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Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (2nd from left) briefs the General Assembly on his World Humanitarian Summit report. Also pictured (from left): OCHA's Stephen O'Brien, General Assembly President Mogens Lykketoft and Catherine Pollard, USG for General Assemb
UN Photo/Rick Bajornas

World Humanitarian Summit must be 'turning point' in cooperation to tackle crises – UN chief

World leaders must come together in 2016 to renew their commitments to humanity and unite to prevent and end crisis and reduce vulnerability, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said today, telling UN Member States that the World Humanitarian Summit will provide an opportunity for “concrete steps towards ending the suffering experienced by billions of people today.”

Migrants wait in line to be registered in Berlin, Germany.
UNICEF/Ashley Gilbertson VII

INTERVIEW: resolving conflicts key to stemming global displacement, says new UN refugee chief

Multiple conflicts have resulted in the massive displacement of men, women and children around the world in record numbers. Last year alone, more than one million refugees and migrants crossed the Mediterranean to Europe. And yet, the arrivals in Europe represent only a fraction of the world’s current 60 million refugees and displaced people – the highest level since the end of the Second World War.

The  UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein.
UN Photo/Rick Bajornas

'The moment we do not support the human rights agenda we see it rolling back in many parts of the world' – Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein

In September 2002, Zeid was elected the first President of the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. At that time, the Court was only a plan on paper, and over the next three years he oversaw the election of the first 18 judges, mediated selection of the Court’s first president, and led efforts to name the Court’s first prosecutor – laying out a functioning institution, despite considerable budgetary pressures and criticism of the Court from several leading nations.

The site of the UN Conference on Climate Change (COP21).
Stephanie Coutrix

COP21: a ‘green’ UN climate change conference, from electric cars to the power of human energy

With countries reaching a new agreement at the United Nations climate change conference (COP21), the global meeting has been qualified as a “monumental triumph” by top UN officials. While many continued to hail the outcome document as the walls of COP21 were torn down on Sunday, the UN News Centre looked back on other aspects that contributed “positive energy” to the two-week event.

Dr. David Nabarro, Special Envoy on Ebola, at a press conference in New York in November 2015.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe

"We’ve learnt many lessons from this outbreak and from the response" – Dr. David Nabarro, Special Envoy on Ebola

In August 2014, amid a rapidly growing outbreak of Ebola, Dr. David Nabarro was tasked with providing strategic guidance for an enhanced international response, and galvanizing essential support for affected communities and countries. As the Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Ebola, Dr. Nabarro played a key role in responding to the outbreak, which mainly affected Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and claimed more than 11,300 lives to date.