UN General Assembly President postpones India trip due to Corona
President of the UN General Assembly Volkan Bozkir's planned visit to
India later this month has been postponed due to an unexpected
situation relating to the COVID-19 pandemic in the country.
Bozkir on Tuesday told reporters that he will be travelling to
Bangladesh and Pakistan later this month on the invitation of the
respective governments and will also be visiting Cox's Bazar in
Bangladesh where he will meet with Rohingya refugees from Myanmar.
Bangladesh
is hosting over 1.1 million Rohingya refugees who fled Myanmar's
military crackdown, often considered as "ethnic cleansing" by many
rights groups.
Bozkir said that he had also planned a visit to
India during his trip to South Asia but postponed it due to an
unexpected situation.
I also wanted to go to India. It was India, Pakistan and
Bangladesh, but unfortunately, an unexpected situation came out and I
had to postpone the India part to a later stage. But I will absolutely
make sure that I'll go to India as well, the UN General Assembly
President said, referring to India's COVID-19 crisis.
Asked
whether the UN will be able to host a regular General Assembly session
in September, he said: It would be wrong if we make a decision now for
September on how the participation will be. Will it be a hybrid format?
Or will we have again 10,000 people at UN Headquarters? What happens to
civil society? What happens to the bilaterals? These are all questions
we have in our minds.
He said June will be a proper time to discuss with the US, the
host country of the UN, and local authorities on the COVID-19 situation
and feasibility of holding the UN General Assembly.
With New
York City aiming to "fully reopen" on July 1, Bozkir said it will give
us a signal on whether we can have a different type of a high-level week
than we had last September , when all meetings were mostly virtual with
minimal in-person presence in the UN premises.
The important
thing is not to risk any people's health we must absolutely go along
with the mitigation measures, we must listen to what science is saying
to us and we must not really open everything without any precaution.
If I were the host country, I wouldn't have made any plans for
September as of now because with this pandemic, unfortunately, we are
living day by day or week by week. We suddenly see something happening,
like what happens in India. Nobody was expecting this suddenly to
happen. It changes all the plans. So, I think it's better to start
talking about it, to start discussing it, and then leave it to the
science and to the local authorities, he added.
India is
struggling with an unprecedented second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic
with more than 3,00,000 daily new coronavirus cases being reported in
the past one week.