NEWSIndia

India’s top priorities at UN meet: terrorism, UN Security Council, climate change

For this year’s UN general meeting, India sure has a lot to show as progress. Along with all the positives, India is aslo expected to press for a ban on Jaish-e-Mohammad chief Masood Azha, indicated Syed Akbaruddin, India’s ambassador to the United Nations. Last year, China had blocked India’s efforts for a ban on the terror chief at the UN. But at the summit of BRICS – a block of emerging economies including Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, held in Xiamen earlier this month – China had relaxed its stance and designated Jaish as a terrorist organization.

The UN General Assembly begins in New York today and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj will reach New York in the afternoon. Counter-terrorism will dominate the discussions between Minister Swaraj and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. The other focus areas for India will be UN reform, action to curb climate change and peacekeeping. Her address at the General Assembly is scheduled for the morning of September 23.

On China, Mr Akbaruddin said India will pursue a “give and take diplomacy” rather than “winner takes all” strategy after the truce at Doklam, the area near Sikkim border, where the troops of two nations were eye-ball to eye-ball for more than 2 months.

China has repeatedly blocked India’s efforts to get a permanent membership at the UN Security Council and the elite Nuclear Suppliers Group. Its diplomatic proximity to Pakistan has also ensured that on terrorism, India and China are not on the same page.

Asserting that reform at the UN is only a “matter of time” with US President Donald Trump openly supporting India’s inclusion in the UNSC, the Ambassador said “nobody can keep one-sixth of humanity out of its rightful place”.  

In June, during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the US, a joint statement had said, “As global non-proliferation partners, the United States expressed strong support for India’s early membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group”.
Ms Swaraj is expected to engage in more than two dozen bilateral and multilateral meetings, and make India’s case on a number of forums, including the UN reform session presided by President Trump.

India, Mr Akbaruddin said, will give a “fitting response” if the Pakistan Prime Minister raises Kashmir during his address on Sept 21. “Kashmir has not been discussed on a formal basis at the UN for decades” and “if others focus on issues of a bygone era it is their prerogative,” Mr Akbaruddin said.

A key diplomatic win is likely to be the international initiative on Solar Alliance spearheaded by India which requires only four more nations to ratify it.

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