Tarasov to brief UNSC on Kuwaiti missing, property late June
<BLOCKQUOTE class="postcontent restore">UNITED NATIONS, June 2 (KUNA) -- Security Council President Emmanuel Issoze-Ngondet of Gabon on Thursday said the Council will discuss the pending issues between Kuwait and Iraq, mainly the missing persons and stolen property, on June 22.
He made the announcement at a press conference to outline the Council's programme of work for the month of June following a Council closed-door meeting during which the members examined the programme and approved it.
Gennady Tarasov, the Secretary-General's High-Level Coordinator for the Kuwait missing and property, is expected to brief the Council on June 22 on the Secretary-General's report on the issue.
The report itself is scheduled to be circulated on June 16, according to the Council's programme of work.
Issoze-Ngondet also announced that on June 15 there will be a meeting between the Security Council and the High-Level panel of the African Union (AU) on Libya. The panel was established by the AU to follow up on the efforts to be made on finding a political solution to the Libyan crisis.
The panel is made of five African States, South Africa, Uganda, Mali, Mauritania and the Republic of Congo. It was formed by the latest AU extraordinary session held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. He said it was agreed that this panel would meet at the ministerial level with the Security Council in order to have a "constructive dialogue on the AU road map and the steps it has taken in order to find a lasting way out of the Libyan crisis, above all when it comes to establishing a credible and verifiable cease-fire." The Council-AU ministerial one-day meeting, he explained, will be in three sections: a public debate, followed by private consultations and then an interactive dialogue between the 5-member AU panel and the members of the Council.
He also said that the UN Special Envoy on Libya Abdel Elah Al-Khatib is scheduled to return to Libya this weekend and he "should be in a position to report to us during the week, whether in person or via video link." In the meantime, the Egyptian Mission to the UN denied that Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabeel El-Arabi is attending the Council ministerial meeting here on June 15.
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<BLOCKQUOTE class="postcontent restore">UNITED NATIONS, June 2 (KUNA) -- Security Council President Emmanuel Issoze-Ngondet of Gabon on Thursday said the Council will discuss the pending issues between Kuwait and Iraq, mainly the missing persons and stolen property, on June 22.
He made the announcement at a press conference to outline the Council's programme of work for the month of June following a Council closed-door meeting during which the members examined the programme and approved it.
Gennady Tarasov, the Secretary-General's High-Level Coordinator for the Kuwait missing and property, is expected to brief the Council on June 22 on the Secretary-General's report on the issue.
The report itself is scheduled to be circulated on June 16, according to the Council's programme of work.
Issoze-Ngondet also announced that on June 15 there will be a meeting between the Security Council and the High-Level panel of the African Union (AU) on Libya. The panel was established by the AU to follow up on the efforts to be made on finding a political solution to the Libyan crisis.
The panel is made of five African States, South Africa, Uganda, Mali, Mauritania and the Republic of Congo. It was formed by the latest AU extraordinary session held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. He said it was agreed that this panel would meet at the ministerial level with the Security Council in order to have a "constructive dialogue on the AU road map and the steps it has taken in order to find a lasting way out of the Libyan crisis, above all when it comes to establishing a credible and verifiable cease-fire." The Council-AU ministerial one-day meeting, he explained, will be in three sections: a public debate, followed by private consultations and then an interactive dialogue between the 5-member AU panel and the members of the Council.
He also said that the UN Special Envoy on Libya Abdel Elah Al-Khatib is scheduled to return to Libya this weekend and he "should be in a position to report to us during the week, whether in person or via video link." In the meantime, the Egyptian Mission to the UN denied that Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabeel El-Arabi is attending the Council ministerial meeting here on June 15.
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