PRESIDENT Muhammadu   Buhari left New York Thursday after participating in the 72nd Session of   the United Nations General Assembly to London, the United Kingdom.    President Buhari checked out of his hotel Millennium Tower New York   accommodation at about 8.05am for JFK International Airport for his   journey the London.
Recall that the Special   Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina had in a   statement before the President left Abuja last weekend said that Buhari   will go to London from New York after the UNGA.
    It was not clear what his mission to London is or how long the president   would stay there but he had recently returned to the country from the   United Kingdom after spending over three months there on medical   vacation. 
  The president presented Nigeria's  statement at the UNGA and thereafter had meetings with President Donald   Trump of the United States, King of Jordan, Abdullah II, President of   Ghana, Kuffour Addo and the Secretary General of the United Nations,   Antonio Guterres. 
While speaking to State House correspondents, Adesina said that   President Buhari's appearance in New York was "worth the while" and   immensely beneficial to Nigeria particularly Jordan's donation of 200   armoured vehicles to Nigeria under generous terms.    He said Buhari held bilateral talks with the different leaders on   various areas of cooperation.    The President had in his address to the General Assembly, he had called   for the cooperation of world leaders to facilitate the recovery of   stolen assets.
  Buhari said even though efforts were being put in through the   strengthening of state institutions, accountability and combating   corruption, the international community's cooperation was needed to make   it succeed.    According to him:
 "Through our individual national efforts, state   institutions are being strengthened to promote accountability, and to   combat corruption and asset recovery.    "These can only be achieved through the international community   cooperating and providing critical assistance and material support.
    "We shall also cooperate in addressing the growing transnational crimes   such as forced labour, modern day slavery, human trafficking and   cybercrime."
    The president had also demanded that the United Nations sends a   delegation to North Korea leader, Kim Jong-un, to pressure him to end   the nuclear crisis which he says has become the greatest threat to   mankind.    He said diplomatic efforts must be brought to bear on North Korea to   ensure a peaceful resolution of the crisis.    North Korea has recently increased the pace of its nuclear weapons   development in defiance of all entreaties to halt the programmes.    Buhari said: 
"The most pressing threat to international peace and   security today is the accelerated nuclear weapons development programme   by North Korea. Since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, we have never   come so close to the threat of nuclear war as we have now.
    "All necessary pressure and diplomatic efforts must be brought to bear   on North Korea to accept peaceful resolution of the crisis. As Hiroshima   and Nagasaki painfully remind us, if we fail, the catastrophic and   devastating human loss and environmental degradation cannot be imagined. 
"Nigeria proposes a strong UN delegation to urgently engage the North   Korean Leader. The delegation, led by the Security Council, should   include members from all the regions.
    "The crisis in the Korean peninsula underscores the urgency for all   member states, guided by the spirit of enthroning a safer and more   peaceful world, to ratify without delay the Treaty prohibiting nuclear   weapons, which will be open for signature here tomorrow." 
Buhari also drew the world body's attention to the suffering of the   Muslim minorities, the Rohingyas in Myanmar, accusing the government of   that country of carrying out ethnic cleansing against them.    On the new conflicts and the need for the world body not to loose sight   of old ones including the Palestinian question, the president regretted   the humanitarian situation in Myanmar which he said was reminiscent of   the situation in 1995 Bosnia and 1994 Rwanda.    He had affirmed his faith in democracy, recalling ECOWAS' effort in   upholding the principles in The Gambia and Cote D'Ivoire. 

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