The United Nations is set to appoint the              head of its Office  of Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) as the first official               responsible for representing humanity in the case of contact with               extraterrestrial life. At an upcoming Royal Society (of London)  conference              scheduled from October 4-5, Dr Mazlan Othman will              explain how  the UN plans to implement changes that will result              in her  being given responsibility as part of her current position               as the director of UNOOSA. Othman says the need for such a  responsibility              is due to the discovery of exoplanets that  makes it more likely than              ever that humanity will  eventually discover extraterrestrial life.              She has said  that the UN is now actively planning a coordinated response               for ‘First Contact’ .Othman is a respected figure in the astrophysics and Outer Space               Affairs community. She was the first female to graduate with a  Ph.D              in astrophysics from the University of Otago New  Zealand (1981) and              became Malaysia’s first astrophysicist.  She was nominated by              Kofi Annan to head UNOOSA from 1999 to  2002, before being summoned              back to Malaysia to head the  Malaysian National Space Agency from              2002-2007. She was  responsible for the training and flight of Malaysia’s              first  astronaut Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor, and was re-appointed head               of UNOOSA by the current UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, in 2007.               As far as Othman’s scientific expertise is concerned,  Professor              Richard Crowther, a space law expert at the  United Kingdom’s              space agency said:              “Othman is absolutely the nearest thing we have to a ‘take              me to your leader’ person”.
In a recent talk Othman              said:
 The continued search for extraterrestrial communication, by several entities, sustains the hope that some day human kind will receive signals from extraterrestrials. When we do, we should have in place a coordinated response that takes into account all the sensitivities related to the subject. The UN is a ready-made mechanism for such coordination.
At the October 4-5 Royal Society conference, Othman will go into               detail in the process the UN plans to undertake to appoint her  as              humanity’s first representative for First Contact. The  Conference              is titled “Towards a scientific and societal  agenda on extra-terrestrial              life,” and its webpage explains the need for political processes to accommodate              scientific study of extraterrestrial life:
 Even more than the scientific agenda, a corresponding complementary societal agenda needs to be debated. With a mix of invited talks and panel debates, we particularly look into the detection of life, the communication with potential extra-terrestrial civilizations, the implications for the future of humanity, and the political processes that are required.”
Othman will present at a panel discussion              titled:   “Extra-terrestrial life and arising political issues              for   the UN agenda.”
 Othman’s position shows that the United Nations is closely monitoring               scientific developments concerning the discovery of  exoplanets and              the growing likelihood that life can be  found throughout the universe.              Recently, renowned  astrophysicist, Stephen Hawking caused a furor              when he              said  that extraterrestrial life is almost certain to exist, but               we should be careful since they are likely to be predatory in nature.               Hawking’s exopolitical speculations has stimulated wide  ranging              debate over the motivations of advanced  extraterrestrial life. As              a member of the Royal Society,  Hawking’s views very likely played              a role in influencing  the agenda of the upcoming Royal Society conference.
The upcoming UN announcement of a First Contact official comes at               a convenient time for a grass roots effort to get the City of  Denver              to pass an Ordinance, Initiative 300, that will  create an Extraterrestrial              Affairs Commission. Initiative  300 is on the ballot for the November              mid-term elections  and deals with some of the same “First Contact”              issues that  Othman will be given responsibility for at the UN. For               example, the proposed              Ordinance asks:
 Shall the voters for the City and County of Denver adopt an Initiated Ordinance to require the creation of an extraterrestrial affairs commission to help ensure the health, safety, and cultural awareness of Denver residents and visitors in relation to potential encounters or interactions with extraterrestrial intelligent beings or their vehicles, and fund such commission from grants, gifts and donations?
It will certainly be difficult to dismiss the importance of Denver’s               proposed Extraterrestrial Affairs Commission if the UN  moves forward              with its plans to appoint Othman as the  official responsible for First              Contact, and the Royal  Society endorses political processes to deal              with the  detection of extraterrestrial life.
 The upcoming appointment of a UN official to be in charge of a future               First Contact scenario is a welcome step forward in  legitimating discussion              about the social and political  implications of extraterrestrial life.              Such a political  discussion – popularly known as exopolitics              – is the  explicit focus of the upcoming Royal Society Conference.               Uthman’s upcoming responsibility makes it more important than               ever that the academic/scientific community discusses the social and               political implications of the discovery of extraterrestrial  life,              and the growing likelihood of First Contact.by "environment clean generations" 
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