UN urged to take action over people gone missing

0

Kuwait maintained its unwavering approach of humanitarianly supporting nations on the field and political level. On the political level, Kuwait has called on the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to take serious action over the whereabouts of thousands of people who have gone missing in Syria since the beginning of the country’s civil war.

The UN Human Rights Council should contact all parties concerned for information on the fate of the missing people, Kuwait’s permanent delegate to the UN Jamal Al-Ghunaim said amid talks involving a UN commission investigating facts in the war-torn nation. He lamented the “systematic and deliberate” nature of attacks on civilians in Syria, which has left the country’s infrastructure in shambles, said the diplomat. “Kuwait prioritizes the matter of missing people in armed conflict given the fact that we lived through that harrowing experience,” he added, citing the Gulf state’s Security Council-adopted draft resolution on missing persons during armed conflicts.

Envoy 
The Kuwaiti envoy went on to describe the humanitarian situation in Syria as catastrophic, where some 11.7 million people are in dire need of urgent assistance. He reiterated Kuwait’s support for a political solution as the only feasible way out of the eight-year old conflict, urging the UN Security Council to intervene and stop further bloodshed.

Meanwhile, Head of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic Paulo Pinheiro praised Kuwait’s initiative to urge the United Nations Security Council to adopt resolution 2474. In his report on human rights violations in Syria, Pinheiro expressed satisfaction over the success of the initiative, extending his thanks and gratitude to the State of Kuwait for the effort.

He called on all parties involved in the Syrian crisis, especially the ruling regime, to take immediate steps to provide information about detained and missing families. He also stressed that it is “unacceptable” that the fate of tens of thousands of people remains unknown. The UN Security Council had adopted resolution 2474, which was submitted by Kuwait, on missing persons in armed conflicts. On another level, Kuwait showed keenness to support the objectives of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Ambassador Al-Ghunaim delivered a statement in Geneva on the matter following his meeting with the Fund Executive Director Peter Sands at the headquarters of the Fund in Geneva.

Fund 
Kuwait has provided a voluntary contribution of USD a half million to the Fund in continuation of Kuwait’s approach to support humanitarian action in the world, especially since a large part of the Fund’s work is directed towards combating these epidemics in many developing countries and Islamic countries, Al-Ghunaim said. Kuwait was a pioneer in financing the operations of the Fund immediately after its establishment with UN resolution in 2001, he added.

Recent reports refers to outbreaks of tuberculosis and cholera in a number of countries such as Yemen, Somalia or Afghanistan, which requires urgent intervention to prevent their spread in the region. He also stressed need to take into account the existence of some of these epidemics and infectious diseases in refugee camps and displaced in a number of countries in the region, which requires a rapid access to a preventive intervention to avoid its spread. He added that Kuwait will spare no effort to support the affected countries, stressing that cooperation between Kuwait and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria will continue to serve the international humanitarian agenda in the future