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23/1/2004
Fréchette
Urges Collective International Response To Emerging Security Threats
Deputy
Secretary-General Louise Fréchette this week made
a strong case for the ability of the United Nations to evolve,
while stressing the need for a strengthened collective response
to emerging security threats.
Delivering the keynote address to the Canadian Club in Montreal,
she said it is legitimate to ask whether existing collective security
mechanisms - including the UN - can rise to the challenge posed
by terrorism and other perils. In particular, she called attention
to the role of international bodies in intervening in the domestic
affairs of States when necessary to combat gross human rights violations,
including genocide and ethnic cleansing.
Contrary to the perception of some,
she said, the UN is capable of adapting to new challenges and
has already, in recent years,
undergone significant reform in order to function more effectively. "The
principles which guide us have also evolved," she said.
Offering examples of recent successes, she cited the UN's role
in fostering East Timor's independence, its help with Afghanistan's
political transition, and its complex operations in African countries
such as Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Democratic Republic of the
Congo.
"The UN has also been very active in addressing terrorism
and weapons of mass destruction - and its role in that effort is
more important than is usually recognized," she said, pointing
to the establishment of the Security Council's Counter-Terrorism
Committee.
But the UN has reached a critical
juncture, the Deputy Secretary-General asserted. "We have
to be able to fashion collective responses to challenges such
as those posed by Iraq or Al-Qaida, just as
we have to deal better with mass killings such as we saw in Rwanda
and Srebrenica."
Towards that end, she noted that
Secretary-General Kofi Annan has created a High-Level Panel to
examine these issues and make
concrete proposals to strengthen the international system. "We
need to come out of this review with a stronger consensus within
the international community on the principles and rules which must
govern the pursuit of peace and security, as well as the political
will to bring whatever improvement might be required to our collective
mechanisms and institutions," she said.
She also called on the international community to uphold the Millennium
Development Goals to reduce poverty and to address HIV/AIDS.
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