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We learnt lessons from the Ebola outbreak; DR Congo President says country moved swiftly to curb coronavirus spread

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We learnt lessons from the Ebola outbreak; DR Congo President says country moved swiftly to curb coronavirus spread

UN News
23 September 2020
By: 
President Félix Antoine Tshilombo Tshisekedi (on screen) of Democratic Republic of the Congo addresses the general debate of the General Assembly’s seventy-fifth session.
UN Photo/Loey Felipe
President Félix Antoine Tshilombo Tshisekedi (on screen) of Democratic Republic of the Congo addresses the general debate of the General Assembly’s seventy-fifth session.

Learning its lessons from the Ebola outbreak, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) took swift and decisive measures to contain the spread of the coronavirus, when the first cases were detected in March, the country’s President told world leaders, gathered virtually, at the UN General Assembly.

Addressing, via a pre-recorded video, President Félix Antoine Tshilombo Tshisekedi said that quick action by the Government brought down the mortality rate in the DRC from 10 per cent in the first days of the pandemic to 2.5 per cent today.

Acknowledging the role of the UN, including the World Health Organization (), in responding to thecoronaviruspandemic, President Tshisekedi urged greater support in the areas of capacity-building and technical assistance.

He also called for international efforts, including cancellation of debts and “no-strings-attached financing” to help developing countries recover from the pandemic and to build back better.

The President also informed the Assembly of his Government’s efforts to promote human rights, while acknowledging that much remains to be done to combat sexual and gender-based violence.

He also called for theSecurity Councilto be reformed to make it more transparent, democratic and representative of the Organization’s make-up.

Need for climate action

The President of the DRC also highlighted the threats posed by climate change.

The effects are increasingly visible throughout the world, he said, adding that climate action and building a green economy is “not merely a necessity, but an urgent duty.”

He underscored the DRC’s commitment to reduce carbon emissions and mitigate the effects of climate change, including through the preservation of its forests through a system of school gardens that aims to plant 1 billion trees in the coming years.

Worrying security situation

Expressing concern about the security situation in the east of the country, President Tshisekedi said that residual elements of armed groups continue to spread death and desolation, attacking not only civilians and national armed forces but also peacekeepers serving with the UN peacekeeping mission in the country,.

The funding of such groups through the illicit exploitation of natural resources which are then sold abroad must be neutralized through international sanctions, he urged.

Pending the outcome of the strategic review of MONUSCO, he said that the DRCs wants to see more cooperation on the ground between the UN mission and the national armed forces, particularly in those areas where armed groups are present.

“My determination is to put smiles on the faces of those living in the east of the country as soon as possible,” said President Tshisekedi.