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UN envoy: peacekeepers should speak French

France's UN ambassador on Wednesday hit out at the United Nations for not sending enough francophone peacekeepers to French-speaking countries in crisis.

Ambassador Gerard Araud told the UN Security Council that more focus was put on having officers who could write a report in English for UN headquarters than having troops who could understand local problems. 

The United Nations has major missions in francophone African countries such as Democratic Republic of Congo and Ivory Coast.

“I want to create an incident on the question of multilingualism,” Araud said, in French, at a council meeting on peacekeeping.

“In many missions which are in French-speaking countries, the francophone capacity of these missions is largely insufficient,” said Araud.  

The ambassador said that in the three years he has been envoy to the UN headquarters “I try to point out that it is more important for a representative to speak French in a francophone country than to be able to write a report in English to send to New York.

“Too often, in reality, we recruit representatives on their capacity to write a report to send to New York,” said Araud. “The work of the secretariat is very insufficient.”

The ambassador said he was not raising the status of the French language in the United Nations but of case of “the efficiency of its means.”

French officials regularly complain about the spread of English though they have become adepts at getting their message across in the increasingly dominant language. Araud had no illusions about the impact of his complaint.

“I know that what I have just said is totally useless and that the secretariat will do nothing. But from time to time it does you good to say what you think,” declared the exasperated envoy.

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UN

‘The war must end now’: UN Sec-Gen meets Swedish PM in Stockholm

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres met Sweden's Prime Minister in Stockholm on Wednesday, ahead of the conference marking the 50th anniversary of the city's historic environment summit .

'The war must end now': UN Sec-Gen meets Swedish PM in Stockholm

After a bilateral meeting with Magdalena Andersson on the security situation in Europe, Guterres warned that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could lead to a global food crisis that would hurt some of the world’s most vulnerable people. 

“It is causing immense suffering, destruction and devastation of the country. But it also inflames a three-dimensional global crisis in food, energy and finance that is pummelling the most vulnerable people, countries and economies,” the Portuguese diplomat told a joint press conference with Andersson. 

He stressed the need for “quick and decisive action to ensure a steady flow of food and energy,” including “lifting export restrictions, allocating surpluses and reserves to vulnerable populations and addressing food price increases to calm market volatility.”

Between the two, Russia and Ukraine produce around 30 percent of the global wheat supply.

Guterres was in Stockholm to take part in the Stockholm 50+ conference, which celebrates the 50th anniversary of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment. 

The conference, which was held on the suggestion of the Swedish government in 1972 was the first UN meeting to discuss human impacts on the global environment, and led to the establishment of the UN Environment Program (UNEP). 

At the joint press conference, Andersson said that discussions continued between Sweden and Turkey over the country’s continuing opposition to Sweden’s application to join the Nato security alliance. 

“We have held discussions with Turkey and I’m looking forward to continuing the constructive meetings with Turkey in the near future,” she said, while refusing to go into detail on Turkey’s demands. 

“We are going to take the demands which have been made of Sweden directly with them, and the same goes for any misunderstandings which have arisen,” she said. 

At the press conference, Guterres condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine as “a violation of its territorial integrity and a violation of the UN Charter”.

“The war must end now,” he said. 

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