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UN General Assembly: Key Issues

CLIMATE CHANGE : Richard Black, environment correspondent

The main climate-related event takes place before the opening of the General

Assembly proper, at a one-day special session on climate change called on the

personal initiative of UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

When the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) announced in 2007

that climate change was "unequivocal" and more than 90% likely to have a human

cause, Mr Ban declared that "all humanity must take responsibility" for

tackling it. In the period since, he has put the climate agenda near the top of

his to-do list.

Icebergs drift in the sea in Cierva Cove, on the coast of the Antarctic

Peninsula in Antarctica

Increasing temperatures are already having an impact on icebergs

Negotiations on a new UN treaty to supplant the ageing Kyoto Protocol have been

going on all year, and a number of critical obstacles remain.

Tuesday's special session is not expected to come up with any startling new

policy announcements. But it should give heads of government time to discuss

their priorities and their outstanding issues in a setting very different from

the labyrinthine UN treaty talks.

Mr Ban hopes - as do the numerous campaigning organisations putting their

supporters on the streets of New York this week - that this direct,

leader-to-leader contact can remove some of the log-jam. Part of the day will

be spent in roundtable sessions. Gordon Brown is due to co-chair one on climate

finance.

After the special session, many of the key players will head to Pittsburgh for

the G20 summit, which President Barack Obama hopes will generate a new

initiative on financing poorer countries' transition to a carbon-constrained

future.

The following week, UN climate treaty negotiations resume in Bangkok. Mr Ban,

and many others involved, will be hoping that the New York or Pittsburgh

summits can unstick that troubled process.

AFRICA : Martin Plaut, Africa analyst

For African leaders two events are already on the agenda - the launching of an

initiative on malaria and organising a unified African position on climate

change, ahead of the Copenhagen meeting in December.

Children playing in a Nuer cattle camp outside the southern Sudanese town of

Nassir in Upper Nile state

Some African states want sanctions against Sudan's president lifted

Heads of state and government from 10 African nations will meet on 23 September

to announce the formation of an African Leaders Malaria Alliance to try to

reduce illness and deaths from the parasite.

The initiative is being led by President Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania. Malaria is

one of the biggest health and economic challenges to Africa, accounting for one

quarter of all deaths of children under five, and costing the continent around

$12bn a year.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who is co-ordinating Africa's response

to climate change, will use the General Assembly to lobby for the continent.

He has already warned that African nations will not rubber-stamp a new climate

change treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol unless it takes account of the

continent's specific interests.

Some African states are also likely to lobby for the lifting of sanctions

against Zimbabwe's President, Robert Mugabe, and Sudan's Omar al-Bashir. And

then there is always the chance to deal with other bilateral issues, as well as

popping out to do a spot of shopping in some of New York's better stores.

MIDDLE EAST : Jeremy Bowen, Middle East editor

The Middle East is one of the major issues on the agenda at the UN General

Assembly this week.

On Tuesday, President Obama will hold a series of meetings with the Palestinian

President Mahmoud Abbas and the Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

Jewish settlement of Har Homa in east Jerusalem

The continued building of settlements is a major obstacle to starting talks

President Obama wants new peace talks about the setting up a Palestinian state

alongside Israel. But his plan has stalled over Israeli construction of homes

for Jews in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Israel's refusal to stop building in the Jewish settlements - all of which are

illegal under international law - despite repeated American requests, means

that the Palestinians will not renew negotiations.

President Obama's envoy Senator George Mitchell tried for months to make a

deal. Now it is up to the president himself.

Mr Obama has defined peace between Israel and the Palestinians as a national

interest of the US. But the failure so far to restart peace talks is a serious

and potentially humiliating setback for him. President Obama needs to find a

way to turn his meetings with the Israeli and Palestinian leaders into more

than just photo opportunities. He cannot afford to let his ambitious plans for

the Middle East fall apart so soon.

The controversy over whether or not Iran is building a nuclear weapon - and, if

so, what to do about it - is the other big issue in the Middle East. Israel

will stress to the Americans that they should worry less about the settlements

and the Palestinians and more about Iran. The Americans believe that progress

on the Israel-Palestinian track would make it easier to deal with Iran.

Iran's President Ahmedinejad is scheduled to address the General Assembly - and

the permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany meet to prepare

for vital negotiations with Iran next week.

SECURITY : Jonathan Marcus, diplomatic correspondent

President Barack Obama's speech last April in Prague has been described as "the

most important statement on nuclear weapons policy in a generation". There he

set out his administration's commitment to seek a world without nuclear

weapons.

US President Barack Obama makes his 5 April 2009 speech in Prague (file image)

Prague was a strategic choice for a major foreign policy speech

He accepted this was a vision that might not be achieved in his lifetime. But

in New York he intends to take the first important steps down this road.

On 24 September, Mr Obama will become the first US president to chair a meeting

of the United Nations Security Council. On the agenda, a US-drafted resolution

dealing with the whole question of nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament.

The text marks Washington's return to the mainstream of arms control after the

unilateralism of the Bush years. The US draft resolution recommits the United

States to multilateral action; support for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty

and for so-called "negative security assurances"; guarantees by nuclear weapons

states not to attack non-nuclear armed countries with nuclear weapons.

The US draft also, importantly, asserts that the rights of states to pursue

peaceful nuclear energy should depend upon their willingness to fulfil their

other non-proliferation obligations.

President Obama's aim is to demonstrate renewed US commitment to disarmament

ahead of next year's important review of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

While the US Senate is unlikely to have ratified the Test Ban Treaty by then,

Mr Obama hopes that his work at the UN, along with the improved chances for a

new arms reduction treaty with Russia - enhanced by his recasting of US missile

defence plans - will lead to an agreement to bolster the NPT, which remains the

corner-stone of international efforts to prevent the spread of nuclear arms.

IRAN AND THE US : Paul Reynolds, world affairs correspondent

Iran is on the international agenda because it is refusing to comply with the

orders of the Security Council to suspend the enrichment of uranium and the US

and its allies want to impose further sanctions on it.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Friction with Iran over its nuclear programme will cast a shadow

In particular, they would like restrictions on investment in Iran's oil and gas

industry and on the export to Iran of refined petroleum products, of which it

is short. However, it is not clear if any such sanctions will be imposed by the

UN itself or whether, because of Russian and Chinese reluctance, individual

countries or groups will look at doing this themselves.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is bound to be listened to closely when

he speaks. Iran is meeting the permanent members of the Security Council plus

Germany after the General Assembly on 1 October.

In a rare move, President Obama will chair a special meeting of the Security

Council. His speech will probably confirm a US rapprochement with the UN after

the Bush years and he can expect an enthusiastic reception. His decision to

shelve the anti-missile defence system in Eastern Europe will also reduce

tensions with the Russians, whose President, Dmitry Medvedev, he is to meet.

But President Obama is also likely to press the case for sanctions on Iran so

the Iranian issue will continue to cast a cloud over the General Assembly

session.

AFGHANISTAN : Martin Patience, Kabul correspondent

The issue of Afghanistan will be centre-stage at the UN General Assembly.

Security in the country is deteriorating in the face of a strengthening

insurgency; the government is largely seen as corrupt; and a deeply flawed

election has yet to be resolved.

Afghan women on a roadside in the capital, Kabul

Western diplomats are now admitting Afghanistan might be a failure

Earlier this week, the top US commander in the country, General Stanley

McChrystal, wrote in a leaked report that unless more US troops were sent to

the country, the mission risked failure.

But there are concerns because of mounting foreign casualties - and the

controversy surrounding the election - that the US Congress and other countries

will not wish to send more troops to the country.

And there is growing concern that the Afghan government is simply not

delivering - mostly because of corruption, but also because it has not received

enough support from the international community.

The UN special envoy to the country, Kai Eide, is expected to tell Congress

that now is "decision time."

He wants to see greater co-operation between various countries - and a clear

set of objectives agreed upon - in a mission that most observers say has been

muddled.

Eight years after the overthrow of the Taliban, the movement is strengthening

across the country. Western officials admit that without resolve the

international community could lose in Afghanistan.

And they fear, that in victory, the Taliban and other groups such as al-Qaeda,

would then use the country to further destabilise the region.