UN / NEW AGENDA FOR PEACE
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STORY: UN / NEW AGENDA FOR PEACE
TRT:
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 20 JULY 2023, NEW YORK CITY / FILE
SHOTLIST:
RECENT - NEW YORK CITY
1.Wide shot, exterior, United Nations Headquarters
20 JULY 2023, NEW YORK CITY
2.Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
3. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“We are on the verge of a new era. The post-Cold War period is over, and we are moving towards a new global order and a multipolar world. This Policy Brief on a New Agenda for Peace outlines my vision of multilateral efforts for peace and security, based on international law, for a world in transition.”
4. Close up, moderator
5. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“This new era is already marked by the highest level of geopolitical tensions and major power competition in decades. Many Member States are growing skeptical of whether the multilateral system is working for them and violations of international law are becoming more common. Deep and, in some cases, justified grievances about double standards and unmet commitments are undermining cooperation.”
6. Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
7. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“At the same time, the world faces new and developing threats that require urgent, united action. Conflicts have become more complex, deadly, and harder to resolve. Last year saw the highest number of conflict-related deaths in almost three decades. Concerns about the possibility of nuclear war have re-emerged. New potential domains of conflict and weapons of war are creating new ways in which humanity can annihilate itself.”
8. Close up, moderator
9. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“The Policy Brief on the New Agenda for Peace outlines an extensive and ambitious set of recommendations that recognize the inter-linked nature of many of these challenges. It is framed around the core principles of trust, solidarity, and universality that are foundational to the Charter and to a stable world.”
10. Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
11. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“Peace is the driving force behind the work of the United Nations. Today’s new threats to peace create new demands on us. This Policy Brief is our attempt to meet those demands. I urge Member States to debate the New Agenda for Peace and to engage with our proposals.”
12. Close up, moderator
13. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“Our Organization is, and must remain, central to multilateralism. In our fractured, troubled world, it is incumbent upon States to preserve our universal institution, in which they all have a stake. The time to act is not when the divisions and fractures have engulfed us. The time to act is now.”
14. Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
STORYLINE:
The Secretary-General, António Guterres, presented his Policy Brief on a New Agenda for Peace, which outlines his vision for multilateral efforts for peace and security, based on international law, for a world in transition.
Addressing Member States on Thursday (20 July), Guterres said, “We are on the verge of a new era. The post-Cold War period is over, and we are moving towards a new global order and a multipolar world. This Policy Brief on a New Agenda for Peace outlines my vision of multilateral efforts for peace and security, based on international law, for a world in transition.”
According to the Secretary-General, “this new era is already marked by the highest level of geopolitical tensions and major power competition in decades” and “many Member States are growing skeptical of whether the multilateral system is working for them.”
The UN chief added, “Violations of international law are becoming more common. Deep and, in some cases, justified grievances about double standards and unmet commitments are undermining cooperation.”
At the same time, continued Guterres, “the world faces new and developing threats that require urgent, united action.”
The Secretary-General said that “conflicts have become more complex, deadly, and harder to resolve” and noted that last year saw the highest number of conflict-related deaths in almost three decades.
The UN chief also remembered that “concerns about the possibility of nuclear war have re-emerged” and “new potential domains of conflict and weapons of war are creating new ways in which humanity can annihilate itself.”
Guterres added, “My Policy Brief on the New Agenda for Peace outlines an extensive and ambitious set of recommendations that recognize the inter-linked nature of many of these challenges. It is framed around the core principles of trust, solidarity, and universality that are foundational to the Charter and to a stable world.”
For the Secretary-General, “peace is the driving force behind the work of the United Nations” and “today’s new threats to peace create new demands on us.”
He added, “this Policy Brief is our attempt to meet those demands. I urge Member States to debate the New Agenda for Peace and to engage with our proposals.”
Guterres said that the UN “is, and must remain, central to multilateralism.”
“In our fractured, troubled world, it is incumbent upon States to preserve our universal institution, in which they all have a stake. The time to act is not when the divisions and fractures have engulfed us,” concluded the UN chief.
The Secretary-General’s Policy Brief on the New Agenda for Peace oalso utlines an extensive and ambitious set of recommendations that recognize the inter-linked nature of many of the challenges we face.
It is framed around the core principles of trust, solidarity, and universality that are foundations of the Charter and of a stable world.
TRT:
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 20 JULY 2023, NEW YORK CITY / FILE
SHOTLIST:
RECENT - NEW YORK CITY
1.Wide shot, exterior, United Nations Headquarters
20 JULY 2023, NEW YORK CITY
2.Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
3. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“We are on the verge of a new era. The post-Cold War period is over, and we are moving towards a new global order and a multipolar world. This Policy Brief on a New Agenda for Peace outlines my vision of multilateral efforts for peace and security, based on international law, for a world in transition.”
4. Close up, moderator
5. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“This new era is already marked by the highest level of geopolitical tensions and major power competition in decades. Many Member States are growing skeptical of whether the multilateral system is working for them and violations of international law are becoming more common. Deep and, in some cases, justified grievances about double standards and unmet commitments are undermining cooperation.”
6. Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
7. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“At the same time, the world faces new and developing threats that require urgent, united action. Conflicts have become more complex, deadly, and harder to resolve. Last year saw the highest number of conflict-related deaths in almost three decades. Concerns about the possibility of nuclear war have re-emerged. New potential domains of conflict and weapons of war are creating new ways in which humanity can annihilate itself.”
8. Close up, moderator
9. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“The Policy Brief on the New Agenda for Peace outlines an extensive and ambitious set of recommendations that recognize the inter-linked nature of many of these challenges. It is framed around the core principles of trust, solidarity, and universality that are foundational to the Charter and to a stable world.”
10. Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
11. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“Peace is the driving force behind the work of the United Nations. Today’s new threats to peace create new demands on us. This Policy Brief is our attempt to meet those demands. I urge Member States to debate the New Agenda for Peace and to engage with our proposals.”
12. Close up, moderator
13. SOUNDBITE (English) António Guterres, Secretary-General, United Nations:
“Our Organization is, and must remain, central to multilateralism. In our fractured, troubled world, it is incumbent upon States to preserve our universal institution, in which they all have a stake. The time to act is not when the divisions and fractures have engulfed us. The time to act is now.”
14. Wide shot, Trusteeship Council
STORYLINE:
The Secretary-General, António Guterres, presented his Policy Brief on a New Agenda for Peace, which outlines his vision for multilateral efforts for peace and security, based on international law, for a world in transition.
Addressing Member States on Thursday (20 July), Guterres said, “We are on the verge of a new era. The post-Cold War period is over, and we are moving towards a new global order and a multipolar world. This Policy Brief on a New Agenda for Peace outlines my vision of multilateral efforts for peace and security, based on international law, for a world in transition.”
According to the Secretary-General, “this new era is already marked by the highest level of geopolitical tensions and major power competition in decades” and “many Member States are growing skeptical of whether the multilateral system is working for them.”
The UN chief added, “Violations of international law are becoming more common. Deep and, in some cases, justified grievances about double standards and unmet commitments are undermining cooperation.”
At the same time, continued Guterres, “the world faces new and developing threats that require urgent, united action.”
The Secretary-General said that “conflicts have become more complex, deadly, and harder to resolve” and noted that last year saw the highest number of conflict-related deaths in almost three decades.
The UN chief also remembered that “concerns about the possibility of nuclear war have re-emerged” and “new potential domains of conflict and weapons of war are creating new ways in which humanity can annihilate itself.”
Guterres added, “My Policy Brief on the New Agenda for Peace outlines an extensive and ambitious set of recommendations that recognize the inter-linked nature of many of these challenges. It is framed around the core principles of trust, solidarity, and universality that are foundational to the Charter and to a stable world.”
For the Secretary-General, “peace is the driving force behind the work of the United Nations” and “today’s new threats to peace create new demands on us.”
He added, “this Policy Brief is our attempt to meet those demands. I urge Member States to debate the New Agenda for Peace and to engage with our proposals.”
Guterres said that the UN “is, and must remain, central to multilateralism.”
“In our fractured, troubled world, it is incumbent upon States to preserve our universal institution, in which they all have a stake. The time to act is not when the divisions and fractures have engulfed us,” concluded the UN chief.
The Secretary-General’s Policy Brief on the New Agenda for Peace oalso utlines an extensive and ambitious set of recommendations that recognize the inter-linked nature of many of the challenges we face.
It is framed around the core principles of trust, solidarity, and universality that are foundations of the Charter and of a stable world.
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