Statement on the one year anniversary of the 11 September attacks on the United States
Statements | Kofi Annan, Former Secretary-General
On September 11th , grief enveloped the globe ?- not only out of solidarity with the people of the United States, but out of shared loss. More than ninety nations lost sons and daughters of their own -- murdered that day, for no other reason than they had chosen to live in the United States. Today, we come together as a world community because we were attacked as a world community.
There have been and will be other occasions to explore the causes of the attacks -- and explored they must be. There will be other occasions to debate our response to the attacks -- and debated it must be. There will be other occasions to consider how best to maintain the global unity of that day -- and considered it must be.
But today is a day for remembrance, for respect. A day to recall the loss of those who died trying to escape the fire, and the sacrifice of those who died rushing into it. A day to recall the lives of citizens from every part of the world who met danger and death without warning, without cause, without a chance. A day to recall the spirit of unity that seized the world that day ?- from New York to Tehran to Berlin to Beijing ?- in the face of unimaginable horror.
There could be no greater affront to the spirit and purpose of the United Nations than the terrorist attacks of September 11th . Everything that we work for -? peace, development, health, freedom -? is damaged by this horror. Everything that we believe in -? respect for human life, justice, tolerance, pluralism and democracy -? is threatened by it. It must be defeated -? by the world acting as one.
May the memory of those who perished on September 11th serve to inspire a better, more just, more peaceful world for all.