UN Transcripts — https://transcripts.un.org/en/briefing/sg/2026-07-09 Commemoration of Genocide in Srebrenica & other topics - Daily Press Briefing — 9 July 2026 Language: en Transcripts available through this tool are created by using automatic speech recognition and are not official records nor official documents of the United Nations. Official records and official documents are available on the Official Document System of the United Nations. --- UN · Stefan [36:07]: Really sorry because I'm late, but as always, it's Things beyond my control. In a short while, we will be joined in person by Ana Claudia Rosbach, who, as you know, is the Executive Director of UN-Habitat, and she will also be joined by Ambassador Erastus Ekithela Lokale, Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, and they will also be joined by Shirley Price, who is a member of the UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues and also a member of the Jamaica Household Workers Union, among other organizations. They will brief you on the renewing commitments of sustainable cities and communities and the launch of SDG 11 Global Synthesis Report 2026. Tomorrow, I will be joined virtually from Haiti by Yuri Sadala, the Global Emergency Director of the Norwegian Refugee Council, and Maria Moita, the Director of the Department of Humanitarian Response and Recovery from IOM. They are part of a group of emergency directors who are on a mission to Haiti, and this group includes UN agency representatives and representatives from large international NGOs. This morning in the General Assembly, Courtney Rattray, the Secretary-General's chef de cabinet, delivered an address on behalf of the Secretary-General at the observance of the International Day of Reflection and Commemoration of the 1995 genocide in Srebrenica. The day, as you know, honors the over 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys, many who had sought refuge in a UN compound, who were killed during the genocide in '95, as well as the thousands of women, children, and older persons who were forcibly displaced. The Secretary-General called on member states to pursue accountability for the atrocities in Srebrenica and to take action against genocide and its warning signs, including the rise in hate speech hate speech that is fueling discrimination, division, and extremism globally. As a reminder, the International Day itself is marked on July 11th, which is Saturday, and our UN team in Bosnia-Herzegovina will be participating in those events. This afternoon, the Secretary-General will deliver remarks at a civil society special event on the UNHCR AD Initiative. In his remarks, he's expected to tell participants that the UN80 is vital to our ability to succeed in the age of profound instability. The challenges we face are complex, but they point to a simple truth, and that is that the United Nations can only deliver on its promise if we dare to evolve. The Secretary-General will also be highlighting that UN80 initiative only succeeds if it strengthens our ability to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goals. Goals, implement the Pact for the Future, and work in partnership with civil society. That event will be broadcast live as of 3 PM, and I think we've shared those remarks with you. Also want to flag some travel by the Under-Secretary-General for Operational Support, Atul Kari. He'll be heading to Tokyo from the 13th to the 17th of July, then Seoul from the 20th to the 21st, and Beijing from the 22nd to the 24th. During the visit, he will meet with senior government officials to discuss operational support priorities, UN field missions, including capacity building for troop and police contributing countries through the Triangular Partnership Program, support for uniformed peacekeepers and mission transitions, and UNADID-related reforms and initiatives. A quick update from our peacekeepers in southern Lebanon. UNIFIL peacekeepers continue to observe air violations, with over 41 violations detected yesterday. Peacekeepers also observed two Israeli Defense Forces reconnaissance quadrocopters and one armed quadcopter operating on the coastal road near al-Bayyada, and later observed three strikes around 700 meters from a UN position in that very area. Peacekeepers also observed airstrike near Kunin in sector west, which resulted in a secondary explosion, as well as an airstrike outside the area of operations in Nabatiyeh. Peacekeepers continue to face restrictions on their freedom of movement around the mission's area of operations. Yesterday, UNIFIL peacekeepers were temporarily stopped by IDF soldiers on the coastal road near Al-Bayyada. Soon after, the Israeli Defense Forces deployed a mobile barrier to halt a subsequent convoy, which, though in the end was later allowed to proceed. Also yesterday, peacekeepers reported 11 firing incidents from IDF forces positioned south of the Blue Line, with one impacting near Sheba and the rest outside of the mission's area of operations. Peacekeepers observed armored movements and tank fire in Sector East. On the humanitarian front, displaced families in Lebanon continue to return across the conflict-impacted areas. As of this week, more than 33,000 people remain in 325 collective shelters across the country. Local authorities and humanitarian partners report limited access to basic services in Nabatiye, where many communities face shortages of water, shortages of electricity, and shortages of fuel. Humanitarian partners supported by the Humanitarian Notification System continue to assist people in conflict-related areas, also hard-to-reach areas. Between March and July 9th, over 370 humanitarian movements were facilitated in southern Lebanon, with over 770 trucks delivering assistance to impacted areas. Funding, as you can imagine, remains a major concern. The revised flash appeal seeks $640 million to support 1.4 million people through August 2026. To date, our funding is only— our appeal is only 42.2% funded. We reiterate that all returns must be safe, they must be voluntary, and of course dignified, and people must have access to the humanitarian assistance that they need. Turning to the occupied Palestinian territory and Gaza more specifically, the Deputy Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Dr. Ramiz Al-Akbaroff, together with our Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator, Susanna Khalik led a virtual diplomatic field visit to one of the displacement sites in Al Mawasi, in Khan Younis. The visit was attended remotely through a video link by members of a dozen diplomatic missions who observed the living conditions and relief efforts at the site, interacting with displaced children and adults, as well as aid workers. You'll recall that just like journalists, diplomatic missions have had difficulty getting into Gaza since October 2023. At a distribution point within the site, diplomats joining the virtual visit saw how community members, including children, collected water carried by trucks. This project is operated by a local partner and funded by the occupied Palestinian humanitarian fund. Displaced people told diplomats that they need sustainable water services, especially during hot summer days, and cash-for-work opportunities to feed families. Participants in the virtual visit were also led through hundreds of tents crammed along the shoreline. Dr. Al-Aghbar thanked the participants for their financial support to our relief efforts, indicating that more is needed to sustain and to scale up operations, including funding and political action to, to unblock persistent impediments. Earlier today in Deir el-Balah, Dr. Alakbarov met with heads of humanitarian agencies to discuss relief efforts and challenges. In the afternoon, he also visited the Emirati hospital in, in Rafah. I want to turn now to, to Sudan. Where I can tell you we remain deeply concerned by the ongoing drone attack as well as disease outbreaks in the Kordofan region. In North Kordofan, we are continuing to get reports of drone strikes, including one that targeted a water truck in Hamrat al-Sheikh, leaving civilian casualties and further disrupting access to essential water supplies. The disruptions of these essential services come as cholera continues to spread across Kordofan. On Wednesday, humanitarian partners reported a suspected case in al-Obaid, where continued drone attacks have led to severe water shortages. Currently, water supply can meet only 20% of the city's needs. We and our partners continue to respond to the cholera outbreak. WHO reports that cholera response supplies have been prepositioned in al-Obaid. For the broader humanitarian response, OCHA has already allocated more than $44 million through the Sudan Humanitarian Fund to our partners to provide critical relief to communities in El Ubaid. This will support food security, nutrition, healthcare, water, sanitation, and many other services. Also in South Kordofan, UNICEF reported yesterday that health supplies have been delivered to the city of Abu Jubaya in support of both emergency and routine health services. For some 240,000 human beings across the area. We thank donors for their continued support and reiterate our appeal for increased timely and flexible funding. The 2026 Humanitarian Response Plan is less than one-third funded, having received $930 million to date out of the nearly $2.9 billion needed. And just a quick update on Pekka Havisto, the SG's Envoy for Sudan. Sudan. He concluded his visit to Chad, where he met with the Prime Minister along with several other cabinet members, including ministers of defense, security, and foreign affairs, and the mediator of the republic. Discussions highlighted the increasing security challenges linked to the conflict and reaffirmed Chad's readiness to continue playing a constructive role in supporting efforts towards a peaceful resolution to the conflict. Mr. Havisda also heard directly from Sudanese refugee women and other refugees during a visit to Adre, which is on the border with Sudan. He also met with humanitarian colleagues there. He expressed his support for Chad's continued support for Sudanese refugees and appealed for the authorities to facilitate, as they did last year, the organization of a Sudanese national examinations for refugees— for students who are stuck in refugee camps. Quick update on Ebola for you. Our Emergency Relief Coordinator, Tom Fletcher, just released a statement in which he said that we need to move faster to break the back of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Interagency Standing Committee has activated a system-wide scale-up to control the disease in the DRC. We, as you know, we've also deployed a senior Ebola coordinator to strengthen the leadership, and that is Julian Harnis. Tom Fletcher has also released $60 million from the Central Emergency Response Fund to accelerate the response in the DRC and help prepare us in neighboring countries, notably Uganda, South Sudan, and Burundi. But we need to act with urgencies, and parties need to facilitate humanitarian access wherever it is needed. Border and supply routes must remain open and donors must ensure that pledged funding reaches the responders quickly and flexibly. Now it's time to invest in the preparedness. Tom said the best defense against Ebola remains strong surveillance, lab testing, referral systems, infection prevention control, and community engagement. Above all, trust saves lives. Communities must remain at the centre of the response with local leadership, accountability to the people, protection against sexual exploitation and abuse, and a response that is both tailored to women and men must be integral to every part of the operation. Any delay, he said, will be measured in Ebola deaths and in lives lost in the wider humanitarian outbreak. Also on— Speaker 2 [48:56]: Excuse me. UN · Stefan [48:57]: Also on Ebola, I wanted to flag a little bit of good news, and that is from Uganda, where no new Ebola cases have been reported in the last 17 days. As we've mentioned, the response to Ebola has been led by national authorities in Uganda, with technical leadership from WHO and support from the UN Country Team. Emphasis has been placed on strengthening contact tracing, expanding lab capacity, supported treatment and infection control, enhanced risk communication and community engagement, and reinforced screenings at borders. Um, to sustain these gains, our team and partners are supporting the authorities in maintaining and updating the national response plan for the next 6 months to ensure that Uganda remains ready to detect and respond rapidly to any, um, resurgence. I also want to flag to you that Volker Türk, the High Commissioner for Human Rights, issued a statement on the DRC in which he deplored the impact of civilians on recent clashes in the eastern part of the country, calling for concerted and national effort— international efforts to de-escalate tension. That statement is online. And in Venezuela, Tom Fletcher continues his visit. He has visited a number of the impacted communities. Throughout his engagements with government people, civilians, and UN teams, he's emphasized the importance of maintaining coordinated and adequate resource response to address immediate humanitarian needs while laying the foundations for early recovery. Today in Caracas, he met with members of the humanitarian country team and other partners. And as we mentioned yesterday, Mr. Fletcher is calling for an additional $298 million to address critical needs over the next 6 months. We and our partners are implementing an integrated response, including health, shelter protection, food assistance, water, sanitation, and hygiene. For example, at La Guaria, the IOM is providing site management support, distributing kitchen sets, and other essential items, and UNICEF has maintained access to clean water, sanitation, hygiene for over 1,200 families by distributing hygiene kits and operating dozens of toilets and handwashing stations and trucking— trucking a lot of water. And this morning, just want to flag that Rosemary DiCarlo, Head of the Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, briefed the Security Council on Ukraine, noting the past week alone, 3 massive waves of Russian aerial strikes targeted Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities. She said that also Ukraine has continued drone attacks on oil, industrial, and military infrastructure in Russia. She said that any attacks against civilians and civilian infrastructure wherever they occur are a clear violation of international humanitarian law. You've been very patient. One last note on Haiti. The— our humanitarian IOM colleagues are alarmed by the impact of armed clashes on people in West Department, with more than 3,000 people newly displaced in the communes of Gantier and Kenscoff. According to IOM, armed clashes displaced some 1,300 people on July 1st. Displaced families are sheltering with host communities, placing additional strain on already vulnerable households. And in Kenscoff, 2,000 people were place following armed clashes between July 4th and 5th. We continue to assess the situation on the ground, and you'll hear more about Haiti from our colleagues tomorrow. I've spoken enough. Up to you to speak up. Gabriel. Gabriel Elizondo [52:39]: Thanks, Steph. I know you guys put out a statement yesterday about the escalating situation in the Gulf., and in the statement yesterday, the SG called on all parties to exercise maximum restraint, or your statement on the SG's behalf, and avoid any further escalatory action. Since that statement was released, there has been more escalatory action, as you know. Iran has launched attacks against Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar, among others. What is the Secretary-General's reaction specifically to the events in the last few hours? UN · Stefan [53:17]: Look, this tit for tat needs to stop, right? A return to diplomacy is urgently needed for the sake of stability in the region, for the sake of, of global— sake of global stability. I mean, we keep talking about the impact that this, this conflict is having on the global economy and I think all of the parties involved need to understand that the best way to, uh, to end this conflict is a return to, uh, the negotiating table. Gabriel Elizondo [53:50]: And clearly, um, the MOU is not sticking, it's not holding. Um, from the Secretary-General's standpoint, where does he see the UN's role perhaps in the coming days and weeks, given where we've been and given where we're at now? UN · Stefan [54:10]: Well, we're always— Secretary General has always said that he stands ready to assist in any way that we can. We have our— his personal envoy on this crisis, Jean Arnault, I think, is— continues to stay in touch with relevant parties. We have also the International Organization— the International Maritime Organization, which plays a critical role on the maritime issues in the Strait. Yes, Islam. Islam [54:44]: Thank you, Stefan. There is a new report that coordinated pro-Israel organizations are working to pressure on Germany to cut the aid to UNRWA. As Germany became top donor after the US cut the aid, is this worry the Secretary General? UN · Stefan [55:15]: Secretary General spoke very clearly and passionately about the need for member states to support UNRWA just a few days ago at the pledging conference here. We very much appreciate Germany's support. And I have to tell you that the UNRWA leadership, now under the leadership of Christian Saunders, has been extremely transparent with donors, ready to answer any questions, any concerns they may have, and we will continue to interact with donors in that very transparent way. Islam [55:47]: And do you see this pressure sort of contradiction with the UN Security Council resolution Regarding the Board of Peace, which mandate UN humanitarian aid in Gaza. UN · Stefan [56:01]: I mean, you're correct, Islam, in pointing out that the Security Council resolution mandates the UN to deliver humanitarian goods, and I think everyone should be supporting our work in that regard. Okay, I will get our guests, and thank you for being patient. Don't go away. Benny [56:17]: Steph, I want to ask you a question. UN · Stefan [56:20]: Go ahead, Benny, Benny, Benny, Benny. I wore my seersucker in your honor. Go ahead. Benny [56:25]: Thank you very much. So yesterday, the Israeli ambassador at the Security Council accused Pramila Patten of being influenced by the Secretary-General and asked for her to release all communication with the Secretary-General. A, what's your response to the allegation? B, will you release any documentation? UN · Stefan [56:51]: No, we won't. Uh, the report is not Pramila Patten's report. The report is the Secretary-General's report. It's his name that's on it. He stands by it. He very much appreciates the work that Ms. Patten and her office does in preparing the report on his behalf. Benny [57:11]: So, uh, does that mean that she had no role in it? UN · Stefan [57:16]: Of course, Benny, Benny, Her title is Special Representative of the Secretary-General, right, for sexual violence in conflict. This is her job. Benny [57:27]: We— UN · Stefan [57:27]: the Secretary-General fully supports her in her effort to prepare the Secretary-General's report. Speaker 20 [57:37]: Thank you very much. UN · Stefan [57:38]: Thank you. Alright, don't go away now. I'm sorry, we've all been very patient. Speaker 22 [58:46]: Great. UN · Stefan [58:46]: Thank you very much and good afternoon again, and thank you for your patience with this. We are delighted to be joined by Ana Claudia Rosbach, who is, you know, is the Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN-Habitat, and she is joined by Ambassador Lokale, Permanent Representative of Kenya. And next to Ms. Rosbach is Shirley Price, a member of the UN Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues and member of the Jamaica Household Workers Union, GROOTS Jamaica. And you have the floor, Madam Executive Director. UN-Habitat · Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director · Ana Claudia Rosbach [59:23]: It was on. Thank you. Good afternoon. It is my pleasure to present the SDG 11 Global Report 2026, which assesses global progress towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goal 11: Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable. As we enter the final stretch towards 2030, this report offers a timely assessment of where the world stands, where progress is accelerating, and where urgent Action is still required. The report shows that progress is possible, but it is neither fast enough nor equitable enough to achieve SDG 11 by 2030. We have made important advances on SDG 11. Across 126 countries, the share of the urban population with convenient access to public transport rose from 53.2% in 2020 to 61.5% in 2025. Across 123 countries, land consumption is now more closely aligned with population growth than in earlier decades. Cities are gradually improving municipal waste collection, with average collection levels exceeding 90% in countries such as Australia and New Zealand, but also in Western Western Asia, Northern Africa, Northern America and Europe, and Latin America and the Caribbean. However, these positive achievements are being outpaced by the scale and speed of urbanization and by growing inequalities within cities. 4 in 10 urban residents still lack convenient public transport access. The number of people affected by disasters annually remains high—between 2015 and 2024, an average of 123 million people per year. Natural disasters are also more frequent. The most urgent challenge remains housing, ladies and gentlemen. More than 1 billion people live in slums and informal settlements, representing an increase of more than 130 million people since 2015. This is part of a broader global housing crisis. 3 billion people lack adequate housing. Nearly half of all households worldwide now spend more than 30% of their income on rent while house prices continue to rise faster than incomes. The report makes it clear that adequate housing is the foundation of sustainable cities and communities. Housing is not only about shelter. It determines access to transport, employment, education, healthcare, public space, and economic opportunities. It influences resilience to disasters, environmental quality, public health, and social inclusion. Without adequate housing, it is hard to achieve most sustainable development goals. In particular, the well-being of more than 1 billion people living in informal settlements and slums— it is, is at stake. This report reminds us that housing crisis is fundamentally a crisis of inequality. The people most affected are often those facing multiple forms of exclusion, including women, children, older persons, persons with disabilities, migrants, displaced populations, indigenous people, and residents of informal settlements. Addressing these inequalities requires more than building houses. The report calls for in situ upgrading of slums and informal settlements in partnership with communities. Residents must be recognized as co-producers of solutions with investments that improve housing, tenure security, infrastructure, public transport, public spaces, and resilience with south displacement. The report highlights important changes in how cities are growing. Contrary to common assumptions, outward urban expansion is increasingly driven by planned low-rise development rather than informal settlements alone. Outward growth continues to significantly outpace compact urban redevelopment, emphasizing the importance of planning cities that are compact, connected, inclusive, and resource efficient. Environmental conditions remain another major concern. Despite gradual improvements in municipal waste collection, service coverage remains highly unequal across regions. Air pollution continues to pose one of the greatest threats to urban health. Public space also remains insufficient. Less than half of urban residents enjoy convenient access to open public spaces, while the amount of green space available per person has continued to decline over recent decades. These trends directly affect health, social cohesion, climate resilience, and quality of life. The report also demonstrates that climate-related disasters are becoming an increasingly central urban challenge. Encouragingly, countries are strengthening resilience planning. More national urban policies meet international standards, and an increasing number of countries have aligned national and local disaster risk reduction strategies. 141 countries have national disaster risk reduction strategies, and 116 countries report aligned local strategies. However, planning must now translate into implementation through safer housing, resilient infrastructure, risk-informed land use, and stronger local preparedness. One of the strongest findings emerging from the report concerns the importance of urban data. Effective urban policy depends on timely, reliable, and disaggregated data. Since 2020, an additional 44 countries have made substantial progress in strengthening urban monitoring systems and reporting on SDG 11. Today, a total of 101 countries report more than 50% of monitoring data for 10 targets of SDG 11. Yet major data disaggregation gaps remain, particularly for women, children, persons with disabilities, informal settlements, and neighborhood-level inequalities. Greater investment is needed in official statistics, geospatial information, Earth observation, administrative systems, and other innovative data sources so that data supports real-time decision-making rather than periodic reporting alone. The evidence presented in this report demonstrates that the solutions already exist. But the SDG 11 Global Report 2026 is not simply an assessment of progress. It is a call to action. The report concludes with a call for renewed commitment during the remaining years of the 2030 Agenda. We need greater investment, especially in adequate housing, stronger political leadership, improved urban governance, and a renewed commitment to ensuring that no one is left behind as cities continue to grow. The choices made during the next 4 years will determine whether cities become engines of inclusion, resilience, and opportunity, or places where inequalities continue to deepen. UN-Habitat remains committed to working with member states and partners to strengthen urban data, improve evidence-based policymaking, and support the transformation of cities into places where everyone can enjoy adequate housing, access to services, and a better quality of life. Thank you. UN · Stefan [1:07:51]: Thank you, ma'am. Uh, and I'll turn to, uh, to Ambassador of Kenya, please. Kenya · Permanent Representative · Erastus Ekithela Lokale [1:07:57]: Thank you very much and good afternoon. Kenya is honored to participate in today's launch and commends UN-Habitat and all partner agencies for the comprehensive report, which comes at a pivotal moment as the international community prepares for the high-level meeting on the midterm review of the New Urban Agenda. The report sends a clear and urgent message, which is that despite progress in areas such as public transport, waste management, and urban policy, the world remains significantly off track in achieving SDG 11. The findings reinforce that adequate housing is not only an enabler of SDG 11, but indeed all the other Sustainable Development Goals. For Kenya, these findings resonate deeply. Guided by our Constitution and the Bottom-up Economic Transformation agenda, we have placed affordable housing, integrated urban planning, and resilient infrastructure at the center of our national development priorities. Through the Affordable Housing Program, informal settlement upgrading initiatives, expanded urban infrastructure, and investments in sustainable mobility, we are working to ensure that urbanization becomes a driver of economic opportunity, social inclusion, and environmental sustainability. Our Affordable Housing Program seeks to address our country's estimated annual housing demand of 250,000 units against current supply of only 50,000 units. To date, and over the last 3 years, more than 270,000 new units have been completed or are at advanced stages of construction, demonstrating Kenya's commitment to accelerate access to adequate, safe, and affordable housing for all. Kenya is also proud to have hosted in April 2026 the Urban— the Africa Urban Forum in Nairobi, which reaffirmed Africa's shared commitment to implementing the New Urban Agenda. The forum highlighted— the importance of strengthening multilevel governance, empowering local authorities, mobilizing sustainable financing, leveraging innovation and data, and promoting partnerships that respond to Africa's rapid urbanization. The Mid-term Review, therefore, is an opportunity to renew our collective resolve towards the attainment of the New Urban Agenda, by assessing progress made, identifying challenges, and recommending strategic actions to advance implementation. The declarations call for integrated urban planning, climate resilient development, stronger local governments, improved access to adequate housing, and enhanced means of implementation aligned closely with Kenya's national development priorities. We particularly welcome its emphasis on accelerating action through stronger international cooperation, capacity building, technology transfer, and increased investment in sustainable urban development. The successful conclusion of the Intergovernmental negotiations on the political declaration is a clear demonstration of the collective resolve to accelerate implementation of the New Urban Agenda and SDG 11 in the remaining years to 2030 and beyond. The next 4 years are critical. We must move beyond acknowledging the challenges to actually implementing practical solutions by placing people at the center of urban development, empowering local governments, strengthening urban data systems, investing in affordable housing, and building cities that are resilient to climate change and future shocks. As host of UN-Habitat, Kenya remains committed to supporting the organization's global mandate. Nairobi continues to serve as a unique home for advancing international dialogue on sustainable urbanization, and we stand ready to work with all member states to translate this report's findings into concrete action. Kenya looks forward to the high-level meeting on the midterm review of the New Urban Agenda and to working with all partners to ensure that the renewed political commitments that are contained in the political declaration actually translate into tangible improvements that improve people's lives and indeed Leave no one behind. UN · Stefan [1:13:34]: I thank you. Thank you very much. Ms. Price, and then we'll take some questions, please. urban stakeholders, especially grassroots and domestic workers' organizations · Member, UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues · Shirley Price [1:13:42]: Good afternoon, everyone. I must give thanks first for the opportunity for me as a domestic worker to be here. Very happy for that. On behalf of urban stakeholders, especially grassroots and domestic workers' organizations, Women around the world, I welcome the launch of the SDGs 11 Global Report 2026 and recognize the work those involved in producing this report does. I would like to make my commentary particularly from the perspective of grassroots women who lives in poor, underserved, urban, rural, indigenous communities. For these women, this is not simply a housing crisis. It is a crisis of rights, truth, opportunity, and resilience. Every city have people we rarely see. They are the women who work before sunrise to care for children, hold the purses, and households. There are women rebuilding homes after fire, storms, hurricanes, floods, with little or no support. There are the women organize their neighbors, supporting one another through crisis and finding solution long before help arrives. Yet these same women, such as domestic workers, And grassroots women are often the ones living in inadequate housing, lacking secure tenure, reliable services, safe transport, affordable childcare, and a meaningful voice in decisions that shape their own community and to have a dignified livelihood. That's why this report matters. The SDG Global Report reminds us that we are running out of time. Progress is possible, but it remains too slow and too unequal. More than 3 billion people still live in inadequate housing, and over 1 billion people live in informal settlements. These are not simply statistics. They represent millions of families whose daily reality is shaped by exclusion and inequality. Coming from Jamaica and the Caribbean, I know that resilience is not built after disaster strikes. It's built every day through decent housing, strong neighborhoods, and organized communities. In our region, climate change is not a future threat, it is a lived reality. Hurricanes, flooding, rising costs continue to test our communities time and time again. It's the grassroots women who organize as first responders. We remain long after the headlines have disappeared. We are still there, working, fighting for survival. This is why I strongly welcome the ED's dominant message in her report that housing must be placed at the center of sustained sustainable development. But housing is much more than a roof over our heads, our four walls. Housing is dignity, it's safety, Housing is health. Housing is opportunity. It is where children learn, where families recover, where whole persons find security, and where resilience begins. The report also reminds us that housing cannot separate from transport, public spaces, basic services, environmental quality or disaster preparedness. I would add one more essential element: care. Cities depend on care— care workers every single day. Care for children, care for older persons, care for persons with disability, care for neighbors, and care for our communities. Yet, Care remains likely largely invisible in the way we design our cities and our policies. If we truly want inclusive, resilient, and sustainable cities, then we must recognize care as part of the essential urban infrastructure. Investing in housing without investing in care will never achieve truly inclusive cities. Over many years, I have worked alongside grassroots women, domestic workers, community organizations in Jamaica, across the Caribbean, and globally. I have seen that communities are not waiting for a solution. They are already creating them. Too often, communities are consolated consulted after decisions have already been made. This can't continue. Woman-led organizations map informal settlements, collect community data, organize savings groups, strengthen disaster preparedness, improve neighborhoods, and work alongside local government every day as grassroots women leaders Myself, I, Shirley Price, this is an everyday reality for me. We are not beneficiaries of development, we are partners in development, and that partnership should become a norm, not exclusion. We are the oil in the engine that makes change happen. As we approach the review of the New Urban Agenda, In the final years before 2030, I would like to leave 3 messages. First, invest directly in community-led solutions. Small investments in organized communities create lasting change because they build ownership, resilience, and accountability. Secondly, move beyond consultation. Grassroots organizations, especially those led by women, must have a permanent place at the decision-making tables where urban policies, budgets, and investments are shaped. Thirdly, strengthen local government and equip them with work and to work hand in hand with organized communities and organizations. Sustainable communities cannot be built by government alone. They require genuine partnership based on trust, shared responsibility, and mutual respect. The SDG global review gives us strong evidence, evidence about the challenges before us. However, communities have spent decades providing equally strong evidence about the solution and how to build their communities for resilience and sustainable development. We have been doing that for years. They generate practical solutions because they understood the local realities. They live it daily. The question before us is no longer whether we know what needs to be done. The question is, whether we prepare to invest in the people who are already doing the job. Because sustainable cities are not built only through concrete and infrastructure. They are built through people. They are built through trust. They are built through care and are built when communities are recognized not simply as beneficiaries of development, but as equal partners in shaping the future of our communities. Today, I'm saying, as water flows downhill, so does inequality. Unless we design differently, sustainability must design with everyone. Nothing for us without us. Let's leave no one behind. UN · Stefan [1:22:44]: Thank you very much. Ms. Price, thank you very much for those words. We'll take first questions from Amélie at AFP. AFP · UNCA · Amélie Bothelier [1:22:52]: Thank you very much. On behalf of the UN Correspondents Association, thank you for doing this briefing. I'm Amélie Bothelier from AFP News Agency. You mentioned the issue of adaptation to climate change, so my question is on that. I mean, we saw in the last few weeks extreme heat waves hitting Europe, countries where we saw people rushing to buy air conditioning.— even some who swore before they would never do that. We know air conditioning is contributing significantly to climate change, is heating the cities by themselves. So do you see air conditioning as a possible temporary solution to save some people, because, you know, we cannot just let elderly people die in the heat in retirement home, until we actually put in place a real sustainable housing solution in this big city, or do you think that developing AC could even, I mean, create the risk of postponing any more sustainable solution to sustain the heat in the future because we will have air conditioning? UN · Stefan [1:24:15]: Please. Executive Director. UN-Habitat · Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director · Ana Claudia Rosbach [1:24:18]: Well, thank you, Amélie. I think this is a very specific context, right? Because indeed the heat waves, they have been affecting cities globally, and we spoke a lot about informal settlements, for example. Our studies, and some studies actually led by communities— there's one, uh, by communities in Rio de Janeiro— in our studies, they showed that the differences between the temperature in the city and informal settlements can be, you know, even 8 or 10 degrees Celsius. And if we talk about these low-income families, even the purchase power to, you know, go for air conditioning or more sophisticated cooling systems is limited, right? So this is a very, you know, specific context. I don't I don't think I would have a concrete opinion about the use of air conditioning or not. I— it's kind of controver— it's kind of, uh, how can I say, um, debatable, because you need to save energy, but you also need to save— to save, uh, people's— people's life. What we advocate for at UN-Habitat is to really make sure that we max out the built environment that we have and that we renew and recycle in a way that works for the people and for, for the planet. And when building new buildings, the buildings— and we have to build because especially in the Global South, we are talking about 2 billion people coming to cities in the next couple of decades. And cities there, they don't have the massive built environment that you find in the Global North or in the Americas. So you still have to build. And what we advocate for, what we assist member states is on regulations, building codes, national urban policies, local plans, where, you know, the localization is a priority, where building means also green spaces and building cities and with local materials and with sustainable materials and designs. That are more energy efficient. So we have an opportunity with the new buildings to work by design, starting with. UN · Stefan [1:26:37]: Thank you. We'll go to Noreen, then Gabriel, then I'll go to you, ma'am. IPS · Noreen Hossein [1:26:44]: Thank you very much. My name is Noreen Hossein with IPS News. I have a question for Ms. Price with regards to something that you said during your statement. You said, and if if I understand this correctly, that care and the role of caregivers in communities is— the needs of caregivers is largely invisible when it comes to urban development policies and how countries design their cities. I wanted to ask if you could clarify on that. What do you mean when you say that care is invisible in policy design? Thank you. Member, UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues · Shirley Price [1:27:24]: Care, I said care is invisible. It is. And I think it's globally, not just in the Caribbean, because the system are designed to leave us behind. I am a caregiver. Many, many community workers are giving care, receive care and are giving care. The system not designed for us. For example, You just— the first ED spoke about building communities with green space. When you're building houses with green space, you're not building houses, you don't build houses, you build communities. It has to be very inclusive. Green area, space for childcare facility, space, elder care facility, city community center, it must be holistic. So you have space to go there for— to take care of whether you're seeing a citizen, your young child, you going to work and your child is left behind. I'm talking about in the context of a domestic worker or inner city communities where slums are. We don't have paid caregiver You know, so we've gone to work and then leave the children behind to get ready for school, to take care of themselves. So care is very expensive. We can't afford care. And as caregivers, we are being left behind all the time, not just most time, but all the time. So care is essential. UN · Stefan [1:29:00]: Thank you. Gabriel? Gabriel Elizondo [1:29:02]: Thank you very much. Member, UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues · Shirley Price [1:29:03]: Did that answer your question? IPS · Noreen Hossein [1:29:04]: It does. Member, UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues · Shirley Price [1:29:05]: Okay, thank you. Gabriel Elizondo [1:29:06]: Thank you very much for the briefing. My name is Gabriel Elizondo from Al Jazeera English. Very informative briefing, thank you. Just two quick questions. One is, um, the report states, as you also stated, that from 2020 to 2025, the number of people, or the percentage that of people that have access to reliable public transport, has jumped from 53 to 61%. That strikes me as a pretty— big increase. What do you attribute that to, specifically with that particular issue? And secondly, on housing, not all informal settlements are built the same around the world, as you all know better than anyone. What is UN-Habitat's position when it comes to governments or municipalities providing land titles to people that live on these types of settlements? UN · Stefan [1:30:06]: Please. UN-Habitat · Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director · Ana Claudia Rosbach [1:30:08]: Thank you very much. So on public transportation, I do think that it's an area where we have developed faster ways of having access to development finance. Less, let's say so. So if you look at the IFIs, the International Development Banks, they have strong transportation teams, they have strong transportation frameworks, there are resources. If you look at their portfolio, there's a large part that goes to transport. Housing, on the other hand, and informality is much more complex because you depend on several sectors and several areas. You depend You depend on local coordination by cities, you know, you depend from resources that comes from the national level or internationally, you depend on regulations. So I think sectorally it's easier to work on public transportation. So perhaps this is one of the reasons where we advance. We have expertise, we have more resources, and we learned the way to do. In terms of informal settlements, the reality is indeed, uh, very diverse, um, and the different situations. So what we advocate for is that first of all, we map, we have the information, because if we don't have the information, we cannot differentiate, uh, and we cannot design the right policy to address, um, the issue in different places. The second aspect is what Shirley was saying, engaging with communities. So it's very important to engage with communities to understand the history of these informal settlements and also who owns what, right, and the borders of the informal set. So this work is very important because first of all, we need to clear the area until we go to a phase where which is providing the title. Different countries, they have different regulations. In Latin America and the Caribbean, many countries, they have in their national constitutions or national frameworks, they recognize the social function of the housing. So they accept the informal settlements are there, and they have developed many policies to address informality, some of them with provisional titles, some of them with the possibility of going to a final title. The UN-HAPTAD has developed an approach and has been working with informal settlements in Africa, in Southeast Asia, globally, on what we call the continuum lands rights. So there are phases. So first of all, what we want is to protect people who are there, make sure that, you know, we minimize the risk and the threats of evictions and displacement forced displacement. And then second, see how can we improve the guarantee of tenure depending on the local legislation and of course the feasibility. Some of these informal settlements, they are located in risk areas, high-risk areas. So in some cases you do need to relocate. Also, in many, many cases when you are upgrading an informal settlement, you have to review the layout to make sure There is access, there are public spaces, there are spaces for what Shirley was talking about, the care, all the social infrastructure that you need. And sometimes you have to remove and resettlement. In many cases you have to densify because we are talking about metropolitan areas, areas where we don't have much land, right? So the approaches and the titling will depend on the conditions, on the communities, on the legal framework. But our advocacy is towards really, you know, protect the people where they are and improve their lives where they are. UN · Stefan [1:34:06]: Thank you. Yes, ma'am, please. Sibel Bülent [1:34:13]: My name is Sibel Bülent. I'm with EchoIQ Turkey. I have two questions. First one for Ms. Price. If you could share with us maybe an example of a good— a good example of community action. And my second question is to Madame Rosbach. We talk about 2 billion people moving into cities. Looking at it from a different perspective, are there any initiatives to keep people in rural communities to make them more attractive so that they're drawing young people in there, maybe the attractiveness of a different lifestyle? Just wondering if there are any initiatives in that perspective. Member, UN-Habitat Advisory Group on Gender Issues · Shirley Price [1:35:09]: Okay. One of the main committee action that we did is needs assessment. Before you go into a community to do any activity, any building, whether it's infrastructure upgrade or whatever you're doing, you have to do needs assessment. We don't want anybody to come into our community to just push something onto us. You got to come in and work with us as community and to see what are our needs. The greatest need, what do we want? So the first activity, the greatest activity, it is to come in the community and to work with the community leaders, you know, and to do a needs assessment. Then what government do most times, just say, I'm going to build here, I'm going to do this here, I'm going to do that. We want to be inclusive. In decision-making, and that's the bottom line. That's what should happen in the first place, you know, so because we know what we want in communities, so come to us. What are the needs? You know, collectively we work together, but, you know, we don't work fragmented. Thank you. Thank you. Executive Director? UN-Habitat · Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director · Ana Claudia Rosbach [1:36:29]: Well, so cities are the places that offer a set of opportunities for people that you cannot compare to any other place, to start with. And I'm not only talking about jobs. I'm talking about— jobs is one important factor, and we all need jobs, but I'm talking about aspirations, I'm talking about dreams, I'm talking about possibilities. I'm also talking about access to higher level education. I'm talking about access to higher level health, sophisticated health systems. I'm talking about access to culture, to leisure, to sports, to human development, to social development. UNHCR does have a strong body of work on the connection of rural and urban, right? We call it the rural urban linkages, and this is on the New Urban Agenda that, as His Excellency was mentioning, will be reviewed at its midpoint next week on the 16th, right? So why building stronger rural urban links are important? Exactly to protect and to preserve the communities living in rural areas. It's important that we make sure that the communities living in rural areas, they have to access to all possibilities that cities can offer, including consumer markets, including training. If we want to improve family agriculture efficiency, for example, then these people, they need access to training. Consumer markets are in cities, exports are in cities, cities are the channel, right? So for us, this is what's important. So people decide what they're going to do. Our estimates show that urbanization is happening at a very accelerated pace and very concentrated in Africa and Southeast Asia. UN · Stefan [1:38:42]: One last question, I think Joseph online. Joseph? Joseph [1:38:47]: Can you hear us? UN · Stefan [1:38:52]: Joseph, can you hear us? Okay, well, it's a very important report. Thank you.