Posts Tagged ‘Martin’

India vs. New Zealand, Day One, Third Test

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

The following is the scoreboard at the end of first day’s play of the third cricket Test between India and New Zealand at the Basin Reserve here Friday.

SCOREBOARD:

India 1st innings

Gautam Gambhir lbw Franklin 23

Virender Sehwag c McCullum b O’Brien 48

Rahul Dravid c Franklin b Martin 35

Sachin Tendulkar c McCullum b Martin 62

V.V.S. Laxman c McIntosh b Southee 4

Martin urges parties to end dispute over army recruitment

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Outgoing chief of the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN), Ian Martin,

has asked the parties not to make the recruitments in Nepal Army a matter

of contention.

Speaking at the Reporters’ Club Monday, Martin said the parties and the

government must abide by the peace agreement and resolve their differences

through dialogue.

and they would augment further if parties fail to settle them amicably.

He expressed hope that army integration and rehabilitation process would

be done in the next six months when UNMIN ends its mission in Nepal.

UN Security Council has already said it is not willing to extend UNMIN

term further.

Martin, who been saying that the new recruitment in Nepal Army is a

violation of the peace agreement, also objected to the statement by Nanda

Kishor Pun, chief of the Maoist People’s Liberation Army, that they would

increase the size of PLA to 32,000.

According to him, challenges in peace process would increase if the

parties fail live up to their commitments in implementing the peace

agreement.

He maintained since democratic spirit has come up strongly, there is no

possibility of any from of authoritarian regime in future.

Martin, who is leaving Nepal in a few days, also stressed that the parties

need to be serious on issues of involuntary disappearances, truth and

reconciliation mechanism and rehabilitation of those displaced during the

insurgency period. nepalnews.

Related News

Martin meets PM; suggests early start of army integration process

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

Outgoing UNMIN Chief and Special Representative of the UN

Secretary-General to Nepal, Ian Martin, has advised the government to

immediately push ahead the army integration process as per the

Comprehensive Peace Accord.

In a farewell visit he made to Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal at the

latter’s official residence in Baluwatar on Sunday, Martin also stressed

the need for consensus among the political parties to take the peace

process to its logical conclusion.

During the meeting, Martin expressed concern at the ongoing dispute over

Nepal Army’s recruitment plan and increasing differences among the

political parties, warning that the peace process may derail if the past

agreements reached between the parties are not implemented and army

integration process doesn’t move ahead as per the peace accord.

In response, PM Dahal assured that the government will expedite the army

integration process by remaining within the guidelines of the peace accord

and the agreement with UNMIN as well as moving ahead with consensus.

“PM Dahal further informed that a special committee for army integration

has also been formed in consensus with all political parties and that the

committee will expedite the integration process,” Hira Bahadur Thapa, PM’s

foreign relations advisor, told media persons after the meeting.

Newly appointed UNMIN chief Karin Landgren including other UNMIN officials

were also present in the meeting.

Martin, who served as the UNSG’s Special Representative to Nepal for two

years, is leaving for UN headquarters in New York within a few days. nepalnews.

Related news

Pun warns of recruitment in PLA, Martin objects NA recruitment

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Chief of the Maoist combatants Nanda Kishor Pun has warned that the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) would open vacancies for new recruitments if Nepal Army dared to go ahead with their recruitment drive ignoring government orders.

Talking to journalists in Kathmandu Friday, Pun said if NA continues to violate the peace agreement, there is no compulsion for his force to abide by it. Alleging that the NA is operated by ‘new kings’, Pun demanded stern action against army officials who chose to ignore orders of the government elected through popular vote.

He informed that a new policy on operation and management of the national security forces is in offing.

Speaking at the same function, CPN (UML) leader Bharat Mohan Adhikari and Nepali Congress leader Ramesh Lekhak said the NA should be allowed to fill the vacancies and alleged Maoists of trying to obstruct the regular processes in army.

In the meantime, Ian Martin who led the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) until January 23, said recruitment by NA is against the spirit of peace agreement.

In an interview with a local radio station today, Martin said NA should have consulted the coordination committee that comprises representatives of NA, PLA and UNMIN before opening vacancies. nepalnews.

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Ki-moon recommends Karin Landgren as UNMIN chief

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the Security Council that he wished to appoint Karin Landgren, Swedish national, as his Representative in Nepal to lead the UN Mission in Nepal (UNMIN).

When UNSC approves the Ki-moon’s proposal, Landgren, 51, will replace Ian Martin. Landgren has been serving as Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Nepal and deputy head of UNMIN since September 2008.

In her new role as Ban’s Representative, she will head a slightly downsized UNMIN, the UN center said. She brings with her many years of political, managerial and international law experience with the UN.

The tenure for Martin was until January 23, after which the government requested the UN to extend its deadline by another six months, in smaller size. Now the UNMIN will serve in Nepal until July 23.

The Security Council last week had clearly indicated to the government that the UN mission will no longer be extended. Initially, the mission was organised for one year to support Nepal’s peace process and the Constituent Assembly election.

A professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, Landgren has undertaken UN assignments in Eritrea, Singapore, Bosnia and Herzegovina, India, the Philippines and the Great Lakes region of Africa in various capacities. nepalnews.

Govt should request soon for UNMIN term extension: Martin

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

KATHMANDU, Dec 4 – United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) has said the government of Nepal must request the UN at the earliest if the latter is interested in extending its mandate.In an interview with Kantipur FM on Thursday, UNMIN Chief Ian Martin said the government should immediately appeal to the UN Secretary General as a long process has to be followed to extend the UN body’s term.

“The actual expiration of the mandate is 23 January 2009, we would have liked to have had a request by now so that we could send recommendations to the Secretary General which he would pass on to the Security Council,” said Martin, adding, “The very latest date for decisions is January and for that we need to request very soon indeed.

The UNMMIN Chief opined that the peace process, however, will not reach to a logical end unless the fate of the former Maoist combatants is decided. He also underscored that the Army Integration Special Committee should initiate the process of integration through consensus at the earliest.

Martin said the monitors will have to play their part until the combatants are integrated and rehabilitated although the UNMIN does not want to extend its term.

“We wanted to see that discussion move forward because it’s the ex-strategy for UNMIN, some people think that UNMIN wants to stay in the country,” said the UNMIN chief, “We want to complete our task but the task of arms monitoring logically is completed when decisions are made about the future of combatants.

The UNMIN, a special political mission to monitor the peace process in Nepal, was established on 23 January 2007 in response to letters to the Secretary-General sent on 9 August 2006, in which the then Seven-Party Alliance government and the CPN-Maoist had requested UN assistance in creating a free and fair atmosphere for the Constituent Assembly election and the entire peace process.

At the request of the government, the UN Security Council had extended UNMIN’s mandate for six months on 23 January 2008 and for another six months on 23 July 2008.

Army integration at critical juncture: UNMIN chief

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

KATHMANDU, Nov 11 – United Nations Special Representative for Nepal Ian Martin on Monday said that cooperation among Nepal’s key parties remains “critical” to the success of the ongoing peace process in Nepal. Speaking at a new conference in New York, the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN), which has been monitoring the peace process, said despite its remarkable achievement the process still faces challenges to cope with “very important and quite difficult” issue of integration of Maoist combatants.

“The government has announced the establishment of the special committee and indeed the Secretary-General welcomed that during his visit [earlier this month], but there is still a negotiation going on regarding both its composition and its terms of reference before the Nepali Congress is willing to nominate representation to participate,” UN news centre quoted Martin as saying.

While briefing the Security Council on Friday, the UNMIN chief said Nepal is going through “a very profound transformation” from what he experienced in 2005, when he arrived to the UN human rights office in Nepal at a time when armed conflict raged, the then king exercised executive authority and democratic rights were under attack.

“It is by any standards extraordinary that now only a little over three years later Nepal has taken decisions that have made it a republic,” he added, noting that it had declared itself a federal democratic republic but still had to draw up a new constitution to give reality to the transition to federalism. “That’s a difficult issue because different groups mean different things [when they speak of federalism],” he said.

“One of the most remarkable aspects of the transformation has been the coming to the fore of ethnic groups that have traditionally been marginalized and now for the first time are much more strongly represented in a uniquely inclusive constituent assembly.” He, however, warned that such a profound transformation “should lead us to expect that it will have difficulties along the way.

Martin further stressed that the issue of former combatants would not be easy. “There are widely differing views among the political parties and sometimes within them regarding the extent to which Maoist army combatants should or should not be integrated into the state army and in what manner,” he said.

He cited other problems, such as the weak implementation of other peace process commitments which remain at issue among the parties and also commissions that have yet to be formed.

Martin noted that the Security Council had itself called for the political parties to cooperate “in a spirit of compromise” to complete the peace process.

The Secretary-General noted that in his meetings with Ban in Nepal, Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal expressed his view that a UN presence in Maoist army cantonments would remain necessary pending integration and rehabilitation.

Martin also reminded that the process will not be completed “even under the most optimistic assumptions” by the time UNMIN’s current mandate expires at the end of January.

Martin said the Secretary-General had urged that the government to come forward very soon with any request for an extension.

“The Secretary-General and we all share the desire of the Council to bring UNMIN’s mandate to completion as soon as possible, to draw down further and close the mission, but of course in a manner that does not jeopardise the peace process,” he said.

UNMIN mandate extension may be needed

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

KATHMANDU, Nov 8 – Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General and head of the United Nations Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) Ian Martin Friday said that the country still needs the UN’s mission. Addressing the Security Council yesterday, he said that although a special committee has been formed for army integration, it would face many difficulties due to widely differing views regarding the extent to which Maoist army combatants should or should not be integrated into the state army.

He opined that even under the most optimistic assumptions, that process could now not be expected to end by January, within the UNMIN’s current mandate.

“Our aim is the earliest possible completion of the mission’s mandate,” Martin said, adding,  “But also the sustained and intensified support of the United Nations system and international community to the peace, development and change which the people of Nepal have demanded.

Quoting Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who recently visited Nepal, Martin informed that he told Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal the government must request UNMIN’s further extension soon if it wanted to. PM Dahal had told the Secretary-General that UNMIN’s presence at the cantonments would remain necessary due to pending integration and rehabilitation.

Concerning the overdue discharge of minors from the Maoist cantonments, the UNMIN chief said that the special committee for army integration has nothing to do with the issue.

Addressing the 15-member body along with Martin, permanent representative of Nepal to the UN Madhu Raman Acharya said that UNMIN’s presence would not be required after the process of managing the cantonment of armed forces and weapons was completed.

The government may request an extension of the UNMIN’s mandate if the process went beyond the end of the current mandate, he added.

UNMIN is a special political mission established by the UN Security Council in support of the peace process in Nepal. Its mandate ends on January 23, 2009.

Obama victory helps turn page on US racial history

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Irish Sun

Wednesday 5th November, 2008  

(IANS)

An 11-year-old white girl came home from school in rural California a few days before the election quoting a slogan she had heard from one of her friends: ‘Rosa sat, so Martin could walk, so Barack could run, so we could fly.

That saying poignantly encapsulates the history of the civil rights movement and the meaning of Barack Obama’s groundbreaking presidential victory, summing up the movement that has transformed both the law and society in the 53 years since Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama.

Her act of defiance in 1955 became a spark that helped ignite the civil rights movement, laying the ground for the march on Washington in 1963, where the Reverend Martin Luther King delivered his historic ‘I Have a Dream’ speech.

Now, a big part of the dream is being fulfilled with Obama’s victory in Tuesday’s election. The son of a Kenyan student and a white Kansas woman, the Illinois senator will be sworn into office Jan 20 as the first black president of the United States of America.

He is living proof of the progress that can be achieved, even in a country that abolished slavery less than 150 years ago and still enshrined legal segregation in some states less than 50 years ago.

‘The potency of the moment will travel far beyond the precincts of blackness,’ journalist Terence Samuel wrote on TheRoot.com, a website of black thought.

‘One of the truest things that Barack Obama has is that his story would only be possible in America. His success has been a repudiation of an ugly past and some absolution for our long and sinful racial history. That is an American story, and this is a different America.

Africans first arrived in the North American mainland in chains, not long after English settlers arrived in Virginia in 1607. The institution of slavery gradually became a central pillar of the economy, especially in the plantation agriculture of the South.

After the 13 original colonies gained their freedom from Britain, the US Constitution of 1787 was only forged by the striking of a brutal compromise between Northern free states and Southern slave states. Three-fifths of the population of slaves would be counted for the purposes of taxation and apportionment in the House of Representatives.

The so-called Three-fifths Compromise, counting African-American slaves a 60 percent of a human being, is sometimes described as the republic’s Original Sin, condemning successive generations to strife.

Slavery was finally ended with the Northern victory in the US Civil War in 1865, freeing an estimated four million slaves, 10 percent of the entire country’s population.

But that did not end discrimination against black people in the US.

They suffered from a lack of education, from a paucity of economic opportunities and from a fabric of laws like poll taxes, grandfather clauses and literacy requirements that kept them from voting across the South. The former slave-holding region’s rigid system of apartheid subjected African-Americans to constant humiliation, and lynchings and beatings were commonplace and mostly unprosecuted.

Quietly gathering steam during the first half of the 20th century, the civil rights movement finally achieved the enforcement of black rights including voting and access to public services.

Keys to the end of institutionalized racism were the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

But the scars of brutality and prejudice are deep.

Blacks, who are 13 percent of the US population, have made steady social and economic gains but are still mostly poorer than average, suffer worse health and shorter life expectancy, and account for 45 percent of prison inmates.

‘We do need to remind ourselves that so many of the disparities that exist in the African-American community today can be directly traced to inequalities passed on from an earlier generation that suffered under the brutal legacy of slavery,’ Obama said in March, during a major address on race relations.

While justifying the anger that many blacks feel at that legacy, Obama noted that many whites feel disenfranchised and resentful. He called on both sides to work together to heal those racial wounds.

‘For the African-American community, that path means embracing the burdens of our past without becoming victims of our past. It means continuing to insist on a full measure of justice in every aspect of American life,’ he said.

‘But it also means binding our particular grievances – for better health care, and better schools, and better jobs – to the larger aspirations of all Americans.

The mere prospect of his victory was greeted as a once-in-a-lifetime moment for many blacks.

‘I can’t express what this means,’ Nathan Whitaker, a 67-year-old black contractor in Oakland, California, who grew up in then-segregated Alabama, told DPA. ‘As a kid I experienced segregation and racism of the worst kind. I had to come to California to escape it. And now we will have a black president. Hallelujah!

But the jubilation that many feel is also tempered by apprehension.

‘A black president is not magic,’ said web designer Ebhodaghe Esoimeme, 23. ‘He’s not going to make inequality change overnight, and he’s sure not going to change it in four years.

Eddie Glaude, a professor of African-American studies at Princeton University, perceived ‘an uneasy juxtaposition of excitement, presented by Obama, and the realities on the ground of so many black folk catching hell’.

But Obama’s achievement may also bolster African-Americans’ faith in their fellow citizens.

‘They’re riding around in cars with a bumper sticker with a black man’s name on it,’ said Scott Williams, 43, a barbershop owner who lives in San Francisco. ‘It makes me trust people more.

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Challenges remain for conclusion of peace process, says Martin

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

KATHMANDU, Oct 24 – Special Representative of the Secretary-General in Nepal Ian Martin on Friday said that challenges remain for the successful conclusion of the peace process in the country.

“The historic election and the formation of an inclusive Constituent Assembly (CA) are indeed landmark achievements,” he said and added that there are major challenges still ahead for the successful conclusion of the peace process.

In his speech delivered at a programme organised to mark the 63rd anniversary of the United Nations in the capital today, Martin said, “Sustaining peace requires the broadest possible consensus on a new federal constitution, as well as efforts to heal the wounds of the conflict, to clarify the fate of those who disappeared, to compensate victims, to enable the return of displaced persons to their homes and the acknowledgement of the human rights.

Further, he said that no peace process can be said to be complete while there are two armies in one country and added that the efforts that are being made to establish a special committee for the integration and rehabilitation of Maoist army combatants on a multiparty basis will soon be successful.

“A continuing spirit of dialogue and compromise, and an approach of seeking consensus on the toughest issues related to completing the peace process, will be essential to its ultimate success,” he opined.

Martin further informed that the UN has resumed discussions with the Minister of Peace and Reconstruction and with the Maoist army about the need for rapid progress regarding the overdue discharge of the disqualified combatants still in the cantonments.

Referring to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s visit scheduled next week, he said, “This visit is the highest symbol of the UN’s interest in Nepal’s peace process and commitment to see it fully realised.

UN Day is celebrated on October 24 which was proclaimed by the UN General Assembly in 1948.