Showing posts with label United Nations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Nations. Show all posts

कच्चे तेल की ऊंची कीमतों पर सऊदी अरब ने दिया बयान, तो OPEC देशों पर भड़क उठे डोनाल्ड ट्रंप

जेद्दाह: कच्चे तेल की लगातार बढ़ती कीमतों के बीच सऊदी अरब के ऊर्जा मंत्री खालेद अल फालेह ने शुक्रवार (20 अप्रैल) को कहा कि वैश्विक बाजार में कच्चे तेल की ऊंची कीमतें वहन करने की क्षमता है. उनके इस बयान के बाद अमेरिकी राष्ट्रपति डोनाल्ड ट्रंप ने प्रतिक्रिया देते हुए ओपेक देशों पर कीमतों को भड़काने का आरोप लगाया. फालेह का बयान ऐसे समय आया है जब कच्चे तेल की कीमतें तीन वर्ष के उच्च स्तर पर पहुंच गई हैं. ट्रंप ने ट्वीट में कहा, "ऐसा लगता है कि ओपेक फिर से ऐसा करने को है. समुद्र में तेल से भरे जहाज के समेत सभी क्षेत्रों में रिकॉर्ड मात्रा में तेल है, कच्चे तेल की कीमतों को कृत्रिम रूप से बढ़ाया जा रहा है ! यह अच्छा नहीं है और न ही स्वीकार किया जाएगा!"

फालेह ने तेल उत्पादक देशों ओपेक एवं गैर - ओपेक की यहां होने वाली बैठक से पहले संवाददाताओं से कहा, "मैंने मौजूदा कीमतों का मांग पर कोई प्रभाव नहीं देखा है. हमने तेल के पहले भी इससे अधिक दाम देखे हैं, जो मौजूदा स्तर से लगभग दोगुना रहे हैं." वैश्विक स्तर पर ऊर्जा क्षेत्र में घटी ऊर्जा तीव्रता और ऊंची उत्पादकता को देखते हुये मुझे लगता है कि बाजार में ईंधन की ऊंची कीमतें झेलने की क्षमता है. फालेह ने जोर देकर कहा कि पेट्रोलियम निर्यातक देशों (ओपेक) ने तेल की कीमतें निर्धारित नहीं की है.

कच्चे तेल की कीमतों में उतार - चढ़ाव को लेकर चेतावनी देते हुए सऊदी मंत्री ने कहा, "हमने कभी कीमतें तय नहीं की ... कीमतें बाजार में तय होती हैं. उन्होंने कहा कि कीमतों में अस्थिरता हमारी दुश्मन हैं." ओपेक और गैर - ओपेक तेल उत्पादक देशों की बैठक में संयुक्त अरब अमीरत के ऊर्जा मंत्री सुहेल अल - मजरूई ने कहा, ‘‘हम कीमतें लक्षित नहीं करते हमारा उद्देश्य बाजार में स्थिरता लाना है.’’ विशेषज्ञों का मानना है कि दुनिया का सबसे बड़ा कच्चा तेल निर्यातक देश सऊदी अरब घरेलू वित्तीय दिक्कतों को दूर करने के लिए तेल की कीमतों में तेजी चाहता है और आईपीओ से पहले तेल कंपनी अरामको के पूंजीकरण को बढ़ाना चाहता है.

Source:-Zeenews

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US, UN for protected and intentional return of Rohingyas to Myanmar

WASHINGTON/UNITED NATIONS:  Mobile Number Database The United States and the United Nations on Wednesday demanded protected and intentional return of Rohingya outcasts from Bangladesh to Myanmar.

More than 6,55,000 Muslim minority of Myanmar fled over the outskirt to Bangladesh since the Myanmar armed force propelled a crackdown on Rohingya revolts in northern Rakhine state on August 25.

In spite of the fact that Myanmar experts said that the crusade was gone for finding Rohingya activists who assaulted police posts on August 25 yet the UN and the US have said the brutality adds up to ethnic purging.

The most noticeably awful, he stated, is move these individuals from camps in Bangladesh to camps in Myanmar, keeping a fake circumstance for quite a while and not taking into consideration them to recover their ordinary lives.

"We will be, obviously, prepared to do everything conceivable, to help a development occurring, as I stated, in view of intentionality, security, pride, and in regard to global norms," he stated, including that the UN or its UNHRC was not associated with the assention amongst Bangladesh and Myanmar on the issue.

In connection to the assention, the UN Secretary General stated, as a rule, this is managed in trilateral understandings between the two states concerned and the UNHCR.

"The UNHCR was not included specifically in the administration of the assention regardless of whether they were counseled. What's more, we trust it would be imperative to have UNHCR completely engaged with the operation to ensure that the operation submits to universal benchmarks," Guterres said.



Source:-TOI

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At UN General Assembly, Sushma Swaraj likely to follow Narendra Modi's stance on Pakistan

New York: External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj will address the UN General Assembly (UNGA) on Monday, where she is expected to lead India's attack on Pakistan and seek global support to dub it a "terror state", following the Uri terror attack that killed 18 soldiers.

Taking a cue from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's first public speech, post the 18 September Uri attack, on Saturday where he openly warned Pakistan of isolating it internationally, the External Affairs Minister is likely to take a tough stance, and is likely to be blunt, vis-a-vis the western neighbour.


Source:-firstpost
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Paris climate deal to be ratified on 2 October: All you need to know about India's COP21 stand

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday announced that India will ratify the Conference of Parties (CoP) protocol on combating climate change on the occasion of Mahatma Gandhi's birth anniversary on 2 October.

"Now the time has come to ratify the COP21 protocol. India will do it on Gandhi Jayanti on 2 October," Modi said while addressing the Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) national executive meet in Kozhikode, Kerala.

In the UN climate change conference COP21 in Paris, 195 countries adopted the first universal, legally binding global climate deal. The agreement sets out a global action plan to put the world on track to avoid dangerous climate change by limiting global warming to well below 2°Celsius. The agreement is due to enter into force in 2020.


Source:-firstpost
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India calls Pakistan a terrorist state in furious response at UN

WASHINGTON: Bluntly calling Pakistan a terrorist state and a global epicenter of terrorism, India on Wednesday told the United Nations that Islamabad's use of terrorism as instrument of state policy is a war crime.

"The worst violation of human rights is terrorism. When practiced as an instrument of state policy it is a war crime," a junior Indian diplomat tasked with exercising India's right of reply to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's speech, in which he had raised the human rights situation in Jammu and Kashmir, said.

First Secretary Eenam Gambhir's response to what she described as Pakistan's "long tirade" about the situation in J and K, expressed earlier in a speech by the country's prime minister Nawaz Sharif, was short, furious, and unprecedented in its intensity and descriptions. It also indicated a new Indian resolve to have Pakistan formally designated a nuclear proliferating terrorist state based on its record and evidence of its nurturing of terror groups.


Source:-TOI
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Pakistan a ‘terrorist state’, ‘Ivy League of terrorism’, war criminal: India’s brutal takedown at United Nations

NEW DELHI: Pakistan is a 'terrorist state', the 'Ivy League of terrorism', a country with a 'democracy deficit' that 'practices terrorism on its own people' and a country that indulges in a 'war crime'. This parsed sentence was the essence of India's brutal smackdown of Pakistan and the speech of its Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in the early hours of Thursday.
India exercised its right of reply on the floor of the UNGA, to respond to what it called the 'hypocritical sermons' by Sharif. "The worst violation of human rights is terrorism. When practiced as an instrument of state policy it is a war crime. What my country and our other neighbours are facing today is Pakistan's long-standing policy of sponsoring terrorism, the consequences of which have spread well beyond our region," said Eenam Gambhir, First Secretary at India's Permanent Mission to the UN.

 
Source:-TOI
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FULL TEXT: Barack Obama’s final speech to the United Nations as President

From the depths of the greatest financial crisis of our time, we coordinated our response to avoid further catastrophe and return the global economy to growth. We’ve taken away terrorist safe havens, strengthened the nonproliferation regime, resolved the Iranian nuclear issue through diplomacy. We opened relations with Cuba, helped Colombia end Latin America’s longest warm, and we welcome a democratically elected leader of Myanmar to this Assembly. Our assistance is helping people feed themselves, care for the sick, power communities across Africa, and promote models of development rather than dependence. And we have made international institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund more representative, while establishing a framework to protect our planet from the ravages of climate change.

This is important work. It has made a real difference in the lives of our people. And it could not have happened had we not worked together. And yet, around the globe we are seeing the same forces of global integration that have made us interdependent also expose deep fault lines in the existing international order.

Source:-indiatvnews
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Authorities search for man in New York, New Jersey explosion case

Authorities investigating the New York explosion case were searching on Monday for a 28-year-old New Jersey man who may be armed and dangerous, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

The New York Police Department released a photo of Ahmad Khan Rahami, a naturalized U.S. citizen of Afghan descent who was wanted for questioning in the Saturday night explosion in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, de Blasio said on CNN.

Federal authorities now believe the weekend explosion that injured 29 people in Chelsea, where another explosive device was found nearby, was linked to as many as six explosive devices found in Elizabeth, Homeland Security officials told Reuters.

The explosions came days before world leaders prepared to gather at the United Nations in New York for the annual General Assembly.



Source:-economictimes
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Uri terror attack: Demands rise for 'befitting reply' to Pakistan

NEW DELHI: On the day after the Uri terror attack+ that killed 17 soldiers+ , it appears that shock has given way to rage among citizens, politicians and the armed forces. The gloves are off.

"Decisive action needed against Pak" and "Give Pak befitting reply'' seem to be the words on everyone's lips. There were several high-level meetings+ today with top government officials and armed forces biggies to discuss the country's response to the attack.

PM Narendra Modi+ remains undecided about attending the SAARC summit in Pakistan later this year, and foreign minister Sushma Swaraj will have the Uri attack on top of her agenda when as she heads to New York for the UN General Assembly, sources told ANI.

Source:-TOI
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'Need to respect each other’s aspirations,' Narendra Modi, Xi Jinping tell each other

NEW DELHI: India and China should be sensitive to each other's aspirations and needs, Prime Minister Narendra Modi told Chinese President Xi Jinping when the two leaders met on the sidelines of the G20 Summit+ in Huangzhou on Sunday. The conciliatory note comes amid rising tensions in India-China ties over a number of issues.

"The Prime Minister told Presdent Xi that it is of paramount importance that India and China+ respect each other's aspirations," said Ministry of External Spokesperson Vikas Swarup in a briefing about the meeting between the two leaders.

"The India - China partnership is important not only to each other, but also to the region and the whole world," PM Modi was reported to have told Xi.

Xi too struck a similar note in his comments to PM Modi. "We ought to respect and give consideration to each other's concerns, and use constructive methods to appropriately handle questions on which there are disputes," Xi said, according to China's Foreign Ministry.


PM Modi also reportedly expressed his condolences to Xi over the attack on the Chinese embassy in Kyrgyztan's Bishkek, and called for collaboration in fighting terrorism. "Not just India, but countries like China, Russia and a number of others face the threat of terrorism emanating from our neighbourhood," he reportedly said, in an oblique reference to Pakistan.


The Modi - Xi meeting lasted half an hour. It was the second meeting between the two Asian giants in less than three months. The last meeting had come on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization+ (SCO) Summit in Tashkent in June. Modi and Xi are also set to meet again, when the BRICS Summit+ convenes in Goa in October.

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Very cunning and backstabber. Right from independence time, it has harmed us by sudden war, supporting terror Pak, stop NSG entry while we have been too good to them in getting UN seat, getting UNSC ... Read MoreAshalatha R

The attempt to deescalate frictions between the two countries comes at a time when New Delhi and Beijing have been bristling other run-ins over a number of issues. New Delhi has seen red with China's opposition to India's entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group+ (NSG), China's refusal to back an Indian resolution at the United Nations to declare Masood Azhar+ a globally designated terrorist, China's diplomatic cover to Pakistan, and China's hardening stand on its territorial claims in the South China Sea among others.


China on its part has expressed consternation and concern over the recent defence logistics agreement between India and the US, it growing engagement with Indian Ocean nations that have a bone to pick with Beijing and Indian infrastructure projects close to the border with China.



Source:-indiatimes
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Pakistan covets territory of others, uses terror as state policy towards that misguided end: India at UN

Syed Akbaruddin, India's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, on Wednesday strongly hit back at Pakistan for raising the issues of alleged human rights violations in Kashmir and killing of Hizbul Mujahideen terrorist Burhan Wani during a debate on human rights.

Responding strongly to the remarks made by Pakistan's envoy Maleeha Lodhi during a high-level thematic debate titled 'UN@70 Human Rights at the center of the global agenda', Akbaruddin accused Islamabad of attempting to misuse the UN platform.

“The attempt came from Pakistan; a country that covets the territory of others; a country that uses terrorism as state policy towards that misguided end; a country that extols the virtues of terrorists and that provides sanctuary to UN-designated terrorists; and a country that masquerades its efforts as support for human rights and self determination,” the Indian envoy to the UN said in a hard-hitting statement.

He was responding to Lodhi who apart from raising the Kashmir issue had also mentioned the "extra-judicial" killing of Wani, whom she described as a "Kashmiri leader", by Indian forces.

Akbaruddin said it was Pakistan which had failed to convince the international community on its human rights track record.

“Pakistan is the same country whose track record has failed to convince the international community to gain membership of the Human Rights Council in this very Session of the UNGA,” he told the 193-member United Nations General Assembly.

“The international community has long seen through such designs. Cynical attempts, like the one this morning therefore, find no resonance in this forum or elsewhere in the United Nations,” he added.

Reiterating India's commitment to upholding the rule of law and protecting human rights, the Indian envoy said, “As a diverse, pluralistic and tolerant society, India’s commitment to the rule of law, democracy and human rights is enshrined in its founding principles.”

“We remain strongly committed to the promotion and protection of all human rights for all through pursuit of dialogue and cooperation,” he added.

Source: http://zeenews.india.com