The Liberian peace activist painted a grim picture of a more dangerous world where the lives of rich and poor of all races and political beliefs are affected.
"All of the things that made life meaningful to us (are) gradually being taken away by insecurity," Gbowee said in a keynote address at a council meeting on the importance of "inclusive development" in promoting peace yesterday.
"Freedom of expression, freedom of the press as we saw in Paris is also a thing of the past," she added, referring to the recent terror attacks that killed 17 people at the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, a kosher grocery and elsewhere in the French capital.
Saying this may be the only time she gets to address the Security Council, Gbowee urged its 15 members "to do some deep self-reflection" and undertake reforms, including expanding the number of its permanent veto-wielding members from five to seven.
"In order to achieve international peace and development, we need to change the systems and structures that make it impossible for others to try where others are succeeding."
The Security Council approved a presidential statement highlighting "the importance of identifying and addressing social, economic, political, cultural and religious exclusion, intolerance, as well as violent extremism, which can be conducive to terrorism, as drivers of conflict."
It encouraged all 193 UN member states to come up with a common UN approach to promote development for all peoples and enlist local communities and non-governmental organisations in developing strategies "to counter the violent extremist narrative that can incite terrorist acts."
South Africa's UN Ambassador Kingsley Mamabolo, whose country chairs the group, criticised richer nations for failing to honor commitments to provide aid to developing countries, for not providing debt relief to poor countries, and for failing to open markets and transfer technology to developing countries.
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