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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 World Refugee Day

Message from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on World Refugee Day

Message from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on World Refugee Day20 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. 

In 2005, more than a million people returned to their own country on a voluntary basis.  Last year, only 250,000 did so - the lowest number in two decades.  The reasons for this include prolonged instability in Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and southern Sudan.

The theme of this year’s observance -- “Home” -- highlights the plight of the world’s 15 million refugees, more than three-quarters of them in the developing world, who have been uprooted from their homes by conflict or persecution. 

For many refugees today, rapid urbanization means that home is not a crowded camp run by an international humanitarian organization, but a makeshift shelter in a shantytown, outside a city in the developing world.

As these cities continue to experience spectacular growth, refugees are among their most vulnerable residents.  They must struggle for the most basic services: sanitation, health and education.  The impact of the global financial and economic crisis only increases the threat of marginalization and destitution.

We in the humanitarian community must adapt our policies to this changing profile of need.  This means working closely with host Governments to deliver services, and intensifying our efforts to resolve conflicts so that refugees can return home.

On World Refugee Day, let us reaffirm the importance of solidarity and burden-sharing by the international community.  Refugees have been deprived of their homes, but they must not be deprived of their futures.

 
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