At
UN, ICP Asks
New Deputy SG Amina Mohammed of
Green Bond, UNSC, Reform
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
February 28 – When new UN
Deputy Secretary General Amina
J. Mohammed was sworn in on
February 28, a delegation from
Nigeria and her family
accompanied her. Less than two
hours later she did her first
media question and answer
session as DSG, and Inner City
Press asked her about the
Green Bond she worked on as
Nigerian Minister of the
Environment, and if in her new
role she will work on the
issue of Security Council
reform, to try to make the
Council more representative. Video
here.
Mohammed
said the Green Bond can get
the private sector involved,
and that reform of the
Security Council along with
Secretary General Antonio
Guterres could help the agenda
of preventive diplomacy. It's
needed. Transcript below.
The
fact that Mohammed took
questions within hours of
taking office is a good sign,
and even at the stakeout in
front of the Economic and
Social Council chamber Inner
City Press encouraged her to
keep holding such Q&A
session. Ironically, Inner
City Press is currently restricted
unlike other correspondents
from staking out ECOSOC and
even the General Assembly, by
a no
due process eviction
order by outgoing Under
Secretary General for
Communications Cristina
Gallach. It should be
reversed, immediately. The UN
should treat the Press fairly,
and start providing more
rather than less Press access.
Watch this site.
Transcript (also
on YouTube,
here)
Inner City Press:
I saw that you worked on the
Green Bond in Nigeria, and I
wondered whether you think
that that is a model that
other emerging markets can use
to secure [inaudible]
projects, and also do you view
it as part of your mandate to
work on the issue of Security
Council reform, in the sense
of making it more
representative, and having
more countries represented on
it? Thanks.
DSG Amina Mohammed: Well, on
the Green Bond, I have to say
it was an exciting initiative
to use, to leverage, the
implementation of the NDC. The
first thought was: how do you
do that, beyond the budget,
and to bring this whole
integration at country level.
So, the sovereign Green Bond
which will be the first ones
issued at the end of March in
emerging countries is very
exciting, and I think that the
model that should be taken
there is that countries
themselves need to go through
a process that strengthens
integration and that they
institutionally can then rise
to the opportunities of other
financing coming into the
international Green Bond
market. And that is huge. It
has also brought in a lot of
the private sector into this,
in a way, I think, that is
constructive and gets
government providing the
enabling environment but the
private sector really taking
things to scale. It has to be
about jobs and our economies
improving in Africa, so yes, I
do think that that is
important.
On the second question on
security reform, that is
something that I will work to
support the
Secretary-General. I
think he has given me a huge
amount to deliver on. I think
that Security Council reform
is a critical part of what we
do in the next few years and
somehow we have to balance
that if we to address the
prevention agenda. Thank you
very much.
***
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