In this photo, Speakers from US, Cuba, China, Russia, Iran line up for 70th UN General Assembly (Photo Credit: Deutsche Welle) |
PAUL KAGAME,
President of Rwanda,
said the adoption of the global Goals marked a new era and recognized that a
sustainable future was one that included all. However, growth and
progress also entailed new challenges. Responding to them would put the
United Nations at the centre of global affairs as never before.
Cooperation was the only way forward and yet the new consensus on sustainable
development was incomplete because it lacked the political legitimacy required
to sustain that international order.
He
recalled that when world Powers created the United Nations 70 years ago,
independence for Africa and Asia was not on the agenda. People in those
regions still needed to be looked after. Those moral hierarchies and
prejudices persisted and contributed to the mismanagement of political change;
those also corroded the trust upon which multilateral cooperation
depended. Political legitimacy was not a legal abstraction, but a reality
that could be measured, for example, in terms of progress towards the global
Goals or could serve as an indicator of public opinion.
In
other cases, multilateral institutions were used to gain credibility for biased
attacks against countries, he said. When matters of principle became
associated with domination and dissidence, then the basis for joint action in
the multilateral system was compromised. “We have nothing to fear from
high standards,” he said, underscoring that no country or system had a claim to
moral superiority. “We have made good commitments; now we must make good
on these commitments by building a community of shared purpose,” he
added. The world community was capable of doing so and should begin by
recognizing the equality of all.
DAVID ARTHUR
GRANGER, President of Guyana, said that the membership of the United
Nations had quadrupled since it began in 1945 with
51 countries. As undemocratic empires were dismantled, the majority
of the new States were mini-, micro- and small States. They asked the
Organization how they would be protected from foreign aggression and how their
independence would be sustained. Small States risked being subjugated
unless the international community demonstrated a commitment to deter dominance
by larger, stronger States. Guyana was a small State and a new one, a
product of the post-Second World War promise of peace. Indeed, his
country was a child of the United Nations.
For
50 years, he went on, his country had been prevented from fully exploiting
its rich natural resources. Venezuela had threatened and deterred
investors and frustrated Guyana’s economic development. The country’s
shared borders with Venezuela had been settled 116 years ago, and the
whole world recognized them except Venezuela. In 1897, a Treaty of
Arbitration had been signed between the United Kingdom and Venezuela and,
in 1899, an arbitral tribunal established by that Treaty had given
Venezuela 13,000 square kilometres of Guyana’s territory. Venezuela
had respected that for the subsequent six decades, but at the onset of Guyana’s
independence, it had resorted to various stratagems to deprive Guyana of its
territory. With its armed forces 40 times bigger than those of
Guyana, Venezuela had pursued a path of intimidation and aggression.
Guyana,
he continued, was committed to preserving the Caribbean as a zone of
peace. With total confidence in international law, his country sought a
resolution to the controversy, consistent with the United Nations
Charter. Over the past 25 years, the Secretary-General had appointed
various good officers to help resolve the issue, but that process had now been
exhausted. “We need a permanent solution in order to avoid the fate of
perpetual peril,” he said, calling on the Organization to give real meaning to
General Assembly resolution 49/31 (1994) by establishing a collective
security system, not merely to monitor, but to maintain the security of small
States. “The United Nations remains our best hope,” he said.
HAGE G. GEINGOB,
President of Namibia,
said his country was “a child of international solidarity, midwifed by the
United Nations”. Following the termination of South Africa’s mandate over
then South-West Africa, the Organization had assumed direct responsibility for
Namibia, establishing a Nationhood Programme and an Institute for Namibia to
develop the building blocks for democracy. Citing an African proverb,
which said that a “patient man will eat ripe fruit”, he announced that Namibia
was now eating the ripe fruit of peace and democracy. In gratitude
to the international community, he noted the country’s contributions to United
Nations peacekeeping operations since independence.
Celebrating
United Nations successes over the last 70 years, he noted that conflicts
of the magnitude of the two World Wars had been averted and that, most
importantly, inroads had been made to lifting millions out of extreme poverty,
empowering women, advancing human rights and spearheading the decolonization
process, which was nearly complete except for the situation of the
Saharans. Africa had turned over a new leaf, ostracizing those who had
assumed power unlawfully, and commended the many that had achieved electoral
democracies. Namibia’s own track record “spoke volumes”; it was rated
sixth among best governed countries in Africa by the Mo Ibrahim index of
African governance; the seventh lowest in corruption; and had the freest press
in Africa.
The
country also had a world-class banking system. However, the
challenges of social disparities, such as housing and other basic necessities,
remained unmet.
The
distribution of wealth was too important to be left solely to the international
financial institutions, he went on. Classifying countries by gross
domestic product (GDP) alone ignored inequalities in wealth distribution, as
well as opportunities. Namibia was a casualty of that approach.
Classified as an upper-middle-income country, the legacy of apartheid, which
left wealth in the hands of the white minority, had not been taken into account.
The
country was denied access to grants and concessional loans to support its
development agenda, leaving the poor trapped in perpetual cycles of poverty and
despair. He further stressed the importance of empowering women to combat
poverty, as Namibia had done, increasing female representation in Parliament to
47 per cent and naming women ministers in a number of strategic
ministries.
He
reaffirmed support for the inalienable rights of the people of Palestine and
Western Sahara to self-determination and national independence, and called on
the Organization to implement all resolutions on Palestine without
pre-conditions, as well as texts calling for a free and fair referendum in
Western Sahara. He commended the re-establishment of diplomatic relations
between Cuba and the United States and looked to the lifting of the
embargo. Committed to comprehensive United Nations reforms, he supported
the African Common Position.
Poverty
would not be eliminated without tackling the issues of desertification, land
degradation and drought. As President of the eleventh Conference of the
Parties to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, Namibia
sought to strengthen its implementation and was pleased that the issues were
included in the Sustainable Development Goals. The only way to overcome
global challenges was through a united front for the advancement of
mankind. “Let us leave a long lasting legacy, which will shape the future
of our planet politically, economically and ecologically,” he concluded.
EMOMALI RAHMON,
President of Tajikistan, said that over the past seven decades, the
Organization had made a special contribution to sustaining the establishment of
new independent States. Tajikistan had experienced difficulties during
its transition period and had received every kind of support from the
Organization, enabling the country to embark on the road to democratic
development.
Today,
Tajikistan was contributing to the fight against terrorism and extremism,
transnational organized crime, arms smuggling, and human trafficking. The
country’s police officers were participating in the joint peacekeeping
operation of the United Nations and the African Union in Darfur. The Drug
Control Agency, which had been established with United Nations support, continued
to play an important role in fighting illicit drug trafficking.
Combating
international terrorism, he added, had become a priority issue and there was a
need to develop mechanisms aimed at eliminating channels of financial and
logistic support, recruiting, propaganda of violence, and the use of modern
information and communication technologies for the purpose of terror.
Prevention of illicit drug trafficking should be an integral part of that
struggle because the money earned from illicit drug trade was being channelled
to finance the acts of terror.
On
other matters of importance to his country, it stood for expanding good
neighbourly relations with Afghanistan, and called on the international
community to support that Government’s efforts. His country also believed
that the Joint Plan of Action on Iran’s nuclear programme would contribute to
strengthening regional peace.
On
climate change, he added that over the last 60 years, the average annual
temperature in Tajikistan had increased by 1°C. The abnormally high
temperatures and severe precipitations in recent months had caused much
economic damage and claimed human lives. Noting that Tajikistan‘s per
capita emission of greenhouse gases was 10 times less than the average
world index, he said a broad use of renewable energy sources, especially
hydropower, was crucial to the development of the country’s green
economy.
Climate
change affected the quality and quantity of freshwater resources, and thus, it
was essential to review the existing practices of water resources management.
Cooperation and “water diplomacy” were needed to mitigate the climate impacts
and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals in a timely manner.
SAULI NIINISTO,
President of Finland,
noting that this year marked the sixtieth anniversary of his country’s
membership in the United Nations, said that Finland had joined a family of
countries, which shouldered their responsibility. The crisis in Syria,
Iraq and parts of North Africa posed an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe
that threatened the peace and stability in the Middle East, Africa and
Europe. Wars and conflicts such as those had given rise to a new era of
migration evidenced by the approximately 60 million refugees — the largest
since the Second World War.
He
said his country was receiving proportionally a very high number of asylum
seekers. While not helping was not an option for Finland, more effective
and sustainable ways to help those in need were critical. The Security
Council and countries in the region must work together to find a political
solution to the Syrian situation. He welcomed the steps taken towards the
implementation of the Minsk agreement, underscoring that all illegal measures,
like the annexation of Crimea by Russia, could not and must not be recognized.
Despite
the United Nations’ peace operations, the scope and complexity of today’s
violent conflicts had surpassed the world community’s ability to address them
properly. In that regard, he welcomed Ramos-Horta’s High-Level Panel
report and said his country would continue to advance that body’s
recommendations. Finland had contributed 50,000 men and women to
United Nations peacekeeping operations. In per capita terms, that was the
number two contributor in Europe and Finland would further strengthen its
contribution.
“We
cannot continue business as usual […] It is up to us to act. We can
choose — or lose — our future,” he said. To implement the ambitious
2030 Agenda, it was necessary to “get everybody on board” to make the
commitments a reality. Similarly, the Climate Change Conference in Paris
must be made a success for the sake of all children. On other matters of
interest to his country, he welcomed efforts to enhance the transparency and
inclusiveness of the selection process of the Secretary-General; the country
championed gender equality, and expected to see many excellent female
candidates for the position. “It was high time that the other half of
humankind took up this challenge,” he said.
Banner of the UNGA 70th Session (Photo Credit: Telesur) |
ELBEGDORJ
TSAKHIA, President of Mongolia, said that “the past 70 years were
the best 70 years ever”. But despite achievements among the family
of nations, “our home” was becoming a more turbulent and fragile place.
Many of the targets of the Millennium Development Goals had been achieved, but
some had failed.
The
international community had learned lessons about working together and with the
2030 Agenda, there was now a truly universal and ambitious action
plan. Robust, inclusive and open mechanisms would advance implementation,
and monitoring and accountability would make that process reliable.
Mongolia appealed to every country to adopt national laws to implement the
Sustainable Development Goals.
Over
the last quarter-century, he said, his country had relentlessly striven to
build an open and just society with a free market economy, participatory
democracy and environmentally conscientious policies. There had been
notable progress in the areas of governance transparency and reduction of
poverty. The life expectancy of Mongolians had increased by 7 years,
while GDP had increased more than 20-fold. Within the span of a single
generation, Mongolia had transformed from one of the most isolated and closed
regimes to one of the most vibrant and open democracies. It had among the
most open and fair electoral systems in the region, with nationwide electronic
voting and biometric voter registration. “We no longer use the wooden or
paper boxes of finger inks,” he said.
All
nations, he added, must bear the responsibility for protecting the planet and
its ecosystem for the benefit of present and future generations. “We, Mongols,
are eager to contribute,” he said. The country had become one of the
20 largest peacekeeping contributors in the world. For
23 years, it had pursued a nuclear-weapon-free status, and in Asia, Mongolia
was an “honest broker” who promoted peace and security, with its status of
“permanent neutrality”.
Noting
that the country was running for membership in the United Nations Human Rights
Council, he said that when he saw giant military exhibits, he wondered at the
huge amounts of money, human ingenuity and time spent on war machines.
Just a fraction of the money and technology presently wasted on the “masculine
war show”, could solve many of the world’s troubling issues.
KLAUS WERNER
IOHANNIS, President of Romania, said that the United Nations was not a
panacea for all humankind’s evils. The increase in the number and depth
of tasks entrusted to it had not been matched by needed resources; the common
practice had been to ask the United Nations to do more with less. While
it might be convenient to point to the Organization’s failures, the significant
work it had done in the area of prevention, while difficult to measure, must be
underscored. “The United Nations was nothing but ourselves, Member States,
living on the trust and resources we invest in it,” he said.
Romania
was among countries that had fully trusted and supported the Organization, he
said, adding that the year 2015 was special for his country as it
celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of its admission. In the aftermath of
the cold war, the United Nations had supported Romania in its transition to
democracy. Funds and programmes had assisted his country in addressing
social problems, such as those relating to children, health, and the environment.
Grateful
for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) 45-year presence in
Romania, he expressed pride in his country’s contributions to the
Organization’s goals, despite its limited economic power, in areas such as arms
control and disarmament, science and technology in development, and promotion
of democracy. After almost two decades as a recipient, Romania had become
a provider of official development assistance (ODA) to neighbouring countries
and beyond.
Reiterating
support for the non-use of the veto in the Security Council when dealing with
mass atrocities, he said that inaction created the impression that unlawful
territorial gains, such as in Ukraine, were tolerated. Further, he
praised the Iranian nuclear agreement, which had proved the virtues of
diplomacy undertaken in good faith and with patience. The world community
should do more to combat terrorism with the “international tools of law”,
including international criminal law. Spain and his country had proposed
an initiative to create an international court for the crime of
terrorism. Despite the difficulties of such an undertaking, the process
of reflection in multilateral forums would likely generate fresh ideas and
innovative legal tools.
MSWATI III, King
of Swaziland,
commending the United Nations for its work in Africa in reducing conflicts and
curbing Ebola, stated that the Organization must continue to help the continent
emerge from the cycle of poverty and disease. Africa had great potential
for investment, and the United Nations should enable the creation of an
environment for economic growth.
The
“Kingdom of e-Swatini” was one of the many nations to have reported significant
progress in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals.
Though it did not have an abundance of natural resources, it had an innovative
and educated work force.
With
Africa opening up new trade markets and investment opportunities, he continued,
his country had fast-tracked reforms to improve the ease of doing
business. Infrastructure development, such as the completion of the new
international airport, had also increased access to global markets.
Africa was well-endowed with mineral resources, yet still faced the challenges
of poverty and unemployment. Access to the markets of the developed world
remained critical. The success of trade and investment also hinged
heavily on a reliable and sustainable energy supply.
While
the country had attained a significant milestone with 97 per cent
enrolment in primary education, sustaining that required that quality education
be further accessible at secondary, high and tertiary levels. Calling on
global partners to ensure that the country did not become a victim of its own
success, he added that its people still largely relied on agriculture.
Swaziland was looking to international financial institutions to support the
building of dams, but it was a matter of concern that such aid came with
stringent conditions that left the recipient countries worse off.
PETRO
POROSHENKO, President of Ukraine, said his country had contributed
actively in the shaping of the United Nations Charter at the San Francisco
Conference of 1945 and was now suffering from a brutal violation of that
document’s principles. The aggressor was the Russian Federation, a
neighbouring country and former strategic partner, and a member of Security
Council, which had conducted an open aggression against Ukraine by occupying
Crimea in February.
After
the General Assembly resolution condemning that annexation, Moscow had started
a new military gamble, this time in the Ukrainian Donbass region. In the
last few days, the Russian Federation had called for the establishment of an
anti-terrorist coalition and warned of the danger of flirting with terrorists.
“How can you talk about an anti-terrorist coalition if you inspire
terrorism right in front of your door?” the speaker asked.
The
Organization, he said, lacked an effective instrument for bringing the
aggressor country to justice. Seventy years ago, when the creators of the
Charter had envisaged Security Council sanctions as a restraining tool, they
could not have imagined that it would be needed against a permanent member of
the Council. Since the beginning of the aggression, the Russian
Federation had used its veto right twice, when the Council was considering
questions relating to Ukraine. Veto power should not become an act of
grace and pardon for a crime. Welcoming the initiative of the French
President to restrain veto use in cases of mass atrocities, he said that
primary attention should be given to modernizing the Council, by enlarging its
membership and improving its working methods.
Strongly
condemning terrorism in all its forms, he added that the International Court of
Justice and International Criminal Court should be given a special role in
combatting international terrorism. Turning to the Sustainable
Development Goals, he said that his country, as a member of the “Friends of
Climate” Group, was looking forward to reaching consensus on the matter this year
in Paris. The Russian aggression had caused another challenge for Ukraine
in the protection of Donbass’ environment. Irresponsible and criminal
flooding of mines by terrorists had poisoned the region’s drinking water, soil,
flora and fauna. Next year would mark the thirtieth anniversary of the
Chernobyl nuclear tragedy. Ukraine requested that a special meeting of
the General Assembly be dedicated to that in April 2016.
ERNEST BAI
KOROMA, President of Sierra Leone, said that issues such as the refugee
crisis, poverty, transnational organized crime, terrorism and violence against
women, and efforts to expand access to health and education were all
characterized by a struggle for inclusion. Creating a more democratic
United Nations was part of that endeavour and a prerequisite for achieving
universal aspirations. Noting his role as coordinator of the African
Union Committee of Ten Heads of State on Security Council Reform, he emphasized
Africa’s demand for two permanent and two non-permanent seats in that body, as
outlined in the Ezulwini Consensus and Sirte Declaration.
On
the security front, he said Sierra Leone was ready to explore means for
increasing its contribution to global peacekeeping. The recent expert
Advisory Group’s review of the peacebuilding architecture was useful, and he
looked forward to the intergovernmental process, adding that Sierra Leone was a
case study and storehouse of lessons learned. Support for the Residual
Special Court for Sierra Leonne also should be sustained.
On
climate change, he urged action to lower greenhouse gas emissions and to shore
up capacities. No country was immune from the climate impacts, and that
insight must be integrated into other decisions on youth unemployment,
insecurity, extreme hunger and violence against women. More broadly, it
was imperative to build countries’ capacities to resolve conflicts and handle
such issues as peacekeeping and migration. Fragile conflict-affected
States in the so-called “G7+” called for country ownership and country-led
implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.
Sierra
Leone had tailored its development framework to the 2030 Agenda, he said,
citing its Agenda for Prosperity and improvements in political and economic
governance. Justice reforms had responded to national and global
demands. National investment in climate had targeted infrastructure,
agriculture, education, health care, youth and women’s employment and public
service delivery. The Ebola outbreak had taken a heavy toll on the country’s
socio-economic fabric. Today, Sierra Leone’s national recovery plan
focused on maintaining zero infections and building national resilience
systems, including a viable health system and a national security and disaster
risk management system.
JUAN MANUEL SANTOS,
President of Colombia, said he had come to the United Nations, an
organization dedicated to peace, security and human rights, to announce that
Colombia was on its own path to peace. In a world in which there were
more than 20 armed conflicts taking place, he was proud to announce that the
conflict in Colombia was on the final path to a genuine solution.
Colombia had put an end to the longest armed conflict in the Western
Hemisphere. Using courage and responsibility, Colombia had ended more
than 50 years of internal warfare. Peace was a difficult path, but
Colombia was dedicated to it. Peace “required that every person inside
opens their mind and heart and soul to reconciliation,” he added.
He
said he had come to the Assembly with optimism because less than a week ago, in
Havana, Cuba, following three years of negotiations, Colombia had reached an
agreement on the most significant obstacle to peace in the country. The
accord laid down a system of transitional justice to ensure that there was no
impunity for the perpetrators of the crimes. The system respected the
principles of international and national law.
“Our
goal was maximum justice, which would allow us to move to peace,” he
said. The agreement set out an accountability system in the form of a
national court for crimes. The system could serve as a precedent for
other armed conflicts in the world. Significantly, a deadline for the
signing of a final agreement by 23 March 2016 had been set. In
addition, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as FARC, would
begin to lay down its arms no later than 60 days after the signing.
He could return to the Assembly next year representing a Government in peace.
On
behalf of 48 million Colombians, he thanked the international community
for its efforts. A Colombia at peace would help the country deal with
global challenges, such as climate change and the eradication of extreme
poverty. Colombia was the most biodiverse country, for its size, and it
was extremely vulnerable to changes in climate. It insisted on the
environmental elements of the Sustainable Development Goals.
He
strongly supported the upcoming climate meeting in Paris. Peace would let
Colombia achieve the Goals as its people would have more economic
opportunities. Peace was the supreme good of any society and the reason
for the United Nations. “In Colombia, in less than six months, the bells
will ring out that the time of peace has come,” said the President. He
hoped that the clocks around the world would be synchronized at the same time.
NICOS
ANASTASIADES, President of Cyprus, said he was proud that his country had
been actively involved in the development of the Sustainable Development Goals
since the very beginning, as the process reflected the high principles of effective
multilateralism and close cooperation of all nations.
At
the same time the global community was witnessing ongoing turmoil, extremism,
sectarianism, civil war and terrorism in the Middle East and North Africa and
other regions of the world. The international community must be vigilant
as migration flows increased as people left their homes in search of a better
future and the refugee crisis persisted in countries and continents around the
world.
In
order to reverse those worrying developments, global efforts had to be directed
to all countries and regions in conflict zones, particularly the Middle East
and North Africa, to ensure sustainable development. The root causes of
political instability and economic security also must be addressed. For
example, it was not enough to take action against individuals responsible for
terrorist attacks; efforts had to be directed against the enablers of
terrorism.
Cyprus,
with its proximity and close historical, political and social links to the
Middle East and North Africa, was convinced that the international community
did not appreciate the region’s complexities, he said. While recognizing
the value and necessity of the United Nations, Cyprus also believed it needed
to be reformed and modernized in order tackle contemporary realities. New
global threats had emerged, such as climate change and environmental
degradation. Seventy years after its founding, the United Nations needed
more from the world leaders to demonstrate statesmanship and vision, so as to
rebuild newly broken societies and find a path to renewal.
TABARÉ VÁZQUEZ,
President of Uruguay,
recalling the shock of world opinion weeks ago over the image of a Syrian boy
on the beach where he had died as he tried to find protection from conflict, said
decisive action was needed from the world community to find solutions to the
tragedies causing human migration. Prevention was better than cure, he
said.
What
was needed was to “recognize other people as ourselves and protect all their
rights”, to see democracy as a form of government that allowed people to be
full citizens and to protect the planet, the only one where people could
survive. It also meant preventing terrorism and discrimination wherever
it appeared and to think and act boldly for future generations.
As
a practicing doctor until recently, he called public health a central component
of national sovereignty and “an unavoidable responsibility of States”.
The global burden of morbidity was moving from infectious to chronic
non-communicable diseases, which were preventable. Cardio- and
cerebro-vascular disease was the major cause of death around the world.
Some
60 per cent of morbidity globally was due to cardio-vascular disease,
cancer and other non-communicable diseases, which had no borders.
Coordinated policies were needed to address poverty, promote healthy
lifestyles, physical activity, sport and a healthy diet, as well as to control
smoking, alcoholism, and drug abuse.
He
said that smoking was a disease transmitted by the multinational tobacco
industry, which killed its own customers in a quest to double profits.
Human and financial resources were needed to combat its transmission, which
required ethical and political will. It was unethical that tribunals of
multinationals were able to make trade a priority over health. Uruguay
was facing difficulties with a major tobacco producer because it had made the
issue a priority with the World Health Organization (WHO). The country
was being made an example to prevent others from taking action.
Hailing
the resumption of diplomatic relations between Cuba and the United States, he
said a key element to success was ending the embargo. Uruguay would vote
in the General Assembly to do so as it had for many years, he said, adding,
“Let’s hope that this is the last time the United Nations will have to take up
this issue.” He also called upon Colombia and Venezuela to peaceably resolve
their border dispute and expressed support for the peace process within
Colombia. He recalled that, in 2008, Uruguay had presented its candidacy
for non-permanent membership on the Security Council for the period
2016-2017.
The
country was a founding Member of the United Nations, and believed that the only
way for the Council to fulfil its mandate was on the basis of the
Charter. Uruguay was committed to peace before the Organization’s
founding. It was also a peacekeeping contributing country and, as such,
would like to bring its experience to the Council. It requested support
for its candidacy.
ARTHUR PETER
MUTHARIKA, President of Malawi, noted that the United Nations was
created with the understanding that “peace is not just the absence of war, but
that it comes with struggles, compromises, sacrifices and choices we make as
nations and individuals, for the benefit of humanity.”
In
that light, he drew attention to several issues spotlighted by the High-level
Independent Panel on Peace Operations, among them that missions should focus on
political solutions with an emphasis on conflict prevention; partnerships were
needed involving the Security Council, regional actors and national mechanisms;
and the United Nations should be responsible for compensating the abused.
He stressed the need for Security Council reform with the Ezulwini Consensus
and the Sirte Declaration as guiding principles.
He
said that the quest for security and peace should hinge on sustainable
socio-economic development. Looking towards implementation of the
Sustainable Development Goals, he said that Malawi was well on the way to ending
AIDS as a public health threat, by 2030. Women and youth, who
constituted the majority in most developing countries, must not be left behind;
they must be represented at all levels of decision-making in society.
The
Government was committed to the “He-for-She Campaign” to address gender
inequalities and end gender-based violence, promote women’s political
participation and economic empowerment. Singling out Goal 4, on education,
he stressed the need to educate youth, and especially the girl child. He
also emphasized the central importance of higher education. “With
improved and increased access to higher education, the world will strike a
massive blow at poverty,” he said.
Malawi
was committed to promoting human rights and rule of law, which could not be
achieved without addressing fraud, corruption and theft of public
resources. The Government, therefore, was also committed to fighting
those vices and was pursuing and prosecuting suspects in the theft of public
funds.
DONALD TUSK,
President of the European Council of the European Union, said Europe was
as committed as ever to its values, even as it confronted unprecedented
challenges. It borders were being challenged as it dealt with the refugee
and migrant crisis, as well as economic problems.
Yet
Europe would cope with all, and it remained dedicated to make the world a
better place. Regarding the flow of migrants and refugees to Europe, he
said it was not true that Europe was the only rich place on earth. There
were other regions of wealth in the world. At the same time, wealth was
not the only factor people considered when choosing their future; they made
decisions based on human rights, freedom and civil rights, all of which
attracted people to Europe.
He
said Europe wanted to be fair in any discussions on quotas for immigration,
whereas many countries represented here were not letting migrants into their
countries at all. It was sheer hypocrisy to criticize Europe. No
one was escaping from there. The refugee crisis had global dimensions and
demanded a global response. People should not criticize Europe for not
doing enough on the refugee situation.
Syria’s
crisis must be resolved, he went on. Millions of Syrians were being
impacted. The fight against terrorism was very important, and the
international community could not overlook the fact that many refugees were
fleeing terrorism. Stability could not be achieved by directing bombs
against civilians. It would be wrong to make Bashar al-Assad part of a
transition government. The peace plan for Syria should let people begin
to live a normal life in the region, which would be consistent with the values
of the international community and the United Nations.
This
year was also crucial in the fight of climate change, and Europe was determined
that the Paris summit at the end of the year would be a breakthrough, he said.
Fighting climate change was not a global competition and everyone had to
take part in the global effort. Global challenges must be managed on a
multilateral basis or they could not be dealt with at all.
SHINZO ABE,
Prime Minister of Japan, highlighted his support for nation-building, citing
work to foster human resources, provide assistance and uphold women’s
rights. Japan would enhance its assistance to refugees and internally
displaced persons from Syria and Iraq, which, this year, totalled
$810 million, or triple the amount it provided in 2014. In
Lebanon, Japan would provide $2 million in new assistance.
Moreover,
it would provide $2.5 million for European Union neighbors struggling to
accept refugees and migrants, including Serbia and the former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia. In Iraq, Japan was preparing $750 million to help
build peace, and ensure it was maintained across the Middle East.
“In
rebuilding devastated countries”, he said, “…cultivating from a grass-roots
level each person’s capacity to fight fear and want is, in fact, the shortest
path there”. It was from that belief that Japan valued health and
education through a policy of human security, a point driven home by a
photograph he had seen of a young woman who had fled a refugee camp near
Damascus. In her bag, she carried a maternal and child health handbook
that Japan had distributed at camps in Syria, Palestine and Jordan in hopes
that a mother’s love could transform the soil that sometimes created despair.
Japan
valued the rule of law — and equality before the law — more highly than any
other principle, he said, highlighting work to train police in Afghanistan and
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, notably through the Japan International
Cooperation Agency, which had trained more than 20,000 people. “I am
second to none in looking to women as the ones to take on many of the roles
that will carve out Japan’s future,” he said. Japanese women were helping
countries emerging from conflict to uphold the rule of law, and for the second
year, Japan had hosted the World Assembly for Women.
As
the United Nations did not “avert its eyes” from actual situations, he turned
to that in North Korea, saying Japan would work with relevant countries towards
the comprehensive resolution of outstanding issues, including abduction,
nuclear and missile matters. In some areas, there appeared to be
increases in nuclear arsenals, without transparency. The United States
and the Russian Federation should proceed with weapons reductions, as should
other States. Japan was preparing a resolution to promote international
action on that issue. Moreover, Japan would pursue Security Council
reform through cooperation with the Assembly President, and it was seeking a
permanent seat. Citing peacekeeping work in South Sudan, Kenya, Uganda
and elsewhere, he said Japan also had laid the legal domestic framework to
contribute to such efforts.
SHEIKH JABER AL
MUBARAK AL HAMAD AL SABAH, Prime Minister of Kuwait, said one of the
most outstanding milestones of the United Nations was embodied in the adoption
of the Sustainable Development Goals. Kuwait affirmed it would spare no
effort to fully implement them over the next 15 years and the Kuwait Fund
for Arab Economic Development would continue to provide loans and development
programs, including $15 billion to meet the entitlements and requirements
of sustainable development.
Turning
to regional conflicts, he said that Yemen and its brotherly people faced
serious challenges owing to the intransigence of the Houthis militias. He
emphasized the need for implementing relevant Security Council resolutions,
especially resolution 2216 (2015). Kuwait had donated
$100 million to meet the humanitarian needs of the Yemeni people. As
the disaster in Syria entered its fifth year and the humanitarian crisis became
overwhelming, Kuwait reiterated its firm and principled position that a
solution could only be achieved through political, peaceful means.
Kuwait
welcomed the endeavours of the United Nations and the Special Representative of
the Secretary-General for Syria, who aimed to mobilize efforts to implement the
2012 Geneva 1 Communique of the Action Group on Syria.
Since 2013, Kuwait had hosted three international donor conferences to
support humanitarian efforts in that country. Declared pledges totalled
$7.15 billion, of which Kuwait had contributed $1.3 billion, most of
which had been delivered to the United Nations specialized agencies and other
governmental and non-governmental organizations concerned with humanitarian
affairs. On Libya, Kuwait was very interested in the agreement announced
by the Special Representative in Skhirat, Morocco, to form a national consensus
government to end the fighting.
He
reiterated his country’s firm and principled position to reject all forms of
terrorism, radicalization and intolerance. International and regional
efforts for peace in the Middle East faced many impediments as a result of
Israel’s intransigence. Kuwait welcomed Security Council resolution
2231 (2015), which endorsed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action on
Iran’s nuclear programme. Kuwait called on Israel to accede to the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and subject all nuclear facilities under
the control of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in compliance with
the resolution adopted in the 1995 NPT Review Conference, which called for
a zone free of nuclear weapons in the region.
MATTEO RENZI,
Prime Minister of Italy, said that he represented the voice of a generous
people. Public life in the world today was fixated on the present, and
led by discussions on television, 24/7 news and social media. He
belonged to a generation that believed in the value of social media but it came
with the risk of reducing the broad horizon to the next poll. “We should
reject the dictatorship of the instant,” he said. On the map, his country
was shaped like a bridge — between the North and South, Europe and Africa, East
and West, extending from the Middle East to the Balkans. Italy had always
been an extraordinary cultural laboratory.
In
the past 70 years, he said, Europe had left behind centuries of war.
As a young man who had witnessed the fall of the Berlin wall, he believed that
Europe was born to tear down walls, not build them. Italy was on the
front line of rescuing thousands of migrants fleeing war. He had personally
accompanied Secretary General Ban-Ki moon on a rescue ship. At the age
of 70, the Organization had the wisdom to recognize its mistakes and the
strength to correct them. Welcoming the nuclear deal with Iran, he said
it had brought hope to the international community. Only through dialogue
and negotiations could the delicate Israel-Palestine question be
addressed.
On
Syria, he said, “we have all felt the failure of inertia”. Italy was
proud to be a leading country in the training of security forces in Iraq and
had taken a primary role in the working group to counteract financing to
Da’esh. It also stood ready to collaborate with the new Libyan
Government, if asked, and would be willing to take a leadership role in a
mechanism to stabilise the country under the norms of international law.
“The
terrorists want us to die”, he said and fear was the playground of
terrorism. When terrorists attacked schools or museums, they were not
attacking the past, they were targeting the future. It was in Italy where
the culture of conservation was born, and it held the highest concentration of
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
heritage sites. Proposing an international task force to rebuild historic
sites; it could be deployed in the framework of peacekeeping.
SERZH SARGSYAN,
President of Armenia, recalled the 2014 centennial of the Armenian
genocide and expressed gratitude to those countries that recognized it.
Armenia was determined to keep prevention of genocide on the international
agenda. He also noted the resolution passed recently by the Assembly
establishing 9 December as “the International Day of Commemoration and Dignity
of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide and of the Prevention of this Crime”.
He
said the peaceful resolution of the “Nagorno-Karabakh problem” was one of the
most salient for the region, and noted that Azerbaijan’s “aggressive policy”
had prevented any meaningful progress in negotiations as the situation
“drifted” towards increased tensions. He drew attention to Azerbaijan’s
firing of large calibre artillery at peaceful settlements on the borders of
both his country and Nagorno-Karabakh, killing three women a few days prior.
Decrying
Azerbaijan’s “disdain” for the joint statement by the Presidents of the United
States, Russian Federation and France and the efforts of the Organization for
Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group, he said that should that
country’s actions continue, Armenia would have to take legal and
political-military steps to enable his country and Nagorno-Karabakh to develop
in peace and security. He enumerated instances of ceasefire violations,
and said it was obvious why his country had urged the international community
to be unambiguous in its statements as to who was violating the
ceasefire.
Otherwise,
he said, the “muffling of the early warning signals of threats” to peace and
security could have catastrophic repercussions.
As
witness to the “unspeakable cruelty” occurring in the Middle East, he noted the
destruction of Armenian artefacts and expulsion of Armenians from Iraq and
Syria. Armenia had received 16,000 refugees from Syria, one of the
largest numbers in Europe. He also spoke of how joint and adequate
actions had led to the historic agreement on Iran’s nuclear programme,
demonstrating that where there was political will it was possible to find
solutions for the most complicated issues. He stressed the importance of
eliminating closed borders.
The
blockade of Armenia by its neighbours was unacceptable, and established
artificial obstacles that disrupted intercultural, human-to-human trade and
contacts. He expressed high regard for the periodic review carried out under
the United Nations Conferences on Landlocked Developing Countries, and stood
ready to invest further efforts in that endeavour.
JAKAYA MRISHO
KIKWETE, President of the United Republic of Tanzania, said the United
Nations had withstood the test of time, evolved and become a stronger
Organization. It had succeeded in preventing another world war, but many
challenges remained, including inter-State and intra-State conflicts, terrorism
and the existence of abject poverty. The United Nations must seek to
forge strategic partnerships with regional and subregional organizations.
In
addition, while some efforts had been made to reform the Security Council, it
was the wish of Member States to see an acceleration of that negotiation during
the Assembly’s seventieth session; in that regard, he stressed: “For the United
Nations Security Council to remain what it was 70 years ago is
incomprehensible and, to say the least, unacceptable.”
Peacekeeping
operations remained one of the most dependable instruments of promoting world
peace and security, and they would remain so for many years to come. The
United Republic of Tanzania, which contributed some 1,322 troops to those
operations, stood ready to contribute more whenever requested to do so. On
Ebola, which had been a stark reminder of how vulnerable people and nations
were, he said the biggest lesson learned was that the world needed to be better
prepared to prevent and respond to epidemics in the future. He welcomed
the creation of the High-Level Panel on Global Health Crises to come up with
recommendations in that regard; having chaired that panel, he said it would
complete its work in December 2015 and bring its report before the
Assembly.
On
the issue of Israel and Palestine, he stressed the need to resume dialogue to
resolve the long-standing conflict. It was about time the pain and
suffering of the Palestinians ended and the Israeli people lived peacefully and
harmoniously with their neighbours. The United Republic of Tanzania
subscribed to the two-State solution, he said in that regard. Turning to
Western Sahara, he said the lack of movement on the part of the United Nations
to implement decisions on the matter was both regrettable and
incomprehensible. “The people of Saharawi have waited far too long to get
the opportunity to determine their fate and future,” he said.
NICOLÁS MADURO
MOROS, President of Venezuela, said 2015 was the year in which
Venezuela celebrated 200 years of liberation, when Simon Bolivar led the
liberation forces — following hundreds of years of colonization — into an anti‑colonialist,
anti-imperialist, geopolitical approach for the Americas. This was an
approach which, 200 years later, Venezuela supported for a balanced world
— a world that rejected every kind of hegemony, the use of force, military and
economic domination. For many of the 70 years of its existence, the
United Nations led a bipolar world, and with the collapse of the Soviet Union,
the world became unipolar — one in which ideologies were supposed to come to an
end.
The
people of Venezuela sought to build a multipolar world, in which there existed
respect for others and the recognition of new, emerging centres, he said.
In the Assembly hall, not one leader would say a single word in support of the
wars that had destroyed Africa, Asia and the Middle East. The war in
Afghanistan did not bring peace to Afghanistan; it brought destruction and
terrorism. In Iraq, the war was woven in a fabric of lies, and
12 years later Iraq was devastated.
Leaders
in the hall listened to Hugo Chavez when he condemned the bombing of
Libya. Now leaders could agree that no one had a right to judge and
undermine the political regime decided by another country. Syria
resembled a “Hollywood version of terrorism — a film about the horrors of
war”. He stressed the need to help and protect the people of Syria.
The United Nations must take some responsibility for the strategic failure of
the wars in those nations and the inability of the Security Council to act to
resolve them.
The
last few days, world leaders had spoken about peace, and only with peace could
they achieve the 2030 Agenda, he said. Latin America had found its
path to dignity once more, and declared it would be a zone of peace.
However, the region had one problem: the internal dissention in Colombia.
Venezuela had taken steps for a peace agreement with the guerrillas, and in the
same vein, he acknowledged the normalization of relations between the United
States and Cuba. Just as then United States President Jimmy Carter in
1979 turned the Panama Canal over to the Panamanian authorities, the United
States must return Guantanamo to the Cuban authorities as soon as
possible. Furthermore, he called on the United Kingdom to negotiate the
return of the Malvinas Islands*
to Argentina.
Venezuela
had faced enormous challenges as it built an economic and social model
quintessentially Venezuelan, based on a socialist revolution in the twenty‑first
century, he said. He said that earlier in 2015 the country received
a threatening edict by United States President Obama who said Venezuela posed a
threat to the United States. President Obama’s decree of
9 March 2015 must be withdrawn and annulled. Venezuela
continued to call for peace and nonviolent approaches to the problems of the
world. Seventy years after the founding of the United Nations, the world
needed another United Nations — a new geopolitical system, a new regionalism
that respected the needs of the peoples and new rules clarifying that every
Government had the right to control itself.
ELLEN
JOHNSON-SIRLEAF, President of Liberia, said that the United Nations was
called to action by new and emerging challenges. Africa, the Middle East,
Asia and even Europe still had vortexes of conflict. Migrants and people
seeking refuge from conflicts and economic hardships were swirling across
Europe. Africa was haunted by the growing threats of destabilizing forces
like Boko Haram and ISIS as well as attempts to reverse democratic initiatives,
such as in Burkina Faso. She wondered if the United Nations, at 70, was
hindered by inflexible structures and overburdened by bureaucracies, and if the
Organization was fit for purpose to play its role in transforming the world
over the next 15 years.
Welcoming
the United Nations comprehensive review of peacekeeping operations and a review
of the Organization’s peacebuilding architecture, she said her country could
attest, with gratitude, to the critical and indispensable nature of the
peacekeeping and peacebuilding functions for post-conflict countries. She
also welcomed the global study on implementation of Security Council
resolution 1325 (2000) on women’s participation in peace processes.
Since the resolution’s adoption 15 years ago, improvement had been made in
the status of women, but much more remained to be done. In 70-year
history of the United Nations, only three women had served as President of the
General Assembly, one of them being her compatriot Angie Brooks Randolph.
Today only a few women served as Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, and not a single woman had ever served as Secretary-General.
Turning
to the Ebola crisis, Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone bore witness to the
fundamental creed of the United Nations, she said, expressing gratitude for
outpouring support. She also thanked the Secretary-General, along with
the African Development Bank, the African Union, the European Union and the
World Bank, for convening the international conference on post-Ebola
recovery. Her country was implementing its post-Ebola economic
stabilization and recovery plan with the expectation that it would receive
support from bilateral and multilateral partners. The three affected
countries had also formulated a regional recovery strategy. Liberia was
determined to address the development losses by rebuilding better and more
resilient health and education systems.
EDGAR CHAGWA
LUNGU, President of Zambia, expressed optimism that the seventieth session of
the Assembly would set the tone for the future and meet the expectations of the
international community. However, his country was concerned that the
gears to advance the three pillars of the Charter were moving at a “very slow
pace”. The core elements of the 2030 Agenda, which centred on
humanity, environment and peaceful societies, would guide its implementation
and help to “leave no one behind”. The development lessons of the
Millennium Development Goals and the cumulative experience of the United
Nations should serve as a spring-board on which to spur the world’s ambitions
in that arena.
In
the last 70 years, the inequality gap among nations had continued to
widen, as poverty and youth unemployment threatened prospects for peace,
security and development, he said. His Government looked towards the
2030 Agenda — which fostered poverty eradication and aimed to create
employment for youth and women, especially in rural communities — to rectify
those issues. While the global community was today more united on some
issues, it was equally if not more divided on who should make decisions on
global peace and security. There had been more conflicts in Africa over
the past 70 years than on any other continent, yet there had been no move
to end Africa’s “absolute exclusion” from decision-making on the Security
Council. Goal 10 of the 2030 Agenda, on reducing inequality
within and among countries, would not be achieved without eradicating the
inequality among countries on the Security Council.
Zambia
had a long history of involvement in conflict prevention, peacekeeping and
peacebuilding, he said. As a landlocked country, independence was
incomplete as long as Zambia remained surrounded by countries still fighting
liberation struggles. Zambia had been the beneficiary of various
initiatives aimed at achieving the Millennium Development Goals. But many
countries continued to face serious challenges in their quest for development
and a better quality of life for their people. The challenges they faced
were numerous, including the inseparable issues of energy shortages and climate
change. This year, Zambia was experiencing an unprecedented energy crisis
that had already cost the nation dearly in terms of productivity, jobs and
revenue. Beyond economic limitations, the social ramifications were
equally devastating; it was therefore important to exert great effort on
mitigation strategies to combat climate change.
Furthermore,
he said, developing countries were still grappling with challenges including
poverty, high unemployment, skewed industrial development, low intraregional
trade and inadequate infrastructure, among others. Agriculture was one of
the country’s priority areas in its efforts to diversify the economy away from
mining; to that end, the country was introducing credit schemes and sought
partnerships to enable the improvement of services and access to market
information. On financing for developing countries in general, he
stressed the need for external resources to bridge the gap required to finance
development projects. The world must quickly identify sources to raise
the $100 billion needed by Africa annually to finance its infrastructure
development.
TOOMAS HENDRIK
ILVES, President of Estonia, said that as the international
community continued to tackle global challenges including terrorism, climate
change, poverty and human rights violations, the number of conflicts and crises
worldwide continued to grow. Expressing hope that the recent agreement on
Iran’s nuclear programme would pave the way for more stability in the Middle
East, he stressed that ISIL posed a serious threat to peace and security in
Syria, and that his country supported the international coalition against
ISIL.
The
United Nations and its Global Counter-Terrorism Forum also had an important
role to play. The ongoing conflicts and crises in Syria and Libya, among
other places, had led to the current refugee crisis in Europe. Some
42,000 people worldwide fled from their homes every day.
Meanwhile,
the civil war in Syria alone had created more than 4 million refugees, he
said. The majority of those people had sought refuge in neighbouring
countries, but many had opted to take the dangerous route across the
Mediterranean to get to Europe. There were 600,000 asylum-seekers in
Europe in 2014, and there would be far more in 2015.
“I
am extremely worried to witness the rising support for far right or far left
political movements in Europe, often fuelled by anti-immigrant, racist
sentiments,” he said, adding that short-sighted, populist policies exploiting
fears of ordinary people would lead nowhere. The European Union was the
main donor in the effort to alleviate the Syrian refugee crisis, having
mobilized approximately €4 billion in humanitarian, development, economic
and stabilization assistance to Syrian internally displaced persons and
refugees.
Not
only did the world have to bring peace and stability to Syria and Libya, but it
also had to put an end to the aggression against Ukraine, he said.
Compared to a year ago, the armed conflict there was less intense, but daily
fighting continued. Crimea remained illegally occupied, and those
responsible for the downing of Malaysian airliner MH17 were still at
large. Attempts to obstruct justice on that matter were deeply disturbing.
In addition, long-standing protracted conflicts in Georgia, Moldova and the
Nagorno-Karabakh region remained unresolved. Dialogue and diplomatic
efforts to find a solution to the conflict between the Russian Federation and
Ukraine must continue. A solution to the conflict, however, must not come
at the expense of the principles that underpinned European and global security.
The
year 2015 was a crucial one for action against poverty and for promoting
sustainable development, he said. The Climate Conference in Paris should
reach an agreement that promoted the goal of economic growth, which did not
come at the expense of the environment. He stressed that all Member
States had committed to protect their people from genocide, war crimes, ethnic
cleansing and crimes against humanity. Unfortunately, in the cases of
Syria and Ukraine, the Security Council had failed to act due to the use of the
veto. Council members must not vote against actions aimed at preventing
and stopping mass atrocity crimes, he stressed in that regard. Estonia
therefore supported the initiatives of France and Mexico on the non-use of veto
in such cases.
DANILO MEDINA
SÁNCHEZ, President of the Dominican Republic, said the United Nations was born
from the unstoppable force of hope and strong will of great men and women who
believed in dialogue, solidarity and the greatness of humanity. The
Organization continued to represent those values that inspired the
international community daily. In the past year, the world had
experienced difficult challenges, but also witnessed encouraging facts, such as
the reopening of embassies between the United States and Cuba. Similarly,
amid a renewed commitment to global development, expressed in the post-2015
agenda, industrialized nations had finally stepped forward to fight climate
change with firmness and determination.
The
fight against inequities was the starting point to address most global
challenges and remained the main task ahead, especially in Latin America, he
said. While 130 million people in the region would have joined the
middle class by 2030, Latin America, together with Sub-Saharan Africa, was also
the world’s most unequal area. Despite decisive moves to counter it,
poverty was still too large and exacerbated by inequality. The region
needed both a responsible productive sector that generated wealth in all layers
of society and an active and efficient State that redistributed that wealth and
created opportunities.
There
was a need for a new international consensus that allowed space for national
Governments to design policies according to their own circumstances, he
said. The outcome of the Millennium Development Goals clearly showed what
the world was capable of doing through collective effort. Experience had
shown the Dominican Republic that a clear agenda and a common path was the only
way to accelerate progress. The post-2015 agenda provided the opportunity
to focus international efforts on the root cause of its problems, he said, and
added that the time had come to work towards equity, solidarity and just
distribution of the shared resources the planet offered.
DALIA
GRYBAUSKAITĖ, President of Lithuania, said that the ideals and principles of
the United Nations were being threatened around the world. Today, in the
twenty-first century, women and girls were abused and sold in slave
markets. The Charter had been breached in the heart of Europe with no
consequences. The Russian Federation had invaded Crimea; that annexation
and military aggression stood out among the world’s many crises because of its
wide implications for the future of peace and security.
Against
that back-drop, the international community had been unable to act, she
said. “If you close your eyes to crimes, they do not disappear,” she
stressed in that regard. Vetoing the Security Council resolutions
commemorating the Srebrenica massacre and blocking the investigation of the
downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 were insults to the victims of those
tragedies. Moreover, the very least the Security Council could do was to
put an end to the use of veto in the cases of war crimes, crimes against
humanity and mass atrocities.
By
protecting the criminals, the four Security Council vetoes on Syria had done
nothing to resolve the situation. Now the world was facing one of the
worst humanitarian crises in recent history.
“Lawlessness
breeds the worst of the worst — extremism, radicalism and terrorism,” she went
on, adding that the world could not allow those elements to take hold.
The United Nations must be adapted to today’s realities and must do much better
to tackle the underlying causes — not just the symptoms — of crises. It must
also improve its work in prevention and mediation in order to save lives.
In the twenty-first century, the world would need a strong and reformed United
Nations. “The United Nations will cease to exist if people stop believing
in it,” she stressed.
JAMES ALIX
MICHEL, President of Seychelles, said that despite the good intentions
and inspirations emanating from the Charter, something seemed to be sorely
lacking. The world was deficient in determination, torn apart by vicious
wars and conflicts, and full of poverty, hunger, famine, and epidemics.
Inequality, injustice and disparity were on the rise, and environmental
degradation and despoliation went unchecked. Was this the legacy today’s
generation wanted to leave behind? The international community had a duty
and obligation to change the world and could do so by accepting responsibility,
casting aside indecisiveness and looking beyond the narrow pursuit of
ideological and national interest.
The
lofty ideals of the United Nations were as relevant today as when it was
founded, he said. However, the structures of governance of the
Organization, in particular the Security Council, were not. International
organizations needed to be made relevant to the realities of the present.
Resolute action was needed for the spirit and essence of sustainable
development to be truly embraced globally. Small island developing States
were the sentinels of nature and the guardians of oceans. But actions or
inactions of others threatened their livelihood and existence. Climate
change was not the making of those States, but they bore the full brunt of it.
The
non-application of the principle of special and differential treatment of Small
Island developing States was one of his country’s major preoccupations, he
said. A one-size-fits-all approach to development was unjust and morally
unacceptable. The growing refugee crisis reminded the world of the need
for shouldering the burden in the fight against ideologies of hate. The
world could not allow itself to be condemned to the wrong side of history by a
collective failure to reach an ambitious and universal agreement to combat
climate change. Seychelles called on all developed countries to fulfil
their commitments to provide $100 billion annually by 2020 for the Green
Climate Fund.
MILOŠ ZEMAN,
President of the Czech Republic, criticized leaders who had spoken
before him for listing too many priorities in their short speeches. He
had only one: the fight against international terrorism. Terrorism was an
outrage and the main danger of human civilization. Practically all
European countries faced migration provoked by a consequence of terrorist
actions in the Middle East and Africa. It was wonderful to criticize
terrorism, organize anti-terrorism demonstrations and prepare the declaration
against terrorism. But there remained three illusions concerning the
scourge: that terrorism would vanish like a historical fluctuation, when it had
been growing like a cancer; that it remained a phenomenon of Islamic States, when
it comprised networks across continents; and that there existed a standard form
of war against terrorism.
His
proposal involved neither tanks, nor artillery, nor a massive occupation, but
rather a coordinated action under the umbrella of the Security Council, he
said. The United Nations had many articles concerning the possibility of
military action: some were never activated and were called the “sleeping
structures”. The United Nations needed to activate them. The
international community, under the five permanent Council members, should
mobilize small military units equipped with drones, helicopters and rangers,
and join together to eliminate the leaders of terroristic groups — the nerve
centre of those organizations. It was his firm hope, he said, that one of
the permanent members would propose such a resolution, and if not, as a
historic optimist, he believed it would eventually become evident as the way
forward.
ABDRABUH MANSOUR
HADI MANSOUR, President of Yemen, said the city of Aden had recently been
liberated from the criminal Houthi militia. However, the tragedy
continued in other cities. Three years ago, he had spoken about the
peaceful transition of power in Yemen before the General Assembly. He had
also warned that Iran was hindering that process, and that it was training
Houthi militias and providing them with weapons. Indeed, his country had
undergone a peaceful, transparent political transition as predicted;
nevertheless, Houthis had undertaken a political and military coup d’état as an
attempt to impose the Iranian model through the use of force. Citizens
were surrounded and killed, and children were conscripted into armed
militias. Schools and public buildings were turned into military
warehouses.
The
Houthis were “given every chance” and included in the national dialogue, yet
they continued to hold on to their weapons, he said. Indeed, the coup had
taken place despite Yemen’s positive approach to the situation. Acting
under Article 51 of the Charter, Yemen had appealed to neighbouring
countries to help them tackle the Houthi militia. The response had been a
courageous one, with Saudi Arabia acting with particular determination.
“We find ourselves mixed in this battle for the legitimacy of the State, to prevent
the country from falling into the hands of Iran,” who wanted to see the
destruction of Yemen. He welcomed the resistance of Yemen’s citizens, who
had also fought against the Houthis.
Greater
effort was needed internationally to alleviate human suffering and to ensure
that the Yemeni crisis was not forgotten, he went on. While the United
Nations had announced its annual humanitarian appeal for Yemen, contributions
fell short, and covered only a meagre number of needs. He appealed to
donor countries to fulfil all commitments to his country. Yemen had
cooperated with all authentic efforts of the international community, including
those of Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and and his Special Envoy under Security
Council resolution 2216 (2015).
Calling
on the Houthis and related militias to lay down their arms and implement that
resolution, he expressed hope that the efforts of the United Nations would be
met with success. Terrorism was a true threat for States. Yemen had
endeavoured to combat terrorism, conducting a “determined drive” against that
scourge in partnership with friendly countries. Given the country’s
geographical location, its stability was important for the region and the
world. “We shall not allow the Houthis, nor anyone else, to repeat the
Iranian experience in Yemen,” he stressed.
AJA ISATOU
NJIE-SAIDY, Vice-President of Gambia, said there had never been a greater
moment for the Organization to respond to the increasing complexity of threats
to peace and stability. The United Nations must craft and implement
critical resolutions for the sustenance of better lives for all. In order
to establish world peace and security, all Member States must be promptly and
severely reprimanded for any violations of the Sustainable Development Agenda.
Condemning the barbarism perpetrated by terrorism, she said the Holy Koran had
enjoined humanity to live in peace and harmony. Therefore, Muslims were
required to condemn those who twisted religious teachings for their narrow
interests and violated the sanctity of life.
Welcoming
the agreement on Iran’s nuclear programme, she stressed the need to step up
collective action to end all threats to peace and security.
Notwithstanding the sizeable financial support and effective intervention
witnessed in the fight against the Ebola epidemic, the long-term effects had
been placed at over $3 billion. Addressing those effects in a timely
manner would be conducive to promoting peace and stability in the region and
beyond. Turning to climate change, Ms. Njie-Saidy said the planet was
humanity’s only home, which required everyone to reverse the depletion of
natural resources. The United Nations must act with greater resolve in
promoting sustainable production and consumption patterns and in reducing man-made
disasters.
Intergovernmental
negotiations on reforming the Security Council must be driven by Member States
themselves, she said, stressing the need to increase representation of African
nations through two permanent and two non-permanent seats. Amid the marked
improvement in respect for human diversity, care must be taken by every country
not to impose “deviant behaviour” on another under any pretext. It was
time for Africa to end the practice of others taking advantage of its natural
resources. The United Nations should redouble its efforts towards the
creation of an independent and viable Palestinian State, as global peace
depended on the international community’s efforts to end global
injustice. In that context, she suggested the establishment of a mechanism
for reparations for the inhumane slave trade.
PRAYUT
CHAN-OCHA, Prime Minister of Thailand, said the United Nations at 70 had a
commendable track record in the maintenance of peace and security, as well as
the prevention of human rights abuses. Nonetheless, numerous challenges
persisted and required a holistic approach to solving, especially in the realm
of development. The imperative was to craft a truly sustainable solution
to peace and security via the nexus of development and human rights.
Sustainability
required that humankind learn to live in harmony with nature, he said.
Today,
the adverse impacts of climate change and natural disasters could reverse
decades of development gains, and it had become incumbent on every country to
“join hands” in solving this pressing global issue. Thailand reaffirmed
its commitment under the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions to
reducing its greenhouse gas emissions between 20 and 25 per cent by
2030. Furthermore, countries could only achieve sustainability when a
framework of fair rules existed. Successful implementation of the
2030 Agenda required joint ownership and collective efforts across all
sectors.
Most
countries expected the strongest to help the weakest and most vulnerable, he
said. But given the widening gap between the two, the United Nations must
not overlook the potential value of the middle countries. Those countries
could stand on their own while remaining in touch with the instructive
experiences of their growth and development, therefore serving as a crucial
link between the strongest and the weakest.
As
a middle-income country, Thailand had taken the position that development would
not work when some countries forged ahead while leaving the others
behind. Therefore, the country had pursued the “Thailand-Plus-One” policy
for region-wide economic and industrial development, creating transport
projects and special economic zones in support of the Association of South-East
Asian Nations (ASEAN).
Finally,
Thailand attached great importance to building a culture of peace and had
actively participated in international efforts to address global conflict, he
said. For those reasons, Thailand had decided to run for a non-permanent
seat on the Security Council for the 2017-2018 term. The Government
believed it could serve as a constructive bridge-builder between different
cultures and beliefs. Thailand aimed to promote good understanding and
enhance international cooperation in a collective pursuit to achieve the goals
of the United Nations.
RALPH GONSALVES,
Prime Minister of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, said the
consequences of climate change, including rising sea levels, drought and
floods, threatened his country — a small, mountainous archipelago of
32 islands scattered across the Caribbean Sea. Less than two years
ago, devastating flooding washed away 17 per cent of its GDP and claimed
12 lives. The posturing and recalcitrance of some major emitters of
global warming gases indicated that the upcoming Climate Conference in Paris,
or COP21, might be yet another empty diplomatic dance that prioritized process
over progress.
His
country and island and coastal States would not settle for any agreement that
did not comprehensively and unambiguously bind major emitters to deep and
ambitious emissions cuts, and meaningful financing commitments to fund
adaptation and mitigation efforts in the most vulnerable countries, he
said. Saint Vincent and the Grenadines embraced a green future and,
within the next three years, 80 per cent of its electricity needs would be
provided by renewable energy. But his country’s own efforts were
inadequate in the face of a global threat.
He
also reiterated a united call of the Caribbean Community for reparatory justice
from the major participants in and beneficiaries of the transatlantic slave
trade. That must form part of the post-2015 development
conversation. Turning to Security Council reform, he said that “for too
long, reform efforts have fallen victim to the geopolitical ambitions of
entrenched Council members and the regional rivalries of legitimate
aspirants”. The clearest signal of the United Nations desire to remain in
modern times would be a decision on the contours of a reformed and expanded
Council that recognized the emergence of new Powers, revised working methods,
and gave voice to other important perspectives, such as those of African and
small island developing States.
He
supported the Assembly’s decision to fly the Palestinian flag at the United
Nations as “an unmistakable endorsement of a true two-State solution” to the
Israel-Palestine conflict. While welcoming the détente between the United
States and Cuba, he said there was much more to be done to unshackle the Cuban
people from the chains of an unjust, illegal and plainly outmoded
blockade. He also expressed support for the inclusion of “Taiwan” in the
work of the United Nations specialized agencies, as the continued exclusion
could neither be explained nor justified by any rational and forward-looking
global gathering.
HABIB ESSID,
Head of Government of Tunisia, said his country had witnessed
important work in its democratic transition, where growing political awareness
allowed stakeholders to employ dialogue to resolve its problems.
Legislative and presidential elections had produced robust institutions that
were focusing attention on policies and programmes aimed at promoting social
and economic development. National guidelines on ensuring sustainable
development had been crafted in the interest of the people and the country in
alignment with the global agenda.
Changes
in the region had been swift and ongoing, leading to an exacerbation of the
terrorist threat which jeopardized safety and security in many countries, he
said.
Although
Tunisia had made great strides in countering terrorism, it was the victim
recently of two heinous attacks aimed at undermining the country’s culture of
tolerance as well as the economy. Tunisia’s counter-terrorism strategy
went beyond a military dimension and sought to address root causes through
bilateral and multilateral cooperation and coordination. The escalation
of conflicts across the globe — regardless of the reasons — was a source of
concern and required greater international partnership.
Tunisia
supported the resumption of peace negotiations between Palestinians and
Israelis within a specified time-table that would end the occupation and grant
Palestinians their legitimate rights, he said. Efforts to change the
status quo and undermine the two-State solution were unacceptable. Libya
was witnessing a crisis whose fallout went beyond its borders, which
underscored the importance of a political solution. The worsening crisis
in Syria required credible and immediate measures to end the violence and
protect lives. International efforts to revive a consensus-based
political solution were urgent in Syria as well as in Yemen.
SAMIUELA
'AKILISI POHIVA, Prime Minister of Tonga, said a key piece of the development
agenda remained outstanding, and he looked forward to an agreement on climate
change in Paris — one that stabilized greenhouse gas emissions in the
atmosphere. Tonga remained highly vulnerable to natural disasters, which
continued to increase in frequency and destructiveness.
Climate
change posed an irreversible threat to the country’s people, livelihoods and
natural environment. He reaffirmed his support for the call to the
Secretary-General to appoint a special representative on climate and security,
as discussed in the dialogues in the Security Council.
Tonga’s
vulnerability to natural disasters also re-emphasized the small island
developing States’ special case for sustainable development, he said.
Such susceptibilities must also factor into development finance calculations
designed to assist those countries.
The
use of GDP per capita as a determinant for access of small island developing
States to development financing, therefore, needed replacing with a new index
that recognized their exposure to natural disaster. This would save Tonga
and other States from increasing their indebtedness in obtaining funds from
multilateral institutions for reconstruction in the wake of a cyclone.
Furthermore,
Tonga remained thoroughly committed to the management and conservation of the
oceans and seas, he said. The Government of Tonga passed legislation
related to seabed mining activities relevant to the United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea. Within the country’s exclusive economic zone,
officials continued to combat the problem of illegal, unreported and
unregulated fishing and supported the proposed triennial United Nations Oceans
and Seas Conference to drive progress on ocean preservation.
As
Tonga worked to translate the new Agenda into action, the development system of
the United Nations must adapt to suit small island developing States’
priorities, he added. The country supported efforts to ensure the United
Nations was “fit for purpose” in implementing the 2030 Agenda and looked
forward to continued dialogue on the longer-term positioning of the United
Nations development system, as well as a more representative Security Council
in line with today’s realities.
JULIE BISHOP,
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Australia, said the critical services the
United Nations provided each and every day in many parts of the world often
went unnoticed or unappreciated. Australia recognized the dedicated and
courageous work of the thousands of United Nations personnel in the field who
protected vulnerable civilians, delivered vital humanitarian assistance,
rebuilt damaged societies and supported development. The world faced an
unprecedented number of long-running and seemingly intractable conflicts, the
global threat of terrorism and an immense development challenge. The
Charter was a remarkable achievement, whose values and aspirations articulated
seven decades ago still guided the world.
Australia
reiterated the pledge it took on the signing of the Charter to achieve higher
living standards, solutions to international problems and universal respect for
and observance of human rights and fundamental freedoms.
Ms. Bishop
said only the United Nations could have produced the remarkable 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development. The Agenda recognized the centrality of economic
growth to sustainable development and affirmed that ODA, while important, was
only one source of financing. Climate change was a challenge for all
nations which required decisive action and engagement by the entire United
Nations membership. Australia was committed to ensuring the Paris Climate
Conference was the platform needed to secure a collective approach to the 2°C
goal.
The
world could not be transformed unless the place of women within it was
transformed, she said, stressing the need to step up the fight against violence
against women and girls. It was time to put into practice the collective
thinking on the role of women in conflict embodied in the Organization’s women,
peace and security agenda. Human rights, good governance and open and
inclusive institutions were crucial foundations for development. With the
rise of terrorist groups like Da’esh, the continuing depredations of the “North
Korean” regime and the persistence of forced labour and other contemporary
forms of slavery, the need for the United Nations to prosecute a strong human
rights agenda had never been more urgent. While the Security Council’s
role was more essential than ever, that body could only perform its role if it
had the tools it needed.
PHILIP HAMMOND,
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Commonwealth Affairs of the United
Kingdom,
said that 70 years ago leaders of the countries that founded the United
Nations gathered in London to institutionalize the conditions for peace.
From the ashes of war, the quest for peace and human dignity had begun.
His country was proud to be a founding member.
Today,
it was proud that the United Kingdom was the only industrialized nation that
met development assistance targets set by the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) and the United Nations alike. The world today faced
numerous challenges, old and new, and immediate and long-term, including
humanitarian crises, denials of fundamental freedom and violations of territory
integrity. In addition to those challenges, longer-term threats had
emerged, such as climate change.
The
international community must avoid putting the future generation at risk.
The
world must tackle immediate challenges as well, he said. Most imminent
was the Syrian crisis. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and ISIL were
inflicting suffering on its people on an unimaginable scale. There was an
urgent need to end that conflict. He commended Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan
for their generosity to accept those fleeing conflict. The United Nations
appeal for the Syrian humanitarian crisis must be met. His country would
remain in the forces to counter ISIL. But defeating the group alone would
not bring an end to the crisis. An inclusive political settlement was
needed, and perpetrators of crimes must be held to account. But progress
on that front had been blocked for too long in the Security Council.
Each
country must follow its path to prosperity, he said, underscoring the need for
security as a prerequisite for development. Security within a country
must be also matched by security between nations. Stability could be best
achieved by following the rule-based international system with the Charter at
its heart. All States should respect territory integrity and political
independence.
His
country stood shoulder to shoulder with Ukraine. Aggression must have
consequences. Crucial to the success of the United Nations was to embrace
change and remain relevant. The Council must be reformed, and a
transparent process was needed to select the next Secretary-General. “He
or she has to head a more efficient Organization” in which every penny was used
to maximum effect, he said, stressing that his country would champion that
reform agenda. The world was a better place because of the United
Nations. That legacy must be preserved.
HAMADI OULD
MEIMOU, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Mauritania, speaking on
behalf of President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, said the seven decades since the
founding of the Organization had been spent in strenuous pursuit of its global
goals. While it had many successes to its credit, the United Nations also
continued to face old and new challenges.
He
expressed hope that the Sustainable Development Agenda would succeed in
addressing many of those challenges. Mauritania had attained remarkable
results over the past years in improving the lives of the people. Unemployment
had been curtailed and basic services were being provided, while rule of law,
judicial independence and transparency were being strengthened. In
recognition of the organic nexus between security and development, the country
had taken forward both priorities together in national policies and
programmes. A culture of dialogue had been promoted with people and
groups to prevent them from being misled into religious extremism.
The
Sahel had witnessed a proliferation of networks of organized crime, gun-running
and unauthorized migration, endangering security of the region, he said.
In that context, countries of the Sahel had embarked on coordinated efforts to
achieve sustainable development and address common challenges. Upholding
its commitment to maintain international peace and security, Mauritania
participated in United Nations peacekeeping operations in Africa.
While
the conflicts in Yemen and Syria required greater efforts towards achieving
political solutions, the process under way in Libya must be advanced by all
stakeholders there. The Arab-Israeli conflict continued to be a threat to
peace and security of a region that was vital to the world. Despite
successive United Nations resolutions, it was regrettable that the parties had
failed to reach agreement on the creation of an independent Palestinian State.
Africa
faced a multitude of challenges in the security and development fields, he
said, stressing the need to establish a well-developed health system to prevent
the outbreak of diseases. Despite their challenges, most African
countries had made progress in achieving the Millennium Development
Goals. A continent with immense natural and demographic resources
deserved a permanent seat on the Security Council. The objectives of the United
Nations would not be achieved unless full justice was attained in the
distribution of wealth across the world.
·
Information
Taken From http://www.un.org/
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