UN General Assembly: Who is attending, and what's on the agenda?
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who was denied a US visa, will address UNGA by video link, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is scheduled to speak on Friday.
ANI
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UNGA annual gathering officially opened on 9 September. (UN)
New York, 23 Sept
World leaders are gathering this week in New York for the
80th session of the United Nations General Assembly, with discussions expected
to be dominated by the conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine.
The annual gathering officially opened on 9 September, with
the high-level general debate beginning on Tuesday at UN headquarters in
Manhattan.
By tradition, Brazil will speak first at the General
Assembly debate, followed by the United States as the host country. This custom
dates back to the UN's early years, when "no one wanted to speak first,
Brazil always offered to speak first", according to the UN's protocol
chief.
Brazil has maintained this honour since the 10th General
Assembly in 1955. The US speaks second because it hosts the UN General
Assembly, after which a complex algorithm determines the sequence of remaining
speakers.
The Assembly comes at a time of heightened international
tensions, with Israel's military campaign in Gaza and Russia's war in Ukraine
likely to feature prominently in speeches and diplomatic meetings.
On Monday, France and Saudi Arabia chaired a meeting aimed
at building support for Palestinian statehood recognition, despite strong
opposition from the United States and Israel. The US remains the only permanent
Security Council member not to recognise a Palestinian state.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who was denied a US
visa, will address UNGA by video link, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is scheduled to speak on Friday.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky arrived in New York
earlier on Monday and will participate in both the general debate and bilateral
meetings with world leaders.
President Trump is expected to deliver a keynote address to
the assembly, accompanied by the First Lady. His schedule includes bilateral
meetings with heads of state and participation in multilateral discussions
before concluding with remarks at the UN Leaders' Reception.
However, several major powers are sending trusted
delegations. Russian President Vladimir Putin will miss the gathering for
another consecutive year, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov leading Moscow's
delegation.
China will be represented by Premier Li Qiang rather than
President Xi Jinping, while Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has tasked
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar to represent the country.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Jaishankar on
Monday to discuss strengthening strategic cooperation between their countries
across trade, defence, energy and critical minerals. The EAM also met EU
Foreign Ministers at an informal meeting in New York where they had an open exchange
of views on multilateralism, India-EU partnership, Ukraine conflict, Gaza,
energy and trade.
Additionally Jaishankar also met US Ambassador-designate to
India, Sergio Gor where they discussed promoting the relationship between the
two countries.
Meanwhile, in one of the most significant developments,
Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa is travelling to New York to address the
assembly - the first time a Syrian head of state has done so since 1967.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian will attend the debate as
Tehran announced it would suspend cooperation with the International Atomic
Energy Agency following UN Security Council sanctions. Qatar's Emir Sheikh
Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani will also be present following recent Israeli attacks
on his nation's capital.
This year's theme is "Better together: 80 years and
more for peace, development and human rights" - a message of unity that
stands in stark contrast to current global divisions.
Annalena Baerbock, Germany's former foreign minister who is
serving as president of the 80th session, has framed the gathering as a
critical moment for international cooperation.
"To preserve what the UN has achieved since 1945. To
renew our United Nations. To make us, the UN, fit for the future, fit for
purpose," Ms Baerbock said, concluding with the rallying cry "Better
Together!"
The assembly will test whether an organisation founded in
the aftermath of global war can foster cooperation in a world facing multiple
simultaneous crises. (ANI)
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