High-level independent panel on security and development in crisis-torn Sahel region launched at UN.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and African leaders have launched a high-level panel to assess the situation in the Sahel and make recommendations on ways to foster international engagement and map out responses to the region's complex challenges.

The independent panel was formally announced on Saturday in New York on the margins of the General Assembly's annual debate during a High-Level Event on the Sahel, held under the auspices of the United Nations, the African Union (AU) Commission, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the Group of Five for the Sahel (G5 Sahel).

The Sahel extends across Africa from the Atlantic Ocean in the west to the Indian Ocean in the east and runs through parts of Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, and Sudan.

While the UN humanitarian affairs office (OCHA), has said that the Sahel faces 'the worst humanitarian needs in years requiring an urgent scale-up of emergency response', the Secretary-General warned just last week that rising insecurity, including the proliferation of terrorist and other non-State armed groups, coupled with political instability, is creating a crisis in the Sahel that poses a 'global threat'.

The crisis is being compounded by climate change... 'and if nothing is done, the effects of terrorism, violent extremism and organized crime will be felt far beyond the region and the African continent,' he said.

In their statements on Saturday, the Chair of the AU Commission, the President of the ECOWAS Commission, the Executive Secretary of the G5 Sahel [a joint force established in 2017 to respond to the expansion...

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