Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2020 08:32 PM

    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken Canada's campaign for a seat on the United Nations Security Council directly to African diplomats with a speech that tried to emphasize his boyhood connection to the continent.

     

    Trudeau fondly recalled accompanying his father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, on trips to Africa as a child and later as a young adult backpacker.

     

    He spoke in a pre-reception address on Tuesday night to an audience of about 200 people, most of them diplomats from African countries, at the Ottawa headquarters of Global Affairs Canada.

     

    Trudeau said his father shared with him his deep love and respect for the African continent — an apparent attempt to counter critics who said his government ignored Africa during its first term in power when it was dealing with major trade issues with the United States and Mexico.

     

    But the prime minister won applause from the crowd when he described the future of Africa-Canadian relations as one rooted in deepening business and trade ties with the fast-growing continent.

     

    Earlier this month, Trudeau visited two African countries, Ethiopia and Senegal, as part of his government's campaign for the council seat.

     

    "In all our conversations, one thing was clear: We have everything to gain by working together on the priorities we share. Canadians, like people across the African continent, want to see real progress on the issues that matter most to them," said Trudeau.

     

    In Ethiopia, he met leaders attending the African Union summit to win support for Canada.

     

    In Dakar, Senegalese President Macky Sall said he would try to drum up support for Canada's bid among African countries.

     

    Africa, with its 54 voting countries, is a key voting bloc in the secret ballot that will take place at the UN General Assembly in June.

     

    Canada will need at least 128 votes in that election for a two-year term on the council starting in 2021, but faces stiff competition from Norway and Ireland who are also campaigning.

     

    Trudeau has said winning the position would give Canada more influence on the world stage on issues such as peace, security and human rights.

     

    He committed Canada to a council run in 2015 as part of his "Canada is back" pledge, following the 2010 loss of a seat to smaller and economically fragile Portugal under the previous Conservative government.

     

    Trudeau was accompanied Tuesday night by Mary Ng, his international trade minister, Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne and Ahmed Hussen, the Somali-born minister of families, children and social development.

     

    "If our goal of making sure that Canada deepens its trade and investment ties, as well as people-to-people ties, the African diaspora, the African-Canadian community is key and central to that effort," Hussen told the gathering.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Firefighters Calendar Too Hot To Handle

    ST. CATHARINES, Ont. — An Ontario city is telling firefighters to turn down the heat on their steamy charity calendar or risk losing municipal backing for the fundraiser.

    Firefighters Calendar Too Hot To Handle

    Eastern Ontario Rail Blockade Still In Place As Provincial Police Keep Watch

    Police kept a watchful eye on a handful of protesters blocking a major stretch of railway in eastern Ontario on Friday as political pressure mounted on the provincial force to take more decisive action.

    Eastern Ontario Rail Blockade Still In Place As Provincial Police Keep Watch

    Industry, Passengers Left Stranded As Anti-Pipeline Blockades Shut Rail Service

    Industry, Passengers Left Stranded As Anti-Pipeline Blockades Shut Rail Service
    Blockades set up by anti-pipeline protesters have forced Canadian National Railway Co. to shut down its entire network in Eastern Canada and Via Rail to cancel passenger service across the country.

    Industry, Passengers Left Stranded As Anti-Pipeline Blockades Shut Rail Service

    Pipeline Protests Expected Today, Governments To Meet With First Nations

    Protests continue as political leaders look to negotiate solutions, while business leaders, opposition politicians and ordinary people call for immediate action to end the disruptions, which have already seen more than 80 arrests.

    Pipeline Protests Expected Today, Governments To Meet With First Nations

    Truckers, Police Combine Resources To Foil Alleged Heavy Equipment Thieves In B.C.

    Truckers, Police Combine Resources To Foil Alleged Heavy Equipment Thieves In B.C.
    KELOWNA, B.C. - The efforts of a few commercial truck drivers and multiple RCMP detachments in northern B.C. led to the recovery of a stolen piece of heavy equipment and the arrest of two suspects.    

    Truckers, Police Combine Resources To Foil Alleged Heavy Equipment Thieves In B.C.

    Police Arrest Ontario-Based Married Couple Accused Of Being 'Money Mules' In CRA Scam

    Police Arrest Ontario-Based Married Couple Accused Of Being 'Money Mules' In CRA Scam
    Investigators have charged an Ontario-based married couple they say acted as "money mules" in a mostly India-based phone and internet scam.    

    Police Arrest Ontario-Based Married Couple Accused Of Being 'Money Mules' In CRA Scam