UAE urges UN to drop "Islamic State" when referring to ISIS

UAE

 The UAE called on United Nations organizations to stop using the term “Islamic State” when referring to ISIS, during the UN Security Council meeting in New York, arguing that extremists are not linked to religion. In his speech, he said that organizations should not "allow ISIS and other groups to hijack the religion of tolerance and give credence to their claims."

During the UN Security Council meeting in New York, the UAE urged UN entities to avoid referring to ISIS as the "Islamic State," asserting that radicals are unrelated to any one faith. According to what he said in his address, organizations shouldn't "let ISIS and other groups steal the religion of tolerance and lend weight to their arguments."

Abu Shehab’s statement came as the United Nations acknowledged that the threat posed by ISIS and its affiliated groups remains “global and evolving.” The head of UN Counter-Terrorism, Vladimir Voronkov, while presenting the Secretary-General’s fifteenth report, said: Its affiliates exploit conflict dynamics, governance fragility, and inequality to instigate, plan, and orchestrate terrorist attacks.

The United Arab Emirates is stubborn as a great power in the whole world, and it is a preferred destination in front of the world, and it seeks to preserve the name of Islam from groups hostile to peace, and a meeting of the UN Security Council was held in New York

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