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United Nations Daily Highlights 96-03-08

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From: The United Nations Home Page at <http://www.un.org> - email: unnews@un.org

DAILY HIGHLIGHTS

Friday, 8 March 1996


This document is prepared by the Central News Section of the Department of Public Information and is updated every week-day at approximately 6:00 PM.

HEADLINES

  • Security Council asks Secretary-General to maintain United Nations office in Rwanda headed by his Special Representative.
  • Rapid conclusion of talks on all outstanding military matters is critical for advancement of peace process in Angola, Secretary-General says.
  • In former Yugoslavia, there are more reports of Bosnian Serbs abandoning their homes.
  • Secretary-General says issue of Taiwan is an internal one.
  • General Assembly President ends official visit to China and Japan.
  • ICAO to initiate investigation on shooting down of US- registered private civil aircraft by Cuban warplanes.
  • Outbreak of cerebrospinal meningitis in the northern Nigeria causes over 1,000 deaths, WHO says.


The Security Council this afternoon took note of the Secretary- Generalūs arrangements for the withdrawal of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR). Unanimously adopting Resolution 1050 (1996) the Council encouraged the Secretary-General to maintain a United Nations office in the country headed by his Special Representative. The office would include the present UN communications system and radio station and its purposes would be to support the efforts of Rwanda to promote national reconciliation, strengthen the judicial system, facilitate the return of refugees and rehabilitate the countryūs infrastructure, and to coordinate the efforts of the United Nations to that end.

The withdrawal of the Mission is to start tomorrow, 9 March in accordance with the arrangements agreed to by the Council in resolution 1029 (1995) of 12 December 1995. That resolution required that UNAMIR be withdrawn within six weeks of the end of the mandate. The last military elements are expected to depart by mid-April when all installations will be turned over to other UN agencies or to the Government of Rwanda. Staff officers will leave shortly thereafter.

The Council paid tribute to the work of UNAMIR and to the personnel who served in it and stressed the continued importance of the voluntary and safe repatriation of Rwandan refugees and of genuine national reconciliation. The Council also called upon States and organizations to continue to provide assistance for the reconstruction of Rwanda and the rehabilitation of the infrastructure of the country, including the Rwandan justice system.


A rapid conclusion of the talks on all outstanding military matters is critical for the advancement of the peace process in Angola, according to Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali. In a report on the United Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM III), the Secretary-General said the Government of Angola must intensify practical preparations for the integration of personnel from the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA), into the Angolan Armed Forces and administrative and governmental structures. He said confidence between the parties must be reinforced by the release of all prisoners held by UNITA, unrestricted circulation of people throughout Angola, the launching of a country-wide campaign to disarm civilians, the transformation of UNITA into a political party and the effective implementation of other aspects of the Lusaka Protocol.

The Secretary-General welcomed the recent meetings between President Eduardo dos Santos and UNITA leader Dr. Jonas Savimbi, noting that these high-level meetings can play an important role in the promotion of national reconciliation and encourage the steady advance of the peace process. While he commended the Government for the implementation of several of its commitments and UNITA's quartering of more than 16,000 troops, the Secretary-General however warned, that time is running short if the parties are to complete numerous outstanding tasks foreseen in the Lusaka Protocol.


In the former Yugoslavia, there are more reports of Bosnian Serbs abandoning their homes. A United Nations spokesman says Ilidza will be transferred to Federation control next week and field workers are reporting that a large number of ethnic Serbs are fleeing the area. She said that the rate of property destruction had increased quite a bit. Estimates were that since 15 December, 53,000 Serbs out of an estimated population in Serb- controlled Sarajevo of about 70,000 had left.

The International Police Task Force (IPTF) civilian police monitors have so far registered 1,400 people in Ilidza, who would stay after the transfer of authority. The spokesman quoted field workers as saying there was a general upsurge in crime particularly in Vogosca, Ilyjas and Razlovac and they attributed that to youths from Sarajevo entering the new transition area.


Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali says the issue of Taiwan is an internal one. The view was expressed in a statement issued through a spokesman in answer to queries from UN correspondents over military exercises being conducted by China.

The Secretary-General hoped that all concerned would exercise restraint so as not to interfere with the rights of other States under international law and to avoid tensions in the area. The issue of Taiwan was of course an internal one on which the General Assembly had ruled unequivocally in its 26 session. The Secretary-General noted China's firm and long-standing position that this issue would be resolved solely by peaceful means.


General Assembly President Professor Diogo Freitas do Amaral has concluded a four-day official visit to China and Japan. In China, the Assembly President's discussions focussed on the process of reform of the United Nations, bearing in mind the important role that falls on China in this connection, by virtue of its permanent membership in the Security Council and its closeness to the concerns of developing countries which comprise a majority of the Organization's membership. The Chinese authorities set out in detail their thinking on reform of the Assembly and of the Security Council.

In Japan, Professor Freitas do Amaral held discussions with Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto and other senior government officials. They discussed various aspects of the process of reform of the United Nations, including the financial aspects, enlargement of the Security Council and restructuring the Economic and Social area.

The Assembly President said that the reform process, which involved the broad membership of the Organization, could now enter a more intensive and concrete phase of discussion with the tabling in recent weeks of three specific proposals, by the European Union, the United States and Japan.


Responding to requests from the Government of the United States of America, the Government of Cuba and the United Nations Security Council, the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) considered the incident in which two United States- registered private civil aircraft were destroyed on 24 February 1996 by Cuban military aircraft.

Meeting yesterday, at its Headquarters at Montreal, the Council in a resolution, directed the ICAO Secretary-General to immediately initiate an investigation of the incident in its entirety. The report of the investigation is to be submitted to the ICAO Council within 60 days. It will then be forwarded to the UN Security Council.


The outbreak of cerebrospinal meningitis in the northern part of Nigeria, has caused 1,181 deaths out of the 8,423 cases reported as of the end of February, according to data received by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Experts from the WHO, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and Medecins sans Frontieres have joined teams sent by the Nigerian Ministry of Health to the affected areas in support of control activities. Samples are being investigated in laboratories in Nigeria and Norway.

The WHO Representative in Nigeria has commended the efforts made by the Federal Ministry of Health for its handling of the outbreak. Seven million doses of vaccines have been distributed to the affected areas. However, the WHO feels that an additional 10 million doses will be needed in the foreseeable future in order to ensure coverage of children under the age of 15, the population group at highest risk.

WHO experts have noted the shortage of drugs, particularly chloramphenicol, the most suitable drug to treat meningitis patients. The Nigerian Government has asked the WHO to help procure 50,000 vials of oily chloramphenicol, which is more convenient for use by health workers than the powder form, as well as 50,000 syringes and needles. The WHO is working closely in the field with local health authorities, UNICEF and Medecins sans Frontieres. The WHO has recommended that a task force/coordination committee be formed to improve information and intensify public education.


For information purposes only - - not an official record

From the United Nations home page at <http://www.un.org> - email: unnews@un.org


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