"The terrible events of last week, in Beirut and Paris, demonstrate to us that the greatest threat to peace and security comes from violent extremism and religious fanaticism, not from the absence of economic and social development," India's Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN Bhagwant Bishnoi said here yesterday.
He told the UN Security Council that the terror attacks also highlight the international community's unfinished business in the fight against terrorism.
"That should not be allowed to continue. Terrorism takes away the foremost of human rights, the right to life. It is truly a crime against humanity," he said at the UNSC session on 'Maintaining of International Peace and Security'.
Bishnoi also underscored the need to address the issue of financing that terrorists obtain saying that ideology alone is not sustaining the terror groups.
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"It is the purveyors of hate and those who characterize others as infidels who are responsible for the violence that threaten our civilizational values. We need to also acknowledge that it is the absence of state authority, or weak state authority, that provides the breeding ground for extremist organizations to operate," he said.
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"Today's violent conflicts and violent extremism are
often rooted in a mix of exclusion, inequality, mismanagement of natural resources, corruption, oppression, governance failures, and the frustration and alienation that accompany a lack of jobs and opportunities," Ban said.
"Yet our responses have not caught up to these realities. We are not yet properly integrating United Nations action across the inter-dependent pillars of our work: peace, development and human rights," he added, calling for a global recovery plan for the Middle East similar to the multi-billion dollar Marshall Plan with which the US rebuilt Western Europe after World War II.
"No grievance or cause can justify such acts," he said of the terrorist attacks.
But, he added: "I am especially concerned about reprisals or further discrimination against Muslims, in particular Muslim refugees and migrants. This would just exacerbate the alienation on which terrorists feed."
He also referred to the tendency of the Security Council to encroach on the jurisdiction of the General Assembly.
Describing the Security Council as a non-representative, limited member body with opaque working methods, he said it cannot presume to prescribe policy choices on issues of development and social inclusion to the wider membership of the United Nations.
"The Council will, however, have our full support in its efforts to curb dangerous and extremist trends. The consolidation of political processes and solutions, while also building durable state institutions, will go a long way in addressing extremism and radicalisation. We would encourage the Council to pursue such solutions," he said.