International

Obama urges international cooperation to solve challenges

WASHINGTON, April 11, (AFP) - US President Barack Obama today urged nations of the world to unite to resolve the most pressing global challenges -- from extremism to environmental pollution to the economic crisis.

In a weekly radio address timed to Easter and Passover celebrations, Obama cautioned that the world remained a dangerous place, and people must be strong and vigilant in the face of multiple threats.

"But let us not allow whatever differences we have with other nations to stop us from coming together around those solutions that are essential to our survival and success," he said.

The comments came just days after Obama's triumphant eight-day European tour, after which White House aides claimed huge progress towards his goal of restoring the US image abroad.

Obama capped the tour with a two-day stay in Turkey, preceded by visits to London for the G20 economic summit, France and Germany for the NATO summit and the Czech Republic. In a major speech in Prague, Obama heralded a far-reaching bid to abolish nuclear stocks, ban nuclear tests and halt production of fissile material.

The president reiterated the same message in his radio address, saying it was evident that the current economic crisis recognized no borders, that violent extremism claimed innocent lives from New York to Mumbai and that "an unsustainable dependence" on foreign oil and other sources of energy was polluting the air and water.

 
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