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      Rebuilding homes in Gaza will cost $40bn and take 16 years, UN finds

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 2 May - 16:43

    Agency pushing to raise funds as research shows 44 years of development in health and education could be erased by the war

    Rebuilding homes in Gaza destroyed during Israel’s seven-month military offensive could take until 2040 in the most optimistic scenario, with total reconstruction across the territory costing as much as $40bn (£32bn), according to United Nations experts.

    An assessment, which is to be published by the UN Development Programme as part of a push to raise funds for early planning for the rehabilitation of Gaza, has also found that the conflict may reduce levels of health, education and wealth in the territory to those of 1980, wiping out 44 years of development.

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      In Rafah I saw new graveyards fill with children. It is unimaginable that worse could be yet to come | James Elder

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 1 May - 14:00

    The European hospital is crammed with severely injured and dying children – a military offensive here will be catastrophic

    • James Elder is Unicef’s global spokesperson

    The war against Gaza’s children is forcing many to close their eyes. Nine-year-old Mohamed’s eyes were forced shut, first by the bandages that covered a gaping hole in the back of his head, and second by the coma caused by the blast that hit his family home. He is nine. Sorry, he was nine. Mohamed is now dead.

    Over three visits to the European hospital’s ICU in Rafah, Gaza, I saw multiple children occupy the same bed. Each one arriving after a bomb had ripped through their home. Each one dying despite doctors’ immense efforts.

    James Elder is Unicef’s global spokesperson

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

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      Debris from North Korean missile found in Kharkiv, say UN sanctions monitors

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 29 April - 21:14

    Report to United Nations security council says remnants of Hwasong-11 violate arms export embargo on Russian ally

    The debris from a missile that landed in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on 2 January was from a North Korean Hwasong-11 series ballistic missile, UN sanctions monitors told a security council committee in a report seen by Reuters.

    In the 32-page report, the UN sanctions monitors concluded that “debris recovered from a missile that landed in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on 2 January 2024 derives from a DPRK Hwasong-11 series missile” and is in violation of the arms embargo on North Korea.

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      Imagining a Future for the DPRK Panel of Experts Monitoring Regime

      blabla.movim.eu / 38north-org:0 · Monday, 29 April - 14:33 edit · 8 minutes

    The Russian veto to end the mandate of the United Nation’s (UN) Panel of Experts on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK or North Korea) on April 30, 2024 has been widely commented upon in recent weeks. I was the coordinator of the Panel for two years, leaving at the end of its last annual mandate in April 2023, and I would like to add my own views.

    The demise of the Panel actually underscores the importance of continued monitoring of DPRK sanctions violations while giving an opportunity to improve that function. I believe that monitoring of UN sanctions could best be conducted, paradoxically, from outside the UN system itself, as the political deadlock and bureaucratic timidity at the UN in New York makes genuinely independent and impartial sanctions monitoring impossible.

    In looking forward to any successor, we should look at both how the Panel succeeded and where (and why) it fell short before considering what else might be necessary to ensure that this important monitoring mission might continue.

    Lessons Learned From the Panel

    The Panel was introduced by resolution in 2009 to serve the UN’s 1718 Sanctions Committee. This was to provide biannual reporting of sanctions regime breaches and recommend how UN Member States might close those loopholes. However, particularly in recent years, many of the institutional structures established to enforce the regime have largely collapsed through political sabotage and neglect.

    First, the 1718 Committee has become utterly toothless. Although it does perform a useful function in efficiently approving humanitarian exemptions to the sanctions regime, the Committee has not actually taken any concrete action on any Panel recommendation relating to sanctions implementation since 2017.

    This is because members of the Committee simply and always reflect their positions expressed in the UN Security Council (UNSC). Despite having voted in favor of the sanctions in place, Russia and China have demonstrated no interest in maintaining or enforcing DPRK sanctions since at least 2019, while the United States, the United Kingdom and France, by contrast, have unsuccessfully sought to tighten sanctions in response to the DPRK’s increasing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) capabilities. Without the consensus of all 15 of its members, the Committee can take no action. At a UN level, therefore, literally nothing has happened in response to a Panel report or Panel recommendations.

    Second, the Panel itself is weakly administered by the UN Secretariat. Like the UNSC and the 1718 Committee, the Panel is bound by rules of consensus—unless all the experts agree, it cannot publish anything. But, the Panel is also supposed to operate independently and impartially. The majority of the experts do indeed rise above national interests to produce objective analysis. However, these rules effectively allow the tyranny of the minority, specifically the ability of Russian and Chinese experts to veto the publication of individual investigations and remove or undermine assessment and analysis with which Beijing and Moscow might not be content. The UN Secretariat, which employs and pays the experts as contractors, has done nothing to enforce this contractual impartiality, allowing Russia and China to have their way.

    Third, the Panel has long been under-resourced and ill-equipped to perform its function. Its IT infrastructure is obsolete, preventing even the most basic analytical investigation. Furthermore, it is staffed by diplomats and other relatively senior former government officials from a set group of UN Member States rather than by trained and objective investigators whose nationality is unimportant.

    Even with these problems, over the years, the Panel has produced valuable reporting that has served as a useful repository of information regarding sanctions evaders and their methodologies. I would draw attention particularly to the following:

    • Although the Panel’s reports probably did not add greatly to the understanding of developments in the DPRK for countries with a strategic interest in the Korean Peninsula, it was a regular and reliable resource for the vast majority of UN Member States, and the only means by which they could understand their detailed responsibilities and obligation under the sanctions resolutions. The Panel and its reports played an important role in improving customs and export control mechanisms in many States.
    • Unlike at the UN level (and for the most part at Member State levels), the commercial world was eager to take action on every detail contained in the reports. Information on companies, vessels and individuals involved in sanctions evasion, as well as bank accounts, contact details and the like—all carefully researched and verified by the Panel—was used by banks, insurance companies and due diligence departments, to take concrete action against sanctions evasion. Although largely unseen, these actions played an important role in imposing real-world consequences for those engaged in sanctions evasion.

    Toward the Next Monitoring Regime

    I would argue that this proven value of sanctions monitoring, the decay of UN systems themselves and the political stagnation that accrues from the UN’s outdated rules suggest, perversely, that UN sanctions would be best monitored from outside the UN system. Allowing those who have no interest in maintaining the sanctions regime to have a decisive say in monitoring them is a mistake. By taking the Panel’s monitoring role out of the UN system, it would be possible to improve the objective value of the monitoring effort.

    So, what would a new DPRK sanctions monitoring body require?

    • The right investigators: These individuals would have the skills necessary for open-source and more sensitive investigations. They would be contractually tied to objectivity and independence (and probably some sort of internal agreement to recuse themselves from investigations involving their own countries). A multinational team would be best, but reflecting the nations on the UNSC is not an effective means of ensuring impartiality or competence. So long as they are good at what they do, the experts can come from anywhere. Additionally, they should have the right IT, imagery, databases and analytical tools, none of which come cheap.
    • Intelligence support: The Panel has relied on the provision of sanitized intelligence material as a starting point for many investigations; that material has been carefully corroborated and subjected to high evidential standards before publication in the Panel’s reports. In recent years, however, contributing States have been less and less inclined to share this valuable material with the Panel because the Panel has been prevented from using the best of this material by Russian and Chinese experts objecting to its content. The new Panel’s membership should, therefore, be trusted to handle sensitive material carefully, as well as be able to independently corroborate that material.
    • Dedicated legal support: Its status as a UN body working on a politically sensitive portfolio has largely shielded the Panel, its members and its investigations from the vexatious attention of commercial lawyers acting on behalf of sanctions evaders. In order to regularly name individuals and entities involved in sanctions evasion without wasting its own time in commercial courts, any new sanctions monitoring body operating outside the UN would require some serious—and expensive—legal help to prevent it from becoming swamped by legal hounding from sanctions breakers.
    • A flexible and responsive reporting schedule: Perhaps a quarterly annual report supplemented by “incident reports” as they happen would be a good reporting pace and method. In addition, this body should be able to draw on and republish other work by independent think tanks and journalists, with expert commentary, in order to maximize the efforts of others. There is a great deal of impartial reporting of DPRK sanctions evasion that this body could centrally assess and help

    Of course, the Panel’s authority as a UN body would be lost, and there is a risk that its “impartiality” would be seen as having been lost, too. The administrative, technical and legal support the new body would require suggests to me that it might be best nested within an international organization. But it is essential, of course, that wherever it is, the “new Panel” would be independent and not subject to influence. Of course, any new body would be vulnerable to accusations of partiality—Russia’s recent veto was partly based on just such a fatuous claim about the Panel, even within the UN system. No one—State, entity or individual—would be obliged to help the new monitoring body, and some (particularly those named in its reports) would be inclined to question its independence.

    The “right of reply” currently exercised by the Panel—which means that individuals, entities and States involved in sanctions evasion are offered an opportunity to defend or explain themselves prior to publication—is a good practice and should be retained. But actually, neither sanctions evaders themselves, nor the States involved in facilitating sanctions evasion, ever responded helpfully or constructively to any request for information from the Panel during my time of service. I strongly believe that the accuracy, reliability and quality of the new body’s reporting would be most important in relatively quickly building its reputation for independence.

    Finally, any attempt to reconstitute the work of the Panel elsewhere, particularly if it requires considerable resources at a politically uncertain juncture, might benefit from a restatement of the aims of sanctions against the DPRK. In short, those interested in maintaining sanctions should be able to describe clearly what they are there to achieve. I would note that Russian (and Chinese) complaints about the sanctions and the Panel do, as ever, contain warped elements of truth, twisted beyond recognition to justify their egregious behavior. For example, it is true, as Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia claimed, that the Panel relied upon Western information in its reports. However, not only did the Panel corroborate that information itself, rather than simply regurgitating it, but it also repeatedly asked Russia and China for their own information and analysis—practical and constructive assistance which neither ever offered. Any ambiguity surrounding the goal of sanctions against the DPRK will only subject the sanctions regime to attack from these two countries in particular, and other States potentially sympathetic to the DPRK.

    Conclusion

    Effective monitoring only really pays its way if there is a commitment to implementation and enforcement on the basis of that monitoring. With neither Russia nor China interested in either, this remains a fundamental weakness in the UN sanctions regime, wherever and whoever does the monitoring. That said, to allow the Panel to disappear at Russian demand, with China smirking in silent approval, would be a meek surrender. It is critically important to continue to cast light into dark corners. The DPRK’s WMD development—an internationally destabilizing phenomenon that even Moscow and Beijing may live to regret—is enabled by sanctions evasion, and it is still necessary to expose both it and its perpetrators, even if it cannot be stopped.

    The post Imagining a Future for the DPRK Panel of Experts Monitoring Regime appeared first on 38 North.

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      Hamas is ‘reviewing Israel’s latest Gaza ceasefire proposal’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 27 April - 15:15

    Signs of renewed truce talks come as UN warns ‘famine thresholds in Gaza will be breached within six weeks’

    Hamas has said it is studying the latest Israeli counterproposal regarding a potential ceasefire in Gaza, a day after media reports said a delegation from Egypt had arrived in Israel in an attempt to jumpstart stalled negotiations.

    The signs of renewed truce talks come as the UN warned that “famine thresholds in Gaza will be breached within the next six weeks” unless massive food assistance arrives.

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      UN-led panel aims to tackle abuses linked to mining for ‘critical minerals’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 26 April - 17:47

    Panel of nearly 100 countries to draw up guidelines for industries that mine raw materials used in low-carbon technology

    A UN-led panel of nearly 100 countries is to draw up new guidelines to prevent some of the environmental damage and human rights abuses associated with mining for “critical minerals”.

    Mining for some of the key raw materials used in low-carbon technology, such as solar panels and electric vehicles, has been associated with human rights abuses, child labour and violence, as well as grave environmental damage .

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      Russia stands alone in vetoing UN resolution on nuclear weapons in space

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 25 April - 23:09

    A meeting of the UN Security Council on April 14.

    Enlarge / A meeting of the UN Security Council on April 14. (credit: Fatih Aktas/Anadolu via Getty Images )

    Russia vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution Wednesday that would have reaffirmed a nearly 50-year-old ban on placing weapons of mass destruction into orbit, two months after reports Russia has plans to do just that.

    Russia's vote against the resolution was no surprise. As one of the five permanent members of the Security Council, Russia has veto power over any resolution that comes before the body. China abstained from the vote, and 13 other members of the Security Council voted in favor of the resolution.

    If it passed, the resolution would have affirmed a binding obligation in Article IV of the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which says nations are "not to place in orbit around the Earth any objects carrying nuclear weapons or any other kinds of weapons of mass destruction."

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      Russia vetos UN resolution to prevent nuclear arms race in space

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 25 April - 01:14

    Moscow described the security council resolution, which would have called on countries not to deploy weapons of mass destruction in outer space, a ‘dirty spectacle’

    Russia has vetoed a UN resolution calling on all nations to prevent a dangerous nuclear arms race in outer space, describing it as “a dirty spectacle”.

    The resolution, sponsored by the United States and Japan , would have called on all countries not to develop or deploy nuclear arms or other weapons of mass destruction in space, which are already banned under a 1967 international treaty.

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      World leaders urge calm after Israeli drone strike on Iran ratchets up tension

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 19 April - 17:49

    Tit-for-tat attacks have breached taboo of direct strikes on each other’s territory but Tehran has no ‘immediate’ plans to retaliate

    World leaders urged calm on Friday after Israel conducted a pre-dawn drone sortie over Iran following a cycle of tit-for-tat attacks that crossed an important red line that has for decades held the Middle East back from a major regional conflict.

    There were tentative hopes late on Friday that the apparent strike attempt against an airbase near the city of Isfahan was sufficiently limited to fend off the threat of a bigger Iranian response and an uncontrolled spiral of violence between a nuclear power and a state with the capacity to develop nuclear weapons quickly.

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