Pakistan facing terror threat from abroad after clearing safe havens, UN told

Terrorists have never shaken my country’s resolve to continue fight to defeat them, Maleeha Lodhi tells UN


APP October 04, 2018
Pakistani envoy to UN Maleeha Lodhi. PHOTO COURTESY: RADIO PAK

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan's Permanent Representative to the United Nations (UN) Maleeha Lodhi said on Thursday that Islamabad has removed all terrorist sanctuaries within the country.

Lodhi was speaking at the General Assembly’s Sixth (Legal) Committee, where she said that "Now the prime threat is coming from beyond Pakistan's borders."

Islamabad is combating the challenge from abroad by implementing a comprehensive border management system along its western border, she added.

“Terrorists and their evil acts have never shaken my country’s resolve and determination to continue the fight to defeat it,”she said in a debate on terrorism.

“The hard-earned stability that Pakistan enjoys today has been attained through a comprehensive approach against terrorism,” Lodhi added.

Elaborating on the implementation of the border management system, Ambassador Lodhi said it would enable Pakistan to prevent the cross border movement of militants, stop the illegal smuggling of arms and check illicit drug trafficking while at the same time facilitate trade through improved border crossing facilities.

Moreover, she said no terrorist movement could be defeated by military means alone.

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On its part, Pakistan was following a “whole Society approach”, engaging community leaders, developing strong counter-narratives, enhanced regional cooperation and following international obligations.

In her remarks, Lodhi also doubled down on the need to address the root causes of terrorism, including well-acknowledged drivers of radicalisation, which lie in political injustice, economic and social marginalisation and exclusion and the breeding grounds spawned by long festering and protracted conflicts.

“Chronic instability due to conflicts and military interventions has provided fertile ground to terrorists to recruit followers and spread their ideology,” she said, adding, “Terrorists and their supporters are obviously able to find save havens in ungoverned conflict areas,” she said.

While the United Nations is focusing on improving technical measures, Pakistan firmly believes that the extremist ideology would never be defeated “unless we deal with the geopolitical dynamics which fuel terrorism.”

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Pakistan, she said, backed the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) position on a consensus-based Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT).

The proposed Convention must be consistent with International Humanitarian Law and clearly differentiate between acts of terrorism and the legitimate struggles for self-determination of people living under foreign occupation.

“The malicious attempts by those who seek to manipulate the international consensus against terrorism to justify the suppression of people struggling for their right to self-determination must never be permitted to succeed,” Ambassador Lodhi told delegates from around the world.

“Without a holistic approach, we will be fighting only the symptoms and not the underlying causes of this deadly phenomenon.”

The United Nations, the Pakistani envoy said, enjoyed a unique position to build consensus among member states to deal with the diverse challenges posed by terrorism and extremism.

However, the capacity-building structure of the United Nations was increasingly donor-driven and does not cater adequately to the needs of member states.

COMMENTS (2)

Rk Singh | 5 years ago | Reply Hafeez saeed is cuddly teddy bear then?
Travis L | 5 years ago | Reply This was another Trump moment. The time when world leaders laughed at the most ludicrous statement ever made.
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