Ban Stresses Vital Link Between Security And Development
At Munich Forum, Ban Stresses Vital Link Between Security And Development
New York, Feb 5 2011 1:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Saturday stressed the vital link between security and development, telling a global forum in Germany that recent events in the Middle East highlight the fact that one cannot exist without the other.
"Where there is security -- broad-based security --
there is peace and development. Where it is absent, there is
often chaos and uncertainty," Mr. Ban said in his
"We see this across a
diverse geography of troubled places, most recently in
Tunisia, Egypt and other countries of the Middle East," he
added. "We do not know how these events will end. But this
much we do know. They are driven, at bottom, by human
insecurity: poverty, diminished or disappointed
expectations, the lack of good governance -- corruption,
ineffective public institutions, a deficit of
de "Insecurity grows with injustice -- where
human rights and human dignity are not fully respected, and
where there are sharp and growing inequalities of
wealth." At the same time, the Secretary-General noted
that the problems and grievances causing unrest in the Arab
world represent a microcosm of the broader world. "Despite
progress in many spheres, in many places, insecurity is
everywhere on the rise," he stated, adding that the best
guarantee of global security is conflict prevention.
"When
you deploy 10,000 soldiers, it costs billions of dollars. If
you can prevent conflict, you save resources at a fraction
of that cost more importantly, you save lives." The United
Nations has been placing greater emphasis in recent years on
preventive diplomacy efforts. Last year alone, it supported
34 different mediation, facilitation and dialogue efforts,
from helping to smooth the way to the first free elections
in Guinea since the country''s independence, to helping to
ease the political crisis in Kyrgyzstan. Sometimes, Mr.
Ban pointed out, a well-run election is the best prevention,
especially in societies divided by conflict or undergoing
critical transitions, drawing attention to the fact that
there will be at least 20 elections in Africa this
year. "Our message is clear and direct: the will of the
people is paramount," he said. "Meaningful participation in
decision-making is among the foundations for social
stability and security. Repression and disregard for
fundamental rights and freedoms breed crisis and
insecurity." He added that it is not possible to speak
about security without addressing one of the gravest
threats, namely the stockpiles of tens of thousands of
weapons, and the spectre of their proliferation and nuclear
terrorism. Important strides were made during the past
year, he noted, including the signing in April by Russia and
the United States of a nuclear arms reduction pact known as
the New START Treaty. Mr. Ban applauded the lea "That it should
enter into force, here in Munich today, marks a milestone on
the road to our ultimate goal of achieving a world free of
nuclear weapons," he told the conference. Meanwhile, he
reiterated a proposal he made last year for the convening of
a conference to advance the important goals of the Nuclear
Terrorism Convention. He also voiced serious concern about
the "unanswered questions" about the nuclear programmes of
Iran and the Democratic People''s Republic of Korea
(DPRK). Feb 5 2011
1:10PM
mocracy.
ders of
both Russia and US for their "visionary leadership and
dedicated efforts" in advancing nuclear disarmament and
non-proliferation, in a separate http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=5078
statement issued by his spokesperson.
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