Nigeria urges UN help to address poverty, security issues

President Bola Tinubu states the need for effective collaboration to combat poverty, security issues, and illicit resource extraction in Africa.

Tinubu, who chairs the West African bloc ECOWAS, assails military coups that have swept through West Africa. / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Tinubu, who chairs the West African bloc ECOWAS, assails military coups that have swept through West Africa. / Photo: Reuters

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu has urged the United Nations to become more proactive in addressing his African nation's poverty and security issues and helping to fight illicit resource extraction, his spokesperson said.

Tinubu raised the issues when he met UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, his spokesperson Ajuri Ngelale said in a statement on Thursday.

The Nigerian leader said malign actors who engage in illicit activities, including resource and weapons smuggling, exploit Africa's vast mineral wealth and undermine its stability.

"We are facing the great challenge of scavengers ravaging our lands and oppressing our people on illegal mines, taking our gold and mineral wealth back to developed economies by stealth and violence," the statement cited Tinubu as saying.

"We will now be aggressive, and we will question motives. We will stop what is happening," he said, urging "effective collaboration" with the UN.

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Comprehensive reform

Tinubu called for the United Nations to evolve from a global discussion platform into a proactive coordination centre, highlighting the urgency of addressing poverty and security issues.

In response, Guterres acknowledged the need for comprehensive reform within the UN to address institutional weaknesses and improve decision-making power for developing nations, according to the statement.

"We now recognise the need to reform the institution to represent the world as it is today," Guterres was quoted as saying.

In a speech at the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Tinubu, who chairs the West African bloc ECOWAS, assailed military coups that have swept through West Africa and pledged to help re-establish constitutional order in Niger.

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