Ghana’s Vice-President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia yesterday participated in a United Nations (UN) Security Council debate in New York with a called for action to prevent domestic inequalities that led to urban migration and the creation of fertile grounds for conflict.
Dr. Bawumia was speaking on behalf of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo during the debate on “War in cities: Protection of civilians in urban settings” presided over by Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gare Støre.
Ghana became a member of the UN Security Council in January this year for a two-year term.
According to Vice President Bawumia, “The issue of poverty which is an important element in urbanization would need to be addressed. National initiatives would need to be supported to equalize access to economic opportunities in all parts of a country.”
This, he said, will help manage the factors that drive migration, lead to unplanned urbanization and nurtured the environment for conflict.
Dr. Bawumia was scheduled to meet UN Secretary-General Antonio Guteress later yesterday before travelling to Washington, DC, the US capital, today to hold discussions with the US Assistant Secretary of State for Africa, Molly Phee.
They were expected to discuss the security situation in the Sahel, and political instability in West Africa whose regional body, ECOWAS, President Akufo-Addo currently chairs.
Dr. Bawumia expressed concern about the threat posed to civilian populations by extremist groups such as Boko Haram and Al Qaeda in the Magreb, organizations whose activities have become a growing threat in the West Africa.
He said such groups “scapegoat civilians in their crusades and consider them as cannon fodder.”
He said the roles played by civilians in such wars demonstrated the complex nature of modern warfare.
Dr. Bawumia said the world had witnessed what he called “the horrific effects of urban conflicts” in places like Syria, Iraq and Yemen; but also, much earlier in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Cote d’Ivoire where the civil wars were fought in cities.
He said urban conflicts created opportunities for violent extremist groups to radicalize young people.
Ghana is serving on the Security Council alongside two other African countries, namely, Kenya and Gabon.
Kenya’s term elapses at the end of 2022 having been elected a year earlier.
In November, Ghana will take over the Presidency of the Security Council on which it is serving for a fourth tenure since independence in 1957.
Among other concerns, Ghana wants to galvanize the Council’s attention to address violent extremism in the Sahel and growing piracy in the Gulf of Guinea.