President Jonathan Says Foreign Fighters Are Aiding Boko Haram , Calls On World To Help Fight Insurgency
President Goodluck Jonathan, on
Wednesday, said foreign fighters have added a new dimension to the emerging
phase of terrorism in the world.
Addressing the United Nations (UN)
Security Council High-Level Meeting on the threat of terrorism to global peace
and security, President Jonathan said the world must act immediately to stop
the new phenomenon of terrorists and foreign fighters attacking and trying to
hold parts of sovereign nations.
He said the international community
must do more to support countries like Nigeria, which are in the frontline of
the war against terrorism.
Jonathan lamented that from targeted
attacks by Al-Qaeda a few years ago, “there are now mobile bands of thousands
of terrorists sweeping across vast areas, destroying lives and even attempting
to hold territory,” a development he described as unacceptable.
He insisted that the world must
capitalise on the commitment and evident determination of the Security Council
to seek more innovative responses to the threat of terrorism and, in
particular, the growing menace of foreign fighters.
“The council should be concerned
about the existence of sources of arming and funding of terrorists. Evidence
has shown that Boko Haram, for instance, is resourced largely from outside our
country,” he said.
According to him, “we must also
commit to ensuring that countries which are in the frontline of this challenge,
receive adequate support from the international community.
“Nigeria knows too well the
destructive effects of terrorist activities. Over the past five years, we have
been, and are still confronting threats posed by Boko Haram to peace and
stability predominantly in the north-eastern part of our country.
“The costs are high: over 13,000
people have been killed, whole communities razed and hundreds of persons
kidnapped, the most prominent being our innocent daughters from Chibok
Secondary School, in North East Nigeria.
“As daunting as the challenge may
be, we have faced it with unrelenting determination, mobilising all the
resources at our disposal, to ensure that the scourge of terrorism is rooted
out of our nation. In addition to our counter-terrorism efforts, we have
evolved initiatives to alleviate the plight of the population in the affected
communities,” he said.
He added that “we have also launched
a Victims Support Fund, which has already raised about $500 million of the
expected minimum of $1 billion in direct support of the victims of terrorism.
“This is in addition to the Safe
Schools Initiative championed by Mr Gordon Brown, former British Prime Minister
and currently the UN Special Envoy for Global Education, which is being
rigorously supported by Nigeria’s Federal Government.”
President Jonathan also called for
reform of the UN Security Council, adding that pressing challenges to global
peace and security had made it imperative that urgent action be taken on its
reformation.
Delivering Nigeria’s annual
statement to the UN General Assembly, President Jonathan also called for an
urgent review of UN peacekeeping operations across the world.
He noted that although the global
body was established about 70 years ago to save succeeding generations from the
scourge of war, the world sadly continued to experience conflict and human
suffering.
He assured the United Nations that
Nigeria is now free of Ebola, but said the world must act in unison to stop the
disease from becoming a global disaster.
President Jonathan Says Foreign Fighters Are Aiding Boko Haram , Calls On World To Help Fight Insurgency
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Thursday, September 25, 2014
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