. A national platform set up in 2012, for example, brings together
200 private and public bodies, including representatives from academia and
civil society. This model has been replicated in 16 regional platforms
while progress is being carried out to ensure hundreds of municipalities have
their own municipal emergency or disaster risk reduction plan. So far, 65
municipalities have plans in place. “We share challenges and can work
together to identify the topics of convergence and put science and technology
at the service of people,” she said, pointing to the importance of early
warning systems.
In
the same vein, the speaker for Cambodia said the country’s National Action Plan
for Disaster Risk Reduction 2019-2023 has been implemented in line with the
Sendai Framework. Some of Cambodia’s latest measures to boost its
preparedness for disaster risk include, inter alia, the construction of
evacuation centres in six flood-prone provinces, development of platforms for
real-time impact and situation monitoring application and 16 additional
national search and rescue teams. Despite the significant progress,
Cambodia urgently requires more modern technologies to effectively deal with
natural calamities.
As
a mountainous landlocked country, Bhutan remains vulnerable to various
climate-induced floods, landslides, earthquakes and wildfires. The country
has developed a legal and institutional framework for disaster risk reduction
by promulgating a Disaster Management Act and has developed national guidelines
to integrate disaster risk reduction into development policies. Investing
in disaster-resilient infrastructure and building community resilience is a
priority for his country, he said, calling for financial assistance, as Bhutan
prepares to graduate from least developed country status.
Several
delegates said unilateral coercive measures create hurdles for countries intent
on implementing national plans for disaster risk reduction and response.
Recalling the landslides and floods that struck Venezuela in October 2022,
Venezuela’s delegate pointed to the Government’s efforts despite “the so-called
sanctions” imposed by the United States. The Governments of Chile, Syria
and Türkiye have acknowledged the effectiveness of Venezuela’s teams deployed
in those countries, she said, asking how much more the country could do if it
weren’t subject to economic, trade and financial sanctions.
The
representative of Belarus said she regretted that the political declaration did
not reflect the unacceptability of unilateral coercive measures.
Resilience against natural catastrophes calls for international and
regional cooperation. Unilateral sanctions limit such cooperation and
threaten people and States that are at a higher risk of natural
disasters. Echoing that concern, Nicaragua’s delegate also called for an
end to unilateral coercive measures, noting that many of these are aimed at
developing countries. His country puts “people, family and community” at
the heart of all its disaster risk reduction policies, he said.
Syria’s
delegate emphasized that the cross-border nature of disasters requires
collective efforts to manage and reduce the risks. The Sendai Framework
aims to manage the risks before they take place, yet this requires funding and
digital transformation. Syria, he said, is deprived of these essential
elements due to unilateral coercive measures, which are imposed with complete
indifference to their impact on people’s need to improve resilience to
disasters. Syria recently suffered a devastating earthquake, resulting in
thousands of victims and destroyed infrastructure, he recalled, asking:
“How many deaths could have been avoided if Syria had had access to the
necessary rescue equipment?”
Cautioning
that hard-won development gains are at risk of being swept away, Türkiye’s
representative said the earthquakes her country experienced in February were so
massive that no State could have overcome such a disaster alone.
Stressing the significance of disaster preparedness, she said those earthquakes
demonstrated how essential the Government’s recent focus on disaster risk
management was to its response. The Government had updated and
implemented several risk reduction plans; developed an integrated alarm warning
system which allowed citizens to transmit data via their smartphones during the
disaster; and launched a seismometer network to monitor fault lines. While
the recovery and reconstruction process will be a long journey, her country
will not simply rebuild destroyed structures and replace losses, but rather
aims to build back better, greener and smarter with disaster resilience and
energy efficiency at the core, she said.
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