UNITED
NATIONS (NNN-PTI) -- Ahead of the annual session of the United Nations General
Assembly, India on Monday said its focus at the high-level meeting will be
terrorism, UN Security Council reforms, managing the global financial system,
Palestine and piracy.
Over
120 world leaders will gather at the United Nations for the 67th session of the
General Assembly, with the theme of this year's general debate being
'Adjustment or settlement of international disputes or situations by peaceful
means.'
External
Affairs Minister S M Krishna is scheduled to reach New York on Sept 27 and will
address the world body on Oct 1. He will also attend a number of meetings
including those of the G4, BRICS, G77 and the Commonwealth.
Sources
said Krishna is also likely to hold bilateral meetings with US Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton as well as with leaders from China and Egypt. They said
it is "unlikely" that a meeting will take place between Krishna and
his Pakistani counterpart Hina Rabbani Khar.
Krishna
had visited Islamabad for a three-day visit earlier in September. Sources said
they do not foresee another meeting in New York between the two.
Outlining
India's focus for the UNGA, the country's Permanent Representative to the UN
Hardeep Singh Puri told PTI that focus would be on the evolving situation in
the Middle East including Palestine, the hot spots in Africa like Sudan, South
Sudan, Somalia and piracy, which, he said, is "becoming an increasing nuisance
from India's point of view."
Puri
said the other major preoccupation for India has been the issue of Security
Council reform, a "tough and lonely battle" for which "you have
to fight each day in order to keep the process alive."
He
said India was able to get a reference to Security Council reform included in
the outcome document for a high-level meeting on 'Rule of Law', which will take
place on Monday.
He
said for India, key issues would also include managing the global economy and
the financial system, securing stable food and energy supplies, challenges of
economic development, poverty alleviation and sustainable development.
Puri
said the theme of this year's general debate is appropriate as the last few
months have witnessed a "recourse to punitive and coercive measures in
Libya and use of all necessary means, which is an euphemism for military action
by NATO."
During
the GA session, high-level meetings have been organised on pressing global
issues including Rule of Law, sustainable energy for all, peace building, the
situation in the Middle East and countering nuclear terrorism. -- NNN-PTI
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