缅北禁地

Addressing Climate Security and Violent Extremism

A side event on “Climate Security and Violent Extremism: From Research to Climate-based Risk Assessments and Programming” was held as part of Counter-Terrorism Week. The event was co-organized by the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT), the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI), and the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) and was co-sponsored by the Permanent Mission of Canada, the Permanent Mission of Mozambique, and the Permanent Mission of Norway.

The hybrid event was held in New York and was attended by over 150 representatives from Member States, international and regional organizations, United Nations Global Counter-Terrorism Compact entities and youth and climate-focused networks. 
 

Ambassador Odd-Inge Kvalheim, Deputy Permanent Representative and Chargé d’ affaires at the Permanent Mission of Norway to the United Nations in New York, stated, “Norway attaches great importance – and concern – to climate-related security risks. Climate change can accelerate the same underlying drivers as those identified as drivers of terrorism: It drives displacement, weakens governance and fuels political and social instability. It drives food insecurity and hunger, competition over resources, and increases tension among communities. And it undermines livelihoods and exacerbates inequality”.

 

Delivering the opening remarks, Ambassador Richard Arbeiter, Deputy Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations, New York, stated, “The first step to addressing the complex security challenge associated with climate change, as for any great challenge, should be to further our understanding of what is coming. We must not be blindsided by a rise in climate-affected violent extremism, but already be developing tools to mitigate and respond to this possibility.”

 

Pedro Comissário Afonso, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Mozambique to the United Nations in New York, said, “Terrorism is a global threat which is increasingly taking alarming contours, particularly in its modus operandi. It manipulates socioeconomic factors, especially in people and countries most vulnerable to climate change. In fact, the negative synergy between the two crises threatens to undermine States and international security itself. To address effectively these challenges, a firm collective and relentless response to terrorism is needed, in a coordinated and resolute manner."