British PM May pays tribute to Benazir Bhutto at UNGA

NEW YORK (AFP): British Prime Minister Theresa May, in her address to the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday, paid a tribute to slain PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto.

“This year is the tenth anniversary of the death of the woman who introduced me to my husband and who is known well to many of us in the United Nations. Benazir Bhutto was brutally murdered by people who actively rejected the values that all of us here at the United Nations stand for.”

“In a country that has suffered more than most at the hands of terrorists, murdered for standing up for democracy, murdered for espousing tolerance and murdered for being a woman. When I think of a hundred and thousands of victims of terrorism in countries across the world I think of their friends, their families, their communities devastated by this evil and I say, enough is enough,” said the British premier.

During the address, May urged world leaders to defend the rules-based international order and its multilateral institutions, one day after US President Donald Trump had hailed national sovereignty.

May cited many dangerous challenges facing member states – from Syria´s use of chemical weapons on its own people to terrorism to economic equality – and called for unity of effort.

“I believe that the only way for us to respond to this vast array of challenges is to come together and defend the international order that we have worked so hard to create and the values by which we stand,” she said.

“For it is the fundamental values that we share – the values of fairness, justice and human rights – that have created the common cause between nations to act together in our shared interest and form the multilateral system.”

“And it is this rules-based system that we have developed … which enables the global cooperation by which we can protect those values,” she said.

May´s comments marked a striking contrast to Tuesday´s speech by Trump, in which he used variations on the word “sovereign” or “sovereignty” more than 20 times and argued that: “The nation-state remains the best vehicle for elevating the human condition.”

Trump´s nationalist bent is a break from decades of US support for multilateral efforts and has led him to dump a planned trans-Pacific trade pact and threaten to pull out of the Paris climate accord and Iran nuclear deal.

May, by contrast, cited both free trade agreements and the Paris accord as examples of a rules-based international system that ensures peace and prosperity.