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UNITED NATIONS, Sept. 14 (Xinhuanet) -- UN Security Council
Heads of State and Government, meeting within the framework of the 2005 World
Summit, on Wednesday unanimously adopted resolutions calling on all states to
reinforce the battle against terrorism and to strengthen the Council's role in
preventing conflict, particularly in Africa.
In Resolution 1624, adopted at what was officially
called the Security Council Summit on Threats to Peace and Security, the leaders
condemned "in the strongest terms all acts of terrorism irrespective of their
motivation, whenever and by whomsoever committed, as one of the most serious
threats to peace and security."
They reaffirmed "the imperative to combat terrorism
in all its forms and manifestations by all means, in accordance with the Charter
of the United Nations."
They called upon all States to adopt all necessary measures,
including prohibiting by law incitement to commit terrorist acts, denying
safe haven to anyone thus involved, and cooperation to strengthen security
of international borders and combat fraudulent travel documents.
The resolution also calls upon all States to continue
international efforts to enhance dialogue and broaden understanding among
civilizations in an effort to prevent indiscriminate targeting of different
religions and cultures and to ensure that measures taken comply with all
obligations under international law, in particular international human rights
law, refugee law, and humanitarian law.
In Council Resolution 1625 on conflict prevention,
the leaders called for a raft of measures ranging from preventive-diplomacy
initiatives, regional mediation and early warnings of potential conflict to
promoting fairness and transparency of electoral processes and acting against
illegal exploitation and trafficking of natural resources.
"We must be at the forefront of the fight against
terrorism," Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, calling on the international
community to complete a comprehensive convention that outlaws terrorism in all
its forms.
He called the need to prevent conflict in Africa a
"crucial issue," adding that "I consider it thoroughly appropriate that at this
summit, you have reflected the priority it deserves - as is the case in the
daily work of the Security Council."
Following Annan, President Benjamin William Mkapa of
Tanzania said it was important that the Council address not only the threats but
also their underlying causes.
"We need to agree on, and pursue an effective
strategy that will address the root causes and underlying conditions of
terrorism and conflict," he added.
Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin said
today's session underlined the fundamental importance of the UN and its Security
Council as the headquarters for the international anti-terrorist front, and
declared his country's readiness to take practical steps to strengthen the UN's
central role in ensuring international security and stability.
Greek Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis stressed that
"actions to combat terrorism and the protection of human rights and fundamental
freedoms are not mutually exclusive," and he called for a more comprehensive
concept of collective security and strengthening the UN.
Speaking next, US President George W. Bush stressed
the "solemnobligation to stop terrorism at its early stages" including freezing
terrorists' assets, denying them freedom of movement and preventing them from
acquiring weapons, including weapons of mass destruction.
"The United States will continue to work with and
through the Security Council to help all nations meet these commitments," he
said.
President Nestor Kirchner of Argentina, said tackling
terrorismrequired a legitimate international response that entailed lookingat
the problem in a broader perspective rather than unilaterally, adding there
should be a closer relationship between preserving human rights and combating
terrorism.
Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika condemned all
manifestations of terrorism, calling on all states to work together under UN
authority to combat it.
He also called for an agreed definition of terrorism
that recognized the legitimate struggle for self-determination.
Prime Minister Tony Blair of the United Kingdom said
terrorism would not be defeated until the Council's determination was as
complete as the terrorists', until its defence of freedom was as absolute as
their fanaticism and until its passion for democracy was as great as their
passion for tyranny.
"They play on our divisions. They exploit our
hesitations. Thisis our weakness. And they know it", he said.
Benin's President Mathieu Kerekou said combating
terrorism required a scrupulous respect for the sovereignty of States and
international law, and the protection of human rights and international
humanitarian law.
On conflict prevention, he said the Council could
establish a regular evaluation of risk situations around the world, so as to
appraise existing threats, concluding that Africa required specific attention.
President Traian Basescu of Romania noted that
"global anti-terrorism can be sustained only by action taken at the Security
Council level. It has to be a UN undertaking as a whole."
Echoing the theme of combating both symptoms and
causes, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said repression alone will
not defeat terrorism.
"We must prevent terror from breeding in hotbeds of
hopelessness," he declared. "In combating irrational violence, thebest means at
our disposal are the promotion of a culture of dialogue, the promotion of
development and the unyielding protection of human rights."
In similar vein, French Prime Minister Dominique de
Villepin called for "resolute action on everything that fuels terrorism - the
inequalities, the persistence of violence, injustices and conflicts, the lack of
understanding among cultures," since force alone "does not answer peoples'
frustrations, it does not address the roots of evil."
The meeting, chaired by Philippine President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo, whose country holds the council presidency for September, took
place after the opening of the UN summit, attended by 153 heads of state and
government and high-ranking officials from nearly 40 other countries.
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