UN Weekly Roundup: February 5-11, 2022

Editor’s note: Here is a fast take on what the international community has been up to this past week, as seen from the United Nations perch.

Ukraine defiant in face of Russian threat

Ukraine’s U.N. ambassador in Geneva said Friday that her country will not bow to threats of military action from Russia and is prepared to fight to protect its sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Ukraine Remains Defiant in Face of Russian Invasion Threat

Hunger spreading in Horn of Africa

UNICEF warned Wednesday that the Horn of Africa is facing a climate-induced emergency. As many as 20 million people in Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia could need water and food assistance in the next six months due to severe recurring drought.

Horn of Africa Facing Climate-induced Emergency

Coups on the rise in Africa

Military coups have been on the rise in Africa over the last year-and-a-half, prompting U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to declare that there is an “epidemic” of them. Burkina Faso is the latest, and Guinea-Bissau averted one on February 2. VOA takes a deeper look at the factors fueling these power grabs.

By the Numbers: Coups in Africa

In brief

— Secretary-General Antonio Guterres attended the opening ceremony of the Beijing Winter Olympics. On the sidelines, he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Foreign Minister Wang Yi. According to a readout, they discussed the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change and world conflicts. The secretary-general also told the Chinese officials that he expects them to allow for a “credible visit” of his High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, to China, including to Xinjiang, the province where the country’s oppressed Uyghur Muslim minority lives. China has been promising such a visit for several years, and recently said it is fine as long as Bachelet comes to have an exchange, not an investigation. Beijing denies it violates the rights of Uyghurs and says it is combating terrorism.
— Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed traveled to Addis Ababa for the African Union Summit last weekend. She then visited conflict zones in northern Ethiopia, going to Tigray where she met with the regional president, and to the neighboring provinces of Afar and Amhara, where fighting and its consequences have spilled over, as well as to the Somali region. The U.N. has been seeking a halt to the fighting in the north and expanded access for humanitarian workers.
— Tropical Cyclone Batsirai made landfall on the east coast of Madagascar on Saturday night, local time. The intense storm killed at least 21 people, including several children, and displaced more than 62,000 people. The U.N. said this week that it is working with its humanitarian partners and coordinating with the government. Surge teams have been deployed and a humanitarian air bridge set up. By Friday, the WFP had distributed 10,000 hot meals at shelters and distributed other food aid to displaced persons.

— UNESCO expressed concern on Thursday about journalists working in Myanmar. The U.N.’s cultural organization said that in the past year since the military seized power, at least 146 journalists have been arrested, while some 52 journalists, including 12 women, remain under detention. At least three reporters are known to have died in detention.

Some good news

After a year-long absence, the iconic tapestry of Pablo Picasso’s anti-war masterpiece “Guernica,” was returned to its place of honor outside the U.N. Security Council on Saturday.
Quote of note

“What we’re appealing for as humanitarian organizations on the ground, is that this military, political strategic chess game, involving Moscow and Minsk and Brussels and Washington and other capitals, that it is concentrating on helping people survive on the ground, protecting them, and avoiding a senseless conflict. Everybody would lose from the conflict, but first and foremost the two million people who live within 20 kilometers from the frontline.”

— Jan Egeland, secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, telling VOA in an interview on Monday about his visit last week to eastern Ukraine.

What we are watching next week

On February 17, the U.N. Security Council will hold its annual meeting on the implementation of the Minsk agreements, which lay out the path to a political settlement in eastern Ukraine between Kyiv and Russian-backed separatists. In February 2015, the Security Council endorsed Minsk II in a resolution. This year’s discussion takes place against the backdrop of the threat of a Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Did you know?

The U.N. corridors and grounds are full of art, sculptures and unique objects donated by governments, foundations and individual donors, many of which can be seen on public tours of the complex. The Guernica tapestry, mentioned above, is a gift of the American Rockefeller family. (They also donated the land the U.N. complex is built on in New York.) There is also a section of the Berlin Wall on the compound’s north lawn and a fountain paid for by U.S. schoolchildren at the southern entrance to the complex. Among the objects on display in the corridors is a model of the ornate Royal Thai Barge “Suphannahong” carved from teak wood, and a black pot from 300 B.C. from Sudan. On the first floor, there is a painting of a white dove of peace by Macedonian painter Vasko Taskovski.

Source: Voice of America

WHO: Africa’s COVID-19 Infections Could Be Much Higher Than Reported

The COVID-19 infection rate for Africa may be as much as seven times higher than reported, while death counts could be two to three times higher, according to the World Health Organization’s regional director for Africa.
“We’re very much aware that our surveillance systems problems that we had on the continent, with access to testing supplies, for example,” Dr. Matshidiso Moeti said Thursday, “have led to an underestimation of the cases.”
Public health officials have warned for some time that Africa’s COVID infection and death tolls were likely undercounted.
India’s health ministry reported 58,077 new COVID cases on Friday. Like Africa, public health officials have also cautioned that India’s COVID figures are probably under-calculated, as well.
As many as 3,000 New York City municipal workers are facing termination Friday if they do not adhere to the city’s mandate requiring city workers to be vaccinated against COVID-19. Workers have staged protests, but Mayor Eric Adams has remained firm in upholding the policy imposed by his predecessor Bill de Blasio.
“We are not firing them. People are quitting,” Adams said recently.
Firefighters and police could be among those terminated.
Meanwhile, officials in Paris and Brussels have warned that they will not allow convoys, to enter the cities to stage anti-vaccine protests, similar to the one in Ottawa, Canada. Part of the French convoy is already en route to the capital for the weekend rally. The Belgian protest is planned for Feb. 14.
Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported early Friday it has recorded more than 406 million global COVID infections and almost 6 million deaths. More than 10 billion COVID-19 vaccines have been administered, the center said.

Source: Voice of America

Lufthansa subsidiary offers link to South African national park

Published by
DPA

German flagship carrier Lufthansa is to become the first intercontinental airline to fly directly to South Africa’s Kruger National Park, through subsidiary Eurowings Discover. The flights are due to begin in mid-November, with three weekly connections taking off from Frankfurt, the Lufthansa Group said on Friday. The site is one of South Africa’s most important tourist attractions and is among the continent’s largest national parks. It is famed for the high number of wild animals there which include elephants, lions, rhinos, leopards and buffalo. The connection will run between November 15 an… Continue reading “Lufthansa subsidiary offers link to South African national park”

African Union to open mission in China’s Beijing

ADDIS ABABA— The African Union will open a permanent mission in Beijing this year, 2022 in what could signal intent to strengthen ties with the continent’s biggest trading partner.

Heads of state and government gathered in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa this past weekend endorsed a proposal by the Council of Ministers, the body of foreign ministers from member states, which had asked for the establishment of a permanent mission to directly engage with China.

A document on the resolutions reached after the 35th Ordinary Assembly of Heads of State and Government said leaders had adopted the creation of the mission as part of new offices to be established under the reforms by the continental body.

The AU Permanent Mission in Beijing will have at least 10 staffers, including the Permanent Representative, and could cost the continental body $1,277,164 worth of salaries a year to run.

The Mission will have various senior officials including policy officers in charge of economic and commercial cooperation, technical cooperation, technology, science and education, culture, tourism, and engagement of the Diaspora.

The AU did not specify when the Mission will open but suggested that the appointment of officials will be staggered.

“The recruitment of those positions should be phased and subject to budget availability,” the Assembly decided on Sunday.

The creation of this Mission now means the continental bloc will have permanent missions to the US in Washington, to the UN in New York, to the World Trade Organisation in Geneva, to the European Union in Brussels, to the Southern Africa Development Cooperation (SADC) in Lilongwe and another Mission to the League of Arab States in Cairo.

The creation of the Mission to China may have been forthcoming for years. The Chinese, like most global powers, often send diplomats to the African Union headquarters.

And the African Union itself is a full member of the Focus on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), a triannual forum between the continent and Beijing, since 2011.

Besides, the Chinese have grown over the last two decades to become Africa’s biggest trading partner, with diplomatic relations with in all member states except the Kingdom of eSwatini, which recognises Taiwan as a separate country from China.

Despite the pandemic and its restrictions, Beijing’s trade with Africa still grew by a third to more than $254 billion, exporting medical protective equipment and other essential goods to Africa at the height of the pandemic.

A report from the Chinese General Administration of Customs showed on Monday that the trade deficit between China and Africa still favoured China, which sold more than $150 billion worth of goods to Africa.

Africa’s biggest exporters to China are South Africa, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo-Brazzaville, and Zambia, whose sales reached about $70 billion, according to the agency.

Beijing itself has said it is ready to work with African countries to improve on exports. Its investments in Africa have been growing steadily and reached $44 billion in 2020 in foreign direct investments to Africa, according to a report by China’s Outward Foreign Direct Investment.

It means China is the fourth largest direct investor in Africa with most of the money going to South Africa, Nigeria, DRC, Zambia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Ghana, Algeria, Zimbabwe, and Angola.

However, China has also loaned African countries huge amounts of money for infrastructure development.

By end of 2020, China had loaned about $150 billion since 2003, making it the biggest bilateral creditor on the continent.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Restive Central African Republic appoints new PM to head same cabinet

BANGUI— The Central African Republic’s Economy Minister Felix Moloua became premier on Wednesday after the president fired the post’s predecessor.

Moloua is to retain his ministry position while also becoming the new head of government in the former French colony, according to a presidential decree read on public radio.

The rest of the cabinet line-up remains the same.

The 64-year-old replaces Henri-Marie Dondra, who was sacked on Monday as tensions have escalated between pro-Russian and pro-French political elite.

Russia’s influence in the mineral-rich country has steadily increased in recent years.

In late 2020, at Bangui’s request, Russian military contractors helped quell a rebellion against President Faustin-Archange Touadera.

Dondra was appointed prime minister in June 2021, after France suspended budgetary aid, accusing Bangui of going along with a Russia-led disinformation campaign.

Dondra was perceived to be more pro-French than his predecessor, who was seen as sympathetic to Russia.

But analyst Roland Marchal said that Dondra had little influence over the defence and foreign ministers and pro-Russian parliament speaker.

Moloua, the new prime minister, is considered a Touadera loyalist and a technocrat “with no political profile”, according to a diplomat who requested anonymity.

Trained as a demographer, he was the chief of staff at the economy ministry for eight years before being assigned the portfolio by Touadera in 2016.

The Central African Republic is rated the world’s second-poorest country by the UN’s Human Development Index, and has been wracked by political instability since independence 60 years ago.

A civil war erupted in 2013, killing thousands and displacing more than a quarter of the country’s 4.9 million people from their homes.

While the violence had decreased in recent years, it resumed abruptly when rebels launched their failed offensive to overthrow Touadera.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK