October 11 , 2016

News

‘UN should focus on addressing unresolved disputes’

* Ambassador Lodhi says UN counter-terrorism strategy should differentiate between acts of terrorism and struggle for self-determination

By: APP

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan has called for the United Nations (UN) counter-terrorism strategy to focus attention on addressing unresolved disputes, foreign occupation and denial of right of self-determination as part of measures to stamp out terrorism.

"The provisions of the draft convention, against International terrorism, should clearly distinguish between acts of terrorism and the legitimate struggles for self-determination of peoples living under foreign occupation," said Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi, Pakistan's permanent representative to the UN, told the UN General Assembly's Sixth Committee, which is working on the convention.

While the international community agreed that human rights violations contributed to violent extremism, killings continued in Kashmir and Palestine, she said.

"Brutalisation and oppression of people struggling for their legitimate right to self-determination constitutes state terrorism," the envoy said in a debate on measures to eliminate international terrorism.

Reaffirming Pakistan's commitment to eliminate terrorism, Maleeha pointed out that her country had been the principal victim of terrorism, losing more than 60,000 lives. The Zarb-e-Azb security operation, deploying 200,000 of Pakistani security forces personnel, had made remarkable progress in cleansing the country of terrorists and would conclude only when the objective has been accomplished, she told delegates.

A national plan was being executed that focused on countering and preventing terrorism, while promoting the rule of law, and social and economic empowerment of women and youth. The international community had created numerous counter-terrorism structures and had invested billions of dollars, but terrorism continued to morph into more dangerous forms, she said. An important factor was an unwillingness to address conditions conducive to terrorists, she added.

While pointing out some of the gaps in the international approach, the Pakistani envoy said that the emphasis on rule of law to prevent terrorism and violent extremism appeared to only prevail at the national level.

However, despite being obvious causative factors, the international community seems to lack the will to addressing foreign intervention, foreign occupation and the continued denial of the right to self-determination of people living under foreign occupation, she said.

The conflicts undermine development, break down governance, create a sense of injustice and fuel violence," Ambassador Lodhi said.

"Yet, in the context of preventing extremism, the international community has yet to address longstanding situations of conflict and injustice," she said, citing the situation in Kashmir and Palestine. There was consensus that terrorism cannot be associated with any religion, and that extreme right political parties in the West were seeking to reap political dividends by fanning Islamophobia, she added.

 

Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk

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