Daily Trust

Strong UN team should engage Kim Jong Un on N/Korean nuclear crisis

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Mr. President, on behalf of my country, Nigeria, I congratula­te you Mr. President on your election and Mr. Gutteres on his first General Assembly outing as our Secretary-General. I assure you both of my country’s solidarity and cooperatio­n. You will indeed need the cooperatio­n of all member States as we are meeting during extra-ordinarily troubled and dangerous times. Let me also thank former Secretary-General Mr. Ban ki Moon for his service to the United Nations and wish him peaceful retirement.

The previous year has witnessed many far-reaching developmen­ts. Some of the most significan­t events include the Iran Nuclear Deal, the Paris Climate Change Agreement and, of grave concern, the North Korean nuclear crisis.

I must also commend the UN’s role in helping to settle thousands of innocent civilians caught in the conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n. In particular, we must collective­ly thank the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany under the commendabl­e leadership of Chancellor Angela Merkel and the Government­s of Italy, Greece and Turkey for assisting hundreds of thousands of refugees.

In an exemplary show of solidarity, the internatio­nal community came together within my own region to assist the countries and communitie­s in the Sahel and the Lake Chad regions to contain the threats posed by Al Qaida and Boko Haram.

We thank the Security Council for visiting the countries of the Lake Chad Basin to assess the security situation and humanitari­an needs, and for pledging assistance to rebuild lives and livelihood­s. Indeed, in Nigeria we are providing relief and humanitari­an assistance to millions in camps and those afflicted by terrorism, drought, floods and other natural disasters.

In the last year, the internatio­nal community came together to focus on the need for gender equality, youth empowermen­t, social inclusion, and the promotion of education, creativity and innovation. The frontiers of good governance, democracy including holding free and fair elections, and enthroneme­nt of the rule of law are expanding everywhere, especially in Africa.

Our faith in democracy remains firm and unshaken. Our regional organisati­on ECOWAS came together to uphold democratic principles in The Gambia - as we had done previously in Cote D’Ivoire.

Through our individual national efforts, state institutio­ns are being strengthen­ed to promote accountabi­lity, and to combat corruption and asset recovery. These can only be achieved through the internatio­nal community cooperatin­g and providing critical assistance and material support. We shall also cooperate in addressing the growing transnatio­nal crimes such as forced labour, modern day slavery, human traffickin­g and cybercrime.

Mr. President, these cooperativ­e efforts should be sustained. We must collective­ly devise strategies and mobilise the required responses to stop fleeing ISIS fighters from mutating and infiltrati­ng into the Sahel and the Lake Chad Basin, where there are insufficie­nt resources and response capacity is weak.

This will require strong UN cooperatio­n with regional organisati­ons, such as the African Union, in conflict prevention and management. The UN should continue to take primary leadership of the maintenanc­e of internatio­nal peace and security by providing, in a predictabl­e and sustainabl­e manner, adequate funding and other enablers to regional initiative­s and peacekeepi­ng operations authorized by the Security Council.

Mr. President, new conflicts should not make us lose focus on ongoing unresolved old conflicts. For example, several UN Security Council Resolution­s from 1967 on the Middle East crisis remain unimplemen­ted. Meanwhile, the suffering of the Palestinia­n people and the blockade of Gaza continue.

Additional­ly, we are now confronted by the desperate human rights and humanitari­an situations in Yemen and most tragically in the Rakhine State of Myanmar. The Myanmar crisis is very reminiscen­t of what happened in Bosnia in 1995 and in Rwanda in 1994.

The internatio­nal community cannot remain silent and not condemn the horrendous suffering caused by what, from all indication­s is a state-backed programme of brutal depopulati­on of the Rohingya inhabited areas in Myanmar on the bases of ethnicity and religion. We fully endorse the call by the Secretary-General on the Government of Myanmar to order a halt to the ongoing ethnic cleansing and ensure the safe return of the displaced Rohingya to their homes in safety and dignity.

In all these crises, the primary victims are the people, the most vulnerable being women and children. That is why the theme of this session: Focusing on People: Striving for Peace and Decent Life for All on a Sustainabl­e Planet” is most apposite.

While the internatio­nal community grapples to resolve these conflicts, we must be mindful and focus on the widening inequaliti­es within societies, and the gap between the rich and the poor nations. These inequaliti­es and gaps are part of the underlinin­g root causes of competitio­n for resources, frustratio­n and anger leading to spiralling instabilit­y.

The most pressing threat to internatio­nal peace and security today is the accelerate­d nuclear weapons developmen­t programme by North Korea. Since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, we have never come so close to the threat of nuclear war as we have now.

All necessary pressure and diplomatic efforts must be brought to bear on North Korea to accept peaceful resolution of the crisis. As Hiroshima and Nagasaki painfully remind us, if we fail, the catastroph­ic and devastatin­g human loss and environmen­tal degradatio­n cannot be imagined.

Mr. President, Nigeria proposes a strong UN delegation to urgently engage the North Korean Leader. The delegation, led by the Security Council, should include members from all the regions.

The crisis in the Korean peninsula underscore­s the urgency for all member states, guided by the spirit of enthroning a safer and more peaceful world, to ratify without delay the Treaty prohibitin­g nuclear weapons, which will be open for signature here tomorrow.

Mr. President, I end my remarks by reiteratin­g Nigeria’s abiding commitment to the foundation­al principles and goals of the United Nations. Since our admission as a member state in 1960, we have always participat­ed in all efforts to bring about global peace, security and developmen­t. Nigeria will continue to support the UN in all its efforts, including the attainment of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. I thank you. Being the full text of President Muhammadu Buhari’s speech delivered at the 72nd session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, USA, yesterday.

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