Tag Archives: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres

Global hunger worsened in 2024, affecting 295 mln people: UN report

Global food insecurity and malnutrition continued to worsen in 2024, with 295 million people suffering from acute hunger across 53 countries, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and its partners said in a report released on Friday.

The figure represents an increase of 13.7 million compared to 2023, marking the sixth consecutive annual rise in acute food insecurity in the world’s most fragile regions.

The findings were published in the 2025 Global Report on Food Crises by the Global Network Against Food Crises (GNAFC), an international alliance comprising the FAO, the UN World Food Programme (WFP), and various governmental and non-governmental organizations.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described the figures as “another unflinching indictment of a world dangerously off course.”

In the report’s foreword, he warned that “hunger and malnutrition are spreading faster than our ability to respond, yet globally, a third of all food produced is lost or wasted.”

He added that long-standing crises are now being compounded by a more recent one: a dramatic reduction in lifesaving humanitarian funding.

While acute food insecurity typically stems from a combination of factors – such as poverty, economic shocks, and extreme weather, the report emphasized that conflicts remained the primary driver in many of the worst-hit regions. Some populations face conditions beyond acute hunger.

Famine was confirmed in parts of Sudan in 2024, while catastrophic levels of food insecurity were recorded in the Gaza Strip, South Sudan, Haiti, and Mali.

In Gaza, famine was narrowly averted thanks to stepped-up humanitarian aid, but the report warned that the risk could return between May and September 2025 if the large-scale military operation and blockade continue.

The report also highlighted the severe impact of forced displacement. Of the 128 million people forcibly displaced in 2024, nearly 95 million – including internally displaced persons, asylum seekers, and refugees – were living in countries already grappling with food crises.

In addition, economic shocks triggered food insecurity in 15 countries, affecting 59.4 million people, including Afghanistan, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen.

Also, extreme weather events pushed 18 countries into crisis, impacting more than 96 million people, particularly in Southern Asia, Southern Africa, and the Horn of Africa.

Source: Africanews

Myanmar coup: UN Secretary General Guterres urges world community to intervene

United Nations (UN) Secretary General António Guterreshas urged the world community to make sure Monday’s coup in Myanmar fails.

He told BBC that the reversal of elections is “unacceptable”, he said, and coup leaders must be made to understand this is no way to rule the country.

The UN Security Council is discussing a possible statement, but China is expected to block any form of words which condemns the coup.

The UN secretary general called for constitutional order to be re-established in Myanmar.

He said he hoped there would be unity in the Security Council on the matter.

“We’ll do everything we can to mobilise all the key actors of the international community to put enough pressure on Myanmar to make sure that this coup fails,” he said.

“It’s absolutely unacceptable to reverse the result of the elections and the will of the people.

“I hope that it’ll be possible to make the military in Myanmar understand that this is not the way to rule the country and this is not the way to move forward,” said Guterres as quoted by BBC.

Western countries have condemned the coup unreservedly, but efforts at the Security Council to reach a common position failed as China dissented.

 China is one of five permanent members with a right of veto in the council.

Beijing has long played a role of protecting the country from international scrutiny, and has warned since the coup that sanctions or international pressure will only make things worse.

Alongside Russia, it has repeatedly protected Myanmar from criticism at the UN over the military crackdown on the Muslim minority Rohingya population.

The elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi was detained when the army seized power.

Police in Myanmar – also known as Burma – later filed several charges against Ms Suu Kyi, who has been remanded in custody until 15 February.

Neither Ms Suu Kyi nor deposed President Win Myint have been heard from since the takeover.

The coup, led by armed forces chief Min Aung Hlaing, has seen the installation of an 11-member junta.

The military, which has declared a year-long state of emergency, sought to justify its action by alleging fraud in last November’s elections, which Ms Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) won decisively.

Facebook services in Myanmar were disrupted on Thursday amid reports the military had ordered telecom companies to block the social media platform.

The company confirmed the disruptions, urging “authorities to restore connectivity so that people in Myanmar can communicate with their families and friends and access important information”.

Over the past days, activists had set up Facebook pages to co-ordinate opposition to the coup.

UN to honor MDF soldier Chancy Chitete who killed in DRC

United Nation (UN) has resolved to award the ‘Captain Mbaye Diagen Medal for Exceptional Courage’ to late Private Chancy Chitete who was killed in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) 

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The United Nation (UN) has resolved to award the ‘Captain Mbaye Diagen Medal for Exceptional Courage’ to late Private Chancy Chitete who was killed in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) while trying to save badly wounded Tanzanian soldier.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres announced it on Monday, May 20, saying the award will be given this coming Friday May 24 during the UN Peacekeeping commemorations at UN Headquarters in New york.

The Diagne Medal was established in 2014 “to recognize men in Uniformed and civilians personnel who demonstrated exceptional courage” , is named for late Captain Diagne who saved hundreds of lives in 1994, before he was killed while serving as a UN Peacekeeper in Rwanda.

The first Inuagural award was given to Diagne’s Family in his hounor in 2016, but despite a number of remarkable nominations over the past four years, the awarding of the medal to Private Chancy Chitete of Malawi will mark the first time the actions of UN peacekeeper have been found to meet the standard set by Captain Diagne.

 

SA troops accused of beating boy and sexually exploiting women in DR Congo – UN

Washington – South African troops serving in the UN peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo have been accused of beating a 17-year-old boy and sexually exploiting women, the UN spokesperson said on Monday.

According to African News24, UN and South African investigators will conduct a joint probe of the four allegations of misconduct that took place in Kasai province and in North Kivu.

The allegations, which surfaced last week, involve a 17-year-old Congolese boy who was subjected to “physical violence” in eastern Kasai, said spokesperson Stephane Dujarric.

Given the “serious concern raised by these allegations”, the United Nations has asked South Africa to send a team of agents to the DR Congo within five days and that the investigation be completed within 90 days, he added.

The other three allegations concern the sexual exploitation of women in the North Kivu towns of Sake, Beni and Goma, one of whom gave birth to a child and is seeking child support.

Dujarric did not says how many troops were involved.

Under UN rules, it is up to troop-contributing countries to prosecute their nationals accused of crimes while serving under the UN flag but the United Nations carries out joint investigations with the national authorities.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has vowed to toughen the UN response to allegations of misconduct against the blue helmets whose mission is to protect vulnerable civilians in conflict zones.

The United Nations has nearly 17 500 troops and police serving in the DR Congo, its biggest mission.

Trump threatens to cut off aid to Palestinians

WASHINGTON-(MaraviPost)-The US has announced that it will hold back more than half of the funding it provides for a UN agency that supports Palestinians, about two weeks after President Donald Trump threatened to pull funding for the group.

The decision drew condemnation from Palestinians, praise from Israel, and expressions of deep concern from UN officials and refugee groups worried about the humanitarian impact and particularly the potential for further destabilization of a region already reeling from conflict in Syria.

The US will withhold more than half its scheduled $125 million payment from the United Nations Relief Works Agency, which provides humanitarian aid, education, social services and medical care to Palestinian refugees in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.

State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said the move had nothing to do with “punishing” the Palestinians for their refusal to enter into negotiations with Israel, or their decision to push for a UN vote that resulted in overwhelming international condemnation of the Trump administration’s decision to unilaterally recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“This is not aimed at punishing anyone,” Nauert said Tuesday, as she outlined the US decision to release $60 million in funding for the agency, while indefinitely withholding another $65 million.

But in early January, about two weeks after the UN vote, Trump tweeted that, “we pay the Palestinians HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year and get no appreciation or respect.” He went on to say, “with the Palestinians no longer willing to talk peace,” he added, “why should we make any of these massive future payments to them?”

Nauert referred questions about the tweet to the White House, but others charged that the funding cut was clearly politically motivated.

“We hope that the US administration and Congress can cooperate in reversing this politically motivated cut in aid before its effects ripple through the Middle East,” said Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council.

“The move will have devastating consequences for vulnerable Palestinian refugees across the Middle East, including hundreds of thousands of refugee children in the West Bank and Gaza, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria who depend on the agency for their education,” said Egeland, a former Norwegian foreign minister and former UN undersecretary general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator.

“It will also deny their parents a social safety net that helps them to survive, and undermine the UN agency’s ability to respond in the event of another flare up in the conflict,” Egeland said.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he was “very concerned” about the impact on the region.

“First of all, UNRWA is not a Palestinian institution, it is a UN institution,” he said at a UN press conference Tuesday.

The services UNRWA provides “are of extreme importance, not only for the well-being of this population, and there is a serious humanitarian concern here,” he said. “But also in my opinion and the opinion that is shared by most international observers, including some Israeli ones, it is an important factor of stability.”

Jordan and Lebanon are already under extreme strain from having to support refugees fleeing the Syrian conflict. If those countries also suddenly face the burden of having to deal with under- or unfunded schools, medical clinics and other services, “this will create a very, very serious problem,” Guterres said, “and we’ll do everything we can to avoid this situation to occur.”

A UN diplomat said “we consider these developments worrisome for obvious humanitarian reasons.”

“Didn’t end up being zero”
Nauert said concerns about regional stability were reflected in the decision to cut only a portion of the funding and not “zero” out the budget.

“A big part of the reason we didn’t, after a lot of interagency deliberations.

UN chief Guterres issues ‘red alert’ for the world

By Lauren Said-Moorhouse and Amanda Coakley-CNN

As the world began to ring in 2018, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for global unity to overcome growing challenges.

In his New Year message on Sunday, Guterres said the world appeared to have “gone in reverse” before adding, “On New Year’s Day 2018 I am not issuing an appeal, I am issuing an alert — a red alert for our world.”

He continued: “As we begin 2018, I call for unity. … We can settle conflicts, overcome hatred and defend shared values. But we can only do that together.”

Reflecting on his January message when he assumed the secretary-general position — in which he called for peace — Guterres said that conflicts have deepened, global anxieties about nuclear weapons have increased, inequalities have grown and nationalism and xenophobia are on the rise.

He stressed cooperation and collaboration should be the way forward in 2018, saying: “Unity is the path. Our future depends on it.”

He then urged leaders “everywhere to make this New Year’s resolution: Narrow the gaps. Bridge the divides. Rebuild trust by bringing people together around common goals.”

CNN’s Carol Jordan contributed to this report.

Malawi President Dr. Peter Mutharika, UN Secretary General António Guterres meet

New York, September 22, 2017: Malawi’s President Prof. Arthur Peter Mutharika Friday morning met the new United Nations Secretary General, António Guterres, at UN Headquarters Building in New York.

President Mutharika had an audience with Guterres before signing a visitors’ book and a traditional photo shoot heads of state have with incumbent top boss for the world body. Continue reading Malawi President Dr. Peter Mutharika, UN Secretary General António Guterres meet

United Nations commemorates United Nations Day: September 8, 2017

New York (MaraviPost): – After a very long hiatus, the United Nations Staff Union, UNSU, is today September 8, hosting the UN Staff Day, a jam-packed activities list that started with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, laying the memorial Wreath in the UN Headquarters Visitors’ Lobby in New York.

The wreath laying ceremony is in honor of civilian and military personnel who have fallen in the service of the 71-year old global organization. Continue reading United Nations commemorates United Nations Day: September 8, 2017