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Economic slump in focus at UN
US President George W. Bush urges world leaders to fight terror and impose sanctions on Iran and North Korea.
- Image Credit: AP
- US President George W. Bush addressing the UN General Assembly on Tuesday.
United Nations: US President George W. Bush delivered his final speech to the United Nations on Tuesday addressing a world that has seen prolonged wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a sweeping global financial crisis during his tenure.
Bush urged the annual General Assembly gathering of world leaders to fight terrorism and to enforce sanctions against Iran and North Korea over their nuclear programmes.
He sought to address concerns about the financial market crisis, saying that he was confident a $700 billion (Dh2.56 trillion) rescue for Wall Street would be enacted in the "urgent time frame required".
Worried
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is worried that this and other bailouts will reduce the ability of rich countries to aid the developing world.
"Our economies are more closely connected than ever before and I know that many of you here are watching how the United States government will address the problems in our financial system," Bush said.
Bush's advisers in Washington are locked in negotiations with Congress over the administration's plan to buy hundreds of billions of dollars in illiquid assets from financial lenders' books.
But still high on Bush's agenda were the Iraq and Afghan wars and fighting terrorism. "Instead of treating all forms of government as equally tolerable, we must actively challenge the conditions of tyranny and despair that allow terror and extremists to thrive," Bush said.
"Some suggest that these men would pose less of a threat if we'd only leave them alone. Yet, their leaders make clear that no concession could ever satisfy their ambitions."
Nations like Syria and Iran continued to sponsor terrorism, but "their numbers are growing fewer, and they're growing more isolated from the world," he said.
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