UN General Assembly - mPhoto taken from Asian News Channel |
Lauding the achievements of the Organization, which commemorates its seventieth anniversary in 2015, Heads of State and Government from across continents underscored the United Nations important and invaluable work in lifting nations out of poverty and conflict and in establishing democracies. They also took a critical look at its next chapter, with many speakers calling for urgent reform to ensure the Organization was fit for purpose in coming decades.
Calling
his country “a child of international solidarity, midwifed by the United
Nations”, Hage G. Geingob, President of
Namibia, said that following the end of South Africa’s mandate over his
country, the Organization had assumed direct responsibility for it and helped
it develop the building blocks for democracy. Today, his country had the
freest press in Africa. It was rated the sixth best governed country by
the Mo Ibrahim Index of African Governance and the seventh lowest in
corruption.
Klaus Werner
Iohannis, President of Romania, said that, in the aftermath of the cold
war, the United Nations had also supported his country in its transition to
democracy. Now, after almost two decades as a recipient, Romania had
become a provider of official development assistance (ODA) to neighbouring
countries and beyond. “The United Nations is nothing but ourselves,
Member States, living on the trust and resources we invest in it,” he said.
Member
States agreed that at the age of 70, the Organization had the wisdom and
experience to recognize its mistakes and the strength to correct them. In
that regard, many speakers called attention to particular issues that still
demanded the Organization’s urgent attention. David
Arthur Granger,
President of Guyana,
said the border conflict between his country and Venezuela had deprived Guyana
of its territory and natural resources, despite the Secretary-General’s efforts
for a resolution over the past 25 years. Urging a permanent solution
to maintain the security of small States, he said “the United Nations remains
our best hope.”
Also
claiming aggression from a neighbouring State, Petro Poroshenko, President of Ukraine, said the Russian
Federation, a former strategic partner, had occupied Crimea in February.
An effective instrument that could bring an aggressor country to justice was
needed, he urged, noting that the Russian Federation had used its veto twice
during the Security Council’s consideration of his country. The veto
power should not become an act of grace and pardon for a crime. He
welcomed the French Government’s initiative to restrain veto use and supported
an enlargement of the Council’s membership and improvement of its working
methods.
“If
you close your eyes to crimes, they do not disappear,” stressed President Dalia
Grybauskaitė of Lithuania, also addressing the use of the veto power in the
Council. Indeed, the ideals and principles of the United Nations were
being threatened around the world. It was crucial that the Organization
be adapted to today’s realities and that it step up its efforts to tackle the
underlying causes — not just the symptoms — of the crisis. 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
Organization. “The United Nations will cease to exist if people stop
believing in it,” she stressed.
Nicos
Anastasiades, President of Cyprus, was among other leaders who expressed
the need for reform of the United Nations. While recognizing the value of
the Organization, he said that new global threats had emerged, such as climate
change and environmental degradation, and that the United Nations must be
adapted to meet those challenges. Seventy years after its founding, the
United Nations needed the world’s leaders to demonstrate statesmanship and
vision so as to rebuild newly broken societies and find a path to renewal.
A
number of countries called, in particular, for Africa to be represented in the
Council’s permanent and non-permanent membership, noting that much of the
15-member body’s work focused on the African continent.
Jakaya Mrisho
Kikwete, President of the United Republic of Tanzania, said that,
while some efforts had been made to reform the Council, those efforts must
accelerate during the Assembly’s current session. “For the United Nations
Security Council to remain what it was 70 years ago is incomprehensible,
and to say the least, unacceptable,” he stressed.
In
that vein, Edgar Charwa Lungu, President
of Zambia, said that, 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 Council.
Goal 10 of the 2030 Agenda, on reducing inequality within and among
countries, would not be achieved without eradicating the inequality among
countries in the 15-member body.
Several
proposals for Council reform — and new ways to harness its power — emerged
throughout the day’s debate. On the issue of tackling terrorism, Miloš Zeman, President of the Czech
Republic, stressed that words and declarations would never fully eradicate
that scourge. Instead he proposed coordinated action under the umbrella
of the Council with the activation of the “sleeping structures” of the United
Nations. Under his proposal, the international community, led by the five
permanent Council members, would 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. As a
historic optimist, it was his firm hope that one of the permanent members would
propose such a resolution and see its value as a viable way forward.
Also
speaking today were Heads of State and Government, as well as other
high-ranking Government officials, from Rwanda, Tajikistan, Finland, Mongolia,
Swaziland, Sierra Leone, Colombia, Uruguay, Malawi, Japan, Kuwait, Italy,
Armenia, Venezuela, Liberia, Estonia, Dominican Republic, Seychelles, Yemen,
Gambia, Thailand, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Tunisia, Tonga, Australia,
United Kingdom, and Mauritania, as well as the European Union.
- · Information Taken From http://www.un.org/
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