"The Secretary-General was considering whether he should cut short his trip to India. In the end, he decided to stay on with his programme (in India)," Ban's Deputy Spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters here yesterday when asked if it was not possible for the UN chief to fly from India quickly for the rally given that New Delhi and Paris are not far.
French President Francois Hollande had invited world leaders to participate in the march in the wake of the three days of terror in which 17 people were killed last week.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas were in attendance, walking hand in hand and showing support and solidarity to France and protesting against terrorism.
The Obama administration drew flak from various quarters for its failure to send a higher-profile official to the rally.
Haq said the Secretary-General's heart goes out to the people of France and that he had issued a statement from Ahmedabad welcoming the march and declaring his strong committment to the "essential work of countering extremism, fighting anti-Semitism and other forms of discrimination, and upholding the rights to freedom of speech and expression.
"Certainly, even though he was not there personally, his thoughts were with the people of France, and...De Mistura represented the UN system," Haq said.
Ban visited Gujarat and New Delhi and attended the Vibrant Gujarat Summit, stressing India's role in the post- 2015 development agenda, climate change and sustainable development.
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