At the UN, Pakistan called for resolving long-standing disputes to save young people from becoming victims of armed conflict, says a press release received here today New York. Speaking in the Security Council debate on Youth, Peace and Security, Pakistan’s Ambassador to the UN, Dr. Maleeha Lodhi said, “The young are some of the worst victims in situations of armed conflict, humanitarian crisis, foreign occupation and longstanding and unresolved disputes”. As a result, she added, their sense of justice and their patience is frequently tested by the inconsistent and often selective global response to their pain and suffering. Emphasizing the need to break the nexus between desperation and hopelessness, Ambassador Lodhi said that the toxic message of violent extremism preys on the vulnerability of youth, recruiting them to its violent ways by playing on their sensitivity to injustice and oppression, and propagating hate, intolerance and violence as the sole response to numerous inequities. “If one has nothing to live for, one finds something to die for”, she added. Ambassador Lodhi pointed out that many of the fundamental causes enraging our youth are often conspicuous by their absence in the international discourse on these issues. “We need to fight the ‘violence of exclusion’ by talking to young people, listening to them and giving them the voice that they deserve”, she said. She quoted what the Secretary General, Antonio Guterres had said recently, “No one is born a terrorist, and nothing justifies terrorism, but factors such as prolonged unresolved conflicts, lack of the rule of law and socioeconomic marginalization can all play a role in transforming grievances into destructive action”. Underscoring that the world today has more young people than ever before- 46% of the global population is under 25, she said many parts of the world including Pakistan have a youth bulge. “Inspired by hope and optimism and an unbridled sense of idealism, the young are agents of change in their communities and societies”, she asserted. “It is time to recognize that youth are not merely instruments of war making but essential partners in peace-building. They are architects for economic and social development and the establishment of effective, inclusive institutions”, she asserted. Ambassador Lodhi told the 15 member Council that Pakistan has led the charge in successfully implementing holistic and comprehensive strategies to counter the narrative of extremism, and at the same time, engage the youth so that they can become productive members of the society. She concluded by urging the international community to recommit to build on the positive energy and innovative spirit of the young, to strive for a world where the illusion of cynicism gives way to the ideal of hope, and equal and inclusive opportunities available to the young are commensurate with their boundless ambitions. “This is the least we owe to them”, she added. *-*-*-*
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