Wednesday, 14 September 2011

NGOS: RESTRICTIONS IN UPCOMING UN SUMMIT 'COUNTERPRODUCTIVE'


Non-governmental organizations have criticized a United Nations policy to restrict the entry of NGOs to the General Assembly and critical high-level meetings due to “enhanced security measures.”
The 10-day ban, which will begin on Sept. 20 — the day before U.S. President Barack Obama is set to address the General Assembly — has been labeled as ”counterproductive” and “contradictory” to the United Nations’ policy on NGO participation and monitoring.
Only a handful of NGOs pre-selected by the United Nations will be permitted into the U.N. building upon presentation of special access cards and regular NGO passes.
NGOs have always been treated as political and social outcasts in the annual U.N. event, Inter-Press News reports. But this year triggered more protests because most NGOs have been banned from the high-level meetings on desertification and poverty eradication, racism and xenophobia, and prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases. NGOs have likewise been banned from attending a nuclear security summit.
Back in 2007, U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro told delegates the United Nations relies on its partnership with the NGO community “in virtually everything the world body does.”
Jem Bendell of Griffith University, Australia, said the restrictions suggest a lack of clarity in the U.N. system and the General Assembly in particular, on what NGOs bring to deliberations. 

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