The New Economist
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Analysis
    • Human Trafficking Features
  • Gossip
  • Life & Style
  • Opinions
    • Editorial
    • Columnists
      • Ikebesi Omoding
      • Isa Senkumba
      • Ramathan Ggoobi
    • Letters
  • Business
    • Corporate
  • Airlines
  • National Parks
The New Economist
  • Home
  • News
    • Analysis
    • Human Trafficking Features
  • Gossip
  • Life & Style
  • Opinions
    • Editorial
    • Columnists
      • Ikebesi Omoding
      • Isa Senkumba
      • Ramathan Ggoobi
    • Letters
  • Business
    • Corporate
  • Airlines
  • National Parks
No Result
View All Result
The New Economist
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinions Letters

Ban Ki-Moon Congratulates Kutesa on Election as Assembly President

byHenry Lutaaya
July 24, 2017
in Letters
0
152
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
WhatsAppShare on TwitterFacebook

By Ban Ki-Moon

I congratulate Sam Kutesa on his election as President of the sixty-ninth session of the General Assembly.

Mr. Kutesa brings wide-ranging experience to the job – lawyer, finance minister and foreign minister.  I wish him every success as he takes up his important responsibilities.

The position of President of the General Assembly demands a variety of skills.  I saw this for myself when I served as Chef de Cabinet to the President of the Assembly’s fifty-sixth session.

One must be able to build bridges among all Member States, not just the most powerful.  One needs patience, since negotiations and consultations can take time.  At times, one serves as a quiet guide, a messenger, a seeker of consensus.

At all times, a General Assembly President is guided above all by the values, principles and obligations of the United Nations Charter – a Charter which will celebrate its seventieth anniversary during your term.

These many roles will be especially important during the upcoming session of the Assembly, when many critical streams of work will converge and reach moments of truth.

Our efforts to accelerate our work for the Millennium Development Goals will enter the home stretch.  Discussions by Member States on the period beyond 2015 will move towards what we hope will be an inspiring yet practical vision and a concise set of goals that will reflect the many voices we have heard and lay out the path for a new and transformative sustainable development agenda.

And on the grave overarching challenge of climate change, the Climate Summit on 23 September and Conference of Parties in Lima in December will be key moments to mobilize solutions on the ground and ambition for a new global agreement next year.

The Assembly will also be called on to address other key concerns, including disarmament, humanitarian assistance, the special needs of Africa and the participation of the world’s young people.  You will focus on strengthening the United Nations itself.  And we must continue our efforts to end all forms of discrimination and ensure that each and every member of the human family can enjoy their fundamental human rights.

The sixty-ninth session will be a period of great consequence for the well-being and shared fate of people and the planet.  I look forward to working with the new President of the Assembly and with all Member States to do our part to end extreme poverty and set the world on a peaceful, just and sustainable path.

Let us work together to keep ambition high and meet the expectations of the billions across the globe who look to this Assembly, this house of all nations, for dialogue, decisions and action to bring about the world we want and a life of dignity for all.  

Thank you.

Comments

comments

Tags: Sam Kuteesa

Related Posts

No Content Available

Recent News

HOCW’s Dr. Bolingo launches ‘Unlock the Mind’ Book

HOCW’s Dr. Bolingo launches ‘Unlock the Mind’ Book

January 24, 2024
EC urged on civic education as  2021 electoral season hots-up

Justice Byabakama retains EC top job

January 11, 2024

Site Navigation

  • About us
  • Our Staff
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • Support

The New Economist's major concentration is on Ugandan and East African affairs, politics, and business, but it also includes regular sections on science and technology, books, and the arts.

© 2024

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Analysis
    • Human Trafficking Features
  • Gossip
  • Life & Style
  • Opinions
    • Editorial
    • Columnists
      • Ikebesi Omoding
      • Isa Senkumba
      • Ramathan Ggoobi
    • Letters
  • Business
    • Corporate

© 2024