STATEMENT ON UNEP'S OGONILAND
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT REPORT

Environmental Panorama
International
July of 2011


Nairobi, 18 July 2011 - In response to reports mainly in the Dutch media over the past 48 hours, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) wishes to clarify several points.

•The forthcoming launch of its independent Environmental Assessment of Ogoniland report is on track and its release has not been delayed as a result of security concerns.

•UNEP's report contains the findings and recommendations from its two-year assessment of the environmental and public health impacts of oil contamination in Ogoniland, Nigeria, conducted at the request of the Government of Nigeria.

•An extensive peer review of the findings has been carried out by external scientists. The study represents an unprecedented effort to examine the location, nature, extent and implications of oil contamination in Ogoniland.

•In early July 2011, UNEP informed the relevant authorities in Nigeria that the report will be ready for publication as of the last week of July, and proposed that the launch takes place in the capital Abuja.

•Once the report has been released, it will be made available to the public and the national and international media via the UNEP website.

•Claims that the independent report either exonerates some stakeholders or blames others for the oil spills are wrong - as has been previously publicly stated.

•UNEP hopes the report and its findings will catalyze cooperation and a response to decades of oil-related environmental challenges and provide for the people of Ogoniland the opportunity for a sustainable future.

•During 14 months of fieldwork in Ogoniland and its surrounding creeks, UNEP teams collected samples of soil, water, sediment, air and plant and fish tissue for analysis. The samples have been tested for more than 400 substances, or analytes, such as petroleum hydrocarbons and heavy metals.

•Community input and assistance was a key element of the project and UNEP deeply appreciates the community support, particularly the widespread contribution of local knowledge of oil contamination stretching back over several decades.

•UNEP had Community Liaison Assistants liaising closely with local communities in Ogoniland, and as part of the project, extensive consultations and discussion groups have been organized by UNEP. The main local academic partner was the Rivers State University of Science and Technology.

•At the project's peak, some 30 local staff were employed with UNEP's project team based in Port Harcourt, who worked alongside international experts. The UNEP project team was supported in the field by voluntary community representatives.

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Scientists Discuss Trade in Marine Species and Reptiles used in Luxury Products

international organization aimed at regulating trade in endangered species.

The 25th meeting of the Animals Committee of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) will focus on fish and reptile leathers, which are often used in luxury goods.

Around 200 scientists, as well as intergovernmental bodies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), will discuss reports on topics such as the trade in sharks and the implementation of shark protection programmes, the efforts to control sturgeon stocks in Caspian range States and the use of reptile skins for fine leather products.

At last year's meeting, four proposals to include sharks in CITES Appendix II were rejected. Appendix II lists species that are not currently threatened with extinction, but that may become so unless trade is closely controlled. This decision enabled four fish species of great commercial value - the scalloped hammerhead, Oceanic whitetip, porbeagle and spiny dogfish - to continue to be traded without CITES permits. However, CITES parties remain concerned about the status of sharks.

CITES is an international agreement between governments. Its aim is to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival. It is administered by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) in Geneva.

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Amina Mohamed Takes Up Post as Deputy Executive Director of UNEP

Nairobi, 25 July 2011-Amina Mohamed of Kenya today formally took up office as Deputy Executive Director (DED) of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Ms. Mohamed, who is also an Assistant-Secretary General of the UN, met with her new staff and colleagues and said she was looking forward to the challenge of UNEP's evolving reform agenda and work programme.

She will also, among her many roles, be providing political and substantive input to Rio+20-the UN Conference on Sustainable Development 2012 scheduled in Brazil next June- and beyond.

Ms. Mohamed, who since 2008 was the Permanent Secretary and Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of Justice, National Cohesion and Constitutional Affairs of the Republic of Kenya, said: "The challenges but also the opportunities of sustainable development in the 21st century will in many ways define how nations cooperate and countries thrive over the coming decades."

"UNEP's unique role in analyzing, catalyzing and implementing forward-looking transitions such as the Green Economy will be central to that success. I am delighted to be re-engaging on international issues and joining UNEP at what promises to be an exciting and defining moment in the organization's 39 year history," she added.

Ms. Mohamed concluded: "I also look forward to working with UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner and bringing the perspective of an international diplomat and lawyer from a developing country to his and the organization's work. Kenya is proud to host UNEP and I hope to also bring a greater understanding of UNEP's special role in the lives of the people of Kenya, East Africa and indeed across the globe."

Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director, said: "We are very pleased to welcome Amina Mohamed on her first day in office. She was the outstanding candidate for the post and a worthy successor to Ms. Angela Cropper of Trinidad and Tobago whose remarkable service and contribution as UNEP's Deputy Executive Director we also recognize today".

"Ms. Mohamed brings a wealth of experience to this position at the national and international level as a distinguished diplomat, lawyer, manager and policymaker working across the sustainable development and environment policy agendas. I look forward to working closely with her in leading UNEP over the coming years," he added.

Ms. Mohamed, whose appointment was announced in May by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, was from 2000 to 2006 the Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Kenya to the UN in Geneva.

Her many achievements included being the first woman to chair the General Council of the World Trade Organization, and the first African and first woman to be elected Chair of the Council for the International Organization for Migration.

Since 2008 and as Permanent Secretary and Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of Justice, National Cohesion and Constitutional Affairs of the Republic of Kenya, she has played a key leadership role in the political, legal and constitutional reform process.

Born on 5 October 1961, Ms. Mohamed graduated with a LLM in International Law from Kiev State University, and has also undertaken post graduate studies at University of Oxford and the Kenya School of Law.

 
 

Source: United Nations Environment Programme
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