Following repeated occurrence of stolen funds discovered to have been  stashed in foreign banks by corrupt politicians, President Buhari  yesterday urged world leaders to dismantle the seeming safe haven in  their countries where these funds are secretly being deposited.  President Buhari said this while addressing world leaders at the 70th General Assembly of the United Nations.
"By any consideration, corruption and cross border financial crimes are impediments to development, economic growth, and the realization of the wellbeing of citizens across the globe. Nigeria is ready and willing to partner with international agencies and individual countries on a bilateral basis to confront crimes and corruption. In particular, I call upon the global community to urgently redouble efforts towards strengthening the mechanisms for dismantling safe havens for proceeds of corruption and ensuring the return of stolen funds and assets to their countries of origin"he said
On  the Chibok girls, Buhari reaffirmed his government's position to return  the girls safely to their parents. According to him, the Chibok girls  are constantly on the government's mind
"One of our major aims is to rescue the Chibok girls alive and unharmed. We are working round the clock to ensure their safety and eventual reunion with their families. Chibok girls are constantly on our minds and in our plans" he said
Read his full text 
President of the General Assembly,
Secretary–General
Secretary–General
Your Excellencies Heads of State and Governments
Distinguished Delegates
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I would like, Mr. President, on  behalf of the Government and people of Nigeria, to congratulate you and  your country on your election to preside over the 70th session of the  U.N. General Assembly.
2. May I also express appreciation  to your predecessor, Mr. Sam Kahamba Kutesa and the Secretary General  Mr. Ban Ki-moon both of whom worked tirelessly to ensure proper  articulation of the post-2015 Development Agenda and to maintain the  focus and commitment to the ideals of the United Nations. I thank Mr.  Ban Ki-moon for his recent visit to Nigeria when we held very useful  discussions.
Mr. President,
3. Fifty-five (55) years ago almost to the day, my great predecessor, Nigeria’s first Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa stood on this forum to declare Nigeria’s desire to develop and maintain friendly relations with all countries. He also assured the world of our country’s commitment to uphold the principles upon which the United Nations was founded.
3. Fifty-five (55) years ago almost to the day, my great predecessor, Nigeria’s first Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa stood on this forum to declare Nigeria’s desire to develop and maintain friendly relations with all countries. He also assured the world of our country’s commitment to uphold the principles upon which the United Nations was founded.
4. Mr. President, my country,  Nigeria, has lived by this conviction, even when judgement went against  us in territorial disputes with our neighbours. We respected those  judgements and abided by them as a mark of respect for the rule of law  and the charter of this organization. Nigeria’s record in the U.N.  peacekeeping is second to none. I myself as a young officer in the  Nigerian Army did tours of duty in Congo and the Lebanon.
5. Nigeria has contributed to U.N.  peacekeeping efforts in Ethiopia, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Darfur.  Furthermore, we are proud of our contributions to other activities of  the U.N. including the Peace Building Commission, the Human Rights  Council and security sector reform.
Mr. President,
6. We are gratified to note that most countries have pledged commitment to the post-2015 Development Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with their means of implementation. The successor frameworks of the MDGs have come, Mr. President, with lofty aspirations and if I may say so, heroic assumptions! Nonetheless, they target development cooperation by the international community up to the year 2020. And they deserve universal support.
6. We are gratified to note that most countries have pledged commitment to the post-2015 Development Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with their means of implementation. The successor frameworks of the MDGs have come, Mr. President, with lofty aspirations and if I may say so, heroic assumptions! Nonetheless, they target development cooperation by the international community up to the year 2020. And they deserve universal support.
7. This is because the SDGs mirror the hopes and aspirations of much of the world.
8. I should stress that for the  newly adopted SDGs to be truly global, they must be practical. In this  regard, the SDGs’ core objectives of poverty eradication and reducing  inequalities must be met within the framework of a revitalized global  partnership support by concrete policies and actions as outlined in the  Addis Ababa Action Agenda.
9. Luckily, these two core  objectives of the SDGs are precisely at the centre of Nigeria’s new  Administration’s agenda. It must be emphasized, Mr. President, that  Foreign Direct Investment supplemented where suitable by Official  Development Assistance as outlined in the Addis Ababa Agenda are  necessary, though not sufficient, conditions for accelerated development  in countries that are trying to catch up.
10. In this connexion, I would like  to appeal to industrialized countries to redeem their pledge of  earmarking 0.7% (nought point seven percent) of their GDP to development  assistance. With the sole exception of the UK, all concerned countries  have, I am told to meet the UN requirement. But, Mr. President, with  SDGs we have the opportunity to improve the lives of people not just in  the developing world but in all nations.
11. The Secretary General himself has grouped the SDGs into what he calls six “essential elements” namely:
• Dignity
• Prosperity
• Justice
• Partnership
• Planet
• People
As a prerequisite to these and as we look at history and remember the terrible events that gave rise to the birth of the United Nations in 1945, I would like to propose a seventh:
• PEACE
• Dignity
• Prosperity
• Justice
• Partnership
• Planet
• People
As a prerequisite to these and as we look at history and remember the terrible events that gave rise to the birth of the United Nations in 1945, I would like to propose a seventh:
• PEACE
12. Peace, Mr. President, is close  to the hearts of Nigerians, as we are in the front line in the war on  terror. Boko Haram’s war against the people of Nigeria, Chad, Niger and  Cameroon may not attract as much worldwide attention as the wars in the  Middle East but the suffering is just as great and the human cost is  equally high.
13. This is a war about values  between progress and chaos; between democracy and the rule of law. Boko  Haram celebrates violence against the weak and the innocent and  deplorably, they hide behind their perverted interpretation of Islam.  Boko Haram is as far away from Islam as any one can think of.
14. Many of my colleagues attending  this forum would want to know how our new government intends to tackle  the huge problems the government has inherited. Friends of Nigeria and  foreign investor partners will be encouraged to know that the new  Government is attacking the problems we inherited head-on.
15. We intend to tackle inequalities  arising from massive unemployment and previous government policies  favouring a few people to the detriment of the many. We intend to  emphasize quality technological education for development and lay  foundation for comprehensive care of the aged, the disadvantaged and the  infirm. But for now terrorism is the immediate problem.
16. Accordingly, Mr. President,  Members of the General Assembly, the new Nigerian Government which I  have the honour to head, moved with dispatch to put in a bold and robust  strategy to defeat Boko Haram. Nigeria and her neighbours Cameroon,  Chad and Niger plus Benin are working together to face this common  threat within the regional framework of the Lake Chad Basin Commission.  We have established a multinational joint task force to confront,  degrade and defeat Boko Haram.
17. We have driven them away from many of their strongholds, killed or captured many of their operatives or commanders and freed several hundreds of hostages.
17. We have driven them away from many of their strongholds, killed or captured many of their operatives or commanders and freed several hundreds of hostages.
18. Mr. President, one of our major  aims is to rescue the Chibok girls alive and unharmed. We are working  round the clock to ensure their safety and eventual reunion with their  families. Chibok girls are constantly on our minds and in our plans.
19. Mr. President, terrorism is by  no means the major or the only evil threatening and undermining the  wellbeing of societies around the world.
• Corruption
• Cross border financial crimes
• Cyber crimes
• Human trafficking
• Spread of communicable diseases
• Climate change
• Proliferation of weapons
• Corruption
• Cross border financial crimes
• Cyber crimes
• Human trafficking
• Spread of communicable diseases
• Climate change
• Proliferation of weapons
are all major challenges of the 21st  century which the international community must tackle collectively. Let  me reaffirm Nigerian government’s unwavering commitment to fight  corruption and illicit financial flows. By any consideration, corruption  and cross border financial crimes are impediments to development,  economic growth, and the realization of the wellbeing of citizens across  the globe.
20. Nigeria is ready and willing to  partner with international agencies and individual countries on a  bilateral basis to confront crimes and corruption. In particular, I call  upon the global community to urgently redouble efforts towards  strengthening the mechanisms for dismantling safe havens for proceeds of  corruption and ensuring the return of stolen funds and assets to their  countries of origin.
21. Mr. President, the world is now  facing a big new challenge: human trafficking. This is an old evil  taking an altogether new and dangerous dimension threatening to upset  international relationships. We in Africa are grieved to see on  international networks how hundreds of thousands of our able bodied men  and women fleeing to Europe and in the process thousands dying in the  desert or drowning in the Mediterranean.
22. We condemn in the strongest  terms these people traffickers and will support any measures to  apprehend and bring them to justice. At the same time, we are very  appreciative of European governments notably Italy and Germany, for  their understanding and humane treatment of these refugees.
23. Last year, our continent faced  the dreadful occurrence of Ebola. We sincerely thank the international  community for the collective efforts to contain this deadly disease. We  are not out of the woods yet but we would like to record our  appreciation to the United States, United Kingdom, France and China for  their outstanding assistance in arresting the spread of Ebola and care  of those infected in collaboration with host countries.
Mr. President,
24. Nigeria fully subscribes to and  fully endorses Goals 13, 14 and 15 of the SDGs regarding Climate Change.  In Nigeria, desertification and land erosion and degradation leading to  biodiversity loss are real threats to our environment and we shall  propose under the auspices of the Lake Chad Basin Commission a regional  approach to combat these environmental challenges.
25. We look forward to the UN Summit  on climate change in Paris in December 2015. This summit should provide  optimism to humanity on addressing the looming threat faced by many  communities around the world.
Mr. President,
26. We are witnessing a dreadful increase in conflicts fuelled by availability of small arms and light weapons. I call upon all member countries to demonstrate the political will needed to uphold the UN charter. For a start, a robust implementation of the Arms Trade Treaty will guarantee that small arms and light weapons are only legally transferred. Arms traffickers and human traffickers are two evil species which the world community should eradicate.
Mr. President,
27. As we engage in these annual debates, we need remind ourselves of the principles that led to the founding of the United Nations. Among those are peaceful coexistence and self-determination of peoples. In this context, Mr. President, the unresolved question of self-determination for the Palestinian people and those of Western Sahara, both nations having been adjusted by the United Nations as qualifying for this inalienable right must now be assured and fulfilled without any further delay or obstacle.
28. The international community has come to pin its hopes on resolving the Palestinian issue through the two – states solution which recognises the legitimate right of each state to exist in peace and security. The world has no more excuses or reasons to delay the implementation of the long list of Security Council resolutions on this question. Neither do we have the moral right to deny any people their freedom or condemn them indefinitely to occupation and blockade
27. As we engage in these annual debates, we need remind ourselves of the principles that led to the founding of the United Nations. Among those are peaceful coexistence and self-determination of peoples. In this context, Mr. President, the unresolved question of self-determination for the Palestinian people and those of Western Sahara, both nations having been adjusted by the United Nations as qualifying for this inalienable right must now be assured and fulfilled without any further delay or obstacle.
28. The international community has come to pin its hopes on resolving the Palestinian issue through the two – states solution which recognises the legitimate right of each state to exist in peace and security. The world has no more excuses or reasons to delay the implementation of the long list of Security Council resolutions on this question. Neither do we have the moral right to deny any people their freedom or condemn them indefinitely to occupation and blockade
Mr. President, delegates of member countries,
29. UN is 70 years old. It can count many more than 70 major achievements as the world’s forum and family reunion. It is my hope that in the next 70 years, it will achieve control of climate, help to eliminate communicable diseases, eliminate major and local conflicts and therefore eliminate the problem of refugees, take major steps towards reducing harmful inequalities between nations and within nations and above all, eliminate nuclear weapons.
29. UN is 70 years old. It can count many more than 70 major achievements as the world’s forum and family reunion. It is my hope that in the next 70 years, it will achieve control of climate, help to eliminate communicable diseases, eliminate major and local conflicts and therefore eliminate the problem of refugees, take major steps towards reducing harmful inequalities between nations and within nations and above all, eliminate nuclear weapons.
30. Mr. President, as this is my first address in this Assembly, I thank you and the delegates for listening so patiently.
 




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