Kenya President Uhuru Kenyatta Asks What United Nations Brings to World Today at UN General Assembly
The statement is fitting coming from an African nation. The continent has the world's youngest population, with a median age of 19. And that booming population is increasingly impatient with leaders multiple times their age. This week at the UN gathering of world leaders, African nations again have made it clear it's time that changed.
United Nations, September 23: Kenya's president has given a generational jolt to the 75-year-old United Nations, pointing out that the world body is older than 96% of the global population.
In a prerecorded speech on Wednesday at the UN General Assembly, Uhuru Kenyatta said the UN was created to bring hope to a world in ruins after World War II, “but what does it bring to the world today?” Also Read | Nepal Foreign Ministry Denies Reports of Land Encroachment by China, Contrary to Claims of Locals.
The statement is fitting coming from an African nation. The continent has the world's youngest population, with a median age of 19. And that booming population is increasingly impatient with leaders multiple times their age. Also Read | COVID-19 Claims 200,000 Lives in US As Donald Trump Vilifies Science, Prioritizes Politics.
African leaders also want to shake up the UN system that keeps the global powers of 75 years ago in charge, while Africa's 1.3 billion people are without a permanent seat on the UN's most powerful body, the Security Council.
This week at the UN gathering of world leaders, African nations again have made it clear it's time that changed.
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