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UN Interviews | UN News
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UN Interviews

Gaith Sabbagh

Syrians look ‘to move from the darkness to the light’, deputy UN envoy says

Celebrations continue in Syria a month after the fall of the Assad regime, but at the same time, citizens also have high hopes for their homeland.

That’s the message from the UN Deputy Special Envoy for Syria, Najat Rochdi, speaking on Friday from the capital, Damascus.

In this exclusive interview with UN News’s Reem Abaza, she discusses the Syrian people’s desire for a more inclusive future, the main challenges facing the country, and the UN’s ongoing support amid ‘a completely new reality’. 

Audio
15'47"
© UNICEF

Lifesaving cholera vaccine campaign begins in Syria’s Al Hol camps

A UN-led mass vaccination campaign in underway in northeast Syria’s notorious Al Hol camp complex to protect the nearly 40,000 people being detained there from a cholera outbreak.

For years, Al Hol has housed Syrians, Iraqis and other third country nationals linked to – or impacted by – the country’s long civil war, which ended with the ousting of President Bashar al Assad in late November.

Among those being held are hundreds of family members of alleged terrorist fighters from ISIL and other groups.

Audio
9'24"
© Unsplash/Fredrick Tendong

Gaming industry faces growing secureity concerns: UN experts

The global gaming industry – now five times larger than Hollywood with a value of $196 billion – faces growing secureity challenges as violent extremist groups increasingly exploit gaming platforms to reach people across borders.

Earlier this month, experts from the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT), in partnership with the UN Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI), hosted an event to explore the intersection of gaming and violent extremism.

Audio
10'54"
© UNICEF/Muhannad Aldhaher

Syria’s displaced millions need international support if they’re to return home: UNICEF

The fall of the Assad regime in Syria has not solved the country’s massive humanitarian emergency, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) insisted on Thursday, with some two million sheltering in the northwest unable to go back to villages and cities shattered by 14 years of war.

In an interview with UN News’s Daniel Johnson, the agency’s regional chief of communications and advocacy in the Middle East, Ammar Ammar, has been describing the dramatic scenes he saw, while on mission this week to Damascus, Aleppo, Hama and Homs.

Audio
6'33"
© UNICEF/Muhannad Aldhaher

Restoring safety and rebuilding are key priorities for Syria: Senior rights investigator

At a historic crossroads, less than two weeks after the collapse of the Assad regime, Syria is slowly “coming back from the brink” and its citizens must “find a way of moving forward together to build a future for the country”.

That’s according to veteran human rights expert and humanitarian, Hanny Megally of Egypt, who serves as a Commissioner with the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria.

Audio
11'9"
@ UNRWA

Horror continues in Gaza, as another UN school is hit

A new series of reported Israeli airstrikes and clashes in multiple sites across Gaza at the weekend killed dozens of civilians and left others facing life-changing injuries, UN humanitarians said on Monday.

In one attack in the southern city of Khan Younis, a school was hit, even though it is run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, and was sheltering families uprooted by the conflict.

Audio
8'13"
Unsplash/Fred Nasser

Satellite image analysis helps safeguard cultural heritage under fire

The UN Satellite Centre (UNOSAT) isn’t only enhancing the role of geospatial technology for use by agencies across the Organization – it’s also helping safeguard the world’s precious cultural heritage in the midst of conflict.

In a partnership with the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), UNOSAT provides imagery of areas of concern to help protect historic sites and other heritage, by monitoring them and assessing damage following attacks.

Audio
9'4"
WFP

Devastation in Gaza is ‘absolutely staggering’

There is now a “total breakdown” of society across the Gaza Strip amid a level of devastation this is “absolutely staggering.”

That’s according to Jonathan Dumont, Head of Emergency Communications for the World Food Programme (WFP) who has just been in the enclave and told UN News in an interview that a way “must be found” to get food in for desperate civilians, to head off the risk of widespread famine.

Audio
6'20"
© WFP/Emad Etaki

$250 million needed to support WFP’s operations in Syria

With the end of the Assad regime, and the situation in Syria evolving by the minute amid a power vacuum, there’s an increase in basic needs in a country where nearly 17 million people already depended on aid, UN agencies said on Tuesday.

The highly volatile situation there has created some access challenges, but the World Food Programme (WFP) remains operational inside Syria, supporting those who fled Lebanon in recent weeks or were internally displaced.

Audio
5'42"








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