Morning multilateralism, May 1
Syrian authorities denounce UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as biased. Report: Russia and China resist sanctions threat against Sudan and South Sudan. Plus, Colum Lynch explores whether the UN is following its own Darfur sanctions. UN committee prepares to blacklist more North Korean companies. Lifting of EU sanctions and Japan’s debt forgiveness make Moody’s bullish ...
Syrian authorities denounce UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as biased.
Syrian authorities denounce UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as biased.
Report: Russia and China resist sanctions threat against Sudan and South Sudan. Plus, Colum Lynch explores whether the UN is following its own Darfur sanctions.
UN committee prepares to blacklist more North Korean companies.
Lifting of EU sanctions and Japan’s debt forgiveness make Moody’s bullish on Burma.
ASEAN and partner countries boost their currency swap arrangement.
The Arab League says Saif Gaddafi should face justice in Libya, not at the International Criminal Court.
NATO chief and Serbian leadership talk about stability in Kosovo. Plus, the EU brokers talks on Kosovo’s upcoming elections.
Chavez says Venezuela should withdraw from the Organization of American States’ human rights body.
From the UN’s refugee agency, a dispatch on the displaced in Tripoli.
On International Jazz Day, Herbie Hancock performs at UN headquarters.
David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist
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