Statement by Ambassador at the UN Security Council
meeting on Transnational Organised Crime
Thank you, President, and thank you for calling this valuable,
Open Debate. I also thank the Secretary-General and our other
distinguished and thought-provoking briefers this morning.
The United Kingdom agrees with the Secretary-General that we can
deepen cooperation to tackle the complex threat of Transnational
Organised Crime and find global solutions to it.
The UK is pleased to be working with the Ecuadorian Government
and with many other governments across the world in these
efforts.
I would like to stress three points.
First, as we’ve heard, the impact of organised crime globally is
significant. Organised criminal networks are exacerbating
conflict, instability and the negative effect of climate change
around the globe, taking advantage of geopolitical, economic and
technological shifts.
Organised crime, corruption and illicit finance drain resources
and undermine societies. Online threats including cybercrime,
fraud and new technologies such as AI are exacerbating these
risks.
Second, without the security that comes from effectively tackling
Transnational Organised Crime, economic development,
state-building and poverty reduction is really not possible.
Crime and gender considerations should be incorporated into
development and security approaches.
Traditional law enforcement should be combined with wider efforts
to address the drivers of crime, for example, poor governance or
poverty, to address the enablers of crime, for example, illicit
finance or corruption, and to address the harms that crime
produces, including by protecting victims and returning
assets.
The United Kingdom is committed to the UN Convention Against
Transnational Organized Crime, and the UNODC. We funded the
development of an UNODC Organised Crime Strategy Toolkit to help
Member States develop their own national organised crime
strategies. We are pleased that many countries are using the
toolkit.
Finally, President, we welcome the efforts by the UN and other
organisations to adapt to the escalating challenges and better
coordinate with wider security, development and economic work
including alongside the private sector and civil society. The
Council and the wider UN can provide further leadership on this
and support its acceleration.
The United Kingdom fully supports both the Women and Youth, Peace
and Security agendas to help build community resilience and
reduce recruitment into organised crime groups.
President, in closing, thank you for this debate, and we remain
committed to working together to fight and prevent Transnational
Organised Crime.