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PRESS RELEASES
11 July 2010 – This year, some 60 countries are collecting data and counting people as part of the 2010 census process.
26 June 2010 – As we prepare for this September’s United Nations Summit on the Millennium Development Goals, we must recognize the major impediment to development posed by drug abuse and illicit trafficking. As this year’s theme stresses, it is time to “Think Health, Not Drugs”.
26 June 2010 Torture is a crime under international law.  The prohibition of torture is absolute and unambiguous.
UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK, 23 June 2010 – Updated data on mortality rates among mothers and young children are likely to encourage G8 leaders, who at their meeting later this week will make this health issue – long considered a neglected area of international development efforts – a 2010 priority.
23 June 2010 – On the annual observance of Public Service Day, we pay tribute to public servants everywhere who have improved the lives of others in their communities.
Ashgabat, 22 June 2010 – The high-level delegation of the European Union visited the UN House in Ashgabat on June 17 to get acquainted with the UN experience of work in the sphere of human rights in Turkmenistan.
20 June 2010 On this observance of World Refugee Day, we must note a troubling trend: the decline in the number of refugees who are able to go home.

Message from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on International Day for Biological Diversity

Message from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on International Day for Biological Diversity

Message from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on International Day for Biological Diversity22 May 2010 The planet’s species and habitats, and the goods and services they provide, form the basis of our wealth, our health and our well-being.  Yet, despite repeated global commitments to protect this heritage, the variety of life on Earth continues to decline at an unprecedented rate.  Biodiversity loss is moving ecological systems ever closer to a tipping point beyond which they will no longer be able to fulfil their vital functions. 

Communities everywhere will reap the negative consequences, but the poorest people and the most vulnerable countries will suffer most.  Seventy per cent of the world’s poor live in rural areas, and depend directly on biodiversity for their daily sustenance and income.  This is among the reasons why the target set by world leaders in 2002 -- to substantially reduce biodiversity loss by 2010 -- was integrated into the Millennium Development Goals. 

The deadline has arrived, yet the deterioration of our natural resources continues apace.  To refocus attention on this challenge, the United Nations General Assembly declared 2010 as the International Year of Biodiversity.  Later this year, the Assembly will hold a special high-level meeting, back-to-back with the September MDG Summit, to provide much-needed impetus to the Nagoya Biodiversity Summit in October.  The goal is a new vision for biodiversity.

That new vision must promote the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity and the equitable sharing of the benefits from its use.  It must also recognize the close links between our natural capital and our development objectives, a point reflected in the theme for this year’s International Day for Biological Diversity, “biodiversity for development and poverty alleviation”.

In this International Year of Biodiversity, let us reflect on the root causes of biodiversity decline and take action to arrest it.  Let us adjust policies and mind-sets to reflect the true value of species and habitats.  Let us recognize that biodiversity is life – our life.  Let us act now to preserve it, before it is too late.

 
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