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Call for ‘action’ against terror

Uri: Army personnel in action inside the Army Brigade camp during a terror attack in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir on Sunday. PTI Photo (PTI9_18_2016_000093A)

Press trust of india

Porlamar (Venezuela), Sep 18: Making a strong pitch against terrorism, India today sought “concrete action” and setting up of a mechanism by the 120 member countries of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) to ensure effective cooperation to combat the menace.
Vice-President Hamid Ansari, who is leading the Indian delegation at the 17th NAM summit, said terrorism is one of the “most egregious sources of human right violations today” and its use as an instrument of state policy is to be unequivocally condemned.
The time has come “for our movement to recognise the need for concrete action in the fight against terrorism”, Ansari said at the plenary meeting of the bloc.
“We need to establish a mechanism within our movement that will ensure effective cooperation in combating terrorism, which is the main threat to security, sovereignty and development,” he said.
Ansari’s remarks came against the backdrop of India raising its concerns at various international fora over Pakistan’s support to cross-border terrorism.
Modi had made clear references to Pakistan’s support to terrorism without naming it at the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, at a BRICS meeting in Hangzhou and at the ASEAN and East Asia summits in Lao PDR.
Describing terrorism as the “biggest threat” to international peace and to the sovereignty of states, Ansari asserted that no cause justifies the indiscriminate killing of innocent civilians as a means to achieve a political goal or change of policies.
“It is therefore imperative for the Non-Aligned Movement to galvanise the international community to strengthen the international legal framework to address this menace, including by adopting the draft Comprehensive UN Convention on Terrorism, to ensure the closest cooperation amongst the international community to counter the scourge of terror,” he said.
“We must also ensure that all existing structures that are the building blocks of UN’s Global Counter Terrorism Strategy function in a non-partisan and professional manner,” Ansari said.
Earlier, during NAM’s foreign ministers’ meeting, minister of state for external affairs MJ Akbar had also called on NAM to set up a “working group on terrorism” to safeguard world peace, stability and prosperity.
“Governments which think they can pay lip service to sanity at a NAM summit, and continue to arm, shelter and exploit terrorists in a war by other means, when they return home will learn that you cannot sip on poison and hope to live,” Akbar had said in an apparent reference to Pakistan.
Ansari also strongly flagged the issue of UN reforms.
He said: “Today we need to
ask whether an organization designed in 1945 with just 51 member states, is really appropriate to serve the needs of an international community that now comprises 193 independent sovereign states facing 21st century challenges to their citizens’ well-being and security.”

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