Gaza: 70% of Newborns are Premature – Press Conference | United Nations

Source: United Nations (video statements)

Press conference by Andrew Saberton, Deputy Executive Director for Management, on his recent visit to Gaza and the West Bank.

“In Gaza I was not fully prepared for what I saw, one can’t be,” a UN top official for population said, describing the destruction across the enclave as “the set of a dystopian film.”

Speaking to reporters at UN Headquarters in New York, Andrew Saberton, Deputy Executive Director for Management at UNFPA said, “There is no other way to put it, Gaza has been flattened mile upon mile with rubble and dust, with few buildings left intact. This is not collateral damage. And I cannot unsee what I have seen.”

He said many women in Gaza “lost everything, their family members, their homes, their colleges and their jobs,” adding that “women cannot even access the most basic personal hygiene supplies when they are menstruating.”

The UN official also said, “Across Gaza, as you well know, one in four people is starving. That includes 11,500 pregnant women for whom starvation is particularly catastrophic for both mother and the newborn. Premature and low birth weight babies now make up around 70 per cent of newborns, and one in three pregnancies is regarded as high risk.”

Maternal health services have collapsed under the strain of conflict. “Ninety-four per cent of hospitals in Gaza are damaged or destroyed,” Saberton said. “Maternal deaths are on the rise because the drugs that could save mothers are no longer available, and multiple newborns are often crammed into one incubator due to a lack of fuel and equipment.”

He noted that UNFPA recently managed to deliver some medical supplies into Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing. “We have been distributing medical supplies and equipment, including incubators, delivery beds and fetal-monitoring machines,” he said, “now that we have more freedom of movement.”

However, Saberton cautioned that “the trickle of aid being allowed to enter Gaza after the ceasefire is nowhere near enough.” He said UNFPA has “much more assistance on all the crossings ready to enter, including more incubators, more heart monitors, beds and other supplies for safe births, as well as much needed hygiene items.”

He urged the full opening of all crossings to ensure “safe and sustained humanitarian access to bring aid to all women and girls in Gaza, from the north to the south.”

Saberton also warned of the long-term psychological toll. “There will be this period of elation when you know, ‘the ceasefire, the ceasefire holds,’ and then it may come this overwhelming downside when people take a look at their lives and realize they’ve lost everything,” he said. “That may actually lead to a kind of a bigger issue psychologically that we’ll need to address.”

Saberton concluded with a call for action: “For the last two years many countries, nations, people have been saying, ‘what can I do? I want to do something.’ Now is the time.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g16G7Oh8Wuo

Syria: Women have rights to participate in determining the future – Special Envoy| United Nations

Source: United Nations (video statements)

Briefing by Najat Rochdi, Deputy Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria, on the situation in Syria.

The Deputy Special Envoy for Syria, Najat Rochdi, told the Security Council that “Syrian women have the right to participate fully and meaningfully in determining the future of the country,” but said “the processes and initial outcomes of transition have not matched their expectations and the commitments made.”

Briefing virtually from Damascus on the situation in Syria, Rochdi said, “this month, six women were elected to the People’s Assembly out of 119 seats contested, reflecting a voting process where women were consistently underrepresented from the outset, which could have been avoided.”

Moreover, she said, “with one Christian, three Ismailis, three Alawites, four Kurds and no Druze among the 119 elected so far, the Supreme Electoral Commission has publicly acknowledged the need to improve representation of communities.”

In meetings with Syrian interlocutors, Rochdi said, some “have also criticized this and other aspects of what they see as underrepresentation.”

She emphasized that solutions must uphold Syria’s sovereignty, unity, independence, and territorial integrity, and address the Druze and Bedouin communities’ safety and rights. The UN, she underscored, stands ready to support authorities and civil society.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yDvNj4bRIxI

UN@80 Photo Exhibit: Shared Lives, Shared Future | United Nations

Source: United Nations (video statements)

The photo exhibit “Shared Lives, Shared Future” showcases over 200 powerful human stories from all 193 Member States, reflecting 80 years of global work of the United Nations. Organized by the UN’s Department of Global Communications together with Italy, Slovenia and Switzerland, this exhibit is on view at the UN Headquarters until January 2026 and also can be seen online at: https://www.un.org/en/exhibits/exhibit/un80

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FutfchTpFCA

Updated: Seeking Information on Capitol Hill Pipe Bomb Suspect

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) (video statements)

The FBI is still offering a $500,000 reward for information that helps identify the person who placed pipe bombs at the offices of the Democratic National Committee and Republican National Committee on January 5, 2021. As part of our ongoing investigation, we’re releasing an updated video of the subject, which includes previously unreleased footage, higher quality video, and longer clips of the subject’s movements.

More: https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/seeking-info/suspected-pipe-bombs-in-washington-dc
—————————————————
Subscribe to Inside the FBI wherever you get your podcasts:
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4H2d3cg…
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast…
Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0…
More ways to follow us: https://inside-the-fbi.transistor.fm/…

Follow us on social media:
X: https://twitter.com/fbi
Facebook: https://facebook.com/FBI
Instagram: https://instagram.com/fbi
YouTube: youtube.com/user/fbi

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_Nv5IfwaD0

Palestine, Yemen, Syria & other topics – Daily Press Briefing (22 October 2025) | United Nations

Source: United Nations (video statements)

Noon briefing by Farhan Haq, Deputy Spokesperson for the Secretary-General.

Highlights:

-Secretary-General/Travel

-Occupied Palestinian Territory

-Yemen

-Passing of the Former Prime Minister of Portugal

-Security Council/Syria

-Ukraine

-Tropical Storm Melissa/Haiti

-Central African Republic

-Senior Personnel Appointment – Assistant Secretary-General for Legal Affairs

-Methane Report

-Guests Today/Tomorrow

——————————————

In Geneva today, the Secretary-General attended the annual conference of the World Meteorological Organization, which is marking its 75th anniversary. In his remarks, the Secretary-General saluted the work of the WMO, especially its rigorous modelling and forecasting. Without it, he said, we would not know what lies ahead or how to prepare for it.  

The Secretary-General underscored the need to accelerate solutions for how communities can adapt to the rapidly evolving climate crisis. He focused on the Early Warning for All Initiative that he launched in 2022 and outlined three areas for urgent action.

First, he said that governments must embed early-warning systems across their policies, institutions and budgets. Second, Mr. Guterres said, reaching every community with an early warning system requires a surge of financing. Last, we need to address the problem of climate disasters at their source: a rapidly heating planet. 

The Secretary-General said that countries must deliver bold new national climate action plans that align with limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius. 

In taking the floor after remarks by regional representatives, the Secretary-General said that it is clear that we will not be able to contain the rise in global warming below 1.5 degrees in the next few years. An overshoot is now inevitable, although he added that that doesn’t mean that we are condemned to live with 1.5 degrees rise. With the right policies, backed by science, it will be possible for temperatures to go down again, he said.

The Secretary-General later addressed the 16th conference of UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD). He said that in the new world in which we live, some things remain the same, as developing countries continue to be short-changed.

Notably, he added, trade barriers are rising, with some least developed countries facing extortionate tariffs of 40 per cent, despite representing barely one per cent of global trade flows.  Protectionism might be inevitable in some situations but at least it should be rational, Mr. Guterres added. 

OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY

The Secretary-General was asked in Geneva today about the advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice concerning Israel’s responsibilities in the occupied Palestinian territory. He said that this is a very important decision and that he hopes that Israel will abide by it. He added that the decision comes at a moment in which we are doing everything we can to boost our humanitarian aid in Gaza, and so the advisory opinion is decisive in order for us to deal with the tragic situation in which the people of Gaza still live.

The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reports that, since the ceasefire entered into effect more than 10 days ago, the UN and its partners have made progress in scaling up our response efforts, especially in central and southern areas of the Strip. The continued closure of the Zikim and Erez crossings, which provide direct access to the north, makes it extremely challenging for the UN and partners to reach people there with vital support at the scale needed.

UN partners monitoring population flows across Gaza report that people continue to move towards areas that were off-limits before the ceasefire. More than 425,000 movements have been reported from southern to northern parts of the Strip since 10 October.

Yesterday, in North Gaza, UN partners visited a displacement site in Jabaliya and two schools where displaced people are sheltering in Beit Lahiya. Humanitarian workers had been unable to reach these areas prior to the ceasefire due to military operations. The more than 200 families sheltering at these sites urgently need food, water, latrines, bedding kits and hygiene items – and we and our partners are doing everything possible to scale up assistance.

Yesterday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said that although the needs are immense, we will not be overwhelmed by the task ahead to rebuild and rehabilitate Gaza’s health system.

Yesterday, the UN teams were able to monitor goods coming through Kissufim crossing under the UN 2720 Mechanism. This was made possible after the Israeli authorities facilitated access to our teams, as we mentioned earlier this week.

Full Highlights: https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/noon-briefing-highlight?date=2025-10-22

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkZ5FE7jgNE

High-level visit from Mozambique

Source: World Trade Organization – WTO (video statements)

Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala met with the President of the Republic of Mozambique, Daniel Francisco Chapo, on 21 October at the WTO. They discussed Mozambique’s current economic situation and the potential for the country to further develop and diversify its mineral-rich economy. Both leaders agreed that regional and multilateral cooperation are vital in this respect and highlighted the importance of the multilateral trading system.

Download this video from the WTO website:
https://www.wto.org/english/res_e/webcas_e/webcas_e.htm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EI8eWMNkQ8

UK Health impacts of breast implants and other cosmetic procedures – Women and Equalities Committee

Source: United Kingdom UK Parliament (video statements)

The Women and Equalities Committee questions Health Minister Karin Smith MP on the Government’s proposals to introduce a licensing scheme in England for non-surgical cosmetic procedures.

Other topics up for discussion include the PIP implant scandal, cosmetic tourism, and body image training within the cosmetic industry.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynRNegQuOAg