UN pushing for development,
peace, security in Afghanistan
United Nations Conference on Afghanistan at the UN offices in Geneva. |
The Geneva Conference on Afghanistan, Nov. 27-28, aims to
emphasize the importance of development to securing peace and security.
By Robin Gomes
The United Nations is garnering support from the
international community to help realize the yearning of the Afghan people for
peace and security through development in a country laid waste by nearly 4
decades of war and strife.
Development, peace, security
A high-level 2-day international conference on Afghanistan
that concluded at the UN in Geneva on Wednesday, is meant to show solidarity
for the war-torn country’s people and help strengthen government efforts to
promote development, along with wider peace and security.
Speaking to journalists at the start of the Nov. 27-28 Geneva
conference on Afghanistan, senior UN officialToby Lanzer,
Deputy Special Representative for the UN Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA),
said that everyone he had met wanted a solution to stop the violence.
“2019 will mark the 40th anniversary – four
decades of instability - in Afghanistan,” Lanzer said. “For the vast
majority of the country, they have grown up knowing conflict and nothing else,
so there is a tremendous hunger for peace.” “I have only met people in
Afghanistan who want the violence to end so the United Nations will be doing
what it can and offering its support in that regard.”
Solidarity
“Our hearts go out to all Afghans who have been affected
by conflict, trauma and suffering,” said UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres on Wednesday in a video message to the Geneva conference.
He hoped the event will be able to “generate further efforts to achieve
the stability for which Afghans have yearned for so long.”
“As the international community, we must come together to
enable the success of an Afghan-led and Afghan-owned peace process…and sustain
that solidarity once a peace agreement has been reached,” Guterres urged.
The conference is being attended by Afghanistan President
Ashraf Ghani, its Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah and numerous foreign ministers,
including from Russia, Turkey and the European Union.
The meeting noted that progress has been made but said more
is needed, especially in areas of security, anti-corruption and the push to
launch peace talks with the Taliban. The conference is also taking stock of the
Afghan government's use of billions of dollars in foreign aid for education,
health care, humanitarian support and needs since 2016.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét