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   UNITED NATIONS, June 6 (KUNA) -- General Assembly President Nassir A. 
Al-Nasser of Qatar on Wednesday said it is possible for any Member State to 
request suspension of Syria's membership from the UN body if all UN efforts 
fail to compel Damascus to stem the violence against peaceful demonstrations.
    He told KUNA "any member state can make the request. Member States will 
have to examine it," and put it to a vote, adding that he cannot do it as 
Assembly President.
    He told a press conference earlier that the Assembly "remains deeply 
concerned about the situation in Syria. The situation on the ground is very 
disappointing and, frankly, appalling."
   He said the world followed the recent "horrifying developments, especially 
the massacre of more than a hundred people - including women and children - in 
the village Al-Houlah. Those responsible must be made to face justice."
   He said that "out of deep concern," the Assembly invited the 
Secretaries-General of the UN and the Arab League and their Joint Special 
Envoy Kofi Annan for Syria and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, to 
brief the World body in open session tomorrow Thursday.  
   "The people of Syria and the region deserve a united voice and urgent 
action from the General Assembly and the UN for the restoration of peace, 
unity and order in Syria," he stressed.
   On another subject, he said he is hosting later today an "important and 
special cultural event" in the Assembly Hall to support 'UN Women' to draw 
attention to the problem of violence against women and girls. 
   He estimated that six out of ten women worldwide have suffered from 
physical or sexual violence. "This is unacceptable!"
   He said that after he approached Member States for help to fund 'UN Women,' 
the UN youngest agency promoting women's rights, "a number of Governments have 
started contributing hundreds of thousands - even millions - of dollars to the 
UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women."   
   He also said that the Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra will perform later today 
to celebrate the Sixty-Sixth Session of the General Assembly, which "I have 
the honour to preside over."  
   The Orchestra "promotes both Arabic and Western music, and has become one 
of the most outstanding orchestras in the world," he said.
   He noted Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will address the event which will 
also bring together dignitaries, celebrities, philanthropists and other 
guests. 
   He noted that the Assembly "remains the world's most representative, most 
legitimate and truly universal body," and "with the direct engagement of 
Member States, it (Assembly) has been able to respond promptly to many 
important and serious situations across the world during this session" which 
started last September.
   "The people of the world are looking to the General Assembly and to the 
United Nations as a whole, for support, assistance and as a moral compass in 
these troubled times," he added. 
   On Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development scheduled for June 20-22 in 
Brazil, Al-Nasser said it is "very important" that Member States focus during 
the negotiations prior to the Conference on the "big picture and not just 
individual national interests or individual group interests."  
   "Rio+20 is about setting the world on the right course for sustainable 
growth for future generations. The real work will begin after the conference 
is over, when we will need concrete action on various key areas of concern. If 
Rio+20 fails, we all lose."   
   "I believe that with genuine political will and a sense of global 
solidarity, we can achieve a great deal at Rio," he concluded. (end)
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KUNA 062228     Jun 12NNNN