Trudeau to Tell Security Conference That Global Economic Security Is Critical

Trudeau to Tell Security Conference That Global Economic Security Is Critical
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a news conference updating the Iran plane crash in Ottawa on Jan. 9, 2020. The Canadian Press/Adrian Wyld
The Canadian Press
Updated:

OTTAWA—Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will address the Munich Security Conference on Friday and urge global leaders to accept that a changing world requires more effort to bring economic prosperity for all.

Trudeau’s speech comes after he spent the last week in Africa and Kuwait, where he said several times that improving access to education and providing hope for young people will go a long way to keeping youth from turning to militancy.

It also comes after what he has called a tumultuous month for the globe, with the rise of tensions between the United States and Iran in early January, the downing of a Ukrainian jetliner by an Iranian missile and the outbreak of the Novel Coronavirus.

World Health Organization director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said this week the coronavirus, called COVID-19, is “public enemy No. 1,” with a potentially bigger impact than any act of terrorism.

Before delivering his speech, Trudeau meets with a U.S. congressional delegation led by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), as well as the prime ministers of Niger and Albania and the president of Kazakhstan.

Trudeau is continuing Canada’s campaign for votes for a temporary seat on the powerful United Nations Security Council. His trip to Africa was planned in large part to help that campaign and he met more than a dozen African leaders over the last week.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a file photo. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a file photo. Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Only one, President Macky Sall of Senegal, publicly pledged to support Canada as it competes with Norway and Ireland for two available seats.

Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is also set to sit down during the conference with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, five weeks after 176 people were killed, including 57 Canadians, when Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 was shot down by an Iranian missile.

Canada is growing increasingly frustrated with Iran’s refusal to allow the flight’s black boxes to be sent to France to be analyzed. Champagne said last week Iran does not have the technology, but France does and the technology is not portable.

Champagne will be at the conference for the full three days. He is also meeting today with his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi.

The conference theme this year is “westlessness” a term coined to describe a crumbling of the knowledge of what defines the western world, and what role it will play in global security amid the rising influence of the non-western world.